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Tag: Awards Chatter Podcast

  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Pod: Jeremy Allen White on ‘Springsteen,’ the Categorization and Future of ‘The Bear,’ and the ‘Social Network’ Sequel

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    For fans of the actor Jeremy Allen White — our guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, which was recorded in front of 500 film students at Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts — it may be time to retire “Yes, Chef!” in favor of “Okay, Boss!”

    That’s because the 34-year-old actor, who shot to stardom playing Carmy Berzatto, a cook, on FX’s The Bear — for which he personally has won two Emmys, three Golden Globe Awards and three SAG Awards — is now garnering rave reviews and awards buzz for his portrayal of Bruce Springsteen in Scott Cooper’s film Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere. In the dark drama, White depicts the singer/songwriter during the years between the releases of his hit albums Born to Run in 1975 and Born in the USA in 1984, when he was grappling with personal demons and making 1982’s Nebraska.

    Over the course of this conversation, White reflected on his entire life and career, including how he seriously pursued dancing as an adolescent, and why he walked away from it to focus instead on acting; how his 11 seasons on the Showtime dramedy Shameless shaped him as an actor; and just how close he came to taking another project instead of The Bear.

    Speaking of The Bear, he addressed the long-running debate about whether the show should be classified as a comedy (the category in which it has been submitted for awards shows) or a drama (the category in which many feel it belongs, given that it’s not exactly a barrel of laughs) by putting forth an interesting suggestion: “I think it’s a dramedy. You have to choose one Movie News when you’re in this in-between space, and I think there should be another category at a certain point. Television has changed so drastically in the last few decades, and the structure of the awards system has remained the same, and that feels strange to me.”

    White also dished about the future of The Bear. Will its recently-announced fifth season be its last? And will he remain a part of the show if it continues beyond that? “The fourth season was going to be the last,” he explains. “Chris [Storer, the show’s creator and co-showrunner] called me on Christmas Eve last year and was like, ‘We’re gonna do some more.’ And, I don’t know, that could happen again around this holiday time. There’s no plans for it to be the last. There’s no plans right now for us to do more. I think it’s just all dependent on what Chris wants to do. But if it was up to me? I just feel so lucky to read Chris’ words, and also to work with these actors who’ve become some of my best friends, so I’d do it for a very long time.”

    As for Springsteen, specifically, he discussed why the offer to play the iconic music artist in a big studio film wasn’t an immediate “yes” for him; how he learned to sing and play guitar over just six months; why he was thrilled to get to meet and question Springsteen, but wasn’t always excited to see him on set; what he makes of Springsteen’s reaction to the film; plus more.

    White also teased a little about another high-profile film project, one for which he has been traveling to Vancouver quite frequently of late: Aaron Sorkin’s The Social Reckoning, which he describes as “a sort of continuation of the story of The Social Network” that is “more about the effects of Facebook on us.” The latter project reunites him with his Springsteen costar Jeremy Strong. Strong plays Mark Zuckerberg, while White plays a journalist.

    You can hear the entire conversation via the audio player near the top of this post or any major podcast app. Please also take a moment to leave us a rating and review, which helps other to discover the podcast.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Pod: George Clooney on ‘Jay Kelly,’ Stardom, Instagram (“Get the F*** Off”), AI and the Next Gen of Stars

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    “This never felt like a story about a movie star to me,” George Clooney says as we sit down at West Hollywood’s Sunset Tower hotel to record an episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast — on which he last guested in 2019 — ahead of the release of Jay Kelly, the new Noah Baumbach dramedy in which Clooney plays the title character, a movie star experiencing an existential crisis. “This felt like a story about almost every one of us who has had to balance work and life.”

    Even so, Jay Kelly — which has been a hit on the fall film fest circuit en route to its theatrical release on Nov. 14 and Netflix debut on Dec. 5, and for which Clooney could earn the fifth acting Oscar nomination of his distinguished career — raises a lot of interesting questions about stardom. And few people alive today are more qualified to discuss the subject than Clooney, who has been an A-lister for more than three decades.

    Like Jay Kelly, Clooney was born in Kentucky, came to Hollywood, caught a few breaks and became a critical and commercial darling sometimes described as “the last movie star,” despite a handful of contrarians occasionally accusing him of playing himself. Unlike Kelly, Clooney hasn’t shown a blatant disregard for the people around him — he is widely known in the business to be highly considerate to his “team,” generous to his friends (once gifting 14 of them checks for $1 million), attentive to his parents and, after many years as a bachelor, a loving husband and father.

    Baumbach says he wrote the role of Kelly for Clooney and would not have made the film if Clooney had declined it — something that many other movie stars might have done, out of fear that the public might assume that a character that resembled them in so many ways — right down to the film featuring a montage of Kelly’s past work that consists of clips of Clooney’s past work — was actually a reflection of them in all ways.

    Clooney said that “wasn’t really a consideration” for him, in part because he is comfortable in his own skin and in part because Baumbach only added some of those details after Clooney signed on. “He added the Kentucky thing and a couple of those things as we were shooting. He kept looking at my life and adding things, and I was like, ‘Take it easy.’” As for the montage featuring clips of his own films? “I was shocked by that,” he admits, but he was not upset. He has learned to take these sorts of things in stride. “When I did Up in the Air, there were all these conversations about how [the character] was very similar to me, and it was — there were things that I had said like, ‘I don’t ever want to get married again’ and all those kind of things.”

    How did Clooney avoid becoming like Jay Kelly in his own life? He insists it’s all about when and how they each became famous. Of Kelly, Clooney says, “He was famous too young. He’s been surrounded by a team of people who have said ‘yes’ to him … He’s not an evil guy; he’s just oblivious.” Clooney, however, was already 33 by the time he became famous, old enough to have experienced a normal life first — something that he says had not been the case for his own late aunt, the singer Rosemary Clooney, whose resulting troubles he observed up close.

    Also, Marshall McLuhan famously said, “The medium is the message.” Clooney agrees. “I got famous from television, not from movies,” he emphasizes. “You watched me at home, and you could make me talk or not talk with the remote, and you’d watch me in your underwear, and you knew me personally, so I was very much accessible in that way.”

