Showing posts with label Robin Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robin Williams. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2022

In Memoriam / Robin Williams

 

In Memoriam: Robin Williams

When asked what the perfect Robin Williams movie would be in his August 1986 cover interview, the actor told Interview, “Something with spirit, with a character who doesn’t drive people crazy.” At the time, Williams had only a few film credits under his belt. Nearly two decades later, it’s safe to say that he had more than a few perfect Robin Williams movies. Whether through his hilarious portrayal of a housekeeper in Mrs. Doubtfire, his role as the unorthodox John Keating in Dead Poets Society, or his voiceover of a manic genie in Aladdin, Williams truly came to life on the big screen, depicting memorable characters who, despite their madness, were always lovable and inspiring.

Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Popeye / Review by Pauline Kael


POPEYE 

(1980) 

Review by Pauline Kael


There are no forebears or influences that would help to explain Shelley Duvall’s acting; she doesn’t seem to owe anything to anyone. She’s an original who has her own limpid way of doing things—a simplicity that isn’t marred by conventional acting technique, but that by now she has adapted to a wide range of characters. In the new Robert Altman film, Popeye, from Jules Feififer’s screenplay, in which she plays Olive Oyl, she sings in a small, wavering voice, and she hits tones that are so flat yet so true that they are transcendently comic. Her dancing has the grave gentleness of the Laurel & Hardy soft-shoe numbers, though she doesn’t move anything like either of them. She’s Olive Oyl of the long neck and stringbean body and the clodhoppers, and at the same time she has a high-fashion beauty. The screwed-tight hair twisted into a cruller at the neck seems just what Olive needs to set off her smooth, rounded forehead. She curls her long legs around each other—entwining them in the rubber-legged positions of the cartoon figure—and it seems the most natural thing for her to do.

Olive lives in Sweethaven, a tumbledown seacoast Dogpatch, and she’s the local belle. When she’s teased about getting engaged to the domineering, wide-as-a-barn Captain Bluto, the most hated and feared man in town, she gets the desperate, trapped expression of a girl who knows that she has made a terrible mistake, and, trying to find a virtue in Bluto (who snorts like a bull and looks as if he’d be more comfortable on all fours), she answers, “He’s large.” And the plaintive defensiveness—the sense of hopelessness—she brings to those words is so pure that you may feel a catch in your throat while you’re smiling. When Popeye, the squinting sailor, searching the seven seas for the pappy who ditched him when he was an infant, arrives at Sweethaven, he moves into the boarding house run by the Oyl family. Olive is very uppity to Popeye and to everyone else; she holds her head high on her tube of a neck and sniffs like a duchess. “Persnickety” is the word for Olive, but there are delicate shades of stubbornness and confusion in her face, and sometimes a frightened look in her eyes. Shelley Duvall takes the funny-page drawing of Olive Oyl and breathes her own spirit in to it. Possibly she can do this so simply because she accepts herself as a cartoon to start with, and, working from that, goes way past it. So far past it that we begin to find chic in her soft, floppy white collars and her droopy, elongated skirts.

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Life Lessons from Robin Williams



Life Lessons from Robin Williams

Welcome to Life Lessons. This week, we revisit some highlights from our August 1986 interview with the late, great comedian Robin Williams, as told to Nancy Collins. Sit down, relax—you just might learn a thing or two. 

———

“Sometimes [comedy] is legalized insanity.”

———

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Robin Williams / Playboy Interview




    ROBIN WILLIAMS: PLAYBOY INTERVIEW 

    (1992)

