Robert De Niro Speech: Next!
Learn English with Robert De Niro. Honored Speaker Robert De Niro’s address at the 2015 TISCH School of the Arts Salute ceremony. Robert Anthony De Niro Jr. (born August 17, 1943) is an American actor, producer, and director. He is particularly known for his nine collaborations with filmmaker Martin Scorsese and is the recipient of various accolades, including two Academy Awards, a Golden Globe Award, the Cecil B. DeMille Award, and a Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award. In 2009, De Niro received the Kennedy Center Honor and received a Presidential Medal of Freedom from U.S. President Barack Obama in 2016. In this speech, she also quotes: “I tell them donβt be afraid to fail. I urge them to take chances, to keep an open mind, to welcome new experiences and new ideas. I tell them that if you donβt go, youβll never know. You just have to be bold and go out there and take your chances.” Watch with big English.
Robert De Niro Quote:
“Time goes on. So whatever you’re going to do, do it. Do it now. Don’t wait.” Robert De Niro
Robert De Niro – FULL TRANSCRIPT:
“Dean Green, deans, University Leadership, faculty, staff, parents, friends, and the 2015 class of New York Universityβs TISCH School of the Arts.
Thank you for inviting me to celebrate with you today.Β TISCH graduates, you made it!
And youβre f*cked. Think about that. The graduates from the college of nursing, they all have jobs. The graduates from the college of dentistry, fully employed. The Leonard M Stern School of Business graduates, theyβre covered. The School of Medicine graduates, each one will get a job. The proud graduates of the NY School of Law, theyβre covered, and if theyβre not, who cares? Theyβre lawyers. The English majors are not a factor. Theyβll be home writing their novels. Teachers, theyβll all be working. Shitty jobs, lousy pay, but still working. The graduates in accounting they all have jobs. Where does that leave you? Envious of those accountants, I doubt that. They had a choice. Maybe they were passionate about accounting, but I think itβs more likely that they used reason and logic and common sense to reach for a career that could give them the expectation of success and stability. Reason, logic, common sense? At the TISCH School of Arts? Are you kidding me?
But you didnβt have that choice, did you? You discovered a talent, recognised your ambition and developed a passion. When you feel that you canβt fight it, you just go with it. When it comes to the arts, passion should always trump common sense. You arenβt just following dreams; youβre reaching for your destiny. Youβre a dancer, a singer, a choreographer, a musician, a film maker, a writer, a photographer, a director, a producer, an actor, an artist. Yeah, youβre f*cked!
The good news is that thatβs not a bad place to start. Now that youβve made your choice, or rather, succumbed to it, your path is clear. Not easy but clear. You have to keep working, itβs that simple. You got through TISCH, thatβs a big deal, or to put it another way, you got through TISCH, big deal. Well, itβs a start. On this day of triumphantly graduating a new door is opening for you. A door to a lifetime of rejection. Itβs inevitable. Itβs what graduates call the βthe real worldβ. Youβll experience it auditioning for a part or a place in a company.Β Itβll happen to you when youβre looking for backers for a project. Youβll feel it when door close on you when youβre trying to get attention for something you have written, and when youβre looking for a directing or choreographing job.
While preparing for my role today, I asked a few TISCH students for directions for this speech. The first thing they said was keep it short. And they said itβs okay to give a bit of advice, itβs kind of expected and no one will mind. And then they said, to keep it short.
Itβs difficult for me to come with advice for you who have already set upon your lifeβs work, but I can tell you some of the things I tell my own children. First, whatever you do, donβt go to TISCH School of the Arts. Get an accounting degree instead.
Then I contradict myself, and as corny as it sounds, I tell them donβt be afraid to fail. I urge them to take chances, to keep an open mind, to welcome new experiences and new ideas. I tell them that if you donβt go, youβll never know. You just have to be bold and go out there and take your chances. I tell them that if they go into the arts, I hope they find a nurturing and challenging community of like-minded individuals, a place like TISCH. If they find themselves with the talent and the burning desire to be in the performing arts, I tell them when you collaborate, you try to make everything better but youβre not responsible for the entire project, only your part in it. Youβll find yourself in movies or plays or concerts or dance pieces that turn out in the eyes of critics and audiences to be bad, but thatβs not on you, because you will put everything into everything that you do. You wonβt judge the characters you play, and shouldnβt be distracted by judgments on the works you are in. Whether you are working for Ed Wood of Federico Fellini or Martin Scorsese, your commitment to your process will be the same.
By the way there will be times when your best is not enough. There can be many reasons for this, but as long as you give your best, itβll be okay. Did you get straight As at school? If so, good for you, congratulations, but in the real world youβll never get straight As again. There are ups and there are downs. And what I want to say to you today is that itβs okay. Instead of rocking caps and gowns today I can see all of you graduating today in custom TSOA T-shirts. On the back is printed, βRejection – it isnβt personalβ. And on the front – your motto, your mantra, your battle cry, βNext!β You didnβt get that part, thatβs my point, βNextβ, youβll get the next one, or the next one after that. You didnβt get that waiterβs job at the White Oak tavern, next! Youβll get the next one, or youβll get the next gig tending bar at Josephβs. You didnβt get into Juilliard? Next! Youβll get into Yale or TISCH. You guys like that joke, so itβs okay.
No, of course choosing TISCH is like choosing the arts. It isnβt your first choice, itβs your only choice. I didnβt attend TISCH or for that matter any college, or my senior year of high school, or most of my junior year … still Iβve felt like part of the TISCH community for a long time. I grew up in the same neighbourhood as TISCH. Iβve worked for a lot of people who have attended TISCH, including Marty Scorsese, Class of β64. As you learn your craft together you come to trust each other and depend on each other. This encourages taking creative risks, because you all have the sense that youβre in it together. Itβs no surprise that we often work with the same people over and over. I did eight pictures with Marty, and plan to do more. He did about twenty-five with his editor, Thelma Schoon maker, whom he met at TISCH when she worked on his student film in the summer of β63. Other directors – Cassavetes, Fellini, Hitchcock, came back to the same collaborators over and over, almost like a repertoire company. And now David O. Russell and Wes Anderson are continuing that tradition.
Treasure the associations and friendships and working relationships with the people in your classes in your early work. You never know what might come from them. There could be a major creative shift or a small detail that could make a major impression. In Taxi Driver, Marty and I wanted Travis Bickle to cut his hair into a mohawk. An important character detail, but I couldnβt do it because I needed long hair for The Last Tycoon that was starting right after Taxi Driver, and we knew a false Mohawk would look, well, false. So, we were kicking it around one day at lunch and we decided to give it one shot with the very best makeup artist at the time, Dick Smith. If you saw the movie, youβll know that it worked. And by the way, now you know it wasnβt real.
Friendships, good working relationships, collaboration, you just never know whatβs going to happen when you get together with your creative friends. Marty Scorsese was here last year to speak to your 2014 graduates. And now here I am, here we are, on Friday, at a kind of super-sized version of one of Alisonβs student lounge hangout sessions. You’re here to pause and celebrate your accomplishments so far, as you move on to a rich and challenging future. And me – Iβm here to hand out my pictures and resumes to the directing and producing graduates.
Iβm excited and honoured to be in a room of young creatives who make me hopeful about the future of the performing and media arts and I know youβre going to make it, all of you. Break a leg!
Next!
Thank you.”
Robert De Niro