    In those days, the worlds of film and TV were much more segregated, and it was virtually unheard of for someone who had first become famous as a TV star to subsequently become a movie star. Clooney was no exception, at first: “I’d done five or six films while I was doing ER, some very good ones, that didn’t succeed — Out of Sight didn’t succeed, Three Kings didn’t succeed — and so the big question was, ‘Am I going to make it in the movies?’ And the answer was no — until I left ER. The next two movies I had were sort of a perfect combination of The Perfect Storm — which was a big hit having nothing to do with me, but listen, I took a lot of shit for Batman & Robin, so I’ll take credit for the big wave — and O Brother, Where Art Thou?, which was a critical hit.”

    After that, he was off to the races, starring in hits like 2001’s Ocean’s Eleven and its 2004 and 2007 sequels but far more often in art house fare, including 2005’s Syriana, for which he won a best supporting actor Oscar; 2007’s Michael Clayton, 2009’s Up in the Air and 2011’s The Descendants, each of which brought him best actor Oscar nominations. He also began writing, directing and producing quality films, some of which he appeared in, others not — he received best director and best original screenplay Oscar noms for 2005’s Good Night, and Good Luck, in which he played a supporting part; a best adapted screenplay Oscar nom for 2011’s The Ides of March, in which he also played a supporting part; and he won a best picture Oscar for producing 2012’s Argo, in which he did not appear at all.

    Incidentally, he says that he did want to play the leads in Good Night, and Good Luck and Argo, but came to realize that he should not. “I wrote Good Night, and Good Luck to play Murrow,” he says, referring to TV newsman Edward R. Murrow, “and we did a table reading and I looked at Grant [Heslov, his best friend and co-writer on that project] and said, ‘I don’t have the gravitas to play that character yet.’ I was too young, which was really disappointing because I really wanted to play the part. David Strathairn, of course, knocked it out of the park. But I still had to be in the film to keep the financing.” As for Argo? “I was supposed to play the lead in Argo, but when [Ben Affleck] came on to direct it, he said, ‘Yeah, I’d like to play that part.’ And I was like, ‘Shit.’”

    Since Clooney last was on this podcast — back when he was promoting 2019’s Catch-22, a Hulu limited series on which he was an executive producer and director, and in which he also played a supporting role — he has been working nonstop. He directed three films — 2020’s The Midnight Sky, 2021’s The Tender Bar and 2023’s The Boys in the Boat) — the first of which he also starred in. He also starred in a rom-com opposite Julia Roberts (2022’s Ticket to Paradise) and a heist film opposite Brad Pitt (2024’s Wolfs). Thirty nine years after he last acted on stage, he made his Broadway debut playing the aforementioned Murrow in a theatrical adaptation of Good Night, and Good Luck, garnering a best actor in a play Tony nom. And he made Jay Kelly, of which he is obviously immensely proud.

    * * *

    George Clooney’s thoughts…

    On social media

    “I talk to kids all the time. I talk to kids at SAG and things, and they’re all on Instagram and everything. And when I was directing and I was casting, and it was between two actors, the casting director and the studio would come to me and go, ‘Well, she’s got 175,000 followers on Instagram, and the other girl’s got 30,000.’ Those were literally the discussions we had. And I said to all these actors, ‘Get the fuck off of it. Get off of all of it. Because if you’re not on it, you have nothing to be compared to.’ And that access, I get it — you can monetize it, you can drink a certain kind of water and they’ll pay you 10 grand, and fair enough, I get it, I understand it. But trying to maintain a career and answer all of the questions that every individual has for you, it’s diminishing your ability to be bigger than life. It’s inevitable, and I’m sort of swimming upstream, and I don’t think that there’s much you can do about it, but I do think it’s better to not be as available.”

    On AI

    “It’s very disturbing, some of the stuff you’re seeing. … I’ve seen stuff with me in it that’s pretty disturbing, stuff that I ‘said’ that I never said, telling, you know, great stories about Hitler and stuff like that, where you just go, ‘Jesus Christ.’ But I will say that AI is gonna have the same problem that Hollywood has always had, which is it’s still hard to find a movie star.”

    On younger stars who impress him

    “I think Zendaya … can do television, she can do commercials, she can do movies, she seems to have that ability to rise above it. I think Glen Powell is doing interesting stuff as a young actor; he’s kind of hitting around the time I hit, and he seems to want to direct and produce and write and do all of those things with a little bit of humor about himself, which I think is an element that’s important if you look back. I’m not ready to call it all dead yet.”

    On failure versus regret

    “You can live with failure. What you cannot live with is regret. You can’t live with that road that you didn’t try when you think ‘that could have been something special,’ because you can’t go back, and that is toxic. And that, to me, is something that I happily don’t have in my life. If I get hit by a bus when I walk outside after this interview, there’s not one person who knows me or who’s been around me that wouldn’t think, ‘Well, he pretty much got everything you could get out of it.’ I’m the most successful version of where I started, cutting tobacco for $3 an hour, that I ever thought I’d be, and not just in work as an actor, but also in life. I have a beautiful wife and wonderful children and great friends and a great family. And I’ve worked at those things. But I also had made sure that wherever there was a fork in the road, I took the one that I thought was the riskiest and not the safest. And it worked out. It could have not. I could live with that. What I couldn’t live with is having not taken that road.”

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast: Channing Tatum on ‘Roofman,’ Stripping and Overcoming Imposter Syndrome

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    It’s hard to imagine that a man who has been described by Esquire as “the first honest-to-God movie star of his generation” and by Vanity Fair as “the biggest male star since Pitt or Clooney,” and who was chosen as People’s Sexiest Man Alive and one of TIME’s 100 most influential people in the world, would feel anything but immense confidence. But Channing Tatum, on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, insists that he felt “imposter syndrome” throughout his career — until, that is, he completed his latest film, Derek Cianfrance’s Roofman, which premiered at last month’s Toronto International Film Festival — bringing Tatum the best reviews of his career — and will be released nationwide on Friday.

