I've been saying that too but millennials attack the mere suggestion. I often point out how much more well spoken people were back then. I grew up around all of those people and I can tell the difference! : )
@@wolf3104 For God's sake, you missed the entire points made by "S" and "Clee Boy." Oh, so today's "big English actors" naturally talk with unique, pleasing American accents of half a century ago? The focus is on changes in Americans' -- well over 300 million of them -- natural manner of speaking NOT "trained . . . big English actors." The inclination is that the everyday practice of verbal communication hasn't improved; in contrast to vast improvements in the multiple, sophisticated, complex manners of audio recording of the spoken word. News flash: with a dialect coach a gifted performer, whether English or American, can speak with any dialect and 'pull it off.' "S" and "Clee Boy" were commenting on how pleasing and well spoken -- and dare I include "literate" -- many Americans spoke a half century ago. And in Sharon Tate's instance here, 1967, a perfect example of normal, young Americans speaking; clearly with correct pronunciation and grammar plus a pleasing tone. "Same today with big English actors." Give me a break. The focus, the specifics, were on everyday Americans' inclined capacities for speaking naturally, mid 1960s vs. early 2020s.
She was. With all due respect to Roman Polanski, he didn’t deserve her. He loved her but he was very unfaithful. She loved him too. It was her hope that the child she was carrying would make him a more responsible man. The whole thing was just beyond tragic.
I do all the time and I’m 59 I’ve always felt this way since it happen we were all cheated but mainly she was and the rest of the victims they all had so much more to live for
Absolutely, and I sometimes feel angry about the way Polanski has behaved since her death. Totally disrespectful of her life and the life of her child. It was only a short time after her death that he was camped outside a Swiss finishing school, sniffing around the teenage girls. Not that he respected and was faithful to her during their marriage either.
It can be quite painful, watching her speak. I wasn't even born when all that meaningless evil happened. I just don't get how people could be so heartless, cruel and merciless. Who could hurt such a lady like her.
I agree. It's very hard to watch this interview knowing what the outcome of her life was. She was just being herself here, no BS just keeping it real. Sharon was one of a kind
She did a interview with Merv Griffith in London it’s in black and white she was getting ready to make the movie the Vampire killers it’s about 7 minutes long I think but I think that’s the longest one I’ve ever seen
Yesterday I watched the Fearless Vampire Killers for the first time, I couldn't stop crying each time she showed up on screen, she had such a beautiful aura around her. Her soft voice, her beautiful face, her grace. She was such a unique person that didn't deserve what she got.
@@luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 I love that movie I watch it all the time . I love her and miss her . She was a beautiful person inside and out. The world was robbed of a special person .
I’m only 26 and I got into Sharon Tate just over the pandemic and when I finally watched the movie I was disappointed as well and I was really surprised that so many people raved about the performance. It was so empty.
Astute point. I wonder if Tarantino was trying to convey the innocent flower-power & “all you need is love” vibe-somewhat ubiquitous throughout the era-via the cinematic portrayal of Miss Tate? Its essentially being a Good vs. Evil Fairy Tale, blatantly presented as “Once Upon a Time…”, the Evil of the tale has long-been known, rather dramatically and often visually graphic. However, the light, care-free, seeming innocence of the times plays little part in the true story. Notwithstanding the goodness and innocence of the victims, the end of the 1960s was filled with extreme political strife. From a little kid’s perspective, the decade was filled with international & US assassinations; the Vietnam war fought by teenagers whose death tally was reported on the 5/6 news for kids to see; the Youth Movement & Yippie anti-war protests…and so much more. On the exciting side: Colors and design exploded in every visual manner: Interior design; artworks; textiles; furnishings; CLOTHING & COSMETICS (Mary Quant, Betsey Johnson, Edie Sedgwick, Andy Warhol, Twiggy), with shops abounding on Carnaby St & King’s Road-all the while some of the greatest music ever composed was being produced by the most innovative equipment. BUT those changes; those vibes scared many of the population. How does the filmmaker create a Fairytale with a universally known EVIL entity, lacking an opposing equally powerful essence of GOOD? We know Tarantino produced an heroic figure at the tale’s end. What’s lacking is the pure power of the Divine Feminine for Good. The real Sharon Tate, an athlete in her own right, who performed all of her stunts in two of her films-left a legacy for which a writer of Fairytales could have brought alive cinematically in a heroine’s role of triumph over Evil.
