Mavis Nicholson speaks to American Author Toni Morrison. First shown: 24/02/1988 if you would like to license a clip from this video please e mail: archive@fremantle.com Quite: VT42498
One of the best interviews I’ve seen thus far. The interviewer wasn’t interested in asking about where whiteness stood in Morrison’s work but instead was interested in what the work represents.
After this, I've devoured everything that the Thames TV youtube channel will post of Mavis Nicholson's interviews. They are an absolute treasure. Really edifying. Check her out: James Baldwin, Maya Angelou, and lots of British authors too.
Exactly. Lately my life changed when I had to watch my boyfriend die because his poa made it a priority to pull the plug because my boyfriend signed a paper 7 years ago. He had a stroke and they made the decision after on the third week. When I asked him to squeeze my hand twice if he wanted to live, once for going to heaven, he squeezed 2 times. He wanted to live… he died on Aug. 2. On that day. I did not agree with the decision. Ever since I wonder what the difference is between what dr. kevorkian does and how the family just let him die- because “this is not my son anymore. He didn’t recognize me… “ of course not! He had a stroke! He didn’t want to die. It was out of his hands, or mine. Since then I made it a point to nurture a beautiful relationship with him and all other spirits of ancestors, relatives, and guides. Because we are still part of each other’s lives death cannot separate souls.❤🦋
Agreed. So many interviewers these days can’t get out of their own way with their own agenda. This interviewer did a beautiful job of asking really probing questions and let Morrison tell her story. Wonderful!
"My whole education was to make sure I didn't believe things like that. I dismissed all sorts of things that were indigenous in my family -- superstition and discredited information, and that discredited way of knowing that discredited people always have. But when I began to write, that was the place where I had to go. That's where the information was."
The glint in their eyes as they exchanged quiet appreciation for each other in this beautifully rhythmic, melodic interview... this provided me an example of what beautiful dialogue between two evolved, curious intellectuals looks like... and i have to add, the retention of their respective voices throughout this literary dance, shows the many layers of honesty through which even an abrupt british critic and a soulfully emotional poet can share without betraying themselves in the least.
It’s an absolute disgrace that Mavis Nicholson hasn’t had an entire 3 hour program dedicated to her life’s work. She was the best interviewer we’ve had. Parkinson doesn’t compare. You know she read the author’s she interviewed and she asked thoughtful questions, and could build up a rapport and bond with anyone. I’m still waiting for this Welsh legend to be given the remembrance she deserves.
So agree she was way better than Parkinson Mavis was very personable almost like talking with a friend. But have to admit I did get distracted by her legs lols Toni Morrison; a legendary writer author such a shame she’s gone a brilliant mind
Why and how did we allow such compassionate intellectualism to abandon our society through the sickly self-indulgence of the soap opera silliness of social media, cell phones, and technological loneliness and separation of social distancing? The great Toni Morrison illuminated what lies buried in our collective consciousness, cognitive dissociation and lonely despair. This great interviewer inspires her illumination and brings out the spirit of her ancestral essentialness. My God what are we witnessing, seeing, hearing and feeling here? Is it the love of humanity that we lost so long ago? Dear God is there a way it can come back to life again? Like Beloved? God bless your precious spirits Toni Morrison and Mavis Nicholson. You are indeed channeling God to us in this very thoughtful, insightful and uplifting conversation!
The sound from the voices of my favorite literal giants like Toni Morrison James Baldwin and Maya Angelou has always had a strange effect on me, whenever I hear them speak, I pause and listen, like a magnet drawn helplessly into whatever story or messages they are sharing....I become apart of their world for those ...moments it is love. I honor and give them the reverence they so deserve these Black special beings that walked among us continue to sleep in paradise with the Ancestors......ASE`
This is, hands down, my favorite interview of this amazing woman. As someone already said in one of the comments- it is so wonderful that the interviewer is so articulate and well versed in Morrison’s work. LOVELY. RIP my absolute most beloved and adored writer of all time!!!! 🦋
The interviewer's thoughful questions, wisdom, compassionate and clear readings of Morrison's work and her thoughtful questions made this interview perhaps the best of any writer I've ever seen. So refreshing. And when one comes to a writer as important as Toni Morrison, we owe you both a great debt. Thank you.
It's so enchanting to see this gallant lady with intricate fabric of thoughts and opinions , how wonderfully she sews vivid colors and shades of different characters.I regret that I started reading her books quite late in life but the insight and impression is going to stay forever.
She seems so ethereal, yet real, and so 'one' with herself. Prof. Morrison is wise beyond words and I can just listen to her for ours. I am so thankful she herself narrated some of her audiobooks.
Every time I listen to this lady speak it elevates my whole day. She is just so lovely--gracious, emotionally intelligent with perfect humility. Just a gorgeous soul.