    Tatum’s path to Hollywood is highly unusual, to say the least, and literally the stuff of movies — the blockbuster Magic Mike films, which he produced and starred in, were inspired by his own youthful adventures as an adrift young man who turned to stripping for lack of a better idea of something to do. For Tatum, though, stripping, against all odds, eventually led to dancing in music videos, most notably Ricky Martin’s “She Bangs”; then to modeling for the likes of Abercrombie & Fitch, Dolce & Gabbana and Armani; then to appearing in national commercials for Pepsi and Mountain Dew; and eventually to acting.

    He landed his first film roles 20 years ago, and since then has proven to be a box-office magnet. Indeed, it can’t be a coincidence that 13 of his films have topped the domestic box office in their opening weekend: 2009’s G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, 2010’s Dear John, 2012’s 21 Jump Street and The Vow, 2013’s G.I. Joe: Retaliation, 2014’s 22 Jump Street and The Lego Movie, 2017’s Kingsman: The Golden Circle and The Lego Batman Movie, 2019’s The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part, 2022’s The Lost City, 2023’s Magic Mike’s Last Dance and 2024’s Deadpool & Wolverine.

    He also has shown himself to be a gifted and constantly-improving actor who top filmmakers want to work with. He has been directed by Steven Soderbergh (five times), Quentin Tarantino, Bennett Miller, Michael Mann, Kimberly Peirce, Jon M. Chu, Lasse Hallstrom and the brothers Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, among others. And if anyone doubts his chops, they should check out his performances in 2006’s A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, 2009’s Fighting, 2012’s Magic Mike, 2013’s Side Effects, 2014’s Foxcatcher, 2015’s The Hateful Eight and especially Roofman.

    In Roofman, which is based on a true story that is stranger than fiction, Tatum plays Jeffrey Manchester, a military veteran who struggles to provide for his family; turns to robbing businesses (in the most polite of ways); winds up incarcerated; and then escapes and secretly takes up residence in a Toys ’R Us store, while also embarking on a relationship with an unwitting single mother (Kirsten Dunst) who works there.

    The performance, which required from Tatum both emotional vulnerability and physical comedy, is the fruit of a collaboration with the writer/director Derek Cianfrance, who is best known for the 2010 masterpiece Blue Valentine — a film, it turns out, that Cianfrance offered to Tatum before the actor he eventually cast, Ryan Gosling. Cianfrance came back to Tatum all these years later, having co-written the part of Manchester with the actor in his mind, at a time when Tatum had grown disillusioned with the business and with fame, and had begun to work less than he used to. But this time, the actor was not going to make the same mistake that he made all those years ago by passing on an opportunity to collaborate with Cianfrance, among the most highly-regarded actors’ directors.

    And sure enough, as Tatum describes during this conversation, Cianfrance’s unusual way of working not only brought out the best in him, but also reignited his passion for acting and provided him with a sense of belonging in the business that he had never possessed before.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Live: Clive Owen on Career Highlights, James Bond and TV Shows ‘Monsieur Spade’ and ‘A Murder at the End of the World’

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Live: Clive Owen on Career Highlights, James Bond and TV Shows ‘Monsieur Spade’ and ‘A Murder at the End of the World’

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    Clive Owen, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast — which was recorded in front of an audience at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic, where Owen was feted with the fest’s President’s Award, and which was presented by Lasvit, a Bohemian design and artisan house that creates sublime artworks of glass — is one of the world’s most admired stage and screen actors.

    Best known for films such as Mike Nichols’s Closer (2004) and Spike Lee’s Inside Man (2006) and TV shows including Steven Soderbergh’s The Knick (2014-15) and, in the past year, two limited series, A Murder at the End of the World and Monsieur Spade, the 59-year-old has been described by The Guardian as “one of our finest actors,” by the New York Times as “a thinking person’s hunk” who possesses “volcanic charisma” and by Interview magazine as “one of the most intensely watchable actors on screen and stage.”

    Over the course of an hourlong conversation, the BAFTA and Golden Globe award winner and an Oscar, Emmy, SAG and Critics Choice award nominee reflected on his path from a rough childhood to his star-making role in the 1998 indie film Croupier; why he wasn’t excited about the prospect of playing James Bond, for which he was long rumored to be in the running; what it was like playing different characters in the stage and screen versions of Closer; why, since The Knick, he has increasingly worked in TV; plus much more.

    You can listen to the entire conversation via the audio player above or read a lightly edited transcript of it below.

    Clive, congratulations on the honor from the festival and thank you for doing this.

    Thank you.

    On this podcast, we go right back to the very beginning. Can you tell our listeners where you were born and raised and what your folks did for a living?

    I was brought up in a little town called Coventry, which is in the Midlands, in a very working-class family. Come from a counselor state. Went to a pretty rough school, and did a school play when I was about 13, playing the Artful Dodger in Oliver!. And I said to myself, “This is what I have to do.” It was a very unlikely scenario because of where I come from, but there was a little youth theater in my hometown called the Belgrade Youth Theater, and the guy who ran that ended up running the Royal Shakespeare Company, one of the most prestigious theater companies in the world. But his first gig was to run the Belgrade Youth Theater, and we did Gogol translations and Lope de Vega plays, and that’s where it really bit me and I knew I had to do it.

    You used the word “rough” to describe your childhood just now and in other interviews. Do you think that is connected with your attraction to acting, the appeal of escaping into somebody else’s skin for a little while?

    I’m sure it is part of that, but I think also what it does, when you come from the sort of background that I come from, is it gives you an engine and a fuel. When I was young, they used to say, “Oh, if you’re going to be an actor, you’ll need a backup career.” I had no backup career, it had to work for me. And that does give you a drive and an energy and a passion, because you have nothing to fall back on.

    When your contemporaries were going off to work or to university, there were a couple of years when you were kind of in limbo, right?