I get so disturbed and devastated when I see footage of her. She was beautiful and full of promise and then two years later, the most atrocious things happened to her. RIP
thank God none of us know what is around the corner for us. I just think of it as being the last half hour of her life was filled with horror then eternal bliss.
Yes too bad the movies she made were silly or focused on her body. She talks about studying with Lee Strasberg but the films she made don’t reflect that very much.
@@angelwings7930 I wouldn't agree with that at all. Eye of the Devil hasa great deal of acting and she comes off as as sinister. 13 Chairs is another one where she shows her flip to comedy. Matter of fact, every movie she did seemed different from the next from Malibu to Ms. Carlson. We are literally only talking a year or two. What did you expect...Hamlet when she is just starting?
My goodness, what a beautiful woman and even a beautiful voice to go with it. She was such a special person and seemed so mature considering her youth too.
Gosh this interview on actual film is so surreal considering the tradegy that befell her. I just feel incredibly sad and heartbroken.... R.I.P Sharon Tate
Sharon is so breathtakingly beautiful. Such class and honesty from her always. A sweet, simple, pure, & radiant inner soul & equally as beautiful on the outside of course. What a timeless beauty. Thank you for gifting us this interview footage of her as there isn’t a lot out there of her. In my opinion Sharons beauty will live on forever. ❤️✨
@@angholloway5091 Patty Duke who played Neely O’ Hara had sadly passed away in 2016. Barbara Parkins who played Anne Welles in the movie is still with us today 🙏
She was an incredible actress she was lovely young girl back then she would have been my granny's age I really hate what happened to her and her losing out on life so soon coz she deserved so much life and love and success ❤️👍🏻 Tx for capturing this back then
Beautiful speaking voice and diction. Such a stunning girl and on her way until those monsters took her life. May she and her baby Rest In Peace along with those that died with her.
Happy Birthday Sharon Jan 24 1943. We still love you and miss you on this Jan 24 2022 . I’m watching the Fearless Vampire Killers . Much love from Ohio
I'll never forget going to the movies to see a screwy little comedy film "Don't make waves" with Tony Curtis, and being mesmerized by the drop dead beauty of an Actress, so I anxiously waited for the credits to get her name, Sharon Tate! I remember thinking she was certainly headed for fame, then the inconceivable horror in the news hearing that she was murdered and it broke my heart!! After all these years I still think Sharon Tate is one of the most beautiful women I ever seen!!
Wow this is very rare!!! It's so great to see Sharon in this footage and she came across as smart and sweet. It's so sad that she was taken from us so violently. R.I.P. Sharon and her unborn son.
Me too. I took a copy, added lovingly to my collection of all things Sharon. Footage of her speaking is so rare. Other snippets are often incomplete, like her 1965 interview on Eye on the Devil set.
Interviewers made attempts in those days to ask far more interesting questions than they do now, then again film actors' egos have certainly inflated since that time so perhaps they can't any longer.
So honest and direct yet abnormally personable and polite. Just like her mother and sister. The Tate's were salt of the earth, you can just tell. A precious video. Thanks.
@@adrian72300 I do have to wonder. It seems the industry was run by Satanists probably from the beginning. Did she make a “deal” to be an actress ? Supposedly raised as a Catholic but her lifestyle and the films she made were sketchy. Sharon did nude photos too. I read Ed Sanders book. That was an experience !
