COMING SOON!
0:25
Жыл бұрын
JLB - The Man Who Saw The Future
1:14:32
Wizz Jones - HAPPINESS WAS FREE
3:23
Wizz Jones - THE FIRST GIRL I LOVED
4:44
Пікірлер
@evansmith3589
@evansmith3589 20 сағат бұрын
Thank you for this !!
@user-cu2bj7bl5q
@user-cu2bj7bl5q 6 күн бұрын
This only addresses women from families of means.
@Timeline916
@Timeline916 6 күн бұрын
In my A I version off reality this is as good as as it gets
@fernandolazaro3276
@fernandolazaro3276 6 күн бұрын
Preciosa canción, plena de sensibilidad y melancolía
@Davyfb75
@Davyfb75 6 күн бұрын
I have a tv viewer since 1938 when I was 7 years old ,the programmes have just gone down hill. Ended up in the TV industry on transmision however.
@Catherine-ty8ss
@Catherine-ty8ss 9 күн бұрын
Women had to compete for their very identity. You were whom you married. Mrs so and so. You couldn't vote,drink,smoke,open bank account without a male signature. No credit except your husband's. Once married not to be working. Judged by how clean your house was, well behaved your children were and well tended flowers and garden were. ThankYou Father I was born in modern times!
@thomasgallipoli8376
@thomasgallipoli8376 9 күн бұрын
This is my favorite JT song ever. Thanks for sharing it with us
@EmmaCraib
@EmmaCraib 11 күн бұрын
Excellent biography that keeps you very interested, even if you thought you wouldn't be!
@flyingdutchwoman
@flyingdutchwoman 12 күн бұрын
don't you have to prove provenance?
@RoNSantiago-ot7vn
@RoNSantiago-ot7vn 15 күн бұрын
Mesmerizing duet from the legends 🎸🎶❤️👍
@mnblkjh6757
@mnblkjh6757 21 күн бұрын
like russia now days😂🤣👎☹️
@tanyaleef5138
@tanyaleef5138 26 күн бұрын
Thank you for posting what an inspirational documentary
@mumsow
@mumsow 27 күн бұрын
Love this 💕
@janettedewar6617
@janettedewar6617 27 күн бұрын
The tabletop is a little too small for dining, yes take your litter home lady
@veritas6335
@veritas6335 Ай бұрын
“…wasn’t meant to be happy”. ?? What an idiotic and ignorant thing to say.
@spudspuddy
@spudspuddy Ай бұрын
A real lady does not say doesn't.
@hiho59ish
@hiho59ish Ай бұрын
Does he call Mark ...Mike right at the end
@ElizaBlue-o1i
@ElizaBlue-o1i Ай бұрын
She certainly did, in her writing, 'make something complex and wonderful' of the predicament in which she found herself - that of the highly intelligent woman whose perception and insight outstrip that of most people around her. The only sane refuge for such a woman is in understanding herself and observing the world she finds herself in, questing its mysteries and depths. Wharton was a master of this in her writing, never more so than in 'The House of Mirth', for me.
@MsTemporaryMadness
@MsTemporaryMadness Ай бұрын
Does anyone here know where I can get these books in large print? Thx ❤
@MsTemporaryMadness
@MsTemporaryMadness Ай бұрын
Great documentary, thx ❤
@DannyHarris-vc4ct
@DannyHarris-vc4ct Ай бұрын
Wow history right there two great legends jamming together!
@jacky3580
@jacky3580 Ай бұрын
Her books were horrifying to a young girl! It’s a testament to her writing that I could be so moved!” A lady does not write”because if she does her thoughts and feelings would tilt the society.
@user-xu3wo1sf8b
@user-xu3wo1sf8b Ай бұрын
My ignorant opinion is exactly what is happening now. Get out of the farm and away from "barn yard," and the couple are childless...
@joansutton
@joansutton Ай бұрын
Edith Wharton, one of the greatest American authors! House of Mirth, Age of Innocence, Ethan Frome, just for starters. But I suggest "The Custom of the Country," which is not as well-known. It's wonderful, both funny and tragic. The main character is an awful woman named Undine Spragg. The first line: "Undine, how could you?" basically summarizes the theme of the whole book - how could she have done so many awful things, all for the sake of fame and fortune.
@elenalatici9568
@elenalatici9568 Ай бұрын
I was once dragged my mother and a friend of her's on a tour of the Newport "cottages." I can't recall now which house we were in when I'd finally had enough. We were being shown a linen "closet" nearly as big as my NYC apartment living room.. At the end of the lecture we were asked if we had any questions. No one spoke, so I raised my hand. "How many people died of black lung to build this "cottage"? My mother was appalled and made her opinion known to the whole group. I suspected at the time that there was at least one other woman in the group who'd thought of a similar question but hadn't dared to ask it. My mother had never read a nook by Edith Wharton, nor would she ever. She didn't know who Edith Wharton was.