    Well, I wasn’t in limbo, I was unemployed and signing on unemployment benefits, but a lot of people were in the U.K. at that time. I helped set up a theater company and I joined this youth theater, but then I had a very tricky time. I told everybody this is what I was going to do, but I was literally unemployed and the acting thing started to dry up. I had a very well-meaning ex-schoolteacher who was saying, “You’ve got to go to drama school, you’ve got to go to drama school.” And to be honest with you, I think I was a bit intimidated by that as an idea. I used to go around saying, “No, you can’t teach people to act. You can either do it or you can’t.” I don’t know who that kid was. Then she encouraged me to apply to a drama school that was accredited, which meant, at that time, that my local city council would fund it — I couldn’t go if that wasn’t the case — would pay for the fees and give me money to live on. I got into that drama school, but then I passed on it and said, “No, I’m not doing it, never wanted to do it.” Then, after two years of unemployment, I get it together to make one application to one drama school, the only one I really had heard of, which was the Royal Academy, and amazingly I got in and everything changed.

    In those years that you were there, you did a ton of plays, including seven in your final year, and then you graduated and went to work in the professional theater. I don’t know if this is mythology, but was your first professional appearance filling in for Gary Oldman?

    Yeah. When I was at RADA, they did this play that Bill Gaskell, a legendary theater director, came to workshop at RADA. It was a Howard Barker play, a take on a play called Women Beware Women, and I got a great part in it, but they were just workshopping it, and I said to Bill Gaskell, “Let me play it when you do it.” He said, “No, no, I’m not pulling you out of drama school.” Then they went on to do the play, and Gary Oldman was playing the part at the Royal Court. This is a year later. I’m in rehearsals [at RADA] and there’s a knock on the door and they say, “We’ve had a call from the Royal Court, Gary Oldman’s taken ill. Bill Gaskell says, ‘Can you get down to the Royal Court and take over from him tonight?’” On a play that I’d done a year before. I sat on the tube going to Sloane Square and I couldn’t remember a single line. I got there, and they’d only got a few of the cast — they couldn’t get ahold of everybody — and I did what rehearsals I could. Then I went on that night, and I did it for a week. Years later, I met and worked with Gary — he’s a bit of a hero of mine, Gary Oldman, I think he’s an absolutely stunning actor — and I said to him, “Do you remember that kid who took over from you?” And he said, “Yes.” I said, “That was me.” And he said, “Do you know what I remember most about that? All the knees.” Because I got into his costume, and he’s quite a bit shorter, and he said, “All the knees in my costume were completely gone after that week!”

    What was the source of your desire to even get into screen acting? I don’t know, but I kind of doubt they taught that at RADA…

    No. I used to think it was not a good thing actually, at RADA, that they didn’t prepare you. Because when young actors left drama schools at that time, you did everything — you did British films, you did TV series, you did theater. And there was no training whatsoever, so the first time you walked on a set, it was totally alien. I mean you’d had all the theater training, but you had no indication of what that was like. But at that time, as I say, actors did it all.

    The first big job you had after leaving school was on a TV series called Chancer. It ran from 1990 to 1991, for 20 episodes, on ITV, and you played a yuppie ’80s banker turned conman. The way it was described subsequently by The New York Times, as far as its effect on your profile, was: “In Britain, he became what George Clooney was to ER.” How did you get the part? And was it truly that explosive for your life?

    Yeah, it was a massive shift for me. I left RADA, I did plays, I did small parts in little things, and then this big TV show arrived. I remember going away and coming back to London and there were huge pictures on the tube of my face, and one of the lines that the character says, and it became a big deal — it was a real shift. I often think back to those times and think, “No one really sort of prepares you for that kind of attention.” If you’re not used to it, it can take some recalibrating, just how you deal with it and what it is. I used to get off the tube because I was so uncomfortable because people would be looking. It took me a good couple of years just to recalibrate and go, “Well, this is what the deal is. This is what you have to deal with. This is what you’ve signed into. And you’ve got to find a way where you are comfortable with it.”

    What was the biggest learning curve, as far as moving from acting on the stage to acting for a camera?

    Well, now theater is all mic’d, but when I started in theater no theater was ever mic’d, so it was all about projection, and that’s a very different kind of acting. Sometimes people think that unless you can do it in the theater, you’re not a proper actor. I disagree with that. I think it’s a different kind of acting, and I think filling a big space takes a certain energy. But I’ve seen some of the finest acting of my life with people in front of a camera too. I just think they’re very different, and I think it is just about understanding what it is to act for a camera instead of trying to fill a big space.

    On Chancer, there was an actor, who played the part of Tom Franklin, named Peter Vaughan, and you’ve said that he was somebody who really had a profound impact on you.

    He was a great guy and a great actor, but it was his discipline — he was always very prepared, and he was very specific, and he was very concentrated. I watched him work. He came in and he really taught me about how in film acting or in TV acting, it’s all about conservation of energy and being ready when needed. We all know there’s a lot of time sitting in a trailer, and you only really get a few minutes each day where you are going to have to deliver, and it’s really about making sure that the day revolves around being ready when that moment comes. Like, I’m somebody who — I don’t like to talk on a set, to chitchat. I like to be away and then come in and do it. I eat the same thing every day — I mean, I love food, but when I’m working, it’s just sustenance. I sleep every lunch time, I always have a nap. And really, the first time I saw that was in Peter Vaughan, and I clocked it.

    As you were becoming well known, at least in the U.K., somehow you knew that you had to not get typecast as a certain kind of actor, because a project that you took on either during or shortly after that show was the film Close My Eyes, in 1991, in which you play a guy who engages in incest with his sister. This was a pretty daring thing to do, and I’ve read that it cost you some endorsements and roles. What made you decide to do it?

    It was a beautiful script. It was a really great writer-director, Stephen Poliakoff. It was very, very delicately handled, a really interesting movie about a brother and sister spending time apart and then falling for each other and the ramifications of that. And I suppose I had an instinct. At that time, I was being offered a lot of similar things as Chancer, big TV things, and I saw this thing and I thought, “I’ve always wanted to keep things as mixed and varied as possible.” I’ve always had that instinct because I trained in the theater, where you want to play lots of parts, you don’t want to play the same part over and over. And when I went up for that film, it felt really important. I really wanted to get it because I knew it would just shift things and open something else up. And literally in the tabloids — “Clive Owen in Incest Shocker” — they treated it really crassly. But it was actually a very delicate, very beautiful film. And that was the beginning of me really wanting to keep things as open as possible so that all options were available.

