All language subtitles for The.Capote.Tapes.2019.720p.WEBRip.x264.AAC-[YTS.MX]

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese Download
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:00:45,355 --> 00:00:47,357 Well it's so nice to hear your voice. 4 00:00:47,392 --> 00:00:48,910 I'll tell you what I'm doing; you know I'm doing this 5 00:00:48,945 --> 00:00:51,913 huge history of good old Truman Capote? 6 00:00:51,948 --> 00:00:53,812 Yes? 7 00:00:53,846 --> 00:00:57,367 And the people that he knew and who talk about him either pro or con 8 00:00:57,402 --> 00:01:00,129 they all seem to have their Truman stories. 9 00:01:00,163 --> 00:01:01,889 Yes? 10 00:01:01,923 --> 00:01:03,235 And I was wondering if you could gather up some of your memories? 11 00:01:04,616 --> 00:01:07,377 And one of the most seductive people I ever met. 12 00:01:07,412 --> 00:01:09,759 I thought he was a freak, absolute freak. 13 00:01:09,793 --> 00:01:12,727 One of the most lionized writers since Voltaire. 14 00:01:12,762 --> 00:01:14,281 It's a sleazy bit of work. 15 00:01:14,315 --> 00:01:16,110 Oh he was wicked. He was fun. 16 00:01:16,145 --> 00:01:18,250 He was totally made out of drugs. 17 00:01:18,285 --> 00:01:20,252 It would feel like a candied tarantula. 18 00:01:20,287 --> 00:01:22,599 It was still the naughty little kid in Truman. 19 00:01:22,634 --> 00:01:24,187 I haven't had a good laugh since he died. 20 00:01:27,777 --> 00:01:29,468 Do you think he's the writer of the moment? 21 00:01:29,503 --> 00:01:32,195 Do you think Truman's going to be read by generations? 22 00:01:40,272 --> 00:01:44,863 I'm Kate Harrington and I live in Sheridan, Wyoming. 23 00:01:48,384 --> 00:01:52,905 When I was 13 years old I was basically adopted by Truman. 24 00:01:55,287 --> 00:01:58,256 I met Truman in my mother's living room. 25 00:02:00,499 --> 00:02:04,848 And Truman was invited by my father to come have dinner. 26 00:02:04,883 --> 00:02:07,334 And he came in this big limousine 27 00:02:07,368 --> 00:02:11,234 out to our little neighbourhood, about an hour outside of Manhattan. 28 00:02:13,029 --> 00:02:15,583 And of course all the kids came to look at the limousine. 29 00:02:15,618 --> 00:02:18,517 I'd never met anybody who spoke like he did. 30 00:02:18,552 --> 00:02:21,900 Um, and at first I had to run into the kitchen 31 00:02:21,934 --> 00:02:27,181 and take a tea towel, and cover my face 'cause I laughed about his - the sound of his voice. 32 00:02:27,216 --> 00:02:29,390 And then my mother reprimanded me hardly. 33 00:02:30,598 --> 00:02:32,566 After that my father came home one day and said 34 00:02:32,600 --> 00:02:35,431 I'm going to become his manager. 35 00:02:36,294 --> 00:02:38,192 So we said oh that's great. 36 00:02:39,435 --> 00:02:41,299 Wonderful, so we didn't think anything of it, 37 00:02:42,334 --> 00:02:43,784 but he and my father became lovers. 38 00:02:45,268 --> 00:02:48,547 They had an on and off relationship, very tumultuous. 39 00:02:48,582 --> 00:02:51,861 My father had a lot of problems. He was an alcoholic. 40 00:02:53,311 --> 00:02:56,176 When my dad left he left us with no money. 41 00:02:57,832 --> 00:03:02,561 Truman's number was up by the telephone, and so I called him and said 42 00:03:02,596 --> 00:03:06,738 do any of your friends need a helper this summer? I need to get a job. 43 00:03:06,772 --> 00:03:08,947 Truman treated me like an adult 44 00:03:08,981 --> 00:03:13,054 and just said OK, well why don't you come into New York 45 00:03:13,089 --> 00:03:15,367 and we'll have lunch and discuss it? 46 00:03:18,888 --> 00:03:22,340 So I took money out of the cookie jar, played hooky, 47 00:03:22,374 --> 00:03:25,929 got on the Long Island Railroad and went into New York. 48 00:03:30,520 --> 00:03:32,591 Truman told me how to do it because I was so young. 49 00:03:33,765 --> 00:03:37,217 I gave the paper with the address to the taxi 50 00:03:39,391 --> 00:03:41,945 and I went there to have lunch with him. 51 00:03:45,742 --> 00:03:50,368 He said the only thing you can do at your age to make a good bit of money is model. 52 00:03:50,402 --> 00:03:54,268 I thought that was a crazy idea because I had never thought of myself in that way. 53 00:03:55,580 --> 00:03:59,377 He took me to Richard Avedon Studio 54 00:04:01,724 --> 00:04:06,004 and just slowly, slowly, slowly my whole world began to change. 55 00:04:07,523 --> 00:04:11,699 'Cause he opened up the doors of literature, dance, 56 00:04:11,734 --> 00:04:14,392 art, music, fashion. 57 00:04:15,634 --> 00:04:18,534 And meeting all kinds of accomplished people. 58 00:04:22,848 --> 00:04:26,438 He always said he was writing a wonderful book about them. 59 00:04:27,543 --> 00:04:30,649 Um, I used to get bored at the lunches 60 00:04:30,684 --> 00:04:34,619 and so he told me once on the way there that what I should do 61 00:04:34,653 --> 00:04:39,382 is sit in the booth and listen to the conversation of the people next to us. 62 00:04:41,039 --> 00:04:44,870 And on the way home I could tell him everything they talked about. 63 00:04:44,905 --> 00:04:46,872 It was sort of fun for him. 64 00:04:48,080 --> 00:04:49,944 And ever since then when I go to restaurants 65 00:04:49,979 --> 00:04:52,050 I kind of do that out of habit. 66 00:04:52,982 --> 00:04:54,328 And I would write in my journal. 67 00:04:56,192 --> 00:05:00,610 Tell me are you a real writer? It depends on what you mean by real. 68 00:05:00,645 --> 00:05:05,028 Well darling, does anyone buy what you write? 69 00:05:05,650 --> 00:05:06,961 Not yet. 70 00:05:08,135 --> 00:05:11,690 I'm going to help you she said. I can too. 71 00:05:11,725 --> 00:05:14,383 Think of all the people I know who know people. 72 00:05:16,177 --> 00:05:20,630 Fix me a drink darling, then you can read me a story yourself. 73 00:05:24,910 --> 00:05:29,708 In America there is only one social class 74 00:05:30,847 --> 00:05:32,987 that really matters in a cultural sense. 75 00:05:34,437 --> 00:05:37,682 And that is the quote "high society of New York." 76 00:05:40,857 --> 00:05:42,583 I mean you can be the richest 77 00:05:42,618 --> 00:05:45,068 and most famous person in Boise, Idaho and it doesn't matter. 78 00:05:46,518 --> 00:05:49,625 Unless you're famous in New York you're not famous. 79 00:05:51,799 --> 00:05:53,836 These people took him up. 80 00:05:55,044 --> 00:05:57,115 Truman saw everything and he remembered it. 81 00:05:58,668 --> 00:06:01,153 Sooner or later he was going to put it down on paper. 82 00:06:03,846 --> 00:06:07,919 An assortment of celebrated people pay $50 to sip the bubbly 83 00:06:07,953 --> 00:06:10,162 and exchanged small talk. 84 00:06:10,197 --> 00:06:14,512 Mr. Capote was on hand for a benefit preview of his newest offering. 85 00:06:14,546 --> 00:06:18,826 You're a part of the in-crowd. You're also referred to as the beautiful people, 86 00:06:18,861 --> 00:06:20,552 do you know what that phrase means? 87 00:06:22,830 --> 00:06:25,143 I don't think that any such thing really exists. 88 00:06:26,455 --> 00:06:28,146 It doesn't mean anything. Does it to you? 89 00:06:29,596 --> 00:06:30,838 I don't know what it means. 90 00:06:30,873 --> 00:06:31,667 Well I don't know then. 91 00:06:31,701 --> 00:06:32,668 Maybe you could tell me. 92 00:06:34,497 --> 00:06:36,119 Thank you. 93 00:06:38,294 --> 00:06:41,504 Truman started his day getting a cup of coffee 94 00:06:41,539 --> 00:06:44,024 and sitting, and talking to gossip columnists. 95 00:06:45,819 --> 00:06:49,926 He'd trade all the gossip and they would discuss all the happenings, 96 00:06:49,961 --> 00:06:53,585 secrets and you know I'd hear him laughing hysterically 97 00:06:53,620 --> 00:06:56,208 that kind of hilarious, guttural laugh. 98 00:07:00,799 --> 00:07:02,145 Oh well that wasn't in the thing... 99 00:07:30,346 --> 00:07:35,489 He was a fantastic gossip. He knew everything. So you could sit next to 100 00:07:35,524 --> 00:07:37,595 Truman it was just a dream come true 101 00:07:37,629 --> 00:07:41,046 because he would just you know? 102 00:07:41,081 --> 00:07:42,772 Just spill it all out. 103 00:07:45,603 --> 00:07:47,501 So you would just eat it up. 104 00:07:49,158 --> 00:07:52,161 And thank god he he never thought he wanted to write about me 105 00:07:53,265 --> 00:07:56,096 'cause God knows what I told him. 106 00:07:57,373 --> 00:07:59,962 And he was bitchy, but he was smart. 107 00:07:59,996 --> 00:08:00,928 I really mean this. 108 00:08:00,963 --> 00:08:02,723 Yeah? 109 00:08:02,758 --> 00:08:06,520 That the less intelligent the performer is the better he is. 110 00:08:06,555 --> 00:08:13,527 For instance Marlon Brando is an absolutely marvellous actor, 111 00:08:13,562 --> 00:08:15,805 but he's so dumb it makes your skin crawl. 112 00:08:19,153 --> 00:08:21,880 He'd encourage you to come up with stories 113 00:08:21,915 --> 00:08:26,298 which he would then make much more Trumanesque and-and bizarre, 114 00:08:27,852 --> 00:08:31,269 and conversations with him were-were-were enormous fun 115 00:08:31,303 --> 00:08:34,997 and had very little to do with the truth. 116 00:08:36,895 --> 00:08:41,210 I can't remember exactly when I first met Truman because he was everywhere. 117 00:08:41,244 --> 00:08:44,662 Any sort of big party you went to in New York I mean there was Truman. 