William Shatner: You Can Call Me Bill (2023)

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William Shatner: You Can Call Me Bill (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

- When you take away the mask,

what is there

to boldly go into?

Boldly go into your life.

Live your life fully,

passionately.

We all have our loves,

and what a miracle

that is on this planet.

I'm afraid of being alone.

Everything loves.

Every living thing loves.

What's your legacy?

What are you leaving behind,

good deeds?

Also, a tree.

I've always had dogs

in my adult life.

In my childhood, my parents

wouldn't let me have a dog.

And so I yearned

to have a dog.

I did have one dog when

I was nine, ten years old.

Parents didn't like it

very much because my father,

who was an earnest man

who worked very hard

and thought, why am

I spending money on a dog

when I could be saving it?

I used to come home from

school and climb the fence

to our little backyard

where the dog would be

and interact with the dog.

One day, I climbed the fence,

there was no dog.

My mother was in the house.

"Where's the dog?"

And she said reluctantly,

he's outside, Bill-Billy.

And I knew something

was wrong, and I ran outside.

And there was my beloved dog,

dead on the street.

It'd been hit by a car.

And I remember gathering

the little-ish dog in my arms.

We had stairs to the-

This was a quadraplex.

And underneath those stairs

was a space.

There was sunlight,

and the latticework

cast a latticework of light

over the dog.

And I was holding the dog,

crooning in pain.

And I lost my dog.

The dog that meant so much

to me as a kid was dead.

I didn't quite understand

what dead was, I think,

but I remember

being bewildered.

And, finally,

I buried the dog.

I think I must have buried it

under those stairs.

And never had a dog since

until I was married-

about 25, 26.

And the first thing

I did was get a dog.

They speak to you.

Dogs speak to you.

Horses speak to you, too.

Trees communicate.

There's this fungi network

which the trees are using

like brain stems.

There's a pattern

in the ground

for a latticework.

I'd like to think there's

a latticework in the universe.

Everything else

has a structure.

Why wouldn't there be

a structure there?

All these things that took

5 billion years to grow,

to become-

I'm working myself up into

an emotional storm here.

It took 5 billion years

to evolve what we see now

in nature.

The preciousness

of everything-

the snails, the worms,

the gnats-

took 5 billion years

of exquisite...

agony.

And the reason I feel so sad

about it

is because...

Extinction is happening

so rapidly now...

By mankind's own hands,

by pollution.

All that is disappearing.

And I'm overwhelmed with it

because we're living

in a miracle.

The little brain that got us

out of the tree

and invented things,

made tools

also has allowed us

to look up into the sky

and look down on the ground,

and realize the miracle

of what we're living in-

the miracle of the universe,

the miracle of the ground,

the miracle...

No, no-

No, no, no, no, no!

I'm not beaming in.

You said I could make

an entrance

with a rocket

strapped to my ass.

By the time people see

what we're filming...

I will have received

a lifetime-achievement award,

a rather prestigious one.

- And we are forever

in your debt.

- What do you achieve

in a life

that's worth an award?

Save yourself...

some money.

Whether you're celebrated

for your death

and your statue's knocked

down 50 years later...

- It's what

he would have wanted.

- Or you d*ed in battle

and were buried

in an unmarked grave.

- It really doesn't matter

'cause it's all over so soon.

So...

the occasion of your death

is meaningless.

You're one

of billions upon billions

who lived and d*ed on Earth.

I thought

about that quite a bit.

And the only answer

I came up with...

is this.

In my life-

So I was born in Montreal.

And when I was

six years of age,

I was at a camp

in the Laurentian Mountains-

city boy going for two weeks

into the woods.

And the camp put on a play,

and I was in the play,

and something they had

written for me that I said

caused the audience to cry.

- This is about Willy.

- Zero hour...9:00 a.m.

And I was bitten by the bug.

And I'm gonna be high.

Maybe it was communication.

Maybe it was, wow,

I made people cry.

I'll try and make them laugh.

And that was a lifetime.

He d*ed

of a heart att*ck onstage.

That's what he d*ed-

That's the way I want to go.

Not tonight.

I see you walking around

town with the girl I love

And I'm like, you

I guess the change

in my pocket wasn't enough

I'm like, you,

and, uh, her, too

That's the story of my life.

Nothing there particularly

to get an award for.

I just did what any actor

was doing

to one degree or another.

But what I did do,

somewhat consciously...

Was take care

of the inner child,

that curious baby

who looked around

and said, why is the sky blue?

Do worms have eyes?

What are they doing

under the ground?

Why are we here?

Is there a God?

What happens after death?

We ask ourselves questions.

Why?

- Excuse me,

I'd just

like to ask a question.

What does God need

with a Starship?

- Will they reach New York

all right now?

Are we gonna live in the East?

Are we gonna live in the West?

Are we gonna live

in this country?

- And then as you...

get a job and you get married

or you have children,

life's exigencies prey on you,

and that curiosity

is generally beaten

out of you in school, in life.

You lose the curiosity.

And that's a shame

because that curiosity

is what keeps us...

Alive.

- Children never age.

Eternal childhood

filled with play.

No responsibilities.

It's almost like a dream.

- I wouldn't examine

that dream too closely.

It might not turn out

to be very pretty.

- It's the search for love

that sends everybody

in motion,

whether you're searching

for the love of God-

whoever that is,

whatever that is-

the love of nature,

the love of a woman or a man,

the love of curiosity.

And I think curiosity

is love...

is the fulfilled life.

And I've tried

to inculcate myself

to be aware...

to be aware, live in the now,

and say,

why is that happening?

What is that?

Oh, how interesting.

What do you think?

What's your story?

How do you feel?

And I've been able to do that

to a degree,

and I'm kind of proud of that.

And if I am to receive

any kind of an award,

it would be for taking care

of my inner child.

I'm a grandfather

more than once.

My granddaughter-in-law

had her family

at this birthday party

in the park,

and my family was there.

I was looking at it

like a three-layered cake.

I'm on the bottom layer.

And I'm looking around,

and I'm thinking,

my God, I'm out of here soon.

And I hate that phrase.

I'm gonna die soon.

I'll never see

these babies grow up.

I'll never know

what they're going to become.

We're all connected.

I'll come back to this

time and time again...

because I know nothing.

Our ignorance is so profound.

And the more we know,

the more we realize how stupid

and how egotistical

human beings are,

thinking we're the only ones.

- I don't believe we can stop.

I don't believe

we're meant to.

Do you wish...

the first Apollo mission

hadn't reached the moon

or we hadn't gone on to Mars

and then to the nearest star?

That's like saying you wish

that you still operated

with scalpels

and sewed your patients up

with catgut,

like your great-great-great-

great-grandfather used to.

- Animals very rarely have...

duplicity.

We're the ones

who are greatly duplicitous

and have the masks up.

The thing that makes me feel

a connection

to whatever we call it

is nature or animals

or people.

But...

you reach a connection

with a horse that is-

can be something mystical.

