User: garyxyz851 |
Gary Bond I am gonna fuck ur mom lastnight Tags: James bond gary scortinator fuck ur mom lastnight the names james |
User: mattman1981 |
The Late Show - Toilet Break - Pot Luck - Gary Bond Tony Martin introducing 'toilet break' on The Late Show. Gary Bond on Pot Luck... trying to get away from the city life. Triple M decided to use this footage as well for a commercial. Tags: Tony Martin Toilet Break Pot Luck The Late Show Gary Bond |
User: chrisrustage |
Gary Bond & Chris Rustage crap wheelies! Bondi and me playing on an industrial estate.. Tags: suzuki bandit wheelie honda cbr |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 1 of 11 link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F 'The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Alan Hay ... Lane Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) It was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. This production has never been commercially available for purchase in any media format. Oscar Wilde was famous as a dazzling personality and sparking conversationalist, but he wasn't described by his contemporaries as acting like one of his characters in his plays, tho. Max Beerbohm told S.N. Behrman: "Well, in the beginning he was the most enchanting company, don't you know. His conversation was so simple and natural and flowing--not at all epigrammatic, which would have been unbearable. He saved that for his plays, thank heaven." W.H. Auden writes (reviewing a collection of Wilde's letters): The post-prison letters are more interesting than the pre-prison. To begin with, Wilde is now a lonely man, without an audience of his social and intellectual equals, so he puts into his letters what in happier times he would have expressed in talk, and the reader gets glimpses of what his conversation must have been like: "I assure you that the type-writing machine, when played with expression, is not more annoying than the piano when played by a sister or a near relation. Indeed many, among those most devoted to domesticity, prefer it." "The sea and sky one opal, no horrid drawing-master's line between them, just one fishing boat, going slowly, and drawining the wind after it." "Cows are very fond of being photographed, and, unlike architecture, don't move." "The automobile was delightful, but, of course, it broke down: they, like all machines, are more wilful than animals--nervous, irritable, strange things: I am going to write an article on "nerves in the inorganic world." "....the Blessed St. Robert of Phillimore, Lover and Martyr--a saint known in 'Hagiographia' for his extraordinary power, not in resisting, but in supplying temptations to others. This he did in the solitude of great cities, to which he retired at the comparatively early age of eight." Tags: Oscar-Wilde Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde play performing arts |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 2 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde A 1985 TV broadcast featuring the formidable and hilarious Lady Bracknell by Dame Wendy Hiller. link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Alan Hay ... Lane Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) Richard Ross asked Wilde about 'Earnest' "What sort of play are we to expect?" the playwright answered: "It is exquisitely trivial, a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy." "Its philosophy?" "That we should treat all the trivial things of life seriously, and all the serious things of life with sincere and studied triviality." This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. Tags: Oscar-Wilde Wendy-Hiller Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde play Gabrielle-Drake |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 3 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde A 1985 TV broadcast featuring the formidable and hilarious Lady Bracknell by Dame Wendy Hiller. This segment includes her famous lines "Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone" and "A handbag?" Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Dame Wendy Hiller (Mrs. Ronald Gow) had a very distinguished stage career, and many fine television appearances. Despite much success in films, especially early on, she preferred the stage. Retired in 1992, she died at age 90 in 2003. A nice tribute to her here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VzJassu_7o Wendy Hiller is the only impersonator of this role who does not make me wish I was watching Dame Edith Evans. See Edith Evans do this very same scene here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oWBdIx9IQE link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. Tags: Oscar-Wilde Wendy-Hiller Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde play Gabrielle-Drake |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 4 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Alan Hay ... Lane Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Rosamund Greenwood ... Miss Prism Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. The actor (and manager) Geroge Alexander first presented this play with a one