118 00:08:45,904 --> 00:08:49,114 You think you could cut that scene out? 119 00:08:50,909 --> 00:08:53,705 New York for many of us is the ultimate destination. 120 00:08:55,604 --> 00:08:59,331 The biggest stage that there is. In New York nobody cares where you came from. 121 00:09:00,954 --> 00:09:04,716 Nobody cares you know really even where you went to school 122 00:09:04,751 --> 00:09:08,237 or who your parents are. They just want to know you know how entertaining you are. 123 00:09:10,860 --> 00:09:13,138 What are you doing tonight? 124 00:09:15,900 --> 00:09:20,318 Call it New York call it whatever you like. The name hardly matters. 125 00:09:21,802 --> 00:09:24,080 Entering from the great reality of elsewhere 126 00:09:24,115 --> 00:09:26,117 one is only in search of a city. 127 00:09:26,151 --> 00:09:29,085 A place to lose or discover one's self. 128 00:09:29,120 --> 00:09:33,262 To make a dream wherein you prove you're not an ugly duckling, 129 00:09:33,296 --> 00:09:35,885 but wonderful and worthy of love. 130 00:09:37,680 --> 00:09:39,233 As you thought sitting on a stoop, 131 00:09:39,268 --> 00:09:40,959 planning your search for a city. 132 00:10:05,018 --> 00:10:05,708 Why? 133 00:10:59,279 --> 00:11:01,005 His first book at the age of 23 he was - 134 00:11:01,039 --> 00:11:03,801 it was you know a beautiful little coming of age novel 135 00:11:03,835 --> 00:11:06,389 set against a rural background. 136 00:11:07,183 --> 00:11:09,427 A small southern town. 137 00:11:11,153 --> 00:11:15,157 I think somebody - one reviewer called it the Fairy Huck Finn. 138 00:11:18,539 --> 00:11:21,094 Just about as explicit as you could be back then I guess in a book review. 139 00:11:52,573 --> 00:11:56,198 Radclif eyed the boy over the rim of his beer glass. 140 00:11:56,232 --> 00:11:59,166 He had his notions of what a real boy should look like. 141 00:11:59,201 --> 00:12:04,378 And this kid offended them. He was too pretty, too delicate and fair-skinned. 142 00:12:04,413 --> 00:12:08,003 Each of his features was shaped with a sensitive accuracy. 143 00:12:10,488 --> 00:12:13,491 A girlish tenderness softened his eyes which were brown and very large. 144 00:12:15,079 --> 00:12:18,910 His hair cut short was streaked with pure yellow strands. 145 00:12:36,617 --> 00:12:38,619 Well he was rather a spectacle wasn't he? 146 00:12:38,654 --> 00:12:41,761 Nothing ever like him on the American scene really. 147 00:12:44,142 --> 00:12:49,147 I mean a very astonishing figure. Did you invite him to your house often? 148 00:12:54,877 --> 00:12:57,155 For many years George's parties 149 00:12:57,190 --> 00:12:58,881 were the literary centre of New York City. 150 00:13:01,021 --> 00:13:05,439 George had given me my break and he was taking me around and introducing me to everybody. 151 00:13:05,474 --> 00:13:10,790 And of course inevitably I got to Truman who was very friendly shall we say? 152 00:13:12,688 --> 00:13:16,968 There was a little bit of groping involved, but he was easily fended off you know, 153 00:13:17,003 --> 00:13:19,799 he was playing the aging queen. 154 00:13:21,455 --> 00:13:23,354 You know early success is a bit of a curse. 155 00:13:24,562 --> 00:13:28,393 You can get locked into an image, a persona 156 00:13:28,428 --> 00:13:34,537 which is based on the public's first glimpse of you. 157 00:13:34,572 --> 00:13:39,819 In my case it was the coke-snorting. Night clubbing protagonist of my first novel. 158 00:13:41,096 --> 00:13:45,065 In his case this effete, elfin little southern boy. 159 00:13:46,446 --> 00:13:48,344 We lived a block away from one another. 160 00:15:45,358 --> 00:15:47,670 Every gay life in those years took courage. 161 00:15:49,189 --> 00:15:52,675 So much self-invention, so much care, so much work. 162 00:15:53,607 --> 00:15:56,334 So much looking in the mirror 163 00:15:56,369 --> 00:16:00,407 thinking who in the name of God is this that I'm looking at? 164 00:16:00,442 --> 00:16:01,788 Or everyone did 165 00:16:01,822 --> 00:16:05,516 and I think that fed him, and nourished him as a writer. 166 00:16:07,414 --> 00:16:10,521 It wasn't as though he was seeing himself in television, or in the movies, 167 00:16:10,555 --> 00:16:13,006 or represented in any other way. 168 00:16:13,041 --> 00:16:15,319 There was no one in the mirror when he looked. 169 00:16:15,353 --> 00:16:18,736 So then he could represent himself in an entirely new way 170 00:16:18,770 --> 00:16:21,532 with full honesty, full disclosure. 171 00:16:21,566 --> 00:16:23,844 Well this is who I am. I am your local gay. 172 00:16:23,879 --> 00:16:27,124 There has to be one, and I am he. 173 00:16:36,857 --> 00:16:39,136 He swished the lavender curtains apart. 174 00:16:40,723 --> 00:16:43,485 Joel's image floated on the looking glass. 175 00:16:44,865 --> 00:16:48,041 His formless reflected face was wide lit 176 00:16:49,215 --> 00:16:53,012 as if it were a heat-softened wax effigy. 177 00:18:04,290 --> 00:18:07,845 It was a strong feeling you know with I don't know 178 00:18:07,879 --> 00:18:13,195 the sort of book crowd that Truman wasn't entirely serious perhaps. 179 00:18:20,651 --> 00:18:24,724 There was a sharp divide between high culture and low culture. 180 00:18:24,758 --> 00:18:27,140 And yet Truman kind of straddled that border. 181 00:18:31,834 --> 00:18:34,630 Would you like me to read a scene from Breakfast at Tiffany's? 182 00:18:36,805 --> 00:18:39,808 Most people say him as the author of Breakfast at Tiffany's. 183 00:18:39,842 --> 00:18:43,432 "I've got the most terrifying man downstairs" 184 00:18:43,467 --> 00:18:46,435 she said stepping off the fire escape into the room. 185 00:18:46,470 --> 00:18:48,679 "I mean he's sweet, but he isn't drunk, but let him start 186 00:18:48,713 --> 00:18:52,441 lapping up the vino and oh God quel beast! 187 00:18:52,476 --> 00:18:55,893 If there's one thing I loathe it's men who bite." 188 00:18:57,274 --> 00:18:59,897 She loosened a grey flannel robe off her shoulder 189 00:18:59,931 --> 00:19:02,486 to show me evidence of what happens if a man bites. 190 00:19:37,383 --> 00:19:39,212 We all think of Audrey Hepburn now 191 00:19:39,247 --> 00:19:42,250 and of course you read the book and it's completely different. 192 00:19:42,284 --> 00:19:46,702 She's a barely legal teenager from Appalachia or something 193 00:19:48,048 --> 00:19:53,537 and quite openly a prostitute. Makes no bones about it. 194 00:19:55,297 --> 00:20:02,235 And is a strange combination of manipulative and used by the world. 195 00:20:04,375 --> 00:20:08,586 The book is a lot grittier. There's much less of a facade of glamour. 196 00:20:09,863 --> 00:20:11,969 Of course it doesn't have the love story. 197 00:20:14,558 --> 00:20:18,941 What do you think? This ought to be the right kind of place for a tough guy like you. 198 00:20:18,976 --> 00:20:20,805 Garbage cans, rats galore. 199 00:20:21,599 --> 00:20:23,981 Scram! I said take off! 200 00:20:26,708 --> 00:20:27,536 Oh yeah? 201 00:20:41,101 --> 00:20:45,623 Audrey Hepburn as Holly Golightly searching for love in the big town. 202 00:21:25,732 --> 00:21:29,322 I think there's a lot of Truman's own mother in Holly Golightly. 203 00:21:29,357 --> 00:21:32,360 Truman's mother was like Holly from a small southern town. 204 00:21:33,395 --> 00:21:36,087 She was also a bit of a courtesan. 205 00:22:13,573 --> 00:22:17,370 Truman's childhood was in some ways heart-breaking. 206 00:22:17,405 --> 00:22:20,477 His mother abandoned him and left him in rural Alabama, 207 00:22:21,719 --> 00:22:24,757 and he got to stay with these couple of aunts 208 00:22:24,791 --> 00:22:28,933 and he - his cousin was his dear friend who he called Sook. 209 00:22:30,176 --> 00:22:33,110 She probably had some developmental problems. 210 00:22:34,525 --> 00:22:36,976 So she saved him. 211 00:22:38,771 --> 00:22:41,912 Spoons spin around in bowls of butter and sugar. 212 00:22:43,465 --> 00:22:46,641 Melting, nose-tingling odours saturate the kitchen 213 00:22:46,675 --> 00:22:49,920 and drift out into the world on puffs of chimney smoke. 214 00:22:54,614 --> 00:22:56,444 We are cousins, 215 00:22:56,478 --> 00:22:59,032 and have lived together as long as I can remember. 216 00:22:59,826 --> 00:23:01,759 We are shy with everyone. 217 00:23:03,174 --> 00:23:06,419 Other people inhabit the house and frequently make us cry. 218 00:23:07,731 --> 00:23:10,181 We are not too much aware of them. 219 00:23:16,533 --> 00:23:19,121 All of those relationships are distant. 220 00:23:19,156 --> 00:23:20,709 He's brought up in this household 221 00:23:22,124 --> 00:23:24,575 where there's no possibility of either mother or father. 222 00:23:25,749 --> 00:23:28,993 Orphanhood, in other words he was brought up 223 00:23:29,028 --> 00:23:31,099 by the same people who'd brought his mother up. 224 00:23:31,996 --> 00:23:34,516 And so I mean you just imagine 225 00:23:34,551 --> 00:23:40,626 that you know that it's the second generation of people who come from broken marriages. 226 00:23:40,660 --> 00:23:44,181 He said to me once how do you think I felt living there? 