    by Larry Grobel
    In many ways, Robin Williams is just a big kid. Watch him play with eight-year-old son Zachary. Williams is positioned in front of the laptop computer, joystick in hand, as planes fly at him on the screen. He pops them off with childlike enthusiasm. “This is great!” he says, racking up kills. “Spielberg loves these, too, you know.” Williams is just back from his day on the set of Hook, in which he plays, appropriately, Peter Pan, the boy who wouldn’t grow up. And what about Zachary, Williams’ son and playmate? He stands by quietly as dad downs more planes, patiently waiting his turn. In other ways, Williams has grown up quite nicely. The stand-up comedian with the quicksilver mind who became an overnight sensation in Mork & Mindy has matured into something of a rarity-a true genius in the world of stand-up comedy, as well as one of the country’s most respected dramatic actors. Many comics have had success in the movies, but few have enjoyed the esteem that Williams does (or the two Oscar nominations). Nor have many overcome the personal demons Williams faced early in stardom when drugs and alcohol threatened to destroy his career, if not his life. Now 40, married for a second time and the father of three children, Williams is at his peak. He appears in movies of substance, not mindless comedies, and he has created a family life in Northern California far from the temptations of the Hollywood fast lane. When Playboy first interviewed Williams in 1982, his career was at a crossroads. Mork & Mindy had nose-dived in the ratings and was canceled after a four-year run. His first movie, Popeye, had been a bomb, and his second, The World According to Garp, earned few rave reviews. But his stand-up comedy routines were legendary, racing from a sometimes simple premise-with mimicry, one-liners, characters and anything else he could think of-to cover an encyclopedia of subjects, leaving his audience breathless. The New York Times described them as having a “perfervid pace and wild, associative leaps,” and worried that his “improvisational method seemed tinged with madness.” Much has happened to Williams in the ten years since that first interview. After the death of acquaintance John Belushi, he stopped using drugs. His first marriage fell apart in a very public manner, and he’s still angry about the way the press covered his divorce and marriage to the woman who had been his son’s nanny; his father, a Detroit automobile industry executive, died. Despite the personal upheaval, his professional life started to jell. His stand-up routines became, in the words of The New York Times, “sharper and less frenetic.” His successful concerts, albums, video tapes and cable specials put him in the top rank of comedians. In 1986, he joined Whoopi Goldberg and Billy Crystal to found Comic Relief, a yearly benefit for the homeless that appears on HBO. So far, it has raised more than $18,000,000. He also makes appearances in support of literacy and is an advocate of women’s rights. But it was his development as an actor that surprised many. Not all of his film roles were memorable, especially at first, but as his list of credits began to build, so did his reputation. He followed Popeye and Garp with The Survivors (which also starred Walter Matthau), Moscow on the HudsonClub Paradise and Cadillac Man. His performance in Good Morning, Vietnam earned his first chance at an Academy Award; his second came with Dead Poets Society. He followed that by co-starring in Awakenings with Robert De Niro, and with a tasty, morbid cameo as a “defrocked” psychiatrist in Dead Again. His performance in The Fisher King has received excellent reviews. And, of course, he’s headlining one of the most anticipated Christmas films-Hook, in which he co-stars with Dustin Hoffman (who plays Hook), Julia Roberts (Tinkerbell), Maggie Smith (Wendy) and Bob Hoskins (the pirate Smee). Director Terry Gilliam has worked with Williams twice, most recently in The Fisher King and earlier in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, in which Williams appeared as a giant-headed man in the moon. “The thing with Robin is, he has the ability to go from manic to mad to tender and vulnerable,” says Gilliam, who was a founding member of Monty Python. “He’s the most unique mind on the planet. There’s nobody like him out there.” To catch up with one of our national treasures, we sent Contributing Editor Lawrence Grobel (whose previous interviews include Marlon Brando and Robert De Niro) to spend three weekends with the Pan Man. Grobel’s report: “Since Robin was smack in the middle of making Hook, I was aware he was giving up precious family time to do the interview. Yet, once we started talking, I knew it couldn’t be rushed. Williams is a stream-of-consciousness talker, and ideas bounce off him like atoms in a blender. Give him a topic-any topic-and he can do five minutes. “When he was on a roll, he would often lean toward the tape recorder to make sure nothing was garbled or lost. But he can also be quiet and serious, concerned about social issues and politics. And sometimes, when his pregnant wife, Marsha, would enter the room, he would simply become very loving, almost apologizing for spending this time away from her. “Throughout our time together, Williams was open and friendly, often more concerned about my welfare than he was about his own. When my car failed to start after one of our sessions, I called my wife to come get me and Robin volunteered himself, his publicist and his gardener to push the car out of the way until a tow truck arrived. The thought of these three men struggling with a car up a steep hill-and the ensuing chiropractic bills-worried me enough that I tried to start it one more time. This time it worked. ‘It’s OK. I yelled. I’m outa here.’ “‘Wait!’ Robin yelled. ‘You better call your wife.’ “How can you not like a guy who’s willing to risk his back pushing your car and then reminds you to call your wife.”
    Robin Williams
    * * *
    PLAYBOY: This is our second time with you. How did the first interview affect you?
    WILLIAMS: To tell you the truth. I can’t remember it.

    Monday, June 24, 2019

    CNN Larry King Live / Interview with Robin Williams (2007)




      CNN Larry King Live 

      Interview with Robin Williams 

      (2007)


      Aired July 3, 2007
      ROBIN WILLIAMS: OK, Larry, we’ve got — we’ve got a shot of you with Colin Powell. It’s a nice shot. OK. Do we have any shots of Larry’s colon?
      (LAUGHTER)
      WILLIAMS: Anything?
      KING: Tonight, a primetime exclusive with Robin Williams.
      (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) WILLIAMS: Good morning, Vietnam!
      UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (INAUDIBLE) Nixon (INAUDIBLE).
      Robin Williams
      Robin Williams
      WILLIAMS: Because she was a stunner. Oy. But you’re still going to help me, Jack. Coveting thy neighbor’s wife. That’s why god invented the cold shower. Show me company!
      (END VIDEO CLIP)
      KING: His remarkable career, the close friendship with the late Chris Reeve, his return to rehab after 20 years of sobriety. We’ll cover it all with the one and only Robin Williams. And then another exclusive with another Robin — Robin Quivers. How has she lasted 26 years as Howard Stern’s on air sidekick — longer than any woman in Howard’s life, except maybe his mother? And how she dropped 21 pounds in 21 days. Robin Williams, Robin Quivers, an exclusive hour next on LARRY KING LIVE.