act curtain raiser by Langdon Mitchell. Wilde had submitted a four-act play, and was told to cut it down to three acts. He complied and most of the cutting involved folding the second and third acts into one--the second act as exits today. Wilde's son Vyvyan reconstructed the original 4-act version, (it survived in a German translation and from copies of Wilde's early drafts, where Lady Bracknell was then called Lady Brancaster). Some excellent stuff got cut! such as these exchanges: Jack: I would like, Miss Fairfax, to take advantage of Lady Brancaster's temporary absence. Gwendolen: Yes, Mr. Worthing, I would certainly advise you to do so. Jack: (A little taken aback.) Ahem!...I hope that what I am going to say to you will not be in any way a shock to you. Gwendolen: Oh! I am sure it won't. I have never been shocked in my life. I think to be shocked by anything shows a very low ethical standard. Nobody is ever shocked now-a-days except the clergy and the middle classes. It is the profession of the one and the punishment of the other. .................. Algernon: And what did Aunt Augusta say? Jack: Oh, she was positively violent. I never heard such language in the whole course of my life from anyone. She might just as well have been in a pulpit. I shouldn't be at all surprised if she took to philanthropy or something of the sort and abused her fellow creatures for the rest of her life. Tags: Oscar-Wilde Gary-Bond theatre play Gabrielle-Drake Jeremy-Clydeshort film |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 11 of 11 link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F A 1985 TV broadcast featuring the formidable and hilarious Lady Bracknell by Dame Wendy Hiller. Wendy Hiller ... Lady Bracknell Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Rosamund Greenwood ... Miss Prism Henry Moxon ... Rev Canon Chasuble Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) It was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. This is the only one of Oscar Wilde's plays free from melodrama and unconvincing moralizing. Wilde was deeply influenced by the works of Walter Pater, who wrote "the desire of beauty, the love of art for its own sake....For art comes to you, proposing frankly to give nothing but the highest quality to our moments as they pass." from "The Critic as Artist" by Oscar Wilde: "A little sincerity is a dangerous thing. All bad poetry springs from genuine feeling. To be natural is to be obvious, and to be obvious is to be inartistic." "There are two ways of disliking art. One is to dislike it. The other is to like it rationally." "All art is immoral." "Don't let us go to life for our fulfillment of our experience....It is through Art, and through Art only, that we can realize our perfection; through Art, and through Art only, that we can shield ourselves from the sordid perils of actual existence." "Life makes us pay too high a price for its wares, and we purchase the meanest of its secrets at a cost that is monstrous and infinite." Tags: Oscar-Wilde Wendy-Hiller Ann-Thornton Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde Gabrielle-Drake play theatre comedy wit |
User: shastatheragdoll |
Wake In Fright: Have a Drink, Mate A memorable scene from the sort-of lost Australian film 'Wake In Fright' ('Outback') (1971). Tags: Wake in Fright Outback Donald Pleasance Gary Bond Terry Kotcheff Beer have drink mate country pub alcoholic Chips Rafferty lost Australian Aussie 1971 |
User: foxter65 |
Anne Of The Thousand Days - Original Trailer 1969 Anne of the Thousand Days is the belated film adaptation of Maxwell Anderson's 1948 stage play. The story concentrates on the romance between Britain's King Henry VIII (Richard Burton) and his ill-fated second wife Anne Boleyn (Genevieve Bujold). After holding out for marriage rather than an illegitimate union, Anne marries Henry after he sheds himself of Katherine of Aragon -- causing a rift between the Crown and the Church in the process. Anne's inability to produce a male heir leads Henry to look about for other suitable mates. Henry's sinister right-hand man Cromwell (John Colicos) arranges for Anne to be condemned on a charge of adultery. She is beheaded, while Henry disconsolately sits in Windsor Castle, regretting this callous example of political expediency. Richard Burton is ideally cast in Anne of the Thousand Days, but it is Genevieve Bujold who delivers the best, most complex performance in the film. Richard Burton - Henry VIII Geneviève Bujold - Anne Boleyn Irene Papas - Katharine of Aragon Anthony Quayle - Cardinal Wolsey John Colicos - Thomas Cromwell Michael Hordern - Thomas Boleyn Katherine Blake - Elizabeth Boleyn Peter Jeffrey - Norfolk Joseph O'Conor - Fisher William Squire - Thomas More Valeiie Gearon - Mary Boleyn Vernon Dobtcheff - Mendoza Gary Bond - Mark Smeaton Terence Wilton - Lord Harry Percy Denis Quilley - Weston Esmond Knight - Kingston T.P. McKenna - Norris Michael Johnson - George Boleyn Marne Maitland - Compeggio Nora Swinburne - Lady Kingston June C. Ellis - Bess Cyril Luckham - Prior Houghton Brook Williams - Brereton Lesley Paterson - Jane Seymour Kynaston Reeves - Willoughby Amanda Jane Smythe - Baby Elizabeth Nicola Pagett - Princess Mary Kate Burton - Serving Maid Liza Todd Burton - Beggar Maid Elizabeth Taylor - Courtesan Tags: Anne Of The Thousand Days - Original Trailer |