227 00:23:45,009 --> 00:23:46,666 I'm little but I'm old. 228 00:23:46,701 --> 00:23:49,911 He said here's this little gay, sawed off man. 229 00:23:49,945 --> 00:23:54,156 I guess 'cause he means he was so short. He said it was dreadful. 230 00:23:54,191 --> 00:23:57,159 Come on. 231 00:23:59,334 --> 00:24:02,786 Truman shared a childhood with his aunts, and with his buddy Harper Lee 232 00:24:04,719 --> 00:24:08,757 in the small southern town which was later immortalised not only by Truman, 233 00:24:08,792 --> 00:24:11,450 but also by Harper Lee in To Kill a Mockingbird. 234 00:24:12,796 --> 00:24:14,487 Harper Lee was someone who he loved. 235 00:24:16,282 --> 00:24:20,286 In To Kill a Mockingbird he's that little, annoying boy who lives next door. 236 00:24:20,320 --> 00:24:23,185 Good morning. My you're up mighty bright and early. 237 00:24:24,117 --> 00:24:25,843 Well I've been up since 4:00. 238 00:24:25,878 --> 00:24:26,465 4:00? 239 00:24:27,742 --> 00:24:30,158 Oh yes, I always get up at 4:00. It's in my blood. 240 00:24:31,608 --> 00:24:34,990 You see my daddy was a railroad man till he got rich. 241 00:24:35,025 --> 00:24:37,268 Now he flies airplanes. 242 00:24:37,303 --> 00:24:40,340 One of these days he's just going to swoop down here at Maycomb, 243 00:24:40,375 --> 00:24:41,997 pick me up and take me for a ride. 244 00:24:44,552 --> 00:24:46,243 I mean people kept letters from him. 245 00:24:47,727 --> 00:24:49,798 There are two early letters both of which I love. 246 00:24:49,833 --> 00:24:51,835 One to the novelist Thomas Flannigan 247 00:24:51,869 --> 00:24:54,354 who is a schoolmate and just a letter saying 248 00:24:54,389 --> 00:24:58,911 all the lies I have been spreading about Thomas Flannigan are untrue. 249 00:24:58,945 --> 00:25:01,292 I promise never to say anything about him to anyone again. 250 00:25:01,327 --> 00:25:04,157 In other words that already aged 10, 11, 12 251 00:25:04,192 --> 00:25:07,540 he was known as someone who made things up and caused trouble. 252 00:25:07,575 --> 00:25:09,749 And he also was known as someone 253 00:25:09,784 --> 00:25:12,234 who could switch identities and wanted to do so. 254 00:25:12,269 --> 00:25:14,616 And the other is to his father. 255 00:25:14,651 --> 00:25:18,344 As you know my name was changed from Persons to Capote, and I would appreciate 256 00:25:18,378 --> 00:25:21,554 that in the future you would address me as Truman Capote. 257 00:25:21,589 --> 00:25:24,005 As everyone knows me by that name. 258 00:25:24,039 --> 00:25:26,145 Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's. 259 00:25:27,733 --> 00:25:28,975 Truman's mother went to New York. 260 00:25:29,010 --> 00:25:31,322 Won't you join me? 261 00:25:31,357 --> 00:25:35,326 She was very pretty and she finally captured a rich man, Joe Capote. 262 00:25:37,190 --> 00:25:38,813 I'd marry you for your money in a minute. 263 00:25:39,814 --> 00:25:40,884 Would you marry me for my money? 264 00:25:41,781 --> 00:25:42,817 In a minute. 265 00:25:44,439 --> 00:25:46,924 Truman's mother asked Truman when he was in his teens 266 00:25:46,959 --> 00:25:50,894 to come live with Joe Capote and her. And Joe adopted him. 267 00:25:52,447 --> 00:25:55,139 Truman's mother was someone who wanted to 268 00:25:55,174 --> 00:25:57,107 achieve success in the city, and in fact did. 269 00:25:59,109 --> 00:26:03,631 She actually lived on Park Avenue for a while and made a splash as a hostess. 270 00:26:23,443 --> 00:26:25,929 Later in his life in the 50s 271 00:26:25,963 --> 00:26:31,279 Nina had a very sad end where she killed herself. 272 00:26:31,313 --> 00:26:35,801 So - and Truman always said that, that was the thing that he drank over. 273 00:26:37,354 --> 00:26:41,289 He would say to me I watched my mother die in my arms. 274 00:26:42,773 --> 00:26:45,914 I don't know if that's true, but I - that's what he said. 275 00:26:45,949 --> 00:26:48,365 I mean Truman used to always say 276 00:26:48,399 --> 00:26:50,885 don't let the truth get in the way of a good story. 277 00:26:52,921 --> 00:26:55,406 His mother did not accept him. 278 00:26:56,822 --> 00:26:59,687 Despite his celebrity, despite his brilliance 279 00:27:02,517 --> 00:27:06,210 was never happy about his sexuality. 280 00:27:10,490 --> 00:27:13,252 But to have a parent commit suicide, 281 00:27:13,286 --> 00:27:17,014 especially one with whom you haven't had a good relationship, 282 00:27:19,016 --> 00:27:22,986 that's one of the most traumatic things that can happen to someone at any age. 283 00:27:23,020 --> 00:27:24,884 And... 284 00:27:27,128 --> 00:27:29,751 you don't get resolution for that. 285 00:27:31,753 --> 00:27:34,100 He was embittered by his mother. She essentially tossed him out. 286 00:27:35,861 --> 00:27:39,036 I don't know how old he was four, five, six something like that. 287 00:27:40,279 --> 00:27:42,246 And I don't think he ever forgave her for that. 288 00:27:44,007 --> 00:27:50,047 And I think it's the reason he had this terrible need to be loved. 289 00:27:50,082 --> 00:27:52,325 And I don't think Truman ever thought he was loved. 290 00:27:53,533 --> 00:27:55,881 I'm serious I don't think he ever found it. 291 00:27:57,572 --> 00:28:01,887 Hello Carole how are you? Nice to see you again. Well here we are. 292 00:30:08,082 --> 00:30:10,429 He loved Babe more than the others. 293 00:30:10,463 --> 00:30:13,846 And I only say that because he talked about her the most. 294 00:30:17,574 --> 00:30:20,577 Isn't it true that an impression of coldness accompanies perfection? 295 00:30:21,992 --> 00:30:24,029 Might it be that what you feel is actually fear? 296 00:30:26,031 --> 00:30:31,277 It is as much fright as appreciation which causes the stabbed-by-an-icicle chill 297 00:30:32,692 --> 00:30:37,456 that for a moment murders us when a swan swims into view. 298 00:30:48,674 --> 00:30:51,090 I come from St. Teresa; 299 00:30:51,125 --> 00:30:53,990 more tears are shared over answered prayers than unanswered ones. 300 00:30:55,301 --> 00:30:59,650 And I thoroughly believe that to be a great truth. 301 00:31:25,159 --> 00:31:28,645 Women ruled New York society. 302 00:31:30,681 --> 00:31:32,511 At the very top of high society 303 00:31:32,545 --> 00:31:35,410 were some extraordinary looking women 304 00:31:35,445 --> 00:31:38,310 who had great grace, intelligence, 305 00:31:38,344 --> 00:31:40,001 and most importantly great taste. 306 00:31:42,038 --> 00:31:46,283 The effort was visible, and the money that went into it was visible. 307 00:31:48,044 --> 00:31:51,150 And I think some of that artistry, 308 00:31:52,358 --> 00:31:54,567 the literal putting on of masks and costumes 309 00:31:54,602 --> 00:31:57,225 must have very much appealed 310 00:31:57,260 --> 00:32:00,539 to someone as naturally theatrical as Truman Capote. 311 00:32:02,161 --> 00:32:04,750 These women were brought up in a world of polish and shine. 312 00:32:04,784 --> 00:32:06,717 Although we were probably doing the polishing and shining. 313 00:32:09,203 --> 00:32:14,001 Someone I know in fashion had her handbags polished by her French maid Yvonne. 314 00:32:14,725 --> 00:32:17,590 Yvonne ironed how $5 bills. 315 00:32:19,558 --> 00:32:22,492 So if she needed to catch a taxi after dinner she'd have a crisp $5 bill. 316 00:32:24,080 --> 00:32:27,531 This is the kind of thing that creates the legacy of style. 317 00:32:27,566 --> 00:32:30,431 And it is permanent. It is a style that goes forever. 318 00:32:33,158 --> 00:32:36,402 And it's aspirational. It is totally aspirational. 319 00:32:39,440 --> 00:32:46,240 Truman opened up these gates to this sort of paradise he prepared for himself. 320 00:33:18,824 --> 00:33:22,448 His letters are amazing. If he goes on a boat with five people 321 00:33:22,483 --> 00:33:25,762 he has a vicious thing to say about each of them. Oh her last doctor said no more face lifts. 322 00:33:27,660 --> 00:33:31,871 Or the man who had his face lathered by 10 year old boys every morning. 323 00:33:31,906 --> 00:33:36,704 It's just disgusting and you know, everyone's disgusting. Everyone's boring him. 324 00:33:38,775 --> 00:33:42,089 He's in Greece and he says the only words of Greek he's learned 325 00:33:42,123 --> 00:33:45,678 is "go away fat girl. Go away fat boy." 326 00:33:47,818 --> 00:33:51,132 You don't break into that world; you're taken up by that world. 327 00:33:51,788 --> 00:33:54,377 Because the chief problem 328 00:33:55,550 --> 00:33:59,658 that rich people face is the endemic boredom 329 00:34:00,555 --> 00:34:03,593 of living in a social ghetto. 330 00:34:03,627 --> 00:34:07,286 Because one class of people all think the same way. 331 00:34:07,321 --> 00:34:10,841 All who have the same desires, all who have roughly the same amount of wealth 332 00:34:11,808 --> 00:34:14,155 and they bore each other silly. 333 00:34:38,938 --> 00:34:41,769 Can you imagine the dinner parties he was invited to, 334 00:34:41,803 --> 00:34:44,082 if he didn't go how boring they would be? 335 00:34:45,393 --> 00:34:51,399 He was expected to perform and perform he did. 336 00:34:51,434 --> 00:34:55,127 Oh God, didn't you ever hear this story? 337 00:34:55,162 --> 00:34:57,716 They had him as the entertainment. 