      Robin Williams last appearance on Tonight Show with Johnny Carson

        robin williams toys
        Robin Williams

      Robin Williams last appearance on Tonight Show with Johnny Carson 

      [21th May 1992] 

      Transcript

      April 22nd, 2019

      Robin Williams appears on the last regular Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. This was the penultimate final Tonight Show with Carson, and the final show with guests.
      Robin was a once in a lifetime talent. This genius walks into a space and completely takes control with the most brilliant ad lib unscripted material ever. He totally commands the space with his genius.


      Robin Williams

      CARSON: Okay. Okay, we’re back. You know, in this business, there are comedians,there are comics, and once in a while – rarely – somebody rises above and supersedes that and becomes a comic persona unto themselves. I never cease to be amazed at the versatility and the wonderful work that Robin Williams does. Would you welcome him please? Robin Williams.
      WILLIAMS: I brought you a little something.

      Wednesday, October 5, 2016

      Robin Williams's best-loved gags

      Robin Williams
       Robin Williams's best-loved gags
      From the satirical to the political to the downright weird, here are some of the comedian's best one-liners
      Richard Vine
      Tuesday 12 August 2014 19.18 BST


      "Do you think God gets stoned? I think so … look at the platypus."
       "In England, if you commit a crime, the police don't have a gun and you don't have a gun. If you commit a crime, the police will say: 'Stop, or I'll say stop again.'"
       "If it's the Psychic Network, why do they need a phone number?"
       "People say satire is dead. It's not dead; it's alive and living in the White House."
       "Cocaine is God's way of saying that you're making too much money."
       "I want to thank my father … the man who, when I said I wanted to be an actor, he said: 'Wonderful, just have a backup profession like welding.' Thank you."
       "We had gay burglars the other night. They broke in and rearranged the furniture."
       "I suffer from severe dyslexia – I was the only kid on my block at Halloween to go trick or trout."
       "Cricket is basically baseball on Valium."
       "Politics: Poli, a Latin word meaning many; and tics meaning, bloodsucking creatures."
       "What's right is what's left if you do everything else wrong."
       "I wonder what chairs think about all day: 'Oh, here comes another asshole.'"
       "They call it freebasing. It's not free, it costs you your house! It should be called homebasing!"
       "Dubya doesn't speak while Cheney's drinking water. Check that shit out."
       "I walked into my son's room the other day, and he's got four screens going at the same time. He's watching a movie on one screen, playing a game on another, downloading something on this one, texting on that one, people say: 'He's got ADD.' Fuck that, he's multitasking."
       "Is it rude to Twitter during sex? To go 'omg, omg, wtf, zzz'? Is that rude?"
       "Death is nature's way of saying, 'Your table is ready.'"

      THE GUARDIAN



      Robin Williams / 'I was shameful, did stuff that caused disgust – that's hard to recover from'

      Robin Williams remembered / 'A remarkable performer, a brutal shock'



      Robin Williams remembered: 'A remarkable performer, a brutal shock'

      The news of the death of this mercurial performer has come as a shock – but his brilliance was always tinged with sadness

      Peter Bradshaw
      Tuesday 12 August 2014 11.53 BST



      Robin Williams was a superb, mercurial standup comic with a staggering talent for improv and verbal riffing, though his movie career finally evolved into an intriguing split – sugary sentimentality or an ambiguous, menacing darkness. Something similar happened with Steve Martin and Jerry Lewis. The “Mr Hyde” in Robin Williams’s movie persona was well known.

      Tuesday, October 4, 2016

      Robin Williams / The life of stand-up comedians

      RobinWilliams
      Poster by T.A.

      The life of stand-up comedians
      by Robin Williams

      It's a brutal field, man. They burn out. It takes its toll. Plus, the lifestyle—partying, drinking, drugs. If you're on the road, it's even more brutal. You gotta come back down to mellow your ass out, and then performing takes you back up. They flame out because it comes and goes. Suddenly they're hot, and then somebody else is hot. Sometimes they get very bitter. Sometimes they just give up. Sometimes they have a revival thing and they come back again. Sometimes they snap. The pressure kicks in. You become obsessed and then you lose that focus that you need.