And I think the mysticism

is all in the human feeling,

not in the horse.

The horse is there-

oh, jeez, he's got

on my back again.

But you're thinking,

this magnificent animal,

and he and I, or she and I,

are at one.

Horses live in the now.

So that's the first thing

you learn about horses.

They're here and now.

Live in the now.

So, if you're

in communication...

with that horse,

if you and the horse

are vibrating

at the same rate...

that horse...

that horse is and you are

in each other's thrall,

you are mystically bound.

Well, you're at one

with the horse,

but you're also at one

with the Earth.

You're also at one

with the planet.

You're at one with the stars.

You're at one with the sky.

You're at one with the breeze

in your face.

You're at one with-

and this is where

we get crazy-

with the creator, whoever-

whatever that is.

He or she or whatever

that is, where it started,

you're suddenly at one.

And it's humbling.

It's like you're there.

And it's so large.

It's so gigantic.

It may be the answer

to what happens when you die.

It's just- you can't be

egotistical about that.

The ecstasy of that

is what brings you

to that cathedral of the barn,

where you and the horse

are vibrating on the same...

whatever that is, channel.

And that's the mystique

and the mysticism

about being at one

with the universe.

And that can be done.

It happened to me

in a performance

three weeks

before this is being taped.

- So fragile, so blue

What can we do?

What can we do?

What can we do?

What can we do?

What can we do?

Thank you, and good night.

I was at one

with the audience.

For me, with an audience, it

happens with some regularity.

I'm there with the audience.

The audience is there with me.

And it's a performance.

And suddenly

the silence is palpable.

What do you mean

you're communicating

with an audience?

And yet, it is.

And it happens enough

that you can repeat

the experience.

So there must be something

that we are dimly aware of.

That feeling...

of being at one...

Is...

religious.

It's animistic, I think.

And that's where paganism

comes in,

where a rock may contain,

not a God in our language

but a spirit.

The tree has a spirit.

People who live

close to the Earth

realize that these gifts

from the Earth

need to be thanked.

So, whether it's

Thank You, God, for this

or for a moment of reflection,

just thank the Earth

for being what it is.

And that's the sadness.

I have some property

in the foothills

of the Sierras.

And I was going through

some tough times financially.

The land is on a wild river.

So one day I'm

in the wild river naked.

And I'm thinking, you know,

I've got to sell this land.

I got to get the money

and sell this land.

And I'm sitting there naked,

and there's a lizard.

And the lizard's going...

I think, oh, my Lord,

the lizard gets its water

by catching droplets

from the river.

I can't possibly sell

this land.

And I didn't.

- Come on, let's go.

- When I was a kid, RKO,

which is now CBS,

was turning out Westerns by-

you know,

I think they made

them in a week.

And I loved them.

I lived in Montreal, just off

of a street called Monkland.

And there was

a Monkland movie theater.

It's Canada, but it was

right out of Middle America.

Have a soda, pay a dime or-

It went to a quarter

at one point,

where they would

play movies all day.

So you could go in

and see three movies.

- Bambi!

- I must have seen "Bambi"

two or three times.

Father came in

and picked me up,

and I remember hanging on

to a railing

'cause I didn't want to go.

He's pulling me off.

"Bambi!"

I was enthralled with movies.

So I think that was a big part

of becoming an actor.

I couldn't get enough.

You know, I'm just

beginning to realize now,

as I talk to you...

that those Westerns

and those horses,

the legend

of the American West

was everything.

I rode a great

saddle-bred

stallion bareback

in a movie we made

on Alexander the Great.

Alexander was

Captain Kirk in 300 BC.

I rode bareback,

which is very difficult to do,

at a gallop with a sword and

a shield

and holding the horse.

And I worked for six months

getting myself ready

for that movie.

And that was, like,

everything.

I admire people who...

go home in the role.

I mean, they bring the role

home with them.

My actor heroes were

Olivier and Marlon Brando,

two opposite poles

of the acting rainbow,

if you will.

And being Canadian,

I was in between the English

and the American worlds.

So I had long since learned

to learn the words,

do the best you can

with the character.

- My office is next to yours

at the Palace of Justice,

if you need anything.

- Thank you.

- Senator.

- And when it was done,

you were done.

I mean, you're

a professional actor.

A carpenter doesn't come home

and try to fix the

dining-room table necessarily.

But if you say, this character,

is on a five-year mission

to discover

and he's filled

with awe and wonder

about what he's discovering,

what else do you need to know?

- Gentlemen,

they're debating

in a vacuum.

Let's go get some answers.

- Every line then becomes,

wow, look at that.

Look at this.

Look at that.

- I prefer this-

double-action .357 Magnum,

loaded with hollow points.

- TJ Hooker,

a recalcitrant policeman

who doesn't want to do

all these new things

like read Miranda rights-

what the hell is that?

- It'll tear a 6-inch hole in

you going in

and the Holland Tunnel

coming out.

Resist arrest.

Resist arrest, please.

- He's a bad guy.

You mean I have to?

For God sakes.

Okay, I will.

- Now to prison,

When a bust does stick,

we house them,

give them color TV

and their wives on weekends.

If that makes sense to you...

then you and I are about

to have a problem,

because

I'm your instructor here,

and I love to weed out

airheads and marshmallows.

- That's the character.

And Denny Crane,

like, confused.

Like...

I don't quite remember.

- Denny Crane.

- Yes, I know

you're Denny Crane.

Why do you always

tell me your name?

Is it so you won't forget?

- Two wild things that

David E. Kelley wrote

that I don't even think

he knew

'cause he never offered

an explanation.

Two things.

One is, he had the character

say the name Denny Crane.

Denny Crane.

So he'd write out Denny Crane,

Denny Crane, Denny Crane.

- Denny Crane.

Denny Crane.

Denny Crane.

- I'm ahead of you there.

- Denny Crane.

- Good for you.

- What the hell

does that mean?

What's he saying?

I had a picture

of reptiles

who flick out their tongue

to get a reading

on what the atmosphere

is like, its scent.

That flicking is not-

That's their nose

and their apprehension

and comprehension

of their environment.

So Denny Crane,

I pictured,

Denny Crane, Denny Crane.

Eh, Denny Crane.

And getting a reading.

When I say Denny Crane,

what's your reaction?

- What's my name?

- Denny Crane.

- Like you mean it.

- Denny Crane.

- What's my name?

- Denny Crane!

- No further questions.

- Oh, you know me.

You don't know me?

Denny Crane. Denny Crane.

- Could you just

say those two little words

I so long to hear?

- Denny Crane.

- Thank you.

- Then...

every so often

in the five years

that we did the show,

he'd write-

the character would say,

"Play the music."

I'd say to the director,

do you understand what-

Who am I saying,

play the music?

Do you understand play-

No, I don't know.

So I'd say, play the music.

I didn't know what

to do with the line.

On the last show,

the last season,

he has the character say...

"I think of my life

as a TV show."

That's why he's saying

play the music.

- Cue the music.

