Transcripts For WUSA CBS News Sunday Morning 20140727

Card image cap



.. >> has now been diagnosed as a mental disorder, hoarding. >> up to 5 percent of americans. >> are we talking about decades worth of stuff? >> decades of stuff yes. it has been picked up at times in the past more has to leave the house. >> ahead, you new help for people who just have to hold on to so much stuff. >> osgood: and angelica huston with an actress with deep roots in hollywood. and we have her story. >> it is one of the more memorable moments in movie history. >> you want to do it, charlie? >> then one of the more memorable romances. >> do you you ever get tired of talking about jack nicholson. >> no because i never get tired of jack. >> anjelica huston on life on the spotlight and life in the country, later. on sunday new york. >> osgood: candid remarks caught on tape that a president who is died 40 years ago this summer, with mark strassmann this summer we will listen in. >> richard nixon's presidency collapsed under the power of the spoken and secretly recorded word. 40 years after his resignation this is, this historianea revls more nixon surprises on decades that took, on more tapes that took him a decade to transcribe. >> there is a lot of sort of barnyard cursing, unpleasant amount of back stabbing. >> we will play the nixon tapes. later on sunday morning.7' >> osgood: a summer song after a long absence from the spotlight is what fans of sarah mclachlan have been waiting for. as anthony us, the wait is now over. >> ♪ >> it has been a while since we have heard from sarah mclachlan. >> is it scary to sort of leave your audience for a while? >> no. it is a bit scary to come back. >> reporter: but after losing her father and a break with her manager, the grammy winning singer is touring again. >> it is -- >> ahead on sunday morning, sarah mclachlan. >> >> osgood: mo rocca has a cutting edge look at man escaping. mar a that teichner talked with ledge ling, richard rink richard linklater. >> honors a lost loved ones bucket list. >> 27th of july, 2014. after turning down an israeli proposal to extend a cease-fire in gaza by 24 hours hamas is now proposing a cease-fire of its own to mark the end of ramadan. >> gone into the gaza for the first time in weeks. >> in liberty a i can't with rival militias making the city of tripoli a war zone, united states closed the embassy yesterday. american travelers are being advised to avoid libya. >> the troops are on the outskirts of the rebel h donetsk. but russian backed forces are ramping up efforts to prevent ukraine from recapturing the city. >> wildfire in northern california has forced the evacuation of about 500 homes. the two square mile blaze near vineyards in the foothills of the sierra nevada not far from sacramento has already destroyed several houses. >> it was billed as a celebration of the human form in new york central park yesterday artists painted the nude bodies of 40 men and women and then marched down broadway to celebrate the event. public nude nude at this is legal in new york if it is considered a performance. >> yesterday, here is today's weather. thunderstorms and cooler temperatures could be in store for the mid atlantic states some clouds on the southeast sunny and hot in the west and in the week ahead, more rain could be in store for the east, cool on the plains, warm and humid in the south. next. >> i was at home and surrounded by all of these piles and i felt like i was suffocating. >> the horrors of hoarding. >> and there is a lot of hair in there. >> later -- >> the art of man escaping. man every story is a journey, and this journey will keep you on the edge of your seat all summer long during the emirates airline us open series. next week we'll be in the great city of washington, dc for the citi open. where some of the top players in tennis will battle it out to see who's best. which champion will prevail, which new hero will emerge? don't miss your chance to find out. for ticket and player information go to citiopentennis.com. >> osgood: a full house is a welcome event if you own a theatre or if you play poker but not so much if your home is so jam-packed with stuff you can barely move. our cover story now from rita braver. >> at some point i got a lot of stuff. i kept too much paper i kept too many books. i kept too many clothes. >> too much of everything. what is this in the corner? >> what you see is reading material. >> all that stuff? >> joanne gorman, greenfield, massachusetts's home is packed with things she just can't part with. >> are we talking about decades worth of stuff you have accumulated in this room? >> decades of stuff yes. it has been picked up at times in the past and the volume of clothing has overwhelmed me, more has to leave the house. >> it is not that she hasn't tried. after years of forcing herself to throw things out she actually can eat in her kitchen again but garland continues to hoard. oh! >> items like wire handles from chinese takeout containers. >> it is easy to bend and you never know when i might need it. >> how much do you end up needing it? >> not very often. >> but, you know, i hate to waste anything and that has been part of by problem over the years. >> and garland is just one of millions of people who hoard. >> it is estimated that up to five percent of the u.s. population has a problem. with an equal number of men and women. >> in the cbs news poll finds that a third of all americans say they have too much clutter in their homes. >> listen to me, nobody else, okay? i am the one that is telling you where it goes. >> the subject of hoarding is so sensational -- it has become fodder for reality tv shows. >> we don't clear this space out, you are going to jail. it is the reality. >> but beyond the spectacle there is new recognition that hoarding is caused by a mental condition, last spring for the very first time, the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders essentially, the handbook for mental health experts, recognized hoarding as a specific disorder. >> the formal definition is someone who has difficulty discarding or letting go of possessions. >> you accumulate way more stuff than you need an really hard time letting go. >> that's exactly