    One place where options were still limited was outside of the U.K. Like many British actors who have a bit of success in the U.K., you came to Hollywood to see what was there. I know the world was less connected at that time, but what was your experience when you got to Hollywood?

    Well, I’d do these small British films, and then they would often send you over for a few days and you’d take some meetings in case this little film kind of hit. And to be honest with you, I found it very tough — I didn’t like it at all. You were never meeting the really properly influential people, you were meeting the assistant of the assistant, and it just always felt like a waste of time. One thing in this business is it’s important to keep real all the time: “What is the real situation here?” There was even one time where I stopped mid-thing and went, “I’m going home. I don’t feel that this is right.” And then I did this very, very small film with Mike Hodges called Croupier — Mike Hodges did the original Get Carter with Michael Caine — and it was a really interesting, unusual film. Some of the people that made it didn’t really like it when it was finished, but a friend who had produced it was friends with Robert Altman and showed Altman the movie, and he really liked it, and they started to do some screenings. And then they got this very tiny distribution deal, but the reviews were great, and suddenly it became the little indie film of that year that everyone wanted to check out. That film, I think, stayed in the cinema for six to nine months. As Mike Hodges said afterwards, “That film wasn’t released, it escaped.” And it totally changed everything.

    That film came out in America in 1998. It’s a great movie — I just re-watched it this week to be fresh on it, and I have some questions for you about it — but first, the year before that, you were on the stage in a big-deal theatrical production called Closer. Written by Patrick Marber, it tells the story of two men and two women who have all kinds of complications between them. But what I think may come as a surprise to some people is that you played in the stage version not Larry, the character who you would play years later when it was made into a film, but the other man, Dan. You were with that production from the beginning, before it was on the West End, and long before it was a film. How did you come to be a part of it?

    Well, it was a stunning piece of writing, and I remember where I was when I read that. I wanted to play Larry, the part I play in the film, but Patrick thought I was too young, and they were just workshopping it. Then a year later they were actually mounting the production, and an agent came to me about another play, and I said, “That play Closer, that’s going to be something when that’s done.” And he said, “Oh, they’re doing it. They’re definitely doing it, at the National. Ciarán Hinds is playing Larry. Would you be interested in Dan?” And I was like, “They’re four great parts. I’ll do it.” And it was a real event — it got phenomenal reviews; people were queuing every night to see it; people were walking out a lot, I remember, because it’s so intense and uncomfortable at times. And yeah, that was a great experience.

    And was that what put you on Mike Hodges’s radar for Croupier? Did he ever tell you what made him think of you?

    No, but I remember it was a very unusual audition because there were dialogue scenes in it, but a lot of internal monologues. His screen test for it was me working a roulette table, not speaking, but recording a voiceover and then him filming me. And it was unusual, I remember that, because he needed someone who could hold that. I was thrilled to get it because I thought he was very cool. But a really strong memory from that film is two days into filming, he said, “Oh, just do some roulette table and I’m going to put some of the voiceover in it,” and it troubled me. I went and banged on his door that night and I said, “I don’t think that the voiceover and what you’re seeing is going to be connected properly if you’re going to just put it over whatever I’m doing. I think what I need to do is to learn all the voiceover. When we do the scene, I’ll speak the voiceover, and then we’ll shoot, and I’ll just think the voiceover.” And it worked because it made it present, it made the thoughts — he didn’t have to use all of it, he could cut to other things, but when he did want to use it, the thoughts were on the beat, on the money, exactly what was being said in his mind. And I think it made quite a difference.

    Amazing. I had read that, and I can’t imagine how you could have done it any other way. Croupier, as you noted, played for six months and grossed $6 million in the U.S., after basically doing nothing in the U.K. Mike Kaplan, the marketer of Stanley Kubrick’s films and a friend of Altman, was the guy who championed it in the U.S.?

    He championed the film. He put out all of Kubrick’s films. He’s the only guy that Kubrick would deal with in the publicity world. Mike Kaplan coined the phrase, “2001, the ultimate trip.” Mike Kaplan did all the artwork for A Clockwork Orange, all that crazy wonderful artwork. And he was really obsessed by the film, and he pushed and he pushed and he got it this little deal. And I got some really great reviews, and he built this campaign that was all about me being compared to a lot of great actors. It was fundamental in the film staying out there, but also shifting everything to me, and I tell him he had a huge part in that gear-change in my career.

    And suddenly the meetings in L.A. were of a higher caliber?

    Suddenly I was meeting the directors, the people that actually make the decisions.

    One thing that happened pretty soon after Croupier, but before some of the other film roles that people know about, was you being approached to play a guy referred to as “The Driver” in a series of very high-end BMW commercials. A lot of actors, when they first are getting a spotlight, don’t want to do commercials, and I think that was your initial inclination. Can you explain what tipped the scale for you to ultimately to do those, which were very cool once they got done?

    I was hesitant and nervous and thinking, “As things are opening up, do I really want to do a bunch of commercials?” Then I started to hear about the caliber of the people involved and it was a very late decision. I remember I flew out and went straight to set to meet John Frankenheimer, who pulled me into a trailer and said, “I want to show you some actors driving. I want to show you bad versions,” and one of them was in one of his films, “and I want to show you really good versions,” about the way people were driving, whether they looked like they were driving or not in the thing. He said, “Have a look at these because we need to really feel that you are driving these cars.” And he was the king of car chases. He broke them down. He would literally say, “Okay, Clive, this is a three-second take. All you’re going to do is you’re going to fight the wheel, it’s pulling to the right and you’re going to try and hold it to the left.” And I would literally go for two seconds, and he’d go, “Got it, move on.” He broke it down that specific, and I ended up working with just such an incredible array of directors.

    Not just John Frankenheimer, but also Tony Scott, Wong Kar-wai, John Woo, Ang Lee, Guy Ritchie and the list goes in. In a way, what better opportunity could there have been for a young actor to get on the radar of big filmmakers? And you would ultimately come back around and work with Ang Lee. I don’t know if it had anything to do with your encounter at that time. But what a cool showcase those were, that I imagine you’re happy you ended up doing.

    Oh, for sure. They were great.