- So that's the discoveries.

That's the fuel.

And from then,

you just maneuver

the ship anywhere you want,

but you've got

an engine going.

Remembering the lines

is an unspoken-about skill.

Laurence Olivier came onstage

and forgot his lines-

we call it going dry-

in his acceptance speech

for the Academy Award.

I remember saying,

what did he say?

- In the great wealth,

the great firmament

of your nation's generosities,

this particular choice

may perhaps be found

by future generations

as a trifle eccentric,

but the mere fact of it...

- Either that day

or days later,

he explained he didn't know

what he was saying

'cause he was so panicked

being in front

of that audience.

He just spoke words.

He made absolutely no sense.

He just strung phrases

that he had remembered

from Shakespeare plays

and anything

you could think of.

There's a pen on the desk,

and it writes beautifully.

- And the extraordinary

elation,

the euphoria that happens

to so many of us

at the first breath

of the majestic glow

of a new tomorrow.

- And we all are fearful

of forgetting.

I would imagine-

I've not talked about this

at any great length

with other actors.

But for me, learning the words

is the work of the actor.

Everything else is a kick.

Without paying the penalty

of sky-high fuel bills.

I'm delighted

to be part of the future...

of Kero-Sun.

I really am.

Now I go.

- An actor brings himself.

Again, Laurence Olivier-

they used to say,

with his makeup on,

first the nose came onstage,

followed by Larry.

No matter what you do-

with some exceptions,

like De Niro

putting on a lot of weight,

and then taking the weight off

to play that boxer.

That was extraordinary

and unhealthy.

But for the most part,

all the actor can do

is bring who he is

to the role.

Every human being is limited

by what they are,

whether it's in business-

Whatever business you're in,

you bring

your own sensibilities to it.

No matter how much you pretend

I'd like to be so-and-so,

you can't be.

You're yourself.

I think that everybody

wears a mask-

everybody-

until you take it down.

We're all holding a mask up

to various times

to various people.

We're holding up the mask

that I think

is what we expect them

to think.

I want them to realize

what you're thinking about me

is true,

and here's my mask.

I think that's it.

So you hold the mask

up of being intelligent.

- And here I thought

you were in shock.

- No, you didn't.

You thought I was confused...

perhaps scared...

and probably playing for time.

- Amazing.

- Why do birds

suddenly appear?

- Or being funny

or being wise.

Hello, I'm William Shatner,

and I'm a shaman.

I'm a conduit of

the ancient forces of nature.

Or being Daddy,

husband, lover.

Mask.

- Hi. I'm your host on this

visit to Washington, D.C.

When do you take

away the mask,

and how do you know you've

taken away the mask?

- What-

What does it mean?

There is no myself.

I'm an actor.

Man of a thousand faces-

one for Farragut,

one for Norland, one for Lila,

one for the children, one-one-

There's no myself anymore.

There's nothing in the mirror.

- You look in the mirror.

You don't really see yourself

when you look in the mirror.

I mean, you'd be appalled

at what you really look like

if you could just see

the reality of-

That's why I don't watch film

on myself,

because

you can't peel away the-

That's real.

There was a close-up

of me as Kirk dies.

And I wanted Kirk

to die the way he lived-

with courage-

'cause I always played Kirk...

with curiosity.

He would say,

oh, my God, what's that?

I wanted that to be his death.

And I didn't quite-

I wish I'd had

another take at it.

- It was...

Fun.

Oh, my.

- I wanted to be, "Oh, my"...

like, wow, death is coming.

How interesting.

Because that's the way

he led his life.

We'll die the way we live.

I mean, we don't change...

When you die, I guess.

I don't know.

Does anybody know?

Nobody knows.

Doesn't anybody know?

Does anybody know?

What's that line from a song?

Nobody knows.

It is slightly darker

than I wanted it to be.

And maybe that's the way

it should be.

- Captain, I just wanted

to assure you

that I did what I thought best

to save both you and the men.

- Noted.

You should know, however,

that there's very little

a Starbase can do

that a Starship can't.

- If I may say so, Captain,

I am now quite aware

of what a Starship can do

with the right man

at the helm.

- Commanding officers-

really good

commanding officers-

I don't know

whether I knew this then,

all those years ago,

but, certainly,

I've observed that...

don't say

all right, let's turn left.

That's what they did

on the pilot.

- We aren't going to go

to be certain?

- Not without any indication

of survivors, no.

Continue on to the Vega colony

and take care of our own sick

and injured first.

You have the helm.

Maintain present course.

- Yes, sir.

- And they presented it to NBC.

And NBC said,

well, it's a great idea

but we don't like the cast.

Do another thing.

And I was in the second pilot.

- I'll have you checkmated

your next move.

Have I ever mentioned you play

a very irritating game

of chess, Mr. Spock?

- Irritating?

Ah, yes, one

of your Earth emotions.

- Certain you don't know

what irritation is?

- As long as he has

the command presence,

he can be a joker.

He could be light.

He could be heavy.

He could be...

But that command presence

is what you need.

And that's what I think

I tried to do

most of the time.

- I'm in command.

I could order this.

But I'm not...

Because Dr. McCoy is right...

in pointing out

the enormous danger potential

in any contact

with life and intelligence

as fantastically advanced

as this.

But I must point out

that the possibilities,

the potential...

for knowledge and advancement

is equally great.

- Just be present there

with the ability to know-

I know exactly

what we have to do,

and I'll tell you what-

you know, just go over there,

stand there,

and be ready when I count.

- Given

the same circumstances...

I would do the same thing

without hesitation,

because the steps I took

in the order I took them...

were absolutely necessary

if I were to save my ship.

And nothing...

is more important

than my ship.

- And so I think

I brought more humor, more...

I didn't think it needed

to be as...

we're on a mission.

And took it from seeing

real guys,

real commanders

who don't do that.

- When I think of the hospitals

in which

over 130,000 other men

of the Third Army...

have had a damn good time,

usually.

- Why me?

- I've never heard

of a network saying

to a company,

here's the money to do another

pilot

of the same show.

Just change the cast

and, of course, another story.

- I believe there's some hope

for you after all, Mr. Spock.

- Could you define

for me Shatnerian?

What is that?

- Oh, Shatnerian.

- Shatnerian.

- I have no idea.

I've heard that phrase.

- I see myself in you, Joey,

at your age.

I just wish someone

had given me

the opportunity that you have.

We grow up too soon, Joey.

- I have no idea

what they mean.

I hear people going...

And he talks like this.

And when

they started doing that,

I remember turning to my wife-

is that me?

Is that what they're doing?

- Normally, Shatner talks at

a pretty lightning-fast pace.

He's William Shatner.

He's talking.

And when sometimes the lines

aren't as...

obvious to him,

he slows down.

Becomes more deliberate

in his approach...

until he gets it,

then he's back

speeding up again and talking.

- People's supposed imitation

of me is...

I don't know.

I don't hear it.

- Listen to me.

Time and space-

you're taking up

valuable time and space.