right. those are two major component but there is a third component that is equally important and that is the inability to keep it organized. >> the diagnosis of hoarding as a mental disorder is no surprise to smith college psychology professor randy frost. >> this is a book for the general public about hoarding stuff. >> he has been studying and writing about hoarding since 1990. >> the public has long been fascinated by dramatic stories on the subject. back in 1947, for example, the bizarre tale of the collier brothers, descendants of a well-to-do new york family made headlines after their bodies were discovered in their jam-packed town house. >> but no scientific research had been done on hoarding until about 20 years ago. >> we put an ad in the newspaper thinking we we would try to find somebody who had this behavior and we got 100 telephone calls. >> 100 telephone calls with one little ad. >> and what we discovered is there were houses that were really full, but yet no one had ever talked to them about it. he never told anyone about it. >> frost, 20 years of study have revealed some key findings. affecting people across the whole economic spectrum. there is evidence that hoarding behavior is inherited, at least in part. >> a significant number of hoarders also suffer from depression and determines the importance of objects shows abnormal activity when hoarders are faced with making decisions about dealing with their belongings. >> the cutoff for where this becomes a disorder really has to do with a place at which this functioning to the point that it is harmful or impairing their ability to live. >> there are companies that help hoarders clean up and get rid of their stuff. >> but that may not really address the root of the problem. >> so randy frost and several colleagues have developed a program they call treasures that helps hoarders understand and change their behavior. >> well, let's check in and go over the goals from -- >> a support groups like these pack rats as some prefer to call themselves established very specific weekly goals and joanne garland had something to brag about. >> michael was to tidy up the two bedside tables, because i tend to read in bed, and i did it. i did it. >> but she didn't have the same success. >> well i still am going through my pile of mail that i eat on top of and i sit there and look at it and say what is that being used? what is the anxiety? what is is the fear? but i don't have the answer. >> but carol starr even recalling the moment that she admitted having a problem is painful. >> i was at home and surrounded by all of these piles and i felt like i was suffocating and i think that is when i really knew that i needed help more than any other time in by life. because i didn't want to be drowned by my stuff. i wanted to find a way to make my house a home again. >> because it isn't right now. >> the members of this group do have a success story in their midst, leader lee shore. >> you can't just prove it in words. you have to prove it in action. >> to see his neat kitchen now you would never know that eight years ago his home was such a disaster zone that his wife gave him an ultimatum. >> it is me or the stuff you have to make a decision, and i made the choice to accept help right there. >> this basement was full. >> through the buried treasure program he developed strategies for separating his belongings into into keep and give away piles. >> toss that. >> though this basement may still look cluttered, well compare it to this. do you still keep yourself from adding more things, picking up some bargain somewhere? >> yeah. the things i know i haven't changed as a person, nobody else has either. you still have the impulse but your reaction to it changes overtime, and some of the thrill is gone for me. >> but for lee shore and anyone else with the urge to hoard, it is likely to be a lifelong struggle. >> you can do it, but it is a lot of work. >> it is, yes. >> it is work. >> it is work. >> because you are replacing something that might have been the one thing that made life worth living. that is pretty significant. >> next. f where there is smoke -- >> you may smoke yourself to death ♪ >> >> now, a face from our sunday morning almanac. july 27, 1965, 49 years ago today. the day the federal government tried to clear the air about cigarette smoking and health. ♪ smoke, smoke, smoke that cigarette. >> that was the day president lyndon johnson signed legislation requiring warning labels on packages of cigarettes. the warnings came a year and a half after surgeon general luther terry announced the findings of a ground breaking study. >> it is the judgment of the committee that cigarette smoking contribute substantially to certain specific diseases and to the overall death rate. >> the warning labels were a warning shot across the bow for an i have that for years had entrenched itself both in our national economy and in popular culture. >> bond, james bond. >> osgood: scenes of smoking were routine in movies. >> ♪ winston tastes like a cigarette should. >> the principal characters and catchy jingles were a television staple for years but as of the beginning of 1971, tv commercials were banned. >> by 1990, smoking was prohibited in all commercial airliners within the united states, and in 1998 the tobacco i have reached a $206 billion settlement with 46 states as compensation for the medicaid money that they spent treating smoking related illnesses. today smoking is banned in an an increasing number of public places around the country even as warning labels are more menacing and graphic. of still despite all of the bans and warnings, the cdc estimates just over 42 million american adults, nearly one in 5 continue to smoke. cdc also blames smoking for 480,000 deaths a year. about one death ever, in every five. >> grape jelly. >> osgood: ahead. >> it feels like hot fudge. >> osgood: a sticky situation. >> oh! >> this portion of sunday morning is sponsored by vision works. find more than a pair of glasses. >> osgood: manscaping not to be confused with landscaping, is a man's grooming practice with particular appeal this time of year. or so mo rocca tells us. >> man, as the dog days of summer drag on it may be time to start thinking