User: foxter65 |
Zulu - Original Trailer 1964 Filmed on a grand scale, Zulu is a rousing recreation of the January 22, 1879, siege of Rorke's Drift in Natal, Africa. An army of 4,000 Zulu warriors have already decimated a huge British garrison; now they are on their way to the much smaller Rorke's Drift. A Royal Engineers officer (Stanley Baker) is determined to stand his ground, despite having only a skeleton garrison at his command. His steamroller tactics are constantly at odds with those of a by-the-book lieutenant (Michael Caine), who feels that a retreat is called for, but it becomes clear that if the garrison is to survive, they'd better pay heed. Jack Hawkins and Ulla Jacobsson are also on hand as an idealistic missionary and his somewhat more pragmatic daughter. Richard Burton provides the narration for Zulu, closing the film with the observation that 11 of the 1,344 Victoria Crosses awarded since 1856 were bestowed upon the survivors of Rorke's Drift. Zulu was followed in 1979 by a "prequel," Zulu Dawn. Stanley Baker - Lt. John Chard Jack Hawkins - Rev. Otto Witt Ulla Jacobsson - Margareta Witt James Booth - Pvt. Henry Hook Michael Caine - Lt. Gonville Bromhead Nigel Green - Color Sgt. Bourne Ivor Emmanuel - Pvt. Owen Paul Daneman - Sgt. Maxfield Glynn Edwards - Cpl. Allen Neil McCarthy - Pvt. Thomas Gary Bond - Pvt. Cole Tom Gerrard - Lance Corporal Patrick Magee - Surgeon Reynolds Richard Davies - Pvt. 593 Jones Dafydd Havard - Gunner Howarth Denys Graham - Pvt. 716 Jones Dickie Owen - Cpl. Schless Larry Taylor - Hughes Joe Powell - Sgt. Windridge John Sullivan - Stephenson Harvey Hall - Sick Man Gert Van Den Bergh - Adendorf Dennis Folbigge - Commissary Dalton Kerry Jordan - Company Cook Ronald Hill - Bugler Simon Sabela - Dance Leader Richard Burton - Narrator David Kerman - Pvt. Hitch Tags: Zulu - Original Trailer 1964 |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 5 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Rosamund Greenwood ... Miss Prism Henry Moxon ... Rev Canon Chasuble Sydney Arnold ... Merriman Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. On the opening night of this play the actor who created the role of Merriman recalled "My first speech, 'Mr. Ernest Worthing hs just driven over from the station. He has brought his luggage with him,' was recieved with the loudest and most sustained laugh that I have ever experienced, culminating in a round of applause; and as I came off Wilde said to me, 'I'm glad you got that laugh. It shows they have followed the plot.'" This tightly constructed and intricately crafted play is of the sort that some commentators dismissively call a "pièce bien faite", but Wilde's doesn't suffer from any obvious or contrived formula. He plotting in very logical and convincing, but much of it moves with surprises--an example of such is the one described above, utilizing a very minor character to move the plot along, thus artfully concealing the necessary plot movement with a suprise and laugh. The actor (and manager) Geroge Alexander first presented this play with a one act curtain raiser by Langdon Mitchell. Wilde had submitted a four-act play, and was told to cut it down to three acts. He complied and most of the cutting involved folding the second and third acts into one--the second act as exits today. Wilde's son Vyvyan reconstructed the original 4-act version, (it survived in a German translation and from copies of Wilde's early drafts). Some excellent stuff got cut! here's a bit: Chausuble: Reading Political Economy, Cecily? It is wonderful how girls are educated now-a-days. I suppose you know all about the relations between Capital and Labour. I wish I did. I am compelled, like most of my brother clergy, to treat scientific subjects from the point of view of sentiment. But that is more impressive I think. Accurate knowledge is out of place in a pulpit. It is secular. Tags: Oscar-Wilde Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde Ann-Thornton play theatre comedy wit performing arts |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 6 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Rosamund Greenwood ... Miss Prism Henry Moxon ... Rev Canon Chasuble Sydney Arnold ... Merriman Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. The actor (and manager) Geroge Alexander first presented this play with a one act curtain raiser by Langdon Mitchell. Wilde had submitted a four-act play, and was told to cut it down to three acts. He complied and most of the cutting involved folding the second and third acts into one--the second act as exits today. Wilde's son Vyvyan reconstructed the original 4-act version in 1957, (it survived in a German translation and from copies of Wilde's early drafts--and offered many more opportunities for the actors to eat on stage). Some excellent stuff got cut! here's a bit: Cecily: ....Miss Prism and I lunch at 2 off some roast mutton. Algernon: I fear