- And when I speak,

I never,

ever talk like every word

is its own sentence.

- I became friends

with Edward G. Robinson.

As an actor, he did

a lot of nyah, nyah.

Well, I'm gonna rub them out.

Nyah.

So I said to him one day...

Do you know you go, nyah?

He's like, I go, nyah?

- I turn on the radio,

what do I hear?

Nyah, nyah, nyah.

Everybody on television,

nyah, nyah, nyah.

The day...

the day my little baby

was born,

the first time that

I picked him up in my arms,

all other babies say,

goo, goo, dada.

He looked up at me, and

he said, nyah, nyah, nyah.

- Comedy is as delicate

as a heart operation.

If you say take my wife...

please, you know...

if you say, take my wife,

please, it's not funny.

But if there's a mystical-

a mist, not mystical-

but a mist...

of humor.

- How are you all?

I'm glad to be here.

Take my wife, please.

- One wrong move,

and you've lost the humor,

lost the joke.

I mean, if you're saying-

go back to the other line-

take my wife, please.

I don't know why I keep

going back to that.

I don't want you

to take my wife.

Please don't take my wife.

Take my-

Please.

Somebody in the office-

in the audience coughs...

it destroys the laugh.

It's empty.

One slight deviation

from the timing of the line,

but particularly

the feed line-

There's a feed line

and a snapper,

the joke line and laugh.

The timing on that is

exquisite, exquisite.

Fred Willard,

I've been watching your career

for many years,

and I can honestly say...

I don't get it.

You're just so dry.

If you were any dryer, you'd

be in Betty White's underwear.

You rehearse in a room,

and you think it's funny.

And then opening night

in front of a trial audience,

the play changes completely,

'cause there's

another character in the play-

the audience.

Hello.

- Captain on the bridge,

captain on the bridge!

You're William Shatner.

- You can call me Bill.

- Can I call you Captain?

- No.

- Please?

- No.

And, slowly,

you play that music

of allowing the audience in,

incorporating the audience in

so that...

you're playing

to the audience,

but you're not playing

to the audience.

- I've appeared onstage

at Stratford,

at Carnegie Hall, Albert Hall,

and the Monkland Theater

in MBG.

And, yes, I've gone where

no man has gone before,

but...

I was in Mexico, and

her father gave me permission.

My name is William Shatner,

and I am Canadian!

And you're aware

of the audience,

but you're not aware

of the audience.

It's a delicate balance

everywhere.

And the moment you lose that

balance, you lose the laugh.

You lose the continuity.

You lose the character.

Everything

goes out the window.

That first laugh...

It's like suckling

on mother's milk.

It's just...

- Ladies and gentlemen,

William Shatner.

- Empowering.

- Thank you, thank you.

Thank you very much.

Thank you.

The producer said, we'd like

you to do the opening

for George Lucas's

Lifetime Achievement Award.

And the sketch for me-

It was literally a sketch.

You go out there and act

as though you're

at a "Star Trek" convention.

"Star Trek"

changed everything.

And aren't these conventions

wonderful?

And then discover

that it's "Star Wars"...

And then get off

as fast as you can.

So I take a piece of paper

out of my hand.

"Mr. Shatner, we want you

to open the show.

'Star Wars'?"

And they got it,

and they started to laugh.

And the moment

they started to laugh,

I realized that I had them,

because that's

a very delicate balance.

Imagine...

if they didn't get it.

George.

It's George, isn't it?

May I call you George?

Thank you.

You can call me Mr. Shatner.

That's how delicate

a balance comedy is.

That's the...

springboard...

that you dive off of

from a 30-foot height,

and you hope there's water

in the pool.

That's comedy.

That's the courage

of a madman.

And...

when you fail...

I failed.

I did fail once,

more than once, but this

was a memorable failure.

So I was asked to do

a stand-up comedy routine.

So I got a great idea.

I'll come out as Captain Kirk,

who thinks

he's a stand-up comic.

Take my wife, please.

'Cause he's got no timing

'cause he's a captain of

a Starship, he's not a comic.

And what if he's the worst

stand-up comic that ever was?

That sounds funny to me.

Take my wife, please.

Nobody's laughing.

sh*t.

That was my lesson

in comedy failing.

I almost forgot it,

it was so painful.

It's embarrassing.

And apparently a lot of,

if not all, stand-up comics-

even the good ones,

even the ones

that are, like, now popular

and they're trying a

new routine out

and it doesn't work,

and it's like-

It's death. It's death.

You want to die.

You want to die now.

And they go on, you know.

They keep going.

Maybe this one will work.

- Great. I think we've got it.

Bill, I hope you

come back tomorrow.

I hope you haven't had enough.

- That's the best line yet.

"I hope you come back

tomorrow."

No, I'm gonna go ride

a horse tomorrow.

The thing about getting old

is you don't realize

you're getting old.

Oh, yeah.

We're both too old

for this kind of thing.

- As a kid in Montreal,

at some point when I was six

or seven or eight,

my dad could afford

to rent a cottage,

a little old cottage

on a little old lake,

and not too far away

was a welfare camp.

And by the time

I was 15 or 16,

I applied to the camp

to be a counselor.

These were tough kids from

the tough part of Montreal.

So I defended myself

by telling stories.

I was in demand

as a storyteller.

And...

I used to tell them

ghost stories.

Once upon a midnight dreary...

While I pondered weak

and weary

over many a quaint

and curious volume

of forgotten lore...

while I nodded,

nearly napping,

suddenly there came a tapping.

I was an actor

when I was six years old,

and being an actor,

taking material

that you don't let-

even in your innocence

because you're a child,

you don't know anything about,

and putting it out

for the first time

in front of an audience

is an adventure itself.

- Corbis.

I'll face whatever you have

behind those doors

and come out exactly

as I went in.

- Everything, by the way,

is an adventure.

My talking to you

should be an adventure

for you and for me

so that I'm discovering what

I'm saying as I'm saying it.

Everything's risky.

Actors want to be

loved and liked.

And no matter

what the role is,

the jeopardy is the same.

- Jump, jump.

That a girl.

- Playing the leading role

in any of these series

that I've done,

that's a risk.

- Aah!

- I do have a sense

of adventure.

I did a series called

"Voice of the Planet."

And I'm there on a-

I don't know-

12,000-, 14,000-foot mountain

on a glacier,

standing there like that.

I hear a cr*ck there,

oh, and a cr*ck there.

I don't know

what's between my legs,

whether I could fall in there

to an icy blue-ice death.

And I'm standing there

thinking,

what am I doing here?

Why have I done this?

I've done a number

of those things

over a period of my life,

and I don't know why.

But there's something

beautiful about that.

- Risk.

Risk is our business.

That's what the Starship

is all about.

That's why we're aboard her.

- Fighting against myself

as a character,

you got to look

for characteristics

that are obvious enough

so the audience will know

which one it is.

- You can't hurt me.

You can't k*ll me.

You can't.

Don't you understand?