about shedding some of that extra hair. >> ah! wow! i hate you! >> manscaping as it is called is no longer just for the 40-year-old virgin. >> oh, god! >> you are a man scape architect. >> pretty much that is what i am. >> an esthetician with the barbara clinic in miami men are increasingly coming to her for laser hair removal. >> it is back hair or the uni brow or ear hair. >> and we are talking about removal of hair everywhere. >> once they get that comfort level with you they are moving down to the buttocks. >> okay. they are going -- >> yes down. >> way down below. >> downtown, yes. >> that's what they are doing. >> martinez came to stella six years ago for help with hisac bk hair. >> people, i want to see your back. >> now it is bare back bear. >> today he is here for maintenance work on his neck and chest. >> my laser is ready to go. >> and it is relatively painless right, marcel? >> not very. >> not true, marcel. >> okay. so we are actually going to start here on the neck and just going to do a little bit here. >> ready? here we go. one, two and three. >> the laser zaps the hair and the follicles underneath, after a few treatments, most of it will never grow back. >> you doing great. >> fantastic. >> is it hurting at all? >> it hurts. >> does it sting? >> does it sting? a bit. >> and do you feel cleaner? >> yes. >> but not everyone is sold on the smooth look. >> how hairy are you? >> pretty hairy. >> you have a hairy husband. >> yes, i do. >> would you like him to remove his body hair? >> no. >> you need a big clipper for that. >> what do you think of the trend of all of getting man scaped? >> well, think it is unsustainable how much do you -- it is bad enough you have to schaefer every so many days to do your whole body for how long forever? >> our obsession with body hair is nothing new. cavemen were said to have removed body hair for hygiene. but the anxious egyptians hairlessness conferred class and status. >> the greeks on the other hand, viewed hairiness as a sign of masculinity, and back and forth it has gone for every burt reynolds a brad pitt. >> i have got a lot scented candles i have been given as a housewarming give gift is that the same kind of wax? >> definitely not, our wax is 100 percent natural bee's wax. >> she waxes enthiews yarveg about the enthusiastic about hair removal. >> at the european wax center. >> the guys that are coming in, are they mostly coming in in of their own volition or is it significant others that are say listen -- >> a little bit of both. i have definitely seen some male guests coming here because maybe their wife or fiance has told them to come try it out. >> our very own follicle fall guy, joe dooley. >> have you always had a lot of chest hair? >> i am one-half italian. >> you don't have back hair, though which seems to be the bigff issue. >> i am only half italian. >> first we surveyed joe's frontal thread count. >> yes. he has got these things, they are like -- >> yes almost likes locks of hair. >> yes. it is nice. >> not so much. >> and then it was time to stop yapping. >> wax on. >> it is like grape jelly. >> it feels like hot fudge. >> wax off. >> oh! >> i tell you women are tough as nails i tell you that. >> we are. >> i have to say if you walk out of here now you look terrible. >> it looks like you are wearing a hair ball. >> a few more tears and joe is stripped clean. >> it looks like a new new me, i actually feel younger. >> younger more confident cleaner. >> i will go with younger and cleaner. >> what do you think your wife is going to say when she sees you. >> probably say why did you do it. >> and i will say for you honey, and we will embrace and see what happens from there. we are done, right? >> >> i always liked being a huston. >> osgood: ahead angelica huston on a life in the spotlight. ♪ i will remember you. >> but first, sarah mclachlan. a summer song. >> ♪ on and on. >> osgood: how is that for a summer song. mystery. at least 17 years ago written by sarah mclachlan. anthony mason tells us about her return to the spotlight. >> ♪ i will remember you. will you remember me? ♪ >> it has been some time since we have heard from sarah mclachlan. >> ♪ >> reporter: but this summer the canadian singer who sold 40 million records is touring again. >> you haven't been afraid to go away for a while. is it scary to sort of leave your audience for a while? >> mo, it is a bit scary tmeo co back but more because i know how much work it takes to get back into the game. >> ♪ >> she is back in the game after a rocky period. that included a divorce, a break with her long time manager and the loss of ver adopt if the father who died of cancer in 2010 at the age of 80. >> i don't think anyone gets to this point of their life unscathed. >> i am 46 years old and this is time when parents die when big changes happen. >> and when you were dealing with all of that .. where were you musically? >> nowhere. >> down the hill behind her home in west vancouver mclachlan has built a recording studio but for a while the songs just didn't come. >> i played music but i didn't have it in me to write music. i mean, i need to play the piano every day. >> ♪ >> it is like some people have a glass of wine i go play the piano, and it just copies me right down. >> >> i mean, my father passed away almost four years ago and it kind of took that long for me to recognize, a what i had lost and what that meant to me moving forward but also what he has given me. >> ♪ >> reporter: her new album shine on, her first in four years, is dedicated in part to her father. >> we don't feel unconditional love very often in our lives. it is almost always conditional and with him, he was just there. he was always there for me. >> ♪ >> reporter: mclachlan grew up in nova scotia studying voice piano and guitar. >> in your high school yearbook it says you were destined to become a at a famous rock star. >> miranda wrote that, my one dear friend. >> she was right. >> she was right well i am not a rock star. >> ♪ >> reporter: she was signed to a record deal at 19. her fourth studio album surfacing, won her two grammys and sell 16 million copies. those are rock star numbers. >> did you have any idea when you were finished what you had? >> well, it is funny