Elizabeth Taylor - A Few Words 15 - by Richard Bassett
Some clips may seem to overlap and start and stop in mid-sentence. Please be patient with this process as it is the way such multi-clips can be posted on YouTube. To get the full stories, please watch previous posts for additional information. Thank you I have included some memorable interview clips with Dame Elizabeth Taylor as a guest from the period of circa 1986 through 2006. Please enjoy this series of short interviews as Elizabeth searches her soul and touches upon her personal history, her self image and self esteem, her loved ones and family and always AIDS. She reviews her own personal timeline regarding her battles with AIDS Fundraising and making certain that important people listened. There is a shy quality that we see, far from the zealous characters she has portrayed onscreen. Elizabeth Taylor talks openly and honestly in detailing some of the difficulties that she has survived in life. She is a true survivor in every sense of the word. Upon watching these clips myself, I fell in love with her all over again. She definitely leaves her ego at the front door as she approaches some deep subject matter all in an effort to allow us to know and understand the real Elizabeth Taylor, and not the Elizabeth Taylor we read about in the tabloids. Her honest is refreshing and it suits her so well. Again, enjoy the upcoming, A Few Words clips. In viewing these short film clips, please donate to the cause that has become Dame Elizabeth Taylors life mission for over two decades. The eradication of AIDS in the world. Until such time, The Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation funds programs and organization that give direct care to the population of millions affected with HIV/AIDSwhether it is direct care or related/ associated services. So many people are now living longer with AIDS/HIV due to advances in viral medication technology, but the impact of living a life with AIDS is far reaching. AIDS affects all of us, in one way or another. Generations of young people are not conscious of the 1980s. The face of AIDS has changed since the time when those who were ill were visibly stigmatized, akin to being lepers. Now, those with HIV/AIDS live life among the general population attempting to cope with the disease. Sometimes, silently. Emotionally, the impact is just the same as those first diagnosed. Fear. The only solution is to rid the world of this disease, therefore opening a technological highway aimed to ignite the remedy to so many other diseases as well. Any amount of time or money will push this development ahead, not behindnever behind!Thank you, Richard Bassettxrichbassx@yahoo.comThe Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundationc/o Derrick LeeReback Lee & Company, Inc.1990 South Bundy Drive, #700LA, Ca. 90025Or visit:.elizabethtayloraidsfoundation.org
Channel: Nonprofits & Activism
Uploaded: November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am
Author: richardbassett1956
Length: 09:53
Rating: 5.00
Views: 242
Video Comments
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LaSerpentaCanta (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Oprah Winfrey is so fucking GROSS AND VULGAR.
BaltoGirl (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
rate me 1-10 J
richardbassett1956 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
It was the 80's!
paul51 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
What was up with Oprah's "do?"
paul51 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Elizabeth looked, as usual, absolutely stunning in this interview. Thanks.
Abbyviki (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
So i assume Nicky Hilton, Mike Todd and Richard Burton were "strong" men. Of course Hilton was abusive so that's not a good thing. That means Michael Wilding, Eddie Fisher and John Warner were "weak" men?? Fortenski was somewhere in between. Started out strong and ended up weak. |
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