338 00:34:57,750 --> 00:35:01,202 Which must've been exhausting for Truman on some level 339 00:35:01,237 --> 00:35:03,894 to always feel like you had to be on, 340 00:35:03,929 --> 00:35:08,658 but I think he thought it was a small price to pay to get to live that life. 341 00:35:09,417 --> 00:35:12,386 So watch out. 342 00:35:37,583 --> 00:35:43,141 Well in those days homosexuality was not acceptable. 343 00:35:44,349 --> 00:35:47,214 There were very, very few people who were out. 344 00:35:48,836 --> 00:35:53,012 But there were you know people used to call them walkers you know? 345 00:35:53,047 --> 00:35:57,810 That - a lot of women would have gay men take them to parties and that sort of thing. 346 00:36:00,019 --> 00:36:04,921 And everybody sort of knew who was and who wasn't, but no one ever discussed it. 347 00:36:07,648 --> 00:36:12,825 I'm sure their husbands did. The word pansy was flying around Park Avenue. 348 00:36:14,033 --> 00:36:16,829 Straight people or as we call them breeders 349 00:36:18,383 --> 00:36:22,041 looked at Truman like they looked as effeminate gay men. 350 00:36:22,076 --> 00:36:24,768 Objects of contempt and ridicule. 351 00:36:26,598 --> 00:36:29,877 Gloria loved him. She stayed with him a lot. 352 00:36:29,911 --> 00:36:33,881 I used to say it's bedtime, off you go because he'd talk all night. 353 00:36:33,915 --> 00:36:36,918 Yes pa, off he'd go. 354 00:36:38,265 --> 00:36:42,545 Truman had thought of himself as a master. 355 00:36:44,857 --> 00:36:50,794 And then it becomes clear to him that they think of him as a servant. 356 00:36:51,864 --> 00:36:54,315 And that was a blow. 357 00:37:28,970 --> 00:37:32,457 He didn't get a story. He was out of his own world. 358 00:37:32,491 --> 00:37:35,045 He would lose himself in his own world. 359 00:37:36,150 --> 00:37:38,773 And that story seemed to him Kansas. 360 00:37:42,121 --> 00:37:46,298 It was so far away from what he was doing that it sort of woke him up. 361 00:37:54,686 --> 00:37:58,137 In Cold Blood is the story of these six people 362 00:37:58,172 --> 00:38:02,625 who died together November 15th, 1959 363 00:38:02,659 --> 00:38:04,420 and my book is the story of their lives and their deaths. 364 00:38:06,560 --> 00:38:11,081 He steps entirely outside his world, his comfort zone, and even his genre. 365 00:38:12,117 --> 00:38:12,807 He called it a non-fiction novel. 366 00:38:14,533 --> 00:38:18,054 But until that moment novels had been precisely fiction. 367 00:38:20,056 --> 00:38:23,956 Once you blend fiction and non-fiction things get a little slippery you know? 368 00:38:24,578 --> 00:38:26,442 It is dangerous. 369 00:38:28,547 --> 00:38:34,035 This is the new adventure of mine; this experiment is what I call the non-fiction novel. 370 00:38:38,488 --> 00:38:43,355 He did a thing that journalists do which is to engrace yourself with people 371 00:38:43,390 --> 00:38:45,564 whom you don't know, who you hope never to see again 372 00:38:45,599 --> 00:38:47,739 but you want to be their best friend 373 00:38:47,773 --> 00:38:52,053 just now because you needa quote, a story. 374 00:38:52,088 --> 00:38:56,195 The difference with Truman Capote was that he did it over a six year period 375 00:38:56,230 --> 00:38:59,371 and that he did it to most of Kansas. 376 00:39:46,867 --> 00:39:50,249 There's so much speculation about the degree 377 00:39:50,284 --> 00:39:54,737 to which Capote manipulated his subjects especially in In Cold Blood. 378 00:39:57,291 --> 00:40:00,467 That he became very close to Perry Smith 379 00:40:02,089 --> 00:40:06,507 to exhort personal confessions from him to enliven the narrative. 380 00:40:07,991 --> 00:40:10,753 This is a picture of Perry and these were taken 381 00:40:10,787 --> 00:40:12,099 the very day he was captured and went to prison. 382 00:40:14,066 --> 00:40:18,726 See there they were taken during the course of my very first interview with him. 383 00:40:18,761 --> 00:40:21,419 Harper Lee who was there says 384 00:40:22,661 --> 00:40:24,698 the minute he appeared and Truman Capote saw him 385 00:40:26,631 --> 00:40:33,534 he had something that matched, something that worked. It was a sexual thing. 386 00:40:36,054 --> 00:40:38,090 Of course it upped the whole business of his book 387 00:40:38,125 --> 00:40:41,197 because he was writing a book about a sort of figure 388 00:40:42,025 --> 00:40:44,683 that he had come to want. 389 00:40:46,685 --> 00:40:50,655 Which do you think? That's the picture of Perry I think is the best. 390 00:40:50,689 --> 00:40:53,934 It's possible to say that he went into the story 391 00:40:53,968 --> 00:40:55,832 with his own Cold Blood. 392 00:40:55,867 --> 00:40:59,111 He was using his charm to get close to all these people. 393 00:41:00,181 --> 00:41:01,493 But he was also emotionally involved. 394 00:41:03,322 --> 00:41:07,085 Be very, very careful how you read this story. He was needy too. 395 00:41:09,052 --> 00:41:11,710 Perry was a strange and difficult boy, 396 00:41:11,745 --> 00:41:15,127 but we became very um, very, 397 00:41:16,543 --> 00:41:19,097 very close too and very intimate sort of 398 00:41:19,994 --> 00:41:22,825 an intense sort of friendship. 399 00:41:22,859 --> 00:41:27,692 Don't know if friendship's exactly the word, but some kind of very intense relationship 400 00:41:27,726 --> 00:41:33,870 having to do with his total loneliness. 401 00:41:35,285 --> 00:41:38,530 And of course because of my work. 402 00:41:42,016 --> 00:41:46,538 His own face enthralled him. Each angle of it induced a different impression. 403 00:41:47,884 --> 00:41:51,267 It was a changing face and mirror guided experiments 404 00:41:51,301 --> 00:41:53,649 had taught him how to bring the changes, 405 00:41:53,683 --> 00:41:57,238 how to look now ominous, now impish, now soulful. 406 00:41:57,273 --> 00:41:59,551 A tilt of the head, a twist of the lips 407 00:41:59,586 --> 00:42:02,209 and the corrupt gypsy became the gentle romantic. 408 00:42:06,247 --> 00:42:09,009 I really think you've written a masterpiece here. 409 00:42:09,043 --> 00:42:13,013 Well, thank you. You'll get a much better dedication 410 00:42:13,047 --> 00:42:16,016 because of that sweet thing. 411 00:42:17,362 --> 00:42:19,675 A book about this crime by Truman Capote 412 00:42:19,709 --> 00:42:21,193 became a worldwide bestseller. 413 00:42:22,643 --> 00:42:25,646 Now a motion picture brings this book to the screen. 414 00:42:32,446 --> 00:42:35,207 He wrote too many letters to too many people 415 00:42:35,242 --> 00:42:37,382 in the months beforehand saying 416 00:42:37,416 --> 00:42:39,833 he needed a goddamn execution to end this book. 417 00:42:41,041 --> 00:42:44,009 Saying the stays of execution have to stop. 418 00:42:45,045 --> 00:42:47,772 Meaning these people have to die. 419 00:43:07,446 --> 00:43:09,932 This was one side of him you know 420 00:43:09,966 --> 00:43:11,934 he really just needed his book and he didn't care about anything else. 421 00:43:13,487 --> 00:43:17,595 But I think we have to allow for something else to be there too. 422 00:43:19,458 --> 00:43:25,154 It's absolutely clear to me that it wasn't as simple as Cold Blood on his part. 423 00:43:27,087 --> 00:43:30,918 That there was fright of where he had got himself. 424 00:43:34,784 --> 00:43:38,719 Perry was going to die in this horrible way, 425 00:43:39,789 --> 00:43:41,929 in this public way. 426 00:43:44,725 --> 00:43:50,317 You can say to this day that nobody has done a real live murder story as well, 427 00:43:50,351 --> 00:43:55,425 with such an amount of immediacy and clarity, and attention to detail, 428 00:43:55,460 --> 00:43:57,255 and sort of coldness. 429 00:44:00,051 --> 00:44:02,329 This may have been the real Truman Capote. 430 00:44:05,297 --> 00:44:11,234 The rest of the time is just fun, lunch, dinner. Self-invention. 431 00:44:12,995 --> 00:44:15,653 Only person who knows me will be the reader of this book. 432 00:44:53,242 --> 00:44:58,005 In Cold Blood propels him into a world of achievements, 433 00:44:58,040 --> 00:44:59,386 and a world of wealth. 434 00:45:03,908 --> 00:45:07,118 So Truman Capote gave arguable 435 00:45:07,152 --> 00:45:11,812 the only important ball in the 20th Century. 436 00:45:12,917 --> 00:45:14,366 And it is still legendary. 437 00:45:16,092 --> 00:45:19,475 They all met here at the great ball room that we're - the Plaza. 438 00:45:23,099 --> 00:45:28,104 So this was a moment in time. It was a bigger than life event. 439 00:45:30,244 --> 00:45:33,765 As a young black man sitting in North Carolina about to graduate from high school 440 00:45:35,974 --> 00:45:41,117 I immediately ripped the pages of Vogue Magazine out and put the whole thing up on my wall. 441 00:45:47,952 --> 00:45:50,748 My entire room was wallpapered in Vogue pages. 442 00:45:53,129 --> 00:45:57,099 The New York Times did the most unprecedented thing. They published the entire list. 443 00:45:57,133 --> 00:46:00,447 So if you said oh, I was invited to the ball but I decided to go on a vacation 444 00:46:00,481 --> 00:46:04,037 you'd be caught out. You'd be busted and that's what I loved the most. 445 00:46:19,362 --> 00:46:22,538 All the ladies are wearing masks on Truman Capote's order's 446 00:46:22,572 --> 00:46:25,886 and the inky wretches of the press on his orders also 447 00:46:25,921 --> 00:46:28,993 are being kept at a discrete distance from the guests outside this door. 448 00:46:32,651 --> 00:46:35,620 The people arriving here have come from Rome, from Hollywood, 449 00:46:35,654 --> 00:46:39,210 Venice, Paris, Washington, San Francisco, London 450 00:46:39,244 --> 00:46:41,074 just to go to a party. 