Sharon’s mother was supposedly a Catholic but never wavered in her support of Sharon being in trashy Hollywood, making weird films and doing photos without her clothes on.
@Kittie Kellie At age 26, not even Jane Fonda or Vanessa Redgrave were considered A list. Jane Fonda did the movie Barbarella at age 30. In the future she might have gone on to do tv episodes of Columbo, Streets of San Fransisco, Barnaby Jones, or Kojak, or very possibly some substantial movie roles. What's important is that she had those decades to live and raise a family as she intended and saw fit, just like her peers had, who were not robbed of 50 years of their life.
She is awesome and her life itself should be celebrated more instead of her end. For this interview she seemed tired and didn’t really want to do this, but she was gracious about it and kind nonetheless. 💖
Well she had a miserable time on Valley of the Dolls, first thinking it was a terrible script and only doing it because she knew the book's bestseller status meant the film would likely do well. And second, Mark Robson treated her horribly on the set, and all the actresses say the mood on the film just dropped once Judy Garland was fired. So she probably wasn't too keen on having to pretend to be excited to promote it
@@BetterWithBob That makes a lot of sense. Thanks for sharing. Also, I had no idea Judy Garland was initially cast. Do you have any more info what happened with her?
The bow in her hair is so lovely. She's such a natural beauty to her. Very honest and intelligent. I love that about her. ❤ Every so often I'll watch interviews with her. I wish I was alive in those times, simply so I could watch the movies in the theater. People seemed more carefree.
LOL her own woman? she did whatever Roman told her to do, she couldn't even wear makeup unless he approved of it, he would make her have sex with other people while he filmed it, her own woman? she was an obedient, oversized head witch, stop with the celebrity worship
I love Sharon, her taste was flawless and her personality was so softly radiant and free. Her style & manner of speaking are especially beautiful. People always comment on how effortlessly refined women were back then, but nothing is effortless. It takes a lot of skill to be so feminine yet sharp.
Bobbie Wygant (born Roberta Connolly; November 22, 1926) is an American television news reporter, film critic, talk show host, and interviewer who has worked for Fort Worth, Texas television station KXAS-TV (originally known as WBAP-TV) for over 70 years. She is known for her filmed interviews with celebrities. 97 AÑOS.
Wow, I never realized Bobbie was around for so long. I watched her interviews with Carrie Fisher, some 10 and 20 years later, which were great. Sharon seemed like a lovely person.
She was so kind , down to earth and feminine. Beautiful but no ego really. What a waste - it’s like she could’ve been a friend, sister, beloved co worker etc .
Sharon’s beautiful dictation and beauty she was on her way until those filthy monsters crossed her path. May Sharon and her baby rest together in eternal peace and may perpetual light shine on their immortal souls.
Yes, I had to get it as well. I need Sharon around me, even if it’s in a book. I leave the book on my table, open, and see her and say a prayer for her every day.
That performance was a farcical joke, a figment of Tarrantino's imagination, and nothing to do with the real Sharon. Shame on Debra Tate for endorsing that movie and that performance. Here's Sharon telling an interviewer, again, that she she didn't want to be a MM bimbo clone, and that's how she was portrayed in that movie. Shameful.
i'm tired of people comparing them. yes, sharon was a one off. she was wonderful and it's so terribly sad we didn't get to see enough of her. but biopics are about actors capturing the essence of a person. looks help, but i think sharon is the most beautiful woman i've ever seen so it's so difficult to find somebody who looks like her. i think tarantino cared deeply about how she was portrayed and it was done sensitively
@@lydiarodgers Sharon was one of the most beautiful, but I could name 3 or 4 that are up there with her. But your right, there was only one Sharon Tate, and only one Margot Robbie.
@@lydiarodgers, sensitive enough to make her bring out his foot fetish while she’s in the movie theater. That was disgraceful to portray her as one of those movie goers who treat the theater like their living room and put their bare feet on the seats in front of them.