that would be too rich for me. Cecily: Uncle Jack, whose health has been sadly undermined by the late hours you keep in town, has been ordered by his London doctor to have 'pâté-de-foie-gras' sandwiches and 1874 champagne at 12. I don't know if such invalid's fare would suit you. Algernon: You sure the champagne is '74? Cecily: Poor Uncle Jack has not been allowed to drink anything else for the last two years. Even the cheaper clarets are, he tells me, strictly forbidden to him. Tags: Oscar-Wilde Gary-Bond Ann-Thornton Jeremy-Clyde play theatre comedy wit performing arts |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 7 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. George Bernard Shaw reviewed this play after it opened in 1895. It was the only one of Wilde's plays he did not like. Even in his late age, in the 1950s (he was only 7 years younger than Wilde) and well after the play was established as a classic of excellence, he position remained unchanged. (from 1895) "I cannot say that I greatly cared for The Importance Of Being Earnest. It amused me, of course; but unless comedy touches me as well as amuses me, it leaves me with a sense of having wasted my evening." Wilde liked the early (and unsuccessful) plays of Bernard Shaw. Wilde wrote to Shaw: "I have read it ['Widowers' Houses'] twice with the keenest interest. I like your superb confidence in the dramatic value of the mere facts of life. I admire the horrible flesh and blood of your creatures, and your preface is a masterpiece--a real masterpiece of trenchant writing and caustic with and dramatic instinct." Tags: Oscar-Wilde Ann-Thornton Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde Gabrielle-Drake play theatre comedy wit performing arts |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 8 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Sydney Arnold ... Merriman Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. from Oscar Wilde's "The Decay of Lying": "If a man is sufficiently unimaginative to produce evidence in support of a lie, he might just as well speak the truth at once." "Lying, the telling of beautiful untrue things, is the proper aim of art." Tags: Oscar-Wilde Ann-Thornton Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde Gabrielle-Drake play theatre comedy wit |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 9 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde A 1985 TV broadcast featuring the formidable and hilarious Lady Bracknell by Dame Wendy Hiller. link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Sydney Arnold ... Merriman Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. from Oscar Wilde's "The Decay of Lying": "The aim of the liar is simply to charm, to delight, to give pleasure. He is the very basis of civilized society." "We are a degraded race and have sold our birthright for a mess of facts." "No great artist ever sees things asa they really are. If he did, he would cease to be an artist." Tags: Oscar-Wilde Wendy-Hiller Ann-Thornton Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde Gabrielle-Drake play theatre comedy wit |
User: ShakespeareAndMore |
The Importance Of Being Earnest (Wendy Hiller) part 10 of 11 "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde A 1985 TV broadcast featuring the formidable and hilarious Lady Bracknell by Dame Wendy Hiller. link below to playlist of all 11 parts of this "The Importance Of Being Earnest": http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=749CF199F94D9B7F Jeremy Clyde ... Algernon Moncrieff Ann Thornton ... Cecily Cardew Gabrielle Drake ... Gwendolen Fairfax Sydney Arnold ... Merriman Gary Bond ... John Worthing, JP Rosamund Greenwood ... Miss Prism Henry Moxon ... Rev Canon Chasuble Directed by Michael Attenborough (stage) and Michael Lindsay-Hogg (TV) This production was broadcasted on US television in 1985 (when I recorded in on this VHS tape), and that is the date given in several references, but it was originally produced in 1981. The actor (and manager) Geroge Alexander first presented this play with a one act curtain raiser by Langdon Mitchell. Wilde had submitted a four-act play, and was told to cut it down to three acts. He complied and most of the cutting involved folding the second and third acts into one--the second act as exits today. Wilde's son Vyvyan reconstructed the original 4-act version in 1957, (it survived in a German translation and from copies of Wilde's early drafts--and offered many more opportunities for the actors to eat on stage). Some excellent stuff got cut! here's a bit: Jack: Believe me, dear Cecily, I am acting for the best. Cecily: People always say that when they do thier worst. Jack: Child! Who taught you such a pessimistic idea? Cecily: No one; if I had been taught it, I wouldn't believe it. Tags: Oscar-Wilde Wendy-Hiller Ann-Thornton Gary-Bond Jeremy-Clyde Gabrielle-Drake play theatre comedy wit short film |
User: ultraman2065 |
geico bond gunbarrel jake make a gary bond! *read this jake and others* geico died for an inpaction this is a tribute of my gecko T_T Tags: geico dies garygecko12 james bond mirka the showbiz dachshund |