451 00:46:41,108 --> 00:46:44,146 540 or so have dressed, 452 00:46:44,180 --> 00:46:47,356 and coiffed, and masked themselves, and presented themselves at the Plaza 453 00:46:47,390 --> 00:46:53,189 for the honour of serving themselves at Truman Capote's bar and saying they were here. 454 00:46:57,573 --> 00:47:02,026 Maybe that had always been the pathos of his childhood dreams. 455 00:47:03,993 --> 00:47:08,515 Being somewhere grand, having all the most beautiful, important people in the world 456 00:47:09,447 --> 00:47:12,691 in costumes and Venetian masks. 457 00:47:13,623 --> 00:47:16,903 As people made their appearances 458 00:47:16,937 --> 00:47:22,253 Truman like a 12 year old clapped his hands, 459 00:47:22,287 --> 00:47:27,292 jumped up and down saying oh you're my favourite. 460 00:47:27,327 --> 00:47:31,365 Oh, you're the most beautiful. Oh you are the best. 461 00:47:31,400 --> 00:47:32,953 Oh yours is the most successful 462 00:47:34,161 --> 00:47:38,441 to every person that walked into that ball. 463 00:48:18,516 --> 00:48:22,485 My first impressions were coming into the Plaza Hotel. 464 00:48:22,520 --> 00:48:28,146 The New York gossip press was behind barricades. 465 00:48:28,181 --> 00:48:32,944 It's the beginning of the celebrity culture in America. 466 00:48:34,394 --> 00:48:39,571 My most memorable moment was dancing with Luciana Pignatelli, 467 00:48:41,780 --> 00:48:46,302 the Princess. She was wearing in the middle of her forehead 468 00:48:46,337 --> 00:48:50,444 a large jewel rented for an unconscionable amount of money. 469 00:48:53,758 --> 00:49:00,799 Waltzing her around the dancefloor I could see these two heavyset gentlemen 470 00:49:00,834 --> 00:49:03,733 moving in time with the music. 471 00:49:05,390 --> 00:49:10,326 They were sent by the jeweller, heavily armed Pinkerton men 472 00:49:10,361 --> 00:49:13,985 to keep their eye at all times on the jewel. 473 00:49:14,020 --> 00:49:17,955 Not on Luciana, on the jewel. 474 00:49:22,718 --> 00:49:24,754 There are many enchanted kingdoms. 475 00:49:26,066 --> 00:49:31,106 Mark Twain wrote "a society that is the sum 476 00:49:31,140 --> 00:49:35,558 of its vanity and greed is not a society at all. 477 00:49:35,593 --> 00:49:37,629 It is a state of war." 478 00:49:39,838 --> 00:49:43,566 And that is the society of Truman Capote 479 00:49:43,601 --> 00:49:48,986 is putting on stage in the enchanted kingdom at the Plaza Hotel. 480 00:49:50,608 --> 00:49:55,993 And the state of war that exists outside of the magic kingdom 481 00:49:56,890 --> 00:50:00,100 is for the moment a temporary truce. 482 00:50:12,526 --> 00:50:13,631 That's right. 483 00:50:39,105 --> 00:50:42,142 For the first hours of it before the unmasking 484 00:50:42,177 --> 00:50:44,696 anybody can dance with anybody they want to, 485 00:50:44,731 --> 00:50:48,838 or talk to anybody they want to. It's a completely free thing. 486 00:50:48,873 --> 00:50:52,187 And by the time the unmasking come you've made a lot of new friends. 487 00:50:52,221 --> 00:50:54,637 And that was the point. 488 00:50:54,672 --> 00:50:57,433 It worked wonderfully. It's the same kind of feeling 489 00:50:57,468 --> 00:51:00,298 you get if you're asked to go on a talk show 490 00:51:00,333 --> 00:51:03,715 and there you are in the green room with the famous actress, 491 00:51:03,750 --> 00:51:05,890 and the dog trainer. 492 00:51:05,924 --> 00:51:09,480 And we are a band of brothers. Temporary, temporary. 493 00:51:10,722 --> 00:51:12,276 Of course when we got away from the green room 494 00:51:13,656 --> 00:51:15,762 then we're very happy to knife each other in the back. 495 00:51:34,953 --> 00:51:38,233 I didn't get invited to his famous masked ball. 496 00:51:39,993 --> 00:51:42,789 I first met him on my show. 497 00:51:44,411 --> 00:51:46,862 He has managed to become a darling of the Beautiful People, 498 00:51:46,896 --> 00:51:50,176 so he conducts that life and also manages to get his work done. 499 00:51:50,210 --> 00:51:52,695 Would you welcome please Truman Capote right here? 500 00:51:54,180 --> 00:51:56,975 He would kind of swing out onto the stage 501 00:51:57,010 --> 00:51:58,770 and go like that 502 00:51:58,805 --> 00:52:01,704 and I thought well this is going to be interesting. 503 00:52:12,025 --> 00:52:14,407 You want to try the hat? 504 00:52:14,441 --> 00:52:16,581 No I can't - I don't need a hat with three balls. 505 00:52:16,616 --> 00:52:20,206 I'm just an average person. 506 00:52:20,240 --> 00:52:23,692 I remember watching Truman on stage at Madison Square Garden 507 00:52:25,038 --> 00:52:28,145 with Mick Jagger centre stage 508 00:52:28,904 --> 00:52:30,768 doing his version of grooving. 509 00:52:36,877 --> 00:52:38,741 I remember thinking is this what a writer should be doing? 510 00:52:40,605 --> 00:52:45,817 A whole evening standing on stage while Mick is enthralling the audience. 511 00:52:53,963 --> 00:52:58,554 The people would say it's Truman Capote, it's Truman Capote. Capote, you could hear it. 512 00:53:17,539 --> 00:53:19,955 A typical one of my notebooks. 513 00:53:37,006 --> 00:53:38,525 He had a really hard time. 514 00:53:39,837 --> 00:53:44,082 He would get up rather early and go into his room. 515 00:53:44,117 --> 00:53:47,016 And he would write for about three hours. 516 00:53:48,777 --> 00:53:53,368 But the day to day life with him was incredibly calm and pleasant. 517 00:53:53,402 --> 00:53:56,716 He was delightful. He was very nurturing. 518 00:53:57,751 --> 00:53:59,926 We didn't have too many groceries. 519 00:54:00,685 --> 00:54:02,756 We ate out all the time. 520 00:54:03,964 --> 00:54:08,728 He had canned soup, raw shrimp, and tab soda. 521 00:54:08,762 --> 00:54:10,833 And a lot of vodka in the freezer. 522 00:54:17,357 --> 00:54:21,050 Near the end of the 60s things began to lighten up for gay people. 523 00:54:21,085 --> 00:54:22,914 A lot of it had to do with protests over the war. 524 00:54:24,122 --> 00:54:26,780 The police had other things to worry about. 525 00:54:26,815 --> 00:54:30,301 You could go to a gay bathhouse and not be afraid the police were going to come in. 526 00:54:31,406 --> 00:54:32,890 Truman and I used to go bar cruising. 527 00:54:34,926 --> 00:54:39,931 Bars became very specific in the appetites they were seeking to welcome. 528 00:54:44,142 --> 00:54:47,698 Prison theme or registry of lollipop with the other sailors. 529 00:54:49,976 --> 00:54:52,392 And this was true of bath houses. They became like little theatres 530 00:54:52,427 --> 00:54:53,876 only they were sexual theatres. 531 00:54:59,779 --> 00:55:05,819 I thought it was fun and then you combined that with this incredible flood of drugs. 532 00:55:09,858 --> 00:55:13,310 I mean eye popping it was unbelievable you couldn't - it was hard to accept. 533 00:55:15,381 --> 00:55:17,590 And Truman found it fascinating. 534 00:55:17,624 --> 00:55:22,457 I found it fascinating because Truman and I shared one thing that we were both voyeurs. 535 00:55:23,078 --> 00:55:25,011 All writers are voyeurs. 536 00:55:28,048 --> 00:55:30,810 Truman didn't want to go to respectable nightclubs. 537 00:55:30,844 --> 00:55:34,434 He wanted to go to all kinds of bad places. 538 00:55:36,643 --> 00:55:40,440 I mean one which Truman absolutely loved was a lesbian bar 539 00:55:40,475 --> 00:55:42,511 where the lesbians were all in leather. 540 00:55:42,546 --> 00:55:45,687 They all had motorcycles. And the girls were very lively, and they liked Truman. 541 00:55:47,689 --> 00:55:52,970 He got some kind of response from them, and everybody was roaring with laughter, 542 00:55:53,004 --> 00:55:59,010 and he knew just how to sort of get them to as it were perform for him. 543 00:56:00,460 --> 00:56:02,497 And they went along with it. 544 00:56:04,222 --> 00:56:07,605 I think his writing was affected slowly, slowly 545 00:56:07,640 --> 00:56:13,059 because he began to care more about meeting all kinds of people than writing. 546 00:56:14,440 --> 00:56:17,028 And that's why Jack Dunphy his long-time lover 547 00:56:17,063 --> 00:56:18,823 shifted away from Truman. 548 00:56:36,634 --> 00:56:40,086 Truman was drawn to all manner of people. 549 00:56:40,120 --> 00:56:42,571 I mean just the fact that he fell in love with my father 550 00:56:42,606 --> 00:56:46,230 you know who's like this guy from the Bronx, this Irish guy from the Bronx 551 00:56:46,264 --> 00:56:48,646 even though he lived in Long Island. 552 00:56:49,233 --> 00:56:51,546 O'Shay was a banker. 553 00:56:52,892 --> 00:56:56,240 He was vice president of some bank out in Long Island. 554 00:56:56,274 --> 00:56:59,554 And Truman said he met him when he went to open an account. 555 00:57:00,865 --> 00:57:03,765 He was asked that you need a place to deposit money, 556 00:57:05,491 --> 00:57:09,633 and Truman said well I don't know about money but I take deposits. 557 00:57:11,220 --> 00:57:16,916 And Truman said at that point he - he went down on Jack O'Shay 558 00:57:16,950 --> 00:57:20,506 and and as they say 559 00:57:20,540 --> 00:57:23,785 he was over the rainbow. So... 560 00:57:26,926 --> 00:57:30,447 Point of fact he'd met him at the East Side Sauna, it's a bath house. 