    One other byproduct of people seeing you as this kind of slick cool guy in those ads might have been the beginning of those incessant rumors that you had to deal with for a number of years about you being the next James Bond? Do you think it traces back to that?

    I wear a tuxedo in Croupier — it’s that obvious!

    Right, of course. Now, was that ever real, as far as Bond? I read one thing where Pierce Brosnan himself might have advocated for you. Is that correct?

    It was all hype and talk, and there’s a lot worse things to be associated with. All I’ll say is that if you take that on, it’s a massive undertaking for your whole life. That’s a career decision. Now, everyone thinks and assumes that everyone would want to do it, but think about your life, think about going in a bar for a drink, think about doing normal things, and whether that would be possible after playing that part.

    Instead, the first movie that I would imagine came about because of Croupier was Altman’s Gosford Park, which connects back, I assume, to Mike Kaplan. This movie had one of the craziest ensembles ever assembled. You’re playing the valet for one of the aristocrats who have gathered at a British country estate in November 1932, whose host turns up dead. Very upstairs/downstairs, and in fact written by Julian Fellowes, who would later do Downton Abbey. I think were the first person cast by Altman?

    It was on the back of Croupier. Once he saw Croupier, he called me up and he said, “I’m not doing it for a year, but I want you to be in this film I’m planning.”

    There’s literally been an oral history book written about Altman, where you get the whole array of experiences that actors had working with him, which seemed to change depending on the decade. What was your experience? Did he provide a lot of guidance or welcome a lot of questions from his actors?

    No, he got that incredible ensemble cast together for the first time and said, “Don’t come and talk to me about your parts. You all know why you’re here.” That was his opening line. But he was a genius. He was so unbelievably on top of the skillset of how to shoot movies with ensemble casts. He could create these scenes that involve so many people and give you just enough of everything to satisfy you. I’ve worked on things where you put five people around a dinner table and directors — good directors — get stuck on how to cover it. We shot it in two halves, and the downstairs cast, which I was part of, we were all sent memos, all of that incredible cast, saying, “I want everyone to come in every day just in case I want to decide to throw people together. You’ll often be released at lunchtime, but I need everyone to come in, go through the works, be ready just in case.” And occasionally you’d be sitting there and he’d start to call you one by one. I remember he said one of the coolest things I’ve ever heard on a film set. He pulled everyone together. It was a really elaborate, long developing shot, and he said, “Okay, we’re going to go for the first take. If you know what you’re doing, we won’t notice you. If you don’t, we will.”

    Well, I know that you also surprised him. You’ve got all these unbelievable actors on the set — Helen Mirren, Maggie Smith, and on and on — and one might expect people to be clamoring for more dialogue. Not you.

    My first scene was, I’m sitting there and two people go walking by, and they’re talking about the murder, and I stop them and say, “Sorry, what were you saying?” and we have this conversation. And I said to him, “Don’t you think it’d be cooler if you just see me and clock me listening to it, rather than do that next obvious step of stopping them and engaging with them?” And the rest of the movie, he mercilessly ribbed me. He went, “Oh, Clive’s here with the biggest British cast ever, and on day one he’s trying to cut his lines. The guy’s a crazy man!” But then he started to go, “Clive, just sit over there and make a cup of tea and listen,” and he just started to use that as a kind of theme through it.

    That’s great. After that was The Bourne Identity, in which you’re one of the people assigned to assassinate Jason Bourne, in 2002. In 2003, you were back with Mike Hodges for I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead, playing a guy who has gotten out of the gangster life but gets drawn back in. And then in 2004 was King Arthur, which seems to me would have been of a scale unlike anything you’d done before. This is for Antoine Fuqua directing, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, and for the Disney studio — it doesn’t get a lot bigger than that. How did you come to be a part of it? And did you find that working on something of that scale, you end up having to give a different kind of performance just to not get lost in the machinery of it all, or is it all the same?

    No, I just got lost. Yeah, it was huge. They rebuilt part of Hadrian’s Wall and people used to joke, “It’s bigger and more expensive than the original.” It’s an experience doing a movie of that size. I think personally I function better when — I love working with these auteurs who write the script, who direct, who are totally on top of a vision. I find the big ones — where there’s lots of writers, lots of people involved with opinions — I find them harder to negotiate, to be honest.

    That same year brought the release of the film version of Closer, with Mike Nichols directing, you and Julia Roberts primarily sharing scenes, Jude Law in the role you’d played in on the stage, opposite Natalie Portman, and on from there. You were the only one who had previously done Closer in any form. Had Nichols seen that? How did you come to be part of the film?

    Mike Nichols came to see the very original production and apparently approached Marber and said, “I’d like to make a movie,” and Marber said, “No, it’s not a movie, it’s a play.” And he approached Marber every year for seven years and said, “Change your mind? Have you thought about it?” The seventh year, Patrick went, “Yeah, make a movie.”

    I don’t know if it ever was something that Nichols discussed, but you think back over the projects that he’s done, from Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Carnal Knowledge right through Closer and beyond, he seems drawn to quartets, especially when sex gets thrown the mix. Was that ever discussed?

    No, but we had a really unusual and memorable rehearsal period because we all went to New York for two weeks months before we started shooting, and we’d read a scene and then discuss around it. We didn’t work the scene. We didn’t do that. We talked around what that brought up. And I have to say that two weeks was so special because he is one of the smartest, funniest, brightest people I’ve ever, ever come across. And we all just drank him in for two weeks as he riffed around the subject of love, betrayal, revenge. And then we had this long period where we didn’t, and he said he always liked doing that, and it was really telling because that period in between you think you’re not doing something as an actor, you think well now we’ve got downtime, but it’s percolating. All those discussions, all those thoughts, you know it’s coming. And so tiny little thoughts and decisions that are going to actually get into it are happening in your head because you have that period now to digest what you’re doing rather than usually get together three days of rehearsals, let’s shoot. It’s not the same. That gestation period seemed to be really valuable and really worked.