OMG! They should have just hired Nicholson as Morrison's primary interviewer. I've seen some really terrible interviewers, who simply had no capacity to have a dialogue. I feel like the she had educated herself on the work and on Morrision.........but I like that she actually had a dialogue with Morrison as a writer, a woman and about her motivations.
2:18 'it's amazing how much time you have when you are unhappy' 🤔 4:10 'solitude is critical... and if that isn't enough you will.invent other company and that is fiction' 🤔 5:05 'the part that was factual but not true... more true' 👏 17:28 'stripped down, made lean' ❤
Oh me...Oh my, Ms. Morrison is a sheroe of mine since my first introduction in 1970 to 'The Bluest Eye' and my book shelf reflects all her writings with the most recent one, "The Source of Self-Regard". She is now an ancestor with a legacy of tremendous depth and 100 years from now people will be reading and studying her works. I'm all up in my feelings. Rest in peace, knowledge and love.
I’m loving these surfacing videos and clips! I’d been longing for these since I’d discovered her years ago. How I miss her so. I’m still stunned that she is not in this world anymore.
A beautiful interview which captures Ms Morrison's brilliance as a writer. Her intelligence, eloquence and her spiritual essence. A writer who leaves us a legacy to be forever proud of. A writer, the greatest of the C20th. Thank you.
@@jeromelj1010 Chimamanda is an embarrassment. Every time she opens her mouth, I cringe. She is not cut from the same cloth as Toni Morrison, I'm afraid. To see her fawning and mincing in the presence of Hilary Clinton made me feel ashamed for all Africans everywhere.
SULA Appropriately, Shadrack is the first major character to be introduced in the novel. He is Sula's ancestral presence - a representation of an ancestral spirit, a husband, a father, a provider dispensed by the gods to "always" be there for the displaced Sula. Theirs was a spiritual kinship - metaphorically, a marriage of traditional West African water spirit/priest to a water priestess, both oracles of a river god. Shadrack's divine nature results from his state of unconsciousness as a victim of shell-shock during World War I. In traditional West African culture when one had lain unconscious for many days, people believed that that person's spirit left the physical body and entered the ancestral world where he or she became an active participant. Physically surviving the state of unconsciousness bestowed no insanity upon the person - no matter how eccentric or erratic the behavior following the onset. On the contrary, unconsciousness bestowed a specialness and a spirituality, since the unconscious person had communed directly with the ancestral spirits.
Homage to you Ms. Toni, Goodnight...... Condolences to you son! Thank you for sharing your GOD given gift of wonderful, thought provoking stories. Your talents are etiched in our ❤/minds forever!!!!!!
1 Corinthians 3:19 New Living Translation 19 For the wisdom of this world is foolishness to God. As the Scriptures say, “He traps the wise in the snare of their own cleverness. 1 Peter 1:25 New Living Translation 25 But the word of the Lord remains forever.” And that word is the Good News that was preached to you. We all deserve hell.
I have never seen this interview and it was a pleasure to get a real glimpse into her process for "Beloved" and so many of the reasons behind the writing of the book. This is something I'll have to review again and again.
For the last week I’ve wallowed in documentaries about great American writers such as John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald (The Great Gatby), William Faulkner, Susan Sontag and a few others. This kind of feverish thirst comes upon me once or twice a year where I glorify the writer’s life and all that it entails. I am totally consumed and in a creative space that I relish. It wasn’t until this week that I began to look at the lives of Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin and Amiri Baraka (Leroi Jones) and suddenly I hear Toni Morrison passes away. There was something mystical about experiencing her death while I was in this creative space. I’ve always adored her stories and the videos documenting her writings. I told myself that I would meet her one day. When I heard of her death I was stunned. I felt a tremendous loss.
Can you believe this level of depth and intelligence is what was on Channel 4 three decades ago? Twenty minutes, brilliant precision and restraint in their answers, no-one talking over the other, complicated ideas about literature, society and the writing process. It is pretty shocking what the UK has become.
Toni Morrison is one of the most intelligent women I have ever heard speak. She is a beautiful example of a leader and a queen really. I could only hope to be able to understand these things with such depth and breadth as she does. Especially in her novel "Song of Solomon." She is truly an amazing woman and I wish I could have met her.
Profound! When I attempted to read toni Morrison's books when I was in my 20s, she was WAAAAAAY over my head. I had all of her books and gave them away. 😩 I hate i did that bc now at 45 I TOTALLY get her. She reminds me of my mother (RIP) and I'm so glad we have these gifts of her forever left behind...to school and give wisdom
Fascinating interview indeed! Shows the breadth and scope of Toni Morrison's mind as well as capacity! Riveting conversation that benefited both persons in many ways!
My god, what I would give to hear her speak again, or even to just know that she was still alive and thinking of what profound and true thing she was going to say next.