561 00:57:32,276 --> 00:57:36,798 I was so happy for my father with regard to his meeting Truman. 562 00:57:36,832 --> 00:57:39,801 Because he seemed happy for the first time in his life. 563 00:57:39,835 --> 00:57:43,977 And I was so, so crushed when the same problems he had - 564 00:57:44,012 --> 00:57:46,773 his violence, and his alcoholism, and his cruelty 565 00:57:46,808 --> 00:57:48,982 he was - he had a cruel side my father - 566 00:57:50,777 --> 00:57:55,057 began to manifest in Truman's life. I was crushed because I had - 567 00:57:55,092 --> 00:58:01,926 my fanciful idea that it was only because he was gay and he was unhappy um, in our home 568 00:58:01,961 --> 00:58:02,996 wasn't the truth. 569 00:58:07,242 --> 00:58:10,487 They were driving along highways at night-time and they got into a fight. 570 00:58:12,247 --> 00:58:15,940 He slugged Truman and then opened the door and shoved him out of the car. 571 00:58:18,011 --> 00:58:23,845 Truman didn't know where he was and he said I saw this little light in the distance 572 00:58:23,879 --> 00:58:28,712 and I walked, and I walked and I went off into this, and I knocked on the door. 573 00:58:28,746 --> 00:58:30,783 And I said please help me, help me. 574 00:58:33,026 --> 00:58:37,928 And this man opened the door and he looked at me and he said oh my God you're Truman Capote! 575 00:58:39,067 --> 00:58:42,588 He slammed the door in my face. 576 00:59:13,688 --> 00:59:18,175 Hey, don't you think that's a good likeness? In his younger days, his younger days. 577 00:59:18,209 --> 00:59:21,592 Well it's taken from a gentleman old Avedon photograph. 578 00:59:23,456 --> 00:59:25,976 How long ago Truman? 579 00:59:26,010 --> 00:59:29,704 That photograph? It was seven, eight years ago. 580 00:59:29,738 --> 00:59:32,189 He's more handsome now than then. 581 00:59:34,398 --> 00:59:39,161 I can see something extremely clearly in another person. 582 00:59:39,196 --> 00:59:43,580 All their motivations, and what's making the whole thing turn around. 583 00:59:44,442 --> 00:59:46,652 And do it with great objectivity. 584 00:59:47,273 --> 00:59:51,035 And I hope compassion. 585 00:59:51,070 --> 00:59:52,899 Sometimes not so compassionate. 586 00:59:54,694 --> 00:59:58,664 But if I were to reverse the whole thing around on myself I can't do it. 587 01:00:00,458 --> 01:00:03,427 He just embarrassed his role as the celebrity and he became 588 01:00:03,461 --> 01:00:07,707 more of a talk show guest than he did a working writer. 589 01:00:10,192 --> 01:00:11,918 Well there was a moment on my show 590 01:00:13,679 --> 01:00:17,993 I asked him in effect why do you hang out with all these fancy folks? 591 01:00:21,997 --> 01:00:30,074 And he actually said way back in the events of his life I'm writing about them. 592 01:00:30,109 --> 01:00:33,181 I was going that these people are my material. 593 01:00:33,215 --> 01:00:35,217 Ah you're there... 594 01:00:35,252 --> 01:00:37,772 And when I now make my forays occasionally it's just to check up. 595 01:00:39,325 --> 01:00:42,984 Is admitting this now on television likely to reduce the number 596 01:00:43,018 --> 01:00:45,503 of invitations you'll get because people will be a little afraid? 597 01:00:45,538 --> 01:00:48,092 Oh everybody knows what the book is about. 598 01:00:48,127 --> 01:00:51,475 No one's going to be the least bit annoyed with me unless they've been left out. 599 01:00:51,509 --> 01:00:53,063 That's probably it. 600 01:00:53,097 --> 01:00:56,929 He must have known that there was danger in all of that. 601 01:01:00,864 --> 01:01:07,422 He talked about his great book you know which of course I'd been hearing about for years. 602 01:01:07,456 --> 01:01:12,151 We had - we all had you know? The book was called Answered Prayers, a great society novel. 603 01:01:14,256 --> 01:01:19,261 And he'd been allegedly working on it since before the publication of In Cold Blood. 604 01:01:21,367 --> 01:01:24,715 Answered Prayers was supposed to be Truman's masterpiece. 605 01:01:26,199 --> 01:01:30,479 He compared himself to Proust, to Remembrance of Things Past 606 01:01:30,514 --> 01:01:34,794 the great masterwork of modernist literature. 607 01:01:36,831 --> 01:01:42,181 Proust wrote about Parisian high society and the aristocracy of France in his time. 608 01:01:42,215 --> 01:01:45,909 And this was the terrain that Truman was exploring. 609 01:01:48,014 --> 01:01:51,500 He was on the yachts, he was on the private planes, he was on the private islands. 610 01:01:52,881 --> 01:01:55,746 He was privy to the secrets, and the gossip. 611 01:01:57,610 --> 01:02:02,235 I think there was a lot of hope that Truman would pull off something Proustian. 612 01:02:49,627 --> 01:02:50,490 Shallow? 613 01:03:00,362 --> 01:03:02,606 It was a society he knew. 614 01:03:02,640 --> 01:03:05,367 He was in the inner sanctum of the Agnellis. 615 01:03:05,402 --> 01:03:06,506 He was on the boats. 616 01:03:08,232 --> 01:03:12,133 He was with Babe Paley. He thought he could just change the names 617 01:03:12,167 --> 01:03:14,860 and people won't recognize her. 618 01:03:14,894 --> 01:03:16,344 Bad judgment. 619 01:03:20,866 --> 01:03:27,942 Babe Paley had only one fault. She was perfect. Other than that she was perfect. 620 01:03:41,438 --> 01:03:42,163 Why? 621 01:04:10,743 --> 01:04:11,502 Oh my, nan. 622 01:04:11,537 --> 01:04:13,504 Oh my dear. 623 01:04:13,539 --> 01:04:15,161 When I first met her there wasn't any warmth at all. 624 01:04:15,196 --> 01:04:17,646 Your feeling was who the hell does she think she is? 625 01:04:19,165 --> 01:04:23,204 But with Truman she was very different. She relaxed. 626 01:04:24,722 --> 01:04:28,243 She laughed. They had fun together. It was fun. They were - 627 01:04:30,521 --> 01:04:34,146 you're sitting having lunch with them and somebody says something and they just look at each other. 628 01:04:34,180 --> 01:04:37,011 They don't say anything. They just look at each other and then they start laughing. 629 01:04:37,045 --> 01:04:39,289 Like kids sitting in the children's table 630 01:04:39,323 --> 01:04:42,568 giggling about what's going on at the adult table. 631 01:04:44,018 --> 01:04:46,675 And I thought it was very sweet. 632 01:04:46,710 --> 01:04:53,890 I don't know anyone Truman was with who had that kind of unlimited acceptance with. 633 01:04:56,030 --> 01:05:00,689 And I think that's why he was happy with her. Because she loved him, and he loved her. 634 01:05:31,168 --> 01:05:36,691 What Truman thought he was doing and I think felt justified in doing 635 01:05:37,830 --> 01:05:41,178 was taking the lid off a bowl of shit. 636 01:05:42,524 --> 01:05:44,526 Don't you have a book about to appear? 637 01:05:44,561 --> 01:05:47,184 Now for a couple of years we've been waiting for Answered Prayers 638 01:05:47,219 --> 01:05:50,049 and have you turned it over to the publisher yet? 639 01:05:50,084 --> 01:05:54,433 No. I refer to it now as my posthumous novel. 640 01:05:54,467 --> 01:05:58,471 Because either I'm going to kill it, or it's going to kill me. 641 01:06:13,107 --> 01:06:17,525 No matter what happens I'm going to publish a big part of it this coming fall. 642 01:06:19,078 --> 01:06:20,735 Okay, we'll take a short break and we'll be right back... 643 01:06:31,297 --> 01:06:36,371 He finally wrote something that cost him mortally. 644 01:06:39,305 --> 01:06:42,826 This book exposed unspeakably 645 01:06:42,860 --> 01:06:47,175 private things about very, very famous people. 646 01:07:11,648 --> 01:07:13,029 That's right, that's right. 647 01:07:26,904 --> 01:07:32,082 It was these thinly veiled identities of people he knew. Stories about their lives. 648 01:07:33,428 --> 01:07:36,500 And outrageous things that people told him in secret, 649 01:07:38,192 --> 01:07:41,367 and it was about these cafe society people that he had known, 650 01:07:41,402 --> 01:07:44,232 these jet set people and he basically told all their secrets. 651 01:07:45,889 --> 01:07:49,755 I didn't know that anyone was upset by this magazine. 652 01:07:51,791 --> 01:07:54,898 Two days later I go to this party at Josh Logan's. 653 01:07:54,932 --> 01:07:59,109 Josh Logan's this big director - movie and theatre director in New York. 654 01:08:00,179 --> 01:08:01,353 And his wife's name is Netta Logan. 655 01:08:02,664 --> 01:08:05,357 And who was this sort of a barrel of an Irish cow. 656 01:08:05,391 --> 01:08:10,879 And I - and I go in and barrelling at me across the room 657 01:08:11,915 --> 01:08:14,159 yelling how dare he? How dare he? 658 01:08:14,193 --> 01:08:16,092 Is Netta yelling and literally she's going like this how dare he? How dare he? 659 01:08:18,370 --> 01:08:22,512 And I said what are you - ah, you know what I'm talking about! And she was going on about Truman. 660 01:08:22,546 --> 01:08:26,481 How could he do that? How could he do that? How could he do that to Ann? How could he do that to Ann? 661 01:08:27,517 --> 01:08:29,829 And that's how I found out about it. 662 01:08:32,867 --> 01:08:38,390 Ann Woodward is a blond showgirl and she married old, old New York money. 