    Was there a key thing that clicked to you at any point, just sort of a way into this character? I ask mainly because obviously it was so well received, BAFTA, Golden Globe Awards, Oscar nomination, all this stuff, it’s still one of the films that I think you’re most closely associated with. So, what was it? This is a complex guy who Larry the dermatologist with some very just sexual hang-ups and different things, sharing most of your scenes with Julia Roberts, who as was noted all the time at that point for sure maybe the biggest movie star in the world. So you got a lot to think about. What was the key to making that work for you, that job?

    Well, I was blessed because I’d done the original play, so I’d really mined that piece of writing. I’d worked it in a theater, I’d seen how it played. I’d seen what was funny. I’d seen what was uncomfortable. And then you get to do the movie and I trusted the language, I totally trusted the language, I knew how it played. And it is a brilliant piece of writing. But as you say, go back and look at Mike Nichols’ career. The guy is one of the greats. And to have him holding us through it, and we did some super long takes, some of those scenes were shot in one long take. He immediately edited it afterwards, but we had to act them all the way through as if it was a stage play. And to have him … People often say, “How come Mike Nichols, why is he so great with actors?” He’s great with actors because he makes them feel good because he’s so smart that if he makes you think you’re anywhere near his level, you feel good about yourself and you want to deliver for it. And I’m not a fan of this, you hear sometimes about these directors who torture an actor because they’re going to get a performance. That’s bullshit to me, that’s bullshit. The best acting you’ll get is when an actor feels like they can do it and they can do anything. And he was brilliant at putting an actor in a place where they could really do.

    The year after Closer was for Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller, Sin City. You’re playing this guy Dwight McCarthy, the first American that you played as a character I think, maybe.

    Probably, yeah.

    Yeah. But what was kind of seems to me must’ve been a different kind of challenge with that is from what I understand, the whole thing is green screen. I don’t know, did you have any sense while you were working on it of what it would actually end up looking like?

    We shot it out in Austin, Texas, in his big studio, and we started off with a couple of things. We started off with a car and the odd prop, and he even stripped that down. So, in the end, the car scene was sitting on a box with a steering wheel. That was it. And everything else was put on afterwards, and it was like acting floating. It was like he mapped out the flat, he mapped out [inaudible 00:37:11] with tape, but there was absolutely nothing to sort of hold onto. It was a bit like doing theater or something.

    But when I went to see that movie for the first time, I was totally blown away. I thought that he did an incredibly faithful adaptation of those graphic novels. It was like the frames bursting into life. But I turned to him afterwards and I said, “I had no idea I was in that movie.” He did so much brilliant work after what we had done that I was so impressed.

    That same year was Derailed, which was kind of Hitchcockian thriller with you and Jennifer Aniston, and then the next year is you working with Spike Lee on the movie that kind of rejuvenated his career, not that it was going badly but it just was one of his biggest hits, Inside Man. You’re the guy who sets out to commit the perfect bank robbery, Dalton Russell. But you originally were not going to accept the role, from what I understand, or had some reservations about accepting the role. Can you talk about how you came around to agreeing to do it?

    So yeah, Spike, huge fan of Spike Lee, so I think, “Oh, Spike Lee wants me to do a movie?” And I read the script and in the original version of the script, I walk into the bank with a mask on and I never take it off. So I said to him, “I’ll voice over it for you, let somebody else walk through it,” and we left it and we left it for quite a while. And then I get a call and he goes, “I got Denzel. Does that change anything?” I go, “Greatest actor around? I think it might Spike, yeah.” “Okay, you in New York?” And he leaves me a ticket for the basketball. I’ve never been to the basketball. So I go to a Knicks game. Now, I don’t realize he’s part of the game. He’s front row. He’s running straight with the ref, the players. And I love sport. I’d never been to a basketball game, but I had the time of my life and I was like … But he didn’t mention the film all night. And then I’m thinking, “Well, it’s not my position to you want to talk to me.” So he goes, “You got a ride?” I go, “Yeah.” He goes, “You want to drop me off at home?” I go, “Sure.” Pull up outside his house and he goes, “So you doing it or what?” And I went, “Of course I’m doing it after that night.” And I’m so glad because we’ve become really, really great friends. I’m so fond of him.

    Yeah, I know you just recently presented him with an honor, I think.

    I gave him his BAFTA, yeah, which I felt an honor that he wanted me to do that for him.

    That’s great, yeah. Now, one of the things that he does I believe on most if not all of his movies that I wonder how you receive this kind of thing is it’s almost like a group screening project, like we’re going to all watch certain number of movies that I want you to have in mind while we’re doing this, or here’s what I’m going for or something. Was that the case?

    Yeah, he does that. I think he does that regularly. He screens films that he thinks are relevant. So we watched Dog Day Afternoon, we watched a whole bunch of ’70s either bank heist or crime movies, and he just screens one once a week just to get people in the zone of what he’s thinking. Also, just something I thought you were going to say, which was totally I’d never experienced before, is he shoots in both directions at the same time. So he says to the DP, “You’ve got to be able to handle this. I want to shoot both ways because I want the actors live and doing it,” even to the point of if there’s a phone call, two sets, two actors on the phone, and it’s hard for a DP but it does mean that anything live, anything that happens can be kept.

    Wow. Now, while you were in New York working on Inside Man, that was also overlapping with sort the beginning stages of being involved with Children of Men. This is Alfonso Cuaron. It’s set in 2027 I believe, so we’re coming up on it, we’ll see if it catches up to the way it’s portrayed in the movie. But basically, the world, pollution has caused global infertility. Your character Theo is a former radical who’s now kind of just a functionary and then gets drawn back into the resistance when it turns out there is one person who may still be pregnant. And I wonder, there’s Cuaron, there’s a cool script, but I’ve heard you talk about the fact that it wasn’t necessarily immediately clear what you were supposed to be bringing to the film. Can you talk about that?