I'm part of you.

You need me.

I need you.

- It's a sale.

Nothing beats a sale.

- Wrong move.

- You.

- You can save

up to half-off that sale

when you name your own price

on Priceline.

- But this one's a deal,

trust me.

- It's only pretending

to be a deal.

Here, bid $79.

Got it. Wow.

- You win this time,

good twin.

- I did a film in Spain

between seasons

at "Star Trek."

And the idea was...

there was a good twin

and a bad twin.

- I'll be in the place

called Rio Hondo.

I'll wait...

four days.

Either you come

and meet me there alone,

or I'll find you again.

One of us must die.

- Of course, they looked alike

'cause they were twins.

And they rode

distinctive horses.

Each twin

had a particular horse

so they could say, oh, no,

that was the other twin.

But in addition, in reality,

you needed two horses,

because for long sh*ts, you

needed a horse that would run.

And for close-ups,

you needed a horse

that was calm.

So I had four horses...

two for each character

that I was playing.

The horse for close-up

was named El Tranquilo,

the tranquil one.

And the one for long sh*ts

was El Nervioso,

the nervous one.

- You should make

a very convincing n*zi.

- In "Star Trek,"

there was a n*zi guy,

and then there was

the evil guy, evil Kirk.

- I'm Captain Kirk.

I'm Captain Kirk!

I'm Captain Kirk!

- A couple-

at least three of them.

Maybe there were

three or four.

But in doing that,

I needed to find a core

of the other character.

- Look at me carefully, Spock.

Can't you tell

I'm your captain?

- Well, there's one difference

between us-I'm hungry.

- The difference is

your weakness, Captain,

not mine.

- Captain Kirk

was the good guy,

but what did the bad guy-

What does a bad guy do?

And what does a n*zi do that

makes him more distinctive?

- Now...

Janice Lester takes

the place of Captain Kirk.

I already possess

your physical strength.

Only this Captain Kirk is

not afraid to k*ll.

- I've played Captain Kirk

as a woman.

How do you play a woman?

The key is to find a core.

There are keys,

if you think

about it enough-

- Rocket man...

- That make a character

sufficiently different enough

that it's recognizable,

but it's still you.

- Who are you?

Who are you really?

- What do you mean?

I'm the host of the hit series

"Rescue 911."

- I thought

that was Robert Stack.

- Robert Stack?

Are you insane?

- So what does

"know yourself" mean?

I've often thought of that.

"Know thyself."

Like what?

Like you like spaghetti?

Okay.

You know, but...

what are you going to do

in a situation?

You don't know what you're

going to do in a situation.

Standing on that train,

what was I doing?

Was I showing off?

Was I trying to make

a better movie?

Was I interested

in what it felt like?

That was the dumbest thing

I could have ever thought of,

putting myself in jeopardy

like that.

But logic only came in

after the passion.

- be so obsessed.

- Obsessed?

- That you could destroy

yourself, uh, your career.

- And we know that passion

overrides anything.

Overrides logic.

The reptilian brain of passion

overrides

the frontal lobe's thoughts.

It's unfortunate, but that's

what human beings are.

"What have I done?"

Which is a phrase

that I've used in my songs

quite a bit.

What have I done?

- My God, Bones.

What have I done?

- What you had to do...

what you always do...

turned death into

a fighting chance to live.

- There's no ego involved,

as far as I can consider.

I don't care.

I would do whatever

I was doing in a vacuum.

- Sea monkeys?

- Piranha.

- Their lives exude

a beautiful simplicity-

savage, ruthless,

existing only

to devour and destroy,

to taste blood, to rend flesh.

Sounds like me, right?

- What's it like to do that?

What's it like?

What's it feel like?

There is a curiosity about it.

Can I do that?

Can I do that

without hurting myself?

You're going

against all the instincts

and intuition

of self-preservation

by doing these-

by challenging your life.

- Have I the right

to jeopardize my crew, my ship

for a feeling

I can't even put into words?

No man achieves

Starfleet Command

without relying on intuition.

But have I made

a rational decision?

Am I letting the horrors

of the past

distort my judgment

of the present?

- When you talk about thrills

and danger,

all that pales besides

the search for passion.

You should be passionate

about everything.

You should be passionate

about talking, about eating.

I want a deep-fried turkey

I want a moister,

tastier turkey

I want a deep-fried turkey

About loving.

About exploring.

I mean, name a verb,

and you should be passionate

about it.

Go boldly passionately.

Without that,

everything is academic.

Boldly go, go into w*r.

Sail your vessel.

Put your vessel next

to the bad guys

and shields up.

But now...

in the aftermath...

what is there

to boldly go into?

The last thing is death.

So boldly go into your life.

Live your life fully,

passionately.

Have some effect,

do something good,

either to yourself,

to the people.

Leave something

that, you know,

that has some quality,

that has some value.

And then boldly go

into the next...

thing,

whether it's emptiness or...

whatever it is.

So it's an interesting phrase-

"Go boldly."

Go boldly.

Go with courage.

Go fully.

Go with commitment.

That's what it means.

Don't do it half-heartedly.

Whatever it is you do,

do it fully.

Do it passionately.

Do it with your whole being.

This is what I believe in

for the next five minutes,

and then I'll believe

in something else.

That's what it means.

I've often talked about regret.

You can't regret.

Oh, I should have turned left.

Because you went to the left

because that was your passion.

Either turn around and go

the right, if you can,

or boldly go to the left.

See if you can make a purse

out of a pig's ear.

So I've tried to limit

my sense of regret.

And that's why you

shouldn't have regrets.

You should try-

Ah, there's no "you should."

I don't know

what I'm talking about.

I...

tried not to do that.

I left home when it was safer

to stay home

and I wanted to stay home.

I...

I went onstage

as an understudy

for "Henry V."

Chris Plummer

was playing Henry.

Something was telling me-

drill those words,

drill those words.

Close the wall up

with our English-

Yeah, yeah,

I got it, I got it.

Once more unto the breach,

dear friend.

Once more unto the breach,

dear friend.

Once more un-

And I would work

and work at it.

And about a week

into the opening

of "Henry V," less,

somebody says to me...

the director wants to talk

to you.

Says, Chris is ill

in the hospital.

Can you go on?

Now,

what did he know?

And I said, yes.

I can go on.

- Timothy Leary,

on his deathbed,

took his final breath...

And said, "Of course."

That's all he said.

He didn't give us

any explanation.

Of course what?

Of course what?

What did he see?

What did he see?

Maybe he said, "Off course."

I don't know!

He didn't give us any context!

Loneliness is a...

a strange beast.

We all are essentially alone.

We don't realize it.

We're born alone.

We die alone.

In between,

we have relationships.

And the relationships

are good.

But do we really know

each other?

Do we really know ourselves?

Do we really know that...

we're not alone

because that person

or persons is...

is in us, with us, beside us?

I think that...

essentially we're all alone.

- I'm alone!

Alone.

Alone.

- And some of us,

I think I'm included,

have been alone all our lives.