663 01:08:38,424 --> 01:08:39,874 One day her husband was shot to death. 664 01:08:41,013 --> 01:08:44,672 In Truman's account of it Anne set him up. 665 01:08:44,706 --> 01:08:48,434 She grabbed the shotgun and shot what she thought was a prowler. 666 01:08:48,469 --> 01:08:51,955 Only it was her husband with a hole through his head. 667 01:08:51,989 --> 01:08:53,991 You don't think it was an accident? 668 01:08:54,026 --> 01:08:56,649 Come out of the trenches boy, the war's over. 669 01:08:56,684 --> 01:08:58,410 Of course it wasn't an accident. 670 01:08:59,307 --> 01:09:01,482 She killed David with malice. 671 01:09:01,516 --> 01:09:04,830 She's a murderess. The police know that. 672 01:09:18,878 --> 01:09:19,845 So they say. 673 01:09:44,525 --> 01:09:47,390 As a writer I should probably be proud because it shows that 674 01:09:47,424 --> 01:09:49,530 what you write actually can have an effect. 675 01:09:59,436 --> 01:10:03,992 She had a terrible marriage. Bill Paley, Mr. CBS 676 01:10:05,684 --> 01:10:10,792 he was famously a womanizer. 677 01:10:12,484 --> 01:10:13,933 They undressed in the dark. 678 01:10:15,003 --> 01:10:17,040 None of his tricks caught her fancy. 679 01:10:17,074 --> 01:10:21,527 She lay there like a missionary outraged by sweating Swahilis. 680 01:10:22,390 --> 01:10:24,737 Dill couldn't come. 681 01:10:24,772 --> 01:10:27,292 He felt as though he were sloshing around in some strange puddle. 682 01:10:28,672 --> 01:10:31,675 He felt sticky and strange as though covered in blood. 683 01:10:32,504 --> 01:10:34,644 As he was. So was the bed. 684 01:10:35,990 --> 01:10:39,545 The sheets bloodied with stains the size of Brazil. 685 01:10:47,346 --> 01:10:49,762 As a woman reading it you're like is that even physically possible? 686 01:10:51,074 --> 01:10:53,766 Menstruation is as normal as breathing, or sleeping. 687 01:10:55,354 --> 01:10:57,080 What was wrong with her? Was she haemorrhaging? 688 01:10:57,114 --> 01:10:58,046 Clearly this is somewhat exaggerated. 689 01:10:59,703 --> 01:11:04,052 Also was that considered a thing that you would insult someone 690 01:11:04,087 --> 01:11:08,022 by having sex with them when you're? 691 01:11:30,493 --> 01:11:34,082 He puts in so much detail about how incredibly unattractive the woman is. 692 01:11:36,464 --> 01:11:41,849 Even by the ungenerous standards of this story the description of her is particularly cruel. 693 01:11:43,678 --> 01:11:46,957 It's like he's trying to hurt, and shock in every single way he can. 694 01:11:48,442 --> 01:11:51,617 One response was how disgusting. 695 01:11:51,652 --> 01:11:55,552 And the other was how could your friend do this to you? 696 01:13:23,468 --> 01:13:27,161 A short, sinister man who looks exactly like Truman Capote 697 01:13:27,195 --> 01:13:29,197 is preparing a fiendishly ingenious crime. 698 01:13:30,854 --> 01:13:34,548 The victim is here at this very table, at this very moment. 699 01:13:34,582 --> 01:13:39,173 And so too ladies and gentlemen is the murderer. 700 01:14:14,829 --> 01:14:16,072 Is he dead? 701 01:14:20,697 --> 01:14:22,699 We touch nothing. We're all experienced criminologists. 702 01:14:36,023 --> 01:14:39,233 The backlash from the individuals was wicked. 703 01:14:41,200 --> 01:14:45,308 About a year ago you published a thing in Esquire. It's a work of fiction. 704 01:14:45,342 --> 01:14:46,758 No it's not. 705 01:14:46,792 --> 01:14:49,795 Well it's not is it? 706 01:14:49,830 --> 01:14:53,558 Who - what friends did you lose if I may be so bold? 707 01:14:53,592 --> 01:14:59,011 No, no three friends that I really liked. And it was - 708 01:14:59,046 --> 01:15:02,601 they were very, very good, very close friends of mine and... 709 01:15:04,189 --> 01:15:08,193 It kind of ruined him. It almost was sort of suicide. 710 01:15:25,210 --> 01:15:28,075 Nobody would have known if they hadn't stood up and said I'm so angry. 711 01:15:28,109 --> 01:15:30,180 How dare he say that about me! 712 01:15:31,216 --> 01:15:33,080 It's fiction for God's sake! 713 01:15:35,185 --> 01:15:39,811 Good lord I mean what is wrong with these people? Talk about a lack of sophistication. 714 01:15:41,191 --> 01:15:44,885 If it had been written about me I'd say wonderful story, 715 01:15:44,919 --> 01:15:47,335 who is he possibly writing about? 716 01:15:49,165 --> 01:15:52,755 Answered Prayers is an early template for reality TV. 717 01:15:54,653 --> 01:15:59,002 Like the pettiness, the interpersonal stuff. Knowing this cast of characters. 718 01:15:59,037 --> 01:16:04,214 Not really thinking it has larger meaning except in a pop cultural way. 719 01:16:06,423 --> 01:16:10,151 I do think it's a precursor to a lot of what we now are living with. 720 01:16:33,450 --> 01:16:35,038 I remember his saying once what are they upset about? 721 01:16:37,040 --> 01:16:41,907 I was a writer. Did they think I was with them because they were so interesting? 722 01:16:48,086 --> 01:16:50,847 Babe said for Christ's sake don't talk to me about Truman. 723 01:16:52,677 --> 01:16:56,163 And then eventually she'd say well all right let's talk about Truman. 724 01:16:56,197 --> 01:16:57,785 Well what's happening now? 725 01:16:59,511 --> 01:17:02,618 She's the only one he cried over their friendship ending. 726 01:17:06,691 --> 01:17:12,179 That's why I think he loved Babe the most. Because he spoke about her forever, until he died. 727 01:17:14,388 --> 01:17:19,669 I think he really, really never got over the fact that she disappeared from his life. 728 01:17:21,844 --> 01:17:27,435 The main body of people who he had lunches with, and who he called first thing vanished. 729 01:17:28,471 --> 01:17:31,129 Only CZ Guest stuck by him. 730 01:17:42,450 --> 01:17:45,764 I would go to this place called Studio 54. 731 01:18:26,460 --> 01:18:28,980 Once Truman said there's a new place and we have to go. 732 01:18:30,602 --> 01:18:33,778 It's a night club and it's fabulous, and you're going to love it. 733 01:18:35,331 --> 01:18:38,921 Truman was one of the great favourites there oh my gosh. 734 01:18:38,955 --> 01:18:41,924 There was a huge crowd outside. 735 01:18:44,167 --> 01:18:47,032 And little Truman would get out of his limousine 736 01:18:47,067 --> 01:18:51,381 and the guys would see him and make a big path for him 737 01:18:51,416 --> 01:18:53,936 and be like come on Truman. Come on in. 738 01:18:57,871 --> 01:19:00,425 And in you'd walk to this inner sanctum. 739 01:19:20,238 --> 01:19:24,863 It was dazzling. It was almost the Black and White Ball. 740 01:19:24,898 --> 01:19:26,347 Except it was public. 741 01:19:27,659 --> 01:19:30,317 It was very upbeat and positive. You felt good at 54. 742 01:19:31,870 --> 01:19:34,079 I just sat and kind of watched it all. 743 01:19:36,012 --> 01:19:37,807 Like it was in a movie. 744 01:19:40,189 --> 01:19:42,639 I would stay until he'd make me go home. 745 01:19:42,674 --> 01:19:46,989 So I never saw the real crazy, excessive whatever may have happened after midnight. 746 01:19:48,542 --> 01:19:50,475 It was the last days of Sodom and Gomorrah. 747 01:19:52,546 --> 01:19:56,446 People having sex, drugged out of their minds and you'd just have to step over them. 748 01:19:56,481 --> 01:19:58,517 They didn't even know who they were having sex with. 749 01:20:00,105 --> 01:20:04,178 You had to just gaze at the moment of ebullient life. 750 01:20:08,458 --> 01:20:11,116 On these evening patrols Joel had witnessed many spectacles. 751 01:20:13,291 --> 01:20:18,434 A girl waltzing stark naked, an old lady dropped dead while puffing out candles on a cake. 752 01:20:20,401 --> 01:20:28,306 And most puzzling of all two grown men in an ugly little room kissing each other. 753 01:20:47,325 --> 01:20:49,672 One of the things that made Studio 54 attractive 754 01:20:49,706 --> 01:20:51,605 is you could get cocaine there. 755 01:20:51,639 --> 01:20:53,331 And I mean you didn't pay for it. 756 01:20:57,404 --> 01:21:02,133 It's totally integrated both sexually and ethnically you know? 757 01:21:04,238 --> 01:21:09,519 Boys and boys, girls and girls, girls and boys, mules and fire hydrants. Anything goes. 758 01:21:12,453 --> 01:21:15,905 Even though he had so much fun during that he was also beginning 759 01:21:15,940 --> 01:21:19,012 a terrible, terrible addiction to prescription pain medicine. 760 01:21:20,116 --> 01:21:24,017 So that photo of Gloria Swanson and I 761 01:21:25,018 --> 01:21:27,537 where Truman's basically passed out 762 01:21:27,572 --> 01:21:31,679 is indicative of some of the sad things that were going on. 763 01:21:33,026 --> 01:21:35,235 He would come out of it, and go back into it. 764 01:21:35,269 --> 01:21:36,684 He would function and then he would fall apart. 765 01:21:37,789 --> 01:21:40,412 Because I had experience with my father 766 01:21:42,380 --> 01:21:48,075 I knew how to be the adult and look after the adult who was acting like a child. 767 01:21:49,801 --> 01:21:51,113 Where were you last night? 