again i always hate my records at the very end, just for a brief moment because i am so sick of them and i remember saying to a friend of mine the only song any good on this is angel. >> reporter: written after reading about the death of the keyboard player for the band smashing pumpkins from a drug overdose, the song angel came to mclachlan in just a day and a half. >> like wow someone just gave me a gift. >> and it turns out to be the song that so many people have connected with on so many levels. >> reporter: especially when the song was used in a commercial for the aspca. >> >> hi, i am sarah mclachlan. will you be an angel for a helpless animal? >> yes boy that ad worked like a -- it really did. >> $30 million? >> reached right in and tore at your heartstrings and yeah over 30 million bucks. >> >> reporter: the success of the surfacing album led her to put together a tour which featured all women artists. ♪ >> were you surprised what a big deal this became? >> absolutely. really, it started out because i didn't want to do shows by myself. >> but the promoters told her an all female bill would never sell tickets. >> i said that is ridiculous music is music, good music is good music and you are telling me i can't do this, well i am goin you wrong. >> in it three-year run, it drew some 2 million fans. >> it became its own brand name. >> it did, i have heard it used in, you know as a cultural reference, that is so willeth of you. >> i love that. >> thank you from the bottom of our hearts. >> it also raised millions for mclachlan's charity foundation. >> and i thought what am i going to do with all of this money? >> so she launched an after school music program for inner city kids in vancouver. >> for the first nine years, we are sort of beg borrowing and stealing at different locations paying a lot of rent in spaces we could only use part of the day. >> reporter: but three years ago, with help from the city, mclachlan raised the money to find a permanent home for the program and open the sarah mclachlan school of music. >> how many kids are here now? >> we have almost 700 kids in the program this year. we have a great room here in the middle. it is sort of the heart of the school, where a lot of performance -- ♪ >> how does it feel have your name on the door? >> it is fulfilling, you know people ask what i am the proudest of and i have to say this place. >> >> reporter: but the road has drawn her back again. usually acoustic, she has even returned to her electric guitar. >> >> it is exciting to be there again. it brings my wild side out a little bit and it is a lot of fun. >> what is that like? >> it is freeing. [laughter.] >> the wild side of sarah mclachlan. >> yes. the horns come out, yes. >> with a new partner, former nhl hockey player jeff cortnel and her two daughters sarah mclachlan says she feels whole again. >> did i read somewhere that when you were going through the divorce that there was a point where you thought you might never write a song again? >> i think that pretty much every time. at the beginning of the process of writing a record, there is always that, do i still have it? am i going to have something to say? >> you have been a creative person i think it is probably hard to turn it off. >> it is impossible to turn it off. >> why always come back? because i love playing. i love to sing. ♪ >> >> and i love to feel that energy that happens between myself, between musicians and between the audience. it is just beautiful cyclical energy thing, on love and passion and good yummy stuff. >> it is like having a religious experience. >> >> ahead, richard nixon the tale of the tapes. >> >> osgood: president richard nixon actually wanted his conversations caught on tape. never dreaming they would ultimately lead to his resignation 40 years ago this summer. after all of this time the tapes are still yielding secrets. this morning mark strassmann shares a few of them. >> in july of 1973, the senate watergate committee heard a bombshell from white house aid alexander butterfield and richard nixon was cornered. >> mr. butterfield are you aware of the installation of any listening devices in the oval office of the president? >> i was aware of listening devices, yes sir. >> nixon's oval office had a secret recording system. the tapes suggested a criminal conspiracy that reached the president. >> in august 1974 as impeachment loomed nixon resigned in disgrace. >> now, 40 years later the same recordings are redefining mix son's legacy. >> and here we have this unique presidential record of 3,700 hours and only around five to seven percent have ever been transcribed and for a historian this is a gold mine. >> luke, an associate professor of history at texas a & m has dusted off a library of nixon tapes in the national archives. they are part private conversations and deliberations they are the policy-making process in real-time. nixon thought he was making history and he wanted to record that history. >> transcribing that history took necter 10 years some tapes are much easier to understand than others. >> a lot of the days and nights late nights? >> my wife jennifer, there was a period, there are just some periods of time she says no nixon. >> reporter: nixon a had seven secret microphones installed in the oval office. >> >> the system was voice activated around the clock and unprecedented. >> fdr did a little reflect if the taping. >> we have john f. kennedy's tapes during the missile crisis, johnson's tapes on civil rights, all of that are valuable. >> nixon is the whole kit and caboodle. >> professor douglas brinkley teaches history at rice university and a cbs news consultant. he and luke nickter coauthored the nixon taped, 700 transcribed pages of largely unheard nixon moments. >> there is anti-semitic slurs. >> (tape playing] >> >> there is bigotry about people in the third world. there is a lot of sort of barnyard cursing, unpleasant amount of back stabbing. duplicitous paranoia going on. >> >> reporter: the tapes cover 1971 and 1972. foreign policy issues dominate, as nixon conducts disarmament talks with the soviet union and opens the door to china. >> nixon is playing the chess game of the word. he is moving all the pieces in his and his goal is to