Never really had...

the friendship

that we read about.

I knew some kids

on the street,

but I never had a real friend.

I think...

the women in my life,

the loves of my life,

have been my friend

and has assuaged

that loneliness.

But I just have been alone...

all my life, pure and simple.

It goes along

with the idea of masks

and what we hold up,

and do we ever present

ourselves as we really are,

as we really are

to somebody else?

Can we be absolutely honest?

I mean,

for a longer period of time

than a flash of passion.

I'm conflicted by it.

I don't want to be alone.

I'm afraid of being alone.

I've gone to great lengths

not to be alone.

And the thing

that frightens me most

about dying is dying.

- What am I-a dog that I die

when I am dead?

No.

I am a man with a God.

And when I die...

I live.

- Do you think about dying?

- All the time.

- Yeah?

- Yeah.

- Do you think it's going

to be pretty exciting?

- No.

- I think it is.

- I don't want to leave.

- Really?

- Well, I'm having

too good a time.

I'm more active now

than I've ever been.

I'm more productive,

more creative.

So I'm not languishing.

But what would happen

if you were languishing?

Do you communicate?

Do you say,

I'm dying and I'm afraid?

Can you talk about that?

Does anybody know

what they're talking about

when they talk to you

about it?

Oh, don't be afraid.

What do you mean

don't be afraid?

I'm the one that's dying.

No, it's going to be

all right.

You'll go to heaven.

What do you mean?

What's heaven?

What is heaven?

Well, all right, so you'll

just be part of the universe.

Great.

So I'll be unconscious.

Yes, 'cause you'll be an atom

or gas or something.

I've had enough gas.

So loneliness is endemic.

I saw a dog the other day

on the street

frantically looking around.

And is that what lonely people

do emotionally?

Emotionally,

frantically look around,

trying to find

some attachment?

I had a wild experience.

Went to Hawaii with my family.

And on that particular beach,

there was police tape.

There was a body.

Oh, somebody d*ed?

No, no, no, said the Hawaiian.

That's a monk seal.

She comes every so often,

comes up on the beach

and lies there.

And we got tape around her

so people won't bother her.

After a while,

the monk seal disappeared.

And I think

it was the next morning.

And I'm swimming,

and suddenly I'm grasped

from behind.

And I turned around.

And I'm looking at this thing

that's holding me.

It's the monk seal.

Had grasped me in its arms.

And I went, aah!

I screamed.

And the thing...

And it swam off.

And I thought

about that monk seal...

a lot...

alone...

but that was

like an animal so lonely

that it took the only thing

in the ocean to hug.

Dogs will howl in pain.

They cry out

'cause you've left them alone.

What is that?

The pack is gone.

Everything they belonged to

is gone.

And they howl.

And that howl is pain.

I'm alone!

I've howled like that

at various times

in pain of being alone.

I'm talking about

an existential loneliness.

I'm overwhelmed

with it all the time.

Love of other people-

that hasn't got anything

to do with it.

Oh, I love you.

Yeah, good.

But what do you do

in the middle of the night?

- See, here's the thing-

I've just moved into Caxton,

and I'm anxious to meet

some young people here.

But I don't have any contacts.

Isn't that a sad story?

- I'm Jewish,

and I went to school

in a non-Jewish area.

I was bullied a lot.

I would have a fight

every day.

And then a ring of students

would go, fight, fight, fight!

I was a kid who was interested

in acting,

and I was a kid

that was interested in sports.

The jocks

didn't understand acting,

and the actors

didn't understand

my love of sports.

I was in between

two worlds again.

And I spent a great deal

of time like that,

and I think a lot of that

has rubbed off

into who I am today.

I was in grade school,

and the teacher said,

all right,

it's Valentine's Day tomorrow.

Everybody send

valentines to each other

and say nice things-

you know,

write a nice message.

And for some reason...

My voice said, you'd better

write yourself

five or six valentines

to yourself.

So I wrote five or six

valentines to myself.

And then on Valentine's Day,

I got five or six valentines.

I had written-the only

valentines I got were to me.

Now, why is that?

And you try to examine.

Am I antisocial?

Do I smell bad?

Do I offend people?

So what happened there?

I don't know.

But I suppose it went along

with the bullying

or the attempt to bully me

and my fights every day.

My father was...

not ostensibly a loving man,

but he loved his family,

and he loved me,

although I heard the phrase

"this is going to hurt me

more than it hurts you,"

and off his belt would come.

And that phrase, "it hurts

me more than it hurts you"

stuck in my craw ever since.

But he was...

charitable to a fault

and to his family,

and he was

a very honorable citizen.

He was such

a worthwhile human being.

I loved my dad.

He was a Canadian snowbird.

And he was down in Miami

with my mother,

and he had a heart att*ck.

And she said

he was weeping

at the end and d*ed.

And that mystery of,

what was he crying about,

has haunted me.

What was he crying about?

Was he crying for his fate?

Did he want to see me?

Did he think, what have

I done with my life?

I was sh**ting "Star Trek,"

and it was lunch hour,

and the phone rings.

My mother said,

your father just passed away.

You got to come here.

It's noon.

And, what am I going to do?

So I thought, maybe we can

continue sh**ting the scene.

- Sadness...

Sadness...

for the end of things.

Go into the tunnel.

There is a passageway.

Quickly, quickly.

- I couldn't remember

the words,

and Leonard and the cameraman,

Jerry Finnerman,

just stood by me

the whole time-it was wild.

And the other vivid memory

is the sound of the Earth

hitting the casket,

I can hear now

as loud as thunder.

Boom.

Oh, I won't forget that.

And...

and that was my dad.

And he d*ed before I achieved

any real success.

I mean, I was living

hand to mouth for many years.

My father I knew loved me,

but my mother wasn't

demonstrably loving

in that way.

I would watch sometimes

these athletes,

they get chosen

to be on the team

and they're

surrounded by their family,

and the mother hugs the boy,

and the boy hugs the mother

before the father.

Wow.

That's something.

I marvel at it all the time.

Oh, Johnny, you made the team.

I'm so proud.

Mom! I did it, Mom!

Wow.

I never said "Mom."

I don't say "my mom."

"I love my mom."

Mom?

What the hell is mom?

It's "my mother."

When children talk

about their female parent

and they say "my mom"-

like, wow.

That's so warm and loving,

and I never had that.

I never had that with her.

She never offered

a motherly thing.

Oh, it's all right,

sweetheart.

We grieve all the time

for things that we lose.

We're in grief

a great deal of our life.

And we have to learn

to live with grief.

And then you learn to grieve

for the end of life,

like I'm losing life.

I'm losing my life.

I'm in-

What was that line

from Chekhov?

- Why do you always

wear black?

- I'm in mourning...

for my life.

- I'm in mourning

for my youth.

Why are you wearing black?

I'm in mourning for my youth.

Are atoms lonely?

Is an electron lonely when it

doesn't go around the nucleus?