      Robin Williams / 'I was shameful, did stuff that caused disgust – that's hard to recover from'



      Robin Williams / Dead Poets Society / Quote



      Robin Williams
      DEAD POETS SOCIETY
      Quote







      Robin Williams / 'I was shameful, did stuff that caused disgust – that's hard to recover from'



      The 10 best teachers


      Robin Williams in  Dead Poets Society


      The 10 best teachers


      School’s back in, so sharpen your pencils and study our list of eminent educators, from the inspirational to the irredeemable. No sniggering at the back

      Stuart Husband
      Sunday 6 September 2015 07.00 BST



      1 | Mr Keating

      One of the late Robin Williams’s most affecting and less mawkish studies in child-men (of which Patch Adams remains the acknowledged nadir), John Keating is the quintessential inspirational English teacher who shakes up his charges at a buttoned-up late-50s Ivy League-style academy by having them rip out the introductions to their poetry primers and clamber on their desks to “sing the body electric”, while he exhorts them to “seize the day boys, carpe diem, make your lives extraordinary”. “Middlebrow high-mindedness,” harrumphed Pauline Kael, but it left a generation of men unable to hear the words “O captain, my captain” without finding that they had, you know, something in their eye.

      Monday, October 3, 2016

      Susan Scheneider on Robin Williams / The terrorist inside my husband's brain

      Robin Williams

      The terrorist inside my husband's brain

      1. by Susan Schneider Williams, BFA
        1. Neurologyvol. 87 no. 13 1308-1311
      I am writing to share a story with you, specifically for you. My hope is that it will help you understand your patients along with their spouses and caregivers a little more. And as for the research you do, perhaps this will add a few more faces behind the why you do what you do. I am sure there are already so many.
      This is a personal story, sadly tragic and heartbreaking, but by sharing this information with you I know that you can help make a difference in the lives of others.

      Tuesday, November 3, 2015

      Robin Williams' widow / 'It was not depression' that killed him

      Robin Williams

      Robin Williams' widow: 'It was not depression' that killed him

      Susan Williams gives first interview since her husband’s death last year and reveals the actor had a debilitating brain disease called Lewy body dementia

      Nigel M Smith in Los Angeles
      Tuesday 3 November 2015 19.45 GMT



      When comedian Robin Williams hanged himself in his California home in August 2014, the news of his death was met with incomprehension around the world.
      The factors behind his suicide have been speculated upon endlessly as colleagues and friends of Williams came forward to allege that depression contributed to his severe mental state. But on Tuesday, his widow Susan set the record straight.
      “It was not depression that killed Robin,” Susan told People magazine in one of her first interviews since losing her husband. “Depression was one of let’s call it 50 symptoms, and it was a small one.” 

      Instead, she argued that it was a debilitating brain disease called diffuse Lewy body dementia or dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) that took hold of Williams, and probably led him to suicide.
      Frequently misdiagnosed, DLB is the second most common neurodegenerative dementia after Alzheimer’s and causes fluctuations in mental status, hallucinations and impairment of motor function.
      Susan told People that the disease started to take hold of the actor in the last year before his death, with the symptoms worsening in the months before he took his own life.
      In her first television interview, she told how the Oscar-winning actor was “just disintegrating” physically and mentally in the months before his death.
      Williams, 63, had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease three months before he died and had been showing symptoms including stiffness, slumping gait and confusion, she told ABC’s Good Morning America.
      But the progressive decline in his mental abilities had begun to affect him profoundly, his widow said. In one incident, a “miscalculation” with a door left him with a self-inflicted head wound, she said.
      During the interview with Good Morning America, her first on-camera appearance since his death, Susan said Williams was well aware he was losing his mind, and tried to keep it together until he hit a breaking point in his last month. “It was like the dam broke,” she recalled.
      “If Robin was lucky, he would’ve had maybe three years left,” Susan added. “And they would’ve been hard years.”
      It wasn’t until after his death that an autopsy confirmed he had the disease. Williams had been planning to undergo neurological testing the week before he killed himself.
      The actor had also struggled with addiction during his life, but Susan told Amy Robach of ABC News that the actor had been “completely clean and sober” in the eight years before his death. She noted that his chronic depression had returned along with paranoia.
      “I’ve spent this last year trying to find out what killed Robin,to understand... what we were in the trenches fighting and one of the doctors said: ‘Robin was very aware that he was losing his mind and there was nothing he could do about it’.”
      Last month, Susan reached a settlement with Williams’ three children from previous relationships, ending a bitter dispute over his estate and the dividing up of his personal belongings.
      Susan told Good Morning America that at no point during their time together did he talk about killing himself. Of her bond with her late husband, Susan tearfully said: “It’s the best love I ever dreamed of.”

      THE GUARDIAN



      Robin Williams / 'I was shameful, did stuff that caused disgust – that's hard to recover from'