@fabiengerard8142
@fabiengerard8142 Ай бұрын
🤗 One of my very favorite female authors, along with Pearl Buck, Patricia Highsmith, and Marguerite Yourcenar.
@gwae48
@gwae48 Ай бұрын
Wonderful !!! Great video 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@LEMANPRODUCTIONSARCHIVE
@LEMANPRODUCTIONSARCHIVE Ай бұрын
Many thanks
@junesmith6689
@junesmith6689 Ай бұрын
Ian Holmes Voice Marvellous 💕
@degalan2656
@degalan2656 Ай бұрын
Sometimes we just wish that life was about something… anything but these interpretations of what we might even half perceive to be truths… somebody save me….
@mauricepowers3804
@mauricepowers3804 Ай бұрын
Painful presentation......sooooooo many people talking!!!!!!!
@fatfrreddy1414
@fatfrreddy1414 Ай бұрын
Deeelightfull...
@charlesezrarevmongoosecane5097
@charlesezrarevmongoosecane5097 Ай бұрын
Beautiful
@margo3367
@margo3367 Ай бұрын
Walter Berry should have married her. It reminds me of Barbara Pym, who had a brief affair and a lifelong friendship with a man she met when she was going to college at Oxford. He didn’t marry Ms. Pym either, he married someone else, but he was at Barbara’s deathbed. Men oftentimes think they are settling when they court someone whose looks don’t quite come up to snuff. They think the grass is greener somewhere else and so pass up spending their life with a soulmate and opt for the ornament of a pretty wife.
@johnfaram4684
@johnfaram4684 Ай бұрын
real british music,unequalled
@Watkinsstudio
@Watkinsstudio Ай бұрын
Much ado about absolutely nothing.
@Blindarthur
@Blindarthur Ай бұрын
Lovely stuff Al!
@bigbearlogic6414
@bigbearlogic6414 Ай бұрын
Fire and Rain... James Taylor. From the 70s (BBC footage mentioned in an earlier) comment) and in the 1994, a live recording in Glasgow when he's older. Superb
@thomasceneri867
@thomasceneri867 Ай бұрын
I love her, but she’s too much! She says that her son was not really a hindrance to her 20:43 writing. Then she says that her parents took care of her son while she wrote and worked!
@rayva1
@rayva1 Ай бұрын
They’re singing a Christian song at 5:53 and they practice Greek life? Nah! This is a cult.
@johngjesdahl-xx2gb
@johngjesdahl-xx2gb Ай бұрын
What Baird saw , was , that to tackle a task, that is reproduce a whole picture for our eyes , an approach similar to calculus...break down the subject into small , miniscule parts , then find a way to reintegrate.
@johngjesdahl-xx2gb
@johngjesdahl-xx2gb 2 ай бұрын
Baird's Television was a threat , commercially, to radio in the 20's. Just as later Armstrong's FM was a threat to established AM.
@timsmith5754
@timsmith5754 2 ай бұрын
Best Restaurant in London by far.
@thepaulmacfarlane
@thepaulmacfarlane 2 ай бұрын
Ive crushed on Anne forever and wanted to be Bert
@R-11034
@R-11034 2 ай бұрын
No matter how many times I hear him I’m still mesmerised and in awe of the ease with which he can play. Sheer genius, and inspirational to so many guitarists and always will be. RIP Bert and thank you!
@Auntrainie
@Auntrainie 2 ай бұрын
I was just at The Mount last week. Beautiful estate.
@zyxw2000
@zyxw2000 Ай бұрын
Does Massachusetts own it now as a museum?
@steadfastandyx4947
@steadfastandyx4947 2 ай бұрын
Brilliant in Fearless. Another forgotten terrific film.
@colindavies5
@colindavies5 2 ай бұрын
Super. I remember Les Cousins, but a snip it of Bungies would make the video perfect. They all played there including of course Jackson C Franke. I had the pleasure of seeing and listening. Quite something.
@thefilmandmusic
@thefilmandmusic 3 ай бұрын
Great interview ..
@tanyaschimon3045
@tanyaschimon3045 3 ай бұрын
Bravo!!!♥️
@Enr227
@Enr227 3 ай бұрын
Interesting Muriel Spark and Doris Lessing in Rhodesia/Zimbabwe, both 1 child, both left for GB