Are scientists

as lonely as that

when they look

through a telescope

out into the space

and they see how far and

how enormous everything is?

How dictatorial...

the laws of nature are?

There's no bending there.

You can go around in a circle,

and you enter

into a black hole,

and you're gone forever.

There seems

no escape from any of that.

We're aware of the...

imponderable mysteries

out there.

We don't know anything.

I mean, the Earth-

the Earth is alone.

There's nothing like it

in our solar system,

and for us to get beyond the

solar system is monumental.

- We are leaving that vast

cloud of stars and planets

which we call our galaxy.

Behind us, Earth, Mars, Venus,

even our sun

are specks of dust.

A question...

what is out there

in the black void beyond?

- The planet is all we have.

And it is so...

ephemerally small.

We don't grasp how small it is

until you look at it.

My God.

So you talk about loneliness.

This is loneliness, man.

The whole planet is alone.

Human beings walking around

are alone.

And I think that,

and I feel that.

So it's more than Mommy.

It's...

it's huge.

- Science fiction became

science fact

for actor

William Shatner today.

At 90 years old,

"Star Trek's" Captain Kirk

became the oldest person

to travel to space.

- I'm lying in the seat...

and the engines

are fulminating.

- Our astronauts

can feel that.

They are sitting at the top

of a 60-foot rocket.

- And I hear, all right,

we're starting our countdown.

But before we start

a countdown-

This is almost verbatim.

Before we start

the countdown,

we're going to remove

the gantry.

So, if anybody decides

that they don't want to go,

now's the time to get off.

Huh?

I could go.

No, I can't go.

I can't go.

I'm Captain Kirk.

Now it's a go.

Countdown.

Hold on. There's an anomaly

in the engine.

An anomaly.

That's a great English word.

- There's something different

about this engine.

And all those thoughts

were flooding my brain.

I could've got off.

The "Hindenburg."

All right,

the anomaly's solved.

And we continue the countdown.

And now we're into liftoff,

and I'm looking out

the window,

and I see clouds of-

Oh, sh*t, I hope

this thing takes off.

My heart skipped a b*at.

And on the brink of an eye,

it all happened so fast.

A thunderous blast sh*t up

as clouds passed.

Punched a hole in the sky!

And...

And it starts to go.

Holy cow.

And we're up in the-

And I'm looking

at the disappearing-

it's on my right-hand side-

disappearing Earth.

And we're up.

And the Gs are enormous.

Oh, God.

And then, bom!

Weightlessness.

- God.

- Weightlessness.

Oh, Jesus.

During the heyday

of the "Star Trek" I was on,

there was the activity

to get to the moon.

So they invited me

to come to Kennedy.

And I came to Kennedy.

And at that point,

"Star Trek" was-

my "Star Trek" was on the air.

And I got there,

and they literally rolled out

the red carpet

and took me

into this giant space

where they assembled

the rockets.

Now, I don't know,

two years later,

Star Trek has been canceled.

I've been divorced.

I'm broke.

I'm-

That word is really weird,

isn't it?

"I'm broke."

No, I'm not broken.

I don't have any money.

I was in a pasture.

In order to save motel

expenses and eating expenses,

I had bought a wrecked truck.

And I'm lying on the bed

in that little cab,

and I've got a 4-inch

black-and-white television set

on my chest.

And I'm looking through

the window at the moon.

It was a clear night

that night.

And I'm looking

at Armstrong...

stepping down from the...

I'm at my nadir.

I have no money.

I'm living like a bum.

I've got my dog.

I mean, at one point,

I couldn't cash a $15 check

after "Star Trek."

- One giant leap for mankind.

- And I'm looking at the...

incredible feat...

F-E-A-T,

and his feet, F-E-E-T,

as he placed it

for one small step for man,

one giant step for mankind.

I hear him say those things,

and I'm thinking,

my God, that's fantastic.

And only a short while ago,

I was a part of it.

I mean, they used to say

that when the "Star Trek's"

ratings went up,

the government

voted more money.

It was like

a self-energizing loop.

And so I was a teeny, teeny,

infinitesimally small part

of him landing on the moon.

And I'm here, and he's there.

And as I went to sleep,

I thought of the irony of it.

I subsequently recovered,

but that was a moment.

There I was

in a giant lifetime

coincidence...

of symmetry...

of chance.

Yeah.

I had seen...

footage of the interior

of the "Blue Origin" spaceship

on the first trip,

which had Jeff Bezos,

his brother, some young kid,

and this older astronaut.

And when I saw the footage,

I was like, my God.

I mean, that's fun.

That's funny.

To tell it, it's funny.

But is that

what you want to do

in the three minutes

you have in space?

Once beyond gravity,

we unlocked the key

and set ourselves free,

floating around the inside.

While some tumbled and danced

in that weightless trance,

I had to take my chance

to the window

to witness the ride.

I needed to see

what was out there

for me, in the endless sea,

to meet my fate,

I could never anticipate

what I saw.

Filled me with awe.

But also something cold

and pitiless and raw-

an instinct to withdraw,

a hot coal to be dropped.

Relentless blackness

was all I could see,

like a depthless eternity,

a benevolent mystery

that could never be stopped.

Endless darkness.

No twinkling stars, no magic

lights that call from afar,

no breathable air,

nothing to care,

no message to send,

no beginnings or ends,

no life could sustain,

no dreams could remain,

nearly drove me insane,

and I felt a deep pain.

What I saw stopped me cold,

collapsed all my breath.

All I could see...

was death.

I thought, my God,

that's probably the darkness

you see when you die.

Boom.

There's no light.

It's all over.

And then I referred

back to Earth.

And I saw the white clouds.

I saw the beige of the...

Texas desert.

I saw all of it filtered

through the blue air,

the refraction of sunlight

through the water vapor

in the air.

And I saw the curvature

of the Earth.

I could delineate the Earth.

It is this little, tiny thing.

We're a moat of dust

in the universe.

We are living on debris

from the solar system.

Our brains aren't made

to encompass

the vastness of the things

we're talking about.

I stumbled and said,

I can't believe it.

But we can't imagine

what it is.

Einstein said,

it's a spooky place.

And it's a spooky place.

And I realized that

little tiny rock...

is all we have to live on.

So we land,

and I go to get off,

and I suddenly feel myself

crying uncontrollably.

What you have given me

is the most profound

experience I can have.

I'm so filled with emotion

about what just happened,

I just-

It's extraordinary,

extraordinary.

What the heck?

What am I crying about?

What am I crying about?

I did an interview with a guy

the day before yesterday,

a well-known interviewer.

He said, I don't believe

in global warming.

What do you mean you don't

believe in global warming?

Do you believe in a

red light saying-

stopping you?

Or do you say, that's-

I know it's a red light,

but I don't believe in it,

and you go right through?

I mean, what do you mean

you don't believe in-

it's, like, insane.

Frankly, I hope

this planet survives.

I really do.

But I am getting

sick of you smug,

hybrid-driving socialists

telling the rest of us

how to live our lives.