make america the preempt innocent power and if we have to share our power with somebody it would be china. >> so you can't come away respecting his intellect while disliking the lack of moral fiber in the man. >> the war in vietnam often dominates the conversation. nixon wants peace but what he calls peace with honor. >> from april 17, 1971 and nixon is really frustrated with the progress of the war. and he is encouraging national security advisor henry kissinger to up the ante to more bombing, more bombing, more bombing. >> >> what is clear is that nixon is making decisions about the vietnam war that really don't have a lot to do with vietnam bombing the bejesus out of vietnam, killing vietnamese, putting on soldiers in south vietnam in harm's way simply to show the chinese we are tough. to show the soviets we mean business. >> the tapes show nixon micromanaging the war in no uncertain terms. tough language, you will do this. this is an order. the briefer needs to be here tomorrow. >> i want you here at 7:00 o'clock. is that clear? >> in fact, he was micromanaging foreign policy in general. henry kissinger use the national security advisor but this was an oval office full of shifting alliances and back stabbing. nixon wanted kissinger excluded from middle east policy because kissinger is jewish. >> jesus christ. >> on another tape, kissinger tries to set aside concerns about his religion in u.s. policy toward the soviets. >> >> henry kissinger had a big big, ego but nixon knew he was taping kissinger and kissinger didn't know so it is a bit of an unfair advantage for the president and i can imagine dr. kissinger must put his head under a pillow every time he hears some, there is some new tape revelation. >> also revealing is how nixon viewed his potential democratic rivals in 1972. >> it would hard not to -- >> senator ted kennedy and his wife joan were the subject of a conversation that showed nixon's love of political gossip. >> >> 700 hours of nixon tapes remain unreleased. half still classified, the other half because discussions are too personal. >> nichter has listened to almost all the rest. a rare backstage pass to white house power politics and nixon's complex personality. >> >> nixon really is like a prism, you turn it anyway you want and the light will hit it different ways. >> the top man always takes the responsibility, and i have never ducked it. >> osgood: next. from nixon to ford. without the internet i would probably be like a c student. internet essentials from comcast has brought low-cost internet access to over one million low-income people at home. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. together with time warner cable we can bring the internet to millions more. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. comcast and time warner cable. together is better for more people. >> osgood: resignation of president richard nixon that mark strassmann described just a moment ago created an unprecedented challenge for his successor gerald ford. a director of the lbj presidential library. >> often throughout our nation's history, we have had the great good fortune of having in place the right person at the right time. >> this is ford who have joined the knicks sons. >> such was the ace 40 years ago when an embattled richard nixon who was the first president to resign from office. he was succeeded by gerald ford. >> uncomplicated and down-to-earth, ford a former eagle scout proved to be an anecdote to the enigmatic nixon. >> after being sworn into office he assured americans -- >> our long national nightmare is over. >> our constitution works. our great republic is a government of laws and not of men. here the people rule. >> americans responded favorably to ford's refreshing openness but his brief honeymoon wouldn't last. a month after taking office, in an effort to bind up the wounds of watergate and move the country forward he pardoned nixon of any wrongdoing. >> a full free and absolute pardon on to richard nixon. >> though he strongly believed it was the right thing to do, his lofty approval ratings plunged overnight. >> ford dealt with the fallout from the pardon while grappling with the last gasps of the failed war in vietnam a stagnant economy marked by rahm emanuel patent inflation and unflattering image as an incompetent albeit good-natured clod. >> along the way the dark cloud of watergate as ford had hoped began to dissipate. >> the pardon of nixon cost ford the 1976 presidential election. but gradually the country came to appreciate its value. and ford's decency. >> carter acknowledged as much in the opening words of his inaugural address. >> i want to thank my predecessor for all he has done to heal o land. [ applause ] >> >> in the beginning, ford tried to manage expectations about leadership, explaining that he was a ford, not a lincoln. and yet gerald ford ultimately fit the moment. there are times when we don't need greatness in our presidents. as ford showed in the wake of watergate, there are times when goodness will do. >> >> and a kid writes a bucket list. there are not many. >> osgood: comingp. u poor christina. >> every story is a journey, and this journey will keep you on the edge of your seat all summer long du tringhe emirates airline us open series. next week we'll be in the great city of washington, dc for the citi open. where some of the top players in tennis will battle it out to see who's best. which champion will prevail, which new hero will emerge? don't miss your chance to find out. for ticket and player information go to citiopentennis.com. >> osgood: a bucket list of things you want to do before you die can be filled if you live long enough. that is not always the case. here is steve hartman. >> reporter: along the busy road in chico, california, there is a memorial to a young college student, killed on a bike by an alleged drunk driver. christina chester man was just 21. she was going to be a nurse. but she had a lot of other dreams that no one really knew about, until a few months ago. when her mom and dad went to clean out her old apartment. >> i opened up a drawer and i found just a make-up bag. >> sandra says there was no make-up. instead, in that zip erred compartment she found a