768 01:21:53,046 --> 01:21:58,983 Well I haven't actually been to bed for about 48 hours. I mean you know I... 769 01:21:59,017 --> 01:22:00,018 How come? 770 01:22:00,053 --> 01:22:02,987 Somehow got here today just... 771 01:22:03,021 --> 01:22:05,990 I was just going to take care of Truman the way he took care of me. 772 01:22:07,025 --> 01:22:11,719 When I say I'll do something I do it. 773 01:22:11,754 --> 01:22:12,997 Yes sir. 774 01:22:13,031 --> 01:22:14,791 I really, really do it. I'm you know? 775 01:22:14,826 --> 01:22:19,313 At the end he unravelled. And he unravelled on TV. 776 01:22:21,384 --> 01:22:28,529 One appearance in particular where he clearly came directly from Studio 54 drunk, 777 01:22:28,564 --> 01:22:31,774 and coked out of his gourd. He was making a spectacle of himself. 778 01:22:31,808 --> 01:22:34,328 Is that you have had a history of alcoholism. 779 01:22:34,363 --> 01:22:36,089 It was a terrible thing to see. 780 01:22:36,123 --> 01:22:38,608 How are you coming along with the problem of drinking? 781 01:22:41,784 --> 01:22:43,751 Truman had been in and out of rehab. 782 01:22:45,270 --> 01:22:49,378 And as I walked in the room he looked oh hi Dotson. 783 01:22:50,724 --> 01:22:53,278 And he said just a minute I have to take my pills - 784 01:22:53,313 --> 01:22:54,141 Antabuse - I have to take my pill. 785 01:22:55,487 --> 01:22:58,007 They have to see you take it, and he took the pill. 786 01:22:58,042 --> 01:23:00,561 And the nurse left and she shut the door 787 01:23:00,596 --> 01:23:05,670 and he goes works every time. 788 01:23:08,397 --> 01:23:13,126 And he said oh, you want a drink? The bar's over there. It's true. 789 01:23:16,198 --> 01:23:21,582 I was walking near my apartment and I suddenly saw Truman a little aged dwarf 790 01:23:23,826 --> 01:23:28,831 carrying a huge plastic bag full of I don't know what. Bottles and things which were clanking. 791 01:23:28,865 --> 01:23:33,318 He looked like a beggar. And I said Truman! 792 01:23:33,353 --> 01:23:37,115 Come back and have a cup of tea with me. 793 01:23:37,150 --> 01:23:39,842 I got him in. he's very wobbly. 794 01:23:39,876 --> 01:23:43,052 Sat him down and went to put a kettle on. 795 01:23:43,087 --> 01:23:46,780 But by the time I'd made the tea 796 01:23:46,814 --> 01:23:50,059 Truman had emptied a bottle of gin 797 01:23:50,094 --> 01:23:52,027 which I think was half full 798 01:23:53,511 --> 01:23:56,790 and was drunk to start with, but this time he was blind drunk. 799 01:23:58,861 --> 01:24:03,072 And there I was looking an idiot with a little tray with a little pot of tea and so on 800 01:24:03,107 --> 01:24:07,111 and I said look I've made this for you. No interest at all. 801 01:24:08,112 --> 01:24:11,598 And so off he went into the dusk. 802 01:24:12,254 --> 01:24:14,118 I was taking... 803 01:24:14,152 --> 01:24:16,568 One program he seemed ill on the show. 804 01:24:17,638 --> 01:24:20,089 And there was a phrase he kept using. 805 01:24:20,124 --> 01:24:24,162 I seem to be going through this terrible haze of pain. 806 01:24:25,681 --> 01:24:27,372 And I said to him one day I said will you cut that out, stop it. 807 01:24:27,407 --> 01:24:29,547 I thought he might get up and have to leave. 808 01:24:29,581 --> 01:24:31,066 And he just laughed you know? 809 01:24:32,826 --> 01:24:38,245 Haze of pain is a good phrase though. The writer was still at work yeah. 810 01:24:42,870 --> 01:24:47,185 Let's order something that takes forever so we can get drunk and disorderly. 811 01:24:47,220 --> 01:24:51,672 Say a Soufflé Furstenberg could you do that? 812 01:24:51,707 --> 01:24:54,330 The maître d' tutted his tongue. 813 01:24:54,365 --> 01:24:58,300 Soufflé Furstenberg is a great nuisance, an uproar. 814 01:24:59,542 --> 01:25:03,891 An uproar said Lady Ena is exactly what we want. 815 01:25:19,976 --> 01:25:25,810 It seems to have been almost a literary hoax in a way. 816 01:25:26,983 --> 01:25:29,952 You know certainly he meant to write it, but 817 01:25:29,986 --> 01:25:34,577 I really - I don't think there's any evidence that anything existed 818 01:25:34,612 --> 01:25:36,924 except the few published excerpts. 819 01:25:36,959 --> 01:25:40,411 Excerpts of a novel that doesn't exist. That's a good one. 820 01:25:46,693 --> 01:25:50,559 He wrote on yellow lined legal pads, and he wrote by hand. 821 01:25:51,456 --> 01:25:53,493 He didn't typewrite anything. 822 01:25:53,527 --> 01:25:56,530 So he had so many pads lined up 823 01:25:56,565 --> 01:25:58,877 and so I just assumed as the pile grew 824 01:25:58,912 --> 01:26:01,225 that he was in fact finishing his book. 825 01:26:02,433 --> 01:26:04,952 I don't know what happened to the manuscript, 826 01:26:04,987 --> 01:26:06,644 but I do believe that he had one. 827 01:26:08,059 --> 01:26:13,202 He would tell me that it was just wonderful, and wicked, 828 01:26:13,237 --> 01:26:15,204 and people were going to be so surprised. 829 01:26:15,239 --> 01:26:18,242 And I know some people think the whole thing was a lie, 830 01:26:18,276 --> 01:26:20,796 but it couldn't have been because he was sitting there writing, and writing, 831 01:26:20,830 --> 01:26:21,210 and writing something. 832 01:26:22,832 --> 01:26:24,834 Yeah, I think he completed the book. He said he completed the book. 833 01:26:27,320 --> 01:26:31,565 I mean I don't know if you can find a source that says Truman told me he didn't complete the book. 834 01:26:31,600 --> 01:26:34,396 I don't know, Truman told me he'd completed the book. I thought the book was done. 835 01:26:36,605 --> 01:26:40,643 It was one of his really best friends says that he gave her a key to a safety deposit box. 836 01:26:40,678 --> 01:26:42,404 And indicated that the novel was in there. 837 01:26:43,750 --> 01:26:46,684 But I have no idea what safety deposit box it fits. 838 01:26:46,718 --> 01:26:48,686 There are millions of those things around. 839 01:26:48,720 --> 01:26:51,482 And I don't know how you ever would tell. 840 01:26:52,759 --> 01:26:57,350 4 million, 4 million 200,000, 4 million 400,000. 841 01:26:57,384 --> 01:27:00,491 Maybe 20 years from now, 30 years from now suddenly it's - someone will find it 842 01:27:02,009 --> 01:27:05,634 and you'll have to pay a pretty penny to get it. 843 01:27:05,668 --> 01:27:07,774 But do I think it exists? Yeah. 844 01:27:09,051 --> 01:27:12,054 It may show up in an auction someday, who knows? 845 01:27:12,088 --> 01:27:14,367 Anyone wish to give more telephone bids? 846 01:27:14,401 --> 01:27:16,507 Someone probably bought it like they buy art 847 01:27:16,541 --> 01:27:18,923 thinking well maybe 10 years from now darling, 848 01:27:18,957 --> 01:27:20,476 this will be worth something. 849 01:27:21,650 --> 01:27:24,722 Just like the de Kooning we bought. 850 01:27:25,516 --> 01:27:27,863 All done? 851 01:27:32,108 --> 01:27:33,972 When he died at the age of 59 852 01:27:34,007 --> 01:27:36,734 Capote had not finished what he called his final 853 01:27:36,768 --> 01:27:38,977 and most important book Answered Prayers. 854 01:27:39,012 --> 01:27:42,360 The book was about life among the unhappy rich 855 01:27:42,395 --> 01:27:45,329 where Capote spent much of his time. 856 01:27:50,368 --> 01:27:53,060 When he writes about the rich or the powerful 857 01:27:55,131 --> 01:27:57,375 contempt just bleeds through him. 858 01:28:03,692 --> 01:28:07,040 The most beautiful writing is about people that don't have any money. 859 01:28:09,007 --> 01:28:13,391 Who aren't famous, who aren't celebrated. That's where you see Truman's heart. 860 01:28:39,728 --> 01:28:40,625 Yes. 861 01:28:59,161 --> 01:29:00,852 Oh, well then you - how can you come here 862 01:29:00,887 --> 01:29:02,682 and talk to me about it? 863 01:29:02,716 --> 01:29:05,512 Jesus, we've been having this big discussion here based on 864 01:29:05,547 --> 01:29:07,963 something that I thought he had this intimate knowledge. 865 01:29:12,726 --> 01:29:14,901 What is heaven for Truman Capote? 866 01:29:20,044 --> 01:29:22,909 I think he probably felt he was in it for a time. 867 01:29:25,912 --> 01:29:27,776 Ballsy little guy. 868 01:29:29,709 --> 01:29:31,711 I have Truman's sofa. 869 01:29:31,745 --> 01:29:33,989 The sofa that he was photographed on in Brooklyn. 870 01:29:35,577 --> 01:29:38,062 And I bought some little ornaments for the table. 871 01:29:39,684 --> 01:29:43,723 Little matchstick holders and lots of little things like that. 872 01:29:47,243 --> 01:29:49,970 What I wanted to buy but I regret that I didn't 873 01:29:50,005 --> 01:29:52,041 was a box of cookies. 874 01:29:53,249 --> 01:29:57,392 Truman had gone through his entire life with 875 01:29:58,669 --> 01:30:02,017 ginger cookies made by Aunt Sook. 876 01:30:04,709 --> 01:30:07,781 They were little gingerbread men dried and desiccated. 877 01:30:09,507 --> 01:30:12,407 His Aunt Sook's gingerbread cookies went with him everywhere. 878 01:30:14,132 --> 01:30:18,102 So extraordinary that his childhood meant so much to him. 879 01:30:19,310 --> 01:30:21,726 These things mattered you know? 880 01:30:27,836 --> 01:30:29,562 Truman had a composition style notebook. 881 01:30:31,287 --> 01:30:33,704 He just said if you want to live with me you have to write about your life. 882 01:30:35,326 --> 01:30:37,915 So I said well why? And he said because your life's about to change 883 01:30:39,503 --> 01:30:42,195 and it's the only way you'll hold onto who you really are. 884 01:30:46,682 --> 01:30:49,098 So I always think of that with him. 75262

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.