I'm rich, okay?

I like to guzzle a

little gas now and then.

I keep my thermostat at

72 during the winter.

And I prefer night games

in football.

And I am fed up with you

global warming wusses

raining on my electric parade!

- Earth is our home.

Space has no people,

passion, or love.

An endless question

hangs from above

we know almost nothing of.

We are...approaching...

A very, to put it mildly,

a very tough time for the

people who come after us.

And we've got our heads

in the sand, mostly.

It's total denial

on a global scale.

Because what is reality

is so painful that it-

you'd better not face it.

Lieutenant, how

would you handle this?

- We could try

ignoring it, sir.

- I see.

Pretend nothing has happened

and hope everything turns

out all right in the morning.

- Just a thought, sir.

- I've considered that.

There's got to be

a better angle.

I heard an author

some years ago say,

well, it doesn't bother

me because I'm out of here

very soon.

But what about your

loved ones?

What are you going

to do about that?

That's-really bothers me.

I can understand

the v*olence of a storm.

It's a natural thing not

meant to harm anyone.

But the v*olence of men,

that cruelty and

savageness to one another,

to themselves-

And I thought of all

those things as I came down.

And I was-

I realize now it took me hours

to come to the conclusion,

I was in grief for the Earth.

I hope I never recover

from what I discovered.

Like a long-lost lover, I had

left to neglect mountains,

trees, birds, beasts.

Life-giving water,

magnificent feasts.

North, South, West, East.

All human reactions,

from terror to fun.

All that breathes,

swims, flies, or runs.

Literally everything

under the sun!

We all have our loves.

And what a miracle

that is on this planet.

Snails, lions, sand-

You know?

And everything loves.

Every living thing loves.

...touching the skies.

The percentages of the

degradation of wildlife

on Earth is enormous.

We don't realize it,

but it's like-

it's like having termites,

you know?

I'm dancing on the floor,

and one day,

you fall through the floor.

How did that happen?

It's all there-

it's all being eaten away.

It's all so fragile.

What can we do?

What can we do?

It's so fragile.

So blue.

What can we do?

What can we do?

When my time has come,

don't put me in a box.

And skip the fancy shiva.

No platters of bagels and lox.

Lay down that spike

and chisel.

No headstone will I need.

Yeah, when I die,

my wish is clear.

Just plant me like a seed.

'Cause I want to be a tree.

Yeah, I want to be a tree

with plenty of leaves

and bark to spare.

For everyone to see.

I want to be a tree.

Yeah, I want to be a tree.

You can sit right

down under my shade.

That'll be enough for me.

How much of our lives are

spent not doing anything?

You know?

You're in a waiting room

of your life

waiting for something that

you hope will happen,

that you try to make

happen, that you

think is going to happen,

and you wait.

So making-

the fullness of your life

is really fraught

with a lot of waiting.

A full life is a life

that's lived with awareness.

You see,

I read it and it's true.

Make a pod from my remains

and stick me in the ground

and pray for sun and rain.

The richness from my body

will supercharge the Earth.

And like a natural

maternity ward,

to a sapling I'll give birth.

I haven't changed the world.

I mean, if you talk about

fame, my heroes of the screen

have now been dead

for many years.

Of course,

they were great artists.

But they no longer are.

They're gone.

The nitrate

on the film is oxidized.

The billboards are b*rned.

The statues are torn down.

But what does remain,

what is a legacy,

are the good deeds.

Yeah, I want to be a tree.

You can sit right

down under my shade.

That'll be enough for me.

And helping an old

lady across the street,

that deed reverberates

like the butterfly wings

which disturbs the air

and changes fate.

You've just changed somebody's

or something's fate

by your contribution,

and that will be- that

will stand the test of time.

Everything else, you, me,

everything,

fades into oblivion

very quickly.

But that good deed

reverberates.

And I feel that.

If humankind were to

disappear tomorrow,

the world would come

back very quickly.

The trees would grow back.

The lungs of the Earth

would come back.

So don't stick me in an urn

for some relative to keep.

And please,

don't throw me overboard

to the bottom of the deep.

No 21-g*n salute.

So just put those g*ns to bed.

I've got a much

more peaceful wish.

Bring the garden tools

instead!

And so I have

made arrangements

that my body will be cremated.

I'll be put in a bag

as an open sack.

A tree, a Redwood-

I wanted a Sequoia, but a

Redwood will be placed on-

over the bag.

The bag will nourish the tree.

I have this kind

of raw land where

I know where I want to do it.

The idea of still

being part of nature,

and flowering and there

and the tree grows,

and we know the

tree communicates-

and there's such a

mystique about trees,

and these wonderful,

large trees

that live for 1,000,

5,000 years.

There's a windswept Cypress

on the edge of a cliff

in Western California

on the coast.

The Lone Cypress.

And it's like an old,

gnarled grandfather.

It's, I'm here, and

I'm going to stay here!

What a thing.

What a thing to look at.

And those Sequoias, they're

1,000, 1,500 years old.

And they've lived

all that time,

enduring everything

that nature threw at them.

And fires of this year

k*lled Sequoia trees.

Where they are built

to survive any fire

because of their bark,

these fires were so bad that

Sequoias d*ed as a result.

That's how bad it is.

Yeah, I want to be a tree

with plenty of leaves

and bark to spare,

for everyone to see.

Yes, I want to be a tree.

I want to be a tree standing,

swaying, firm and tall.

Glorious and free.

I want to be a tree.

Can you imagine?

So you think,

what's your legacy?

What are you leaving behind?

Good deeds?

Also a tree.

But that one's for you.

You can

sit under the shade.

And that'll be enough for me.

That'll be enough for me.

- One, two, three, four...

- I have saved the world

in the movies.

So naturally,

there's folks who think

I must know what to do.

And just because you've

seen me on your TV...

doesn't mean I'm any more

enlightened than you.

- And while

there's a part of me

in that guy you've seen

up there on that screen

I am so much more.

And I wish I knew

the things you think I do

I would change this world

for sure.

But I eat and sleep and

breathe and bleed and feel.

Sorry to disappoint you

but I'm real

- I'd love to help the world

and all its problems.

But I'm an entertainer

and that's all.

So the next time

there's an asteroid

or a natural disaster,

I'm flattered

that you thought of me,

but I'm not the one to call.

- And while there's

a part of me

in that guy you see

up there on that screen

I am so much more.

And I wish I knew the things

you think I knew

I would change this world

for sure.

But I eat and sleep and

breathe and bleed and feel.

Sorry to disappoint you,

but I'm real.

- And while

there's a part of me

in that guy you've seen

up there on that screen...

I am so much more.

- And I wish I knew

- And I wish I knew...

- the things you think I do

- the things you think I do.

- I would change this world

- I would change this world...

- for sure

- for sure.

- But I eat

- But I eat...

- and sleep and breathe

- and sleep and breathe...

- and bleed and feel

- and bleed and feel.

Sorry to disappoint you...

...but I'm real.
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