single sheet of notebook paper. >> christina's bucket list. >> i mean, what kid writes a bucket list? there are not many. >> christina probably wrote it in high school. >> can you read some of what is on there? >> sure. she wanted to tour niagara falls, save someone's life which she did that many times over. >> how did she do that? >> by donating her organs. she saved lives. this next one makes me laugh. she wanted to break up a fight between two guys over her. >> which i think is so cute. and i didn't know that it ever happened. but it should have. >> when sandra and her husband david found the list they say they knew exactly what they had to do. >> because she didn't get to do this, you wanted to complete it for her. >> a few weeks ago they crossed niagara falls crossed myself falls off their daughter's bucket list.poppies but here is the next part. >> sandra and david are not the only one going through christina's list right now. after posting it on facebook thousands of people, most of them total strangers started doing it too. >> and although sandra cries every time she reads about someone else's new adventure she and david are both so thankful their daughter turned out to be such an inspiration. >> i think that is just amazingd that she can have that effect on somebody that never even knew her. >> it is still hard to get up in the morning, but this is what does it. this is what gets me up. >> obviously, their brand of sightseeing is no vacation. >> but they say remembering their daughter'sest is for, zest for life is better than the futility of trying to forget it. >> right here on the oriental. >> still to come actress angelica huston on a hollywood life. >> a lot of pressure on a girl. >> if not i will have him killed. >> it is sunday morning on cbs. and here again is charles osgood. >> angelica huston put her family background to good use in the grifters. >> here is lee leigh cowan with a sunday profile. >> the flying heart ranch near california's sequoia national part park is a quiet peaceful place. >> come on, hurry up, big boy. >> reporter: but for actor angelica huston it can be just as wild here as hollywood. >> the pigs over here and horses in here, and a few little sheep but it is an old mcdonald farm. it is not a real farm. >> it was the first place the academy award winner ever bought with her own money. >> a retreat she kept to herself. >> i kind of bought it as a secret and then i kept it as a secret. >> it is one of the few secrets angelica huston was able to have in her very public life. >> now 63, it is a life she chronicled in the first of a two-part memoir, a story lately told. >> published by cbs's simon & schuster. >> if you are going to tell your story, you kind of have to commit to a certain degree of forthrightness. >> reporter: it is very detailed. >> it is detailed. >> >> she was born heir to a hollywood dynasty. >> you are so dumb there is nothing to compare you with. >> started with her grandfather walter huston. >> you so dumb you you can't see your own feet. >> she won the oscar for the treasure of the sierra padre. >> it was directed by her father john huston who took home an oscar too. >> did you feel the family name was a bit of a burden? >> no. i always liked being a huston. and i always felt like it was my right and it was my birthright and it was who i was. >> reporter: acting is in her blood. over the course of more than 50 movies, she has played some pretty imposing characters. >> like her oscar nominated role as the con artist in the grifters. >> you are working for him don't tell me you are not because i wrote the book. >> you are going to biff that money to the mob? >> that's me, that's who i am. >> and a ghoulish mortician in the adams family. >> don't touch yourself, gomez. that's my job. >> it started early growing up on a country estate in ireland. >> it is the stuff of fairy tales, buying horses with her father and mingling with his famous friends while her life may have been glamorous she didn't think she was. >> because i never felt that i was particularly good-looking. >> you never did? >> at this point really not. >> because i wasn't. >> she grew into her unique looks, looks that she got from her mother, ballerina ricky soma. >> ricky was john huston's fourth wife when on, angelica, her mom and her brother tony moved to london, where she grew up a little too fast for her father. >> one day -- >> he had enough. >> he dressed me down and then he hit me and it was a moment that really was a big shocker for me. >> he struck you where? >> he struck me in the face. >> hard? >> yeah. he was a boxer. >> and i think his anger had gotten away from him. >> what was he like as a father? >> fantastic. >> even though he hit you? >> even though he hit me. it was the only time. >> but when angelica was 16 john huston directed her in her very first movie medieval rehe romance called a walk with love and death. >> he played her uncle. >> long before you were born -- >> don't you dare talk about him, you killed him. >> in 1987 interview with cbs news huston characterized the experience this way. >> i put never a picture at the wrong moment. she wasn't all that good in it. and it was a big mistake on my part. >> he was right. i wasn't ready to work with him and he was too tough on me and it was all too personal. >> the critics tore it apart but the harsh reviews were suddenly replaced by another harsh reality, the death of her mother in a car accident. >> and it was like an implosion. a bottom falls out of your life. >> because you guys had been impossibly close. >> very close. and my mother was wonderful spectacular, joyful creature, sorry, i am going to lose it. >> that's okay. >> devastated, she headed for new york. >> she was soon modeling for the likes of vogue. >> she had taken up with fashion photographer bob richardson. >> >> it was an abusive relationship that lasted for four long years, one she doesn't regret. >> he taught me about the camera. he taught me about lighting. and he thought i was beautiful so that helps. >> she admits she was attracted to bad boys, one famous one in particular. >> do you ever get tired of talking about jack nicholson? >> no, because i never get tired of jack. >> it was love at first sight for me. >> not that it was easy living with one of the biggest stars in the world. >> he was the center of attention and very much the center of female attention and male attention by the way men are worse than women men are jack jack, jack jack. what? >> he was, she was playing opposite jack with her father directing and angelica won her own oscar. >> i am just thrilled. >> for the role of a wise talking italian mob mistress. >> you want to do it, charlie? is that what you want? >> whoa. >> take it easy. what the hell. >> that was one of the great lines of richard condon ever. >> you want to do it? >> with all the lights on? >> yeah. >> right here. on the oriental. >> with all the lights on. >> nicholson and her were together on and off for 16 years. >> they would marry and have a family, it was a source of constant speculation. >> it was a real pain to always have this kind of, is she or isn't she going to be pregnant and it is a lot of pressure on a girl. >> and it was really hard because you did want to have a child? >> i did want to have a chide and worked very hard at it. >> instead, nicholson father add child with actress rebecca but sadr, in an instant it was all very publicly and very painfully over. >> all of a sudden, he was as absent as he had been present in my life, and that was really hard to take:she wrote about it in part 2 of her memoir, out later this year, but she says nicholson had nothing to worry about. >> i think just so long as i don't, you know, drag him through the thistles i think we will be fine. >> but you are going to? >> no. i wouldn't dream of it. and also, jack doesn't deserve to be dragged through the thistles. i know a lot of people i would drag through before i would drag him. >> she did find love again she married famed sculptor robert graham in 1992. they were together and tied the knot in 2008. >> again she dealt with her grief by working. >> taking roles such as the broadway producer in the nbc series smash. >> it is -- >> from may to december. >> september song was an ode to the family roots. >> her grandfather sang it on broadway, and it was played at her father's funeral. she is as proud to be a huston now as she ever was, on her terms with few regrets. >> at least in my life i can go to the heights and i can go to the depths and i can find my levels inbetween. that is a good life. >> >> this portion of sunday morning is sponsored by physicians mutual. insurance for all of us. >> osgood: it happened this past week, a tale of two cities, or rather a tale of two different types of cities. a new study by the national bureau of economic research has used cdc data to estimate the relative happiness of every metropolitan area with more than 1 million people. to the question of which area is happiest the researchers voiced their opinion, it is the cities of richmond and petersburg that make for such happy virginia, as for rich folks are the unhappiest, research folks expressed some pity many who lived both inside and around the boundaries of new york city. as a new yorker i say it is subjective, not easily summed up in lines. it is for us to decide whether the way we reside is the best or the worst of times. >> >> ahead -- a movie that takes its time. >> l;m >> we are your humble servants please give us the power to blow people's minds with our high voltage rock, in your name we pray amen. >> amen. >> now let's get out there and melt some faces. >> osgood: richard linklater classic school of rock starred jack black as a musician who never grew up. martha teichner now tells us about linklater's newest film, now place. >> never before had a film maker richard linklater's movies generated the kind of buzz boyhood has. the film follows a boy mason, played by el lard positively. >> stop. >> from age six to 18, he literally grows up before your very eyes. >> the sisterlayed by laura, the director's daughter. the divorced parents, patricia arquette and ethan hawke. >> when you get older you can save a up and buy a car of your own and be cool like i used toarkable about boyhood is that it was shot over 12 years. >> time is the subject. and how it changes people. >> this movie has been done, why? >> >> it gives you a chance to really watch a family develop in the course of the decades. >> oh. >> the manipulation of time is the unique property of cinema cinema is painting, time is the paint. it is that fundamental. >> it has been 12 years since we filmed here but this is the house of the first year. >> >> the boy mason, is in first grade. >> and i had one of these in my life from from you are born to about seven, it is house you kind of grew up in and that steeps like home. >> good-bye, yard. >> the story is moved along by the accumulation of small but emotionally loaded moments. >> bye house. >> this scene came straight from linklater's own boyhood. >> >> there is a .20 gauge shotgun. >> i call it my redneck moment for a year. i have a .20 gauge. >> i look back and say, you look kind of funny but i think there is a part of us that wants to see something that is a little part of our lives. >> born in houston he went to college on a baseball scholarship but when a heart condition ended his sports career, he dropped out out and went to work on onshore oil rigs. >> so when i was on land, i was watching three, four films a day, and going home and reading about the actor the director, the studio, so it was a great education. >> i lived in that room for five years. >> yes? >> that little round turret and i lived up here from the summer of 85 to the spring of '91. and the door was always broken, it couldn't lock and people would just wander in off the street and janis joplin lived here in the sixties. >> and in his early 20s with his oil rig earnings he moved to austin, texas, determined to make films. >> has it been in movies, this particular spot? >> it was in slacker my first movie. >> yes. there. >> linklater appears in slacker. >> one time i had lines with tolstoy, at time i was a roadie for frank zappa. >> his eccentric characters bounce off each other randomly over a 24-hour period. >> we have been on mars since 62. >> he made slacker for 23,000, released in 1991, it grossed more than $1.2 million. >> i just kind of dedicated my life to film. it is the priesthood i joined and that was it. that was just my whole life and i didn't know where that would lead. >> >> it led to another movie about time, dazed and confuse add comedy cult classic about austin high school kids on the last day of school. >> the film introduced movie goers to an unknown matthew mcconaughey. >> all right, all right, all right. >> linklater has made 18 features. including popular hits like school of rock. >> >> starring jack black. >> i feel like this is some dreamworld we are in. >> it is before trilogy, three movies about one romance. was nominated for two oscars, with ethan hawke again and julie delphi. >> if we met for the first time today on a train would you find us attractive. >> most of his films cost way under $10 million to make. >> the budget for boyhood 2.4 million. >> church change as chump changes as movies go. >> in the indy world if you keep your budgets low you can actually do these things that are out there and see as more risky. >> it is one of the most original and of his generation. >> he has carved out a low-budget indy niche for himself, but not in hollywood. >> by being intin, and staying in austin, you have managed to keep that freedom? >> yeah. i feel pretty uncompromised. >> here he is at the center of a vibrant film scene he helped to create. >> 20 acres of austin's old airport are now a studio. it is the sort of professional ecosystem in which boyhood could actually get made. >> the biggest artistic decision imaginable was casting who was going to be the boy. remend going you are great now but who are you going to be when you are a teenager? >> you know, it was a huge leap of faith. >> you know, you knew what the tone of the scene use and obviously what it was about but most of the dialogue was just kind of work shopped between him and the actors. >> how was your week? >> linklater regarded his actors even ehler coltrane the boy in boyhood as his collaborators. >> you should just let it happen more natural. >> that's what she is saying. okay. hehe would take all of our input and add that to what he had and you know, come to us with a finished script. sometimes the morning of the shoot. >> linklater, you look like a man, not like a little girl. >> i think maybe he is dissatisfied with normal reality and so he is kind of constructed his own world. >> a place for richard linklater, like time itself. >> i like the way world goes on. >> we capture it for a moment, it is there on our negative for all-time. in the movie, but then it has its own life. >> huston,. >> osgood: here is a look at the week ahead on our sunday morning calendar. monday is renewal and remembrance day at arl national cemetery, with some 400 volunteers pitching in to help care and maintain the grounds. overlooking washington d.c. on tuesday, 1,000 pages of love letters from president warren g. harding of all people to his mistress carrie phillips will be opened to the public at the library of congress. wednesday is the day for the tuskegee international convention in orlando, florida it ons more the african americans who served in the army air corp during world war ii. >> on thursday, edward snowden's temporary asylum in russia expires, he has asked for an extension. friday sees the start of the three-day la la palooza festival inly featuring dozen of performers including eminem outcast. and leon. >> and on saturday the haul of payment in kwan on the ohio enshrines the class of 2014. >> >> and that brings us to bob schieffer in boston for a look ahead on fsce the nation. >> benin netanyahu and ukrainian foreign minister pablo plem p.k. in. >> next week on sunday morning closeup of a the trial on oscar pistorius. >> >> is he a killer? >> >> sunday morning's moment of nature is sponsored by viking river cruises. >> >> osgood: we leave you this morning in the company of texas horned lizards a threatened species, with a safe home at the matador wildlife area in paducah, texas. >> >> i am charles osgood, please join us again next sunday morning. until then, i will see you on the radio. >> >> schieffer: i'm bob schieffer and today on the "face the nation" the cease fire in gaza is over. there is intense fighting in easterneastern ukraine and all dip pats are safely out of libya. we will hear from prime minister benjamin netanyahu and pavlo klimkin, the chairman of the house intelligence committee, mike rogers, former secretary of state madeleine albright plus an excerpt of charlie rose's interview with hamas leader. and we begin "battleground tracker" a joint project with the "new york times" toug gae the political mood in america and what to expect in the midterm elections. 60 years of news because this is "face the nation."

Related Keywords

Vietnam , Republic Of , Sierra Nevada , California , United States , Vancouver , British Columbia , Canada , China , Russia , Washington , District Of Columbia , Richmond , Virginia , Ukraine , Paducah , Texas , Egypt , Massachusetts , Hollywood , Sacramento , Libya , Ireland , Smith College , Greece , New York , Florida , Boston , Tripoli , Tarabulus , London , City Of , United Kingdom , Niagara Falls , Israel , Petersburg , Sankt Peterburg , Gaza , Israel General , Houston , Ohio , Orlando , South Vietnam , Vietnam General , Italy , Italian , Americans , America , Egyptians , Canadian , Chinese , Greeks , Soviets , Russian , Vietnamese , New Yorker , Ukrainian , Soviet , Israeli , American , Lee Leigh Cowan , Angelica Huston , Charles Osgood , Douglas Brinkley , Henry Kissinger , Madeleine Albright , Mike Rogers , Anjelica Huston , Steve Hartman , Joe Dooley , Bob Richardson , Frank Zappa , Alexander Butterfield , Luther Terry , Benjamin Netanyahu , Walter Huston , Warren G Harding , John Huston , Oscar Pistorius , Sarah Mclachlan , Carol Starr , Patricia Arquette , Lyndon Johnson , Matthew Mcconaughey , Joanne Gorman , Jack Nicholson , Simon Schuster , Jack , Carrie Phillips , Gerald Ford , Christina Chester , Robert Graham , Bob Schieffer , Mo Rocca , Edward Snowden , Rahm Emanuel , Atlantic States , Richard Condon , Jesus Christ , Anthony Mason , Richard Linklater , Richard Nixon , John F Kennedy , Ted Kennedy , Ethan Hawke ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.