    He’s brilliant. Alfonso Cuaron is brilliant, but when I read the script, I couldn’t see the part. There were no scenes that I felt, “Oh yeah, I can do some acting in now.” The guy had kind of given up at the beginning of the movie and he was the lead of the movie. He takes people through the movie and you’re playing somebody who’s kind of given up and a bit apathetic about everything. So I go, “How do you even do that?” I was struggling and I was being offered other things where I really saw clearly there’s a part, I know what to do with that. But he was brilliant. And then I remember the thing that sort of really pushed me over the line was I had never seen Battle of Algiers, the movie. And he said, “I’m going to send you this because this is kind of my template. This is what I’m thinking.” And I saw that movie and was blown away by it. And as we started to shoot, I realized that he is a visionary, Alfonso, he’s an extraordinary filmmaker. And that my job really was to get out of the way. I was the conduit to which you see all of this stuff, but if I’m too busy, if I’m acting, if I’m like I need … And it felt like that was what was demanded. You’ve got to be the way that Alfonso can show this world to everybody. Yeah, so that’s what happened.

    Just a few months ago, we had Julianne Moore on the podcast who was your co-star in this, and I had to ask her, and I have to ask you to talk about these long, unbelievable chase scenes, which are done as at least appears to be one long take. In particular, the one in the car with you guys being shot at and all hell breaking loose. But there’s also another at the end later with you. So, at that time, Alfonso was working with Chivo Lubezki, the cinematographer, but I don’t know how many camera operators something like that requires. Anyway, that’s going to be talked about the Touch of Evil opening or some of the great long takes ever, so how the hell did you guys do it?

    A lot of rehearsals. We had some days where he didn’t shoot a thing and he would come up to me towards the end he said, “I’m going for a take because I’ve got the studio breathing down my neck saying you haven’t shot a thing today. It’s never going to be in the movie. It’s a rehearsal, but let’s shoot something to get them off my back.” And we did that. They were hugely elaborate. And it’s a real lesson in sort of people who are brave filmmakers. The car rig for that sequence towards the beginning of the movie, it kind of hadn’t been done before. And he was with one of these English Pinewood car rig guys. And I remember witnessing this conversation right early on with the guy going, “Can’t be done, mate. Can’t be done,” and Alfonso, using worse language than I’ll use, said, “It can be. It really can be.” And he’s like, “No, mate. Trust me. I’ve been doing this for 20 years.” The guy was fired, and then they created that extraordinary rig and it’s become one of the memorable scenes. Yeah.

    Unbelievable. So I mean the pace, I don’t know if you ever have taken a break, because right after that is Elizabeth: The Golden Age, where it’s you and Cate Blanchett, you’re Walter Raleigh. Then there’s The International after that, an Interpol agent, this is Tom Tykwer. And then Duplicity that same year, you and Julia Roberts back again. This is Tony Gilroy’s first thing after Michael Clayton. And then that brings us to … And also that year, by the way, The Boys Are Back, same year. This is a lot of output. Amazing. But Hemingway & Gellhorn, 2012, ended up being a TV film, but it’s you and Nicole Kidman as Hemingway and his wife Martha Gellhorn. And really, I think doesn’t always get the credit that it deserves. I just thought that’s a … I mean you did get an Emmy nomination and things like that, but it seems like that was some of the most impressive work that you’ve done, in my opinion.

    Well, it’s nice you say that. I’m great friends with Phil Kaufman and I think he’s an absolute brilliant, brilliant filmmaker who’s made some absolutely incredible films. And it really bothers me as Phil’s gone on, he’s also a brilliant writer and he tries to get these films off the ground and it’s a real struggle. And I really do think sometimes that the movie business can be a bit ageist and you look at somebody of his intelligence and his skillset, and it beggars belief to me why Phil can’t get anything he wants to make made. And he did this very unusual technique in that movie where he bedded in real footage and put us into the real footage, and it was a really ambitious way of telling that story. And I think nothing but great things about Phil.

    Yeah. TV you had not really done in terms of an ongoing part since Chancer, I think, right, and then along comes Steven Soderbergh, who I don’t know if you know, was here this week.

    I do. We texted each other.

    OK. And this is with the project The Knick in which you ended up playing Dr. Thackery, this brilliant chief surgeon at a hospital in the early 1900s New York, who’s also a drug addict and a bit of a psychopath in some ways. The L.A. Times called him “one of the defining TV characters of the era.” It was only a two season show, 20 episodes, but that’s the way people think about it, the way The L.A. Times talked about it. And so I just wonder, I guess it starts with outreach from Soderbergh?

    Yeah. I get a call and he says, “I’m sending you a script. I want to make a TV series.” I wasn’t thinking about doing TV at that time. I remember I was on my lunch break in my trailer, and I thought, “Oh, I’ll just have a little look at this.” I flew through it. I thought it was one of the best, most exciting things I’d read. And I called him back, I said, “I’m in,” that quick. And said, “It’s fantastic.”

    Now, I’ve heard him talk about Clint Eastwood or something where they do as few takes as possible. Is that true and is that a way you like working where just fast?

    It took me a few weeks to adapt because he does so few takes. He’s incredibly economical. And I started, it took me a little while to learn that he shoots the edit in the order of the edit. So, he lights the whole room, and then he looks at a scene, and he rehearses it a few times, and he’s kind of making the cuts, and then he shoots it like that. If he doesn’t need to come back round on something that he knows he’s not going to use, he doesn’t. He gets in the car when he wraps, he edits it, and at 10 o’clock you’ve got the finished scene, and that is the finished scene because he hasn’t shot anything else. He is the most unbelievably economical and smart director. But his sets, I have such fond memories of that show. I mean, I love the material, I love the show. I love that cast, that ensemble cast is one of the best group of actors I’ve ever worked with. And Soderbergh raises everyone’s game because he is very quietly very demanding. You have to come prepared and ready. And it was such … And the concentration on his sets. There’s no monitors, there’s no places for people to sit down anywhere. It’s you walk onto that set, it’s a hush tone and everyone is very clear that we are here to do this. And that to me is heaven. There’s one thing I find very difficult in the modern era of filming, and I know ADs have to use their phones because they’re all communicating, but the distraction of people messaging around a camera when you’re all there to capture that one little bit of magic. And there is such distraction around, and the beauty of Soderberg’s set is he does not allow that anywhere near.

    And that one, just because people were hungry for as much of it as possible, and then after two seasons, we won’t divulge in case anyone hasn’t seen it how this happens, but it rather suddenly ends. You said you knew that from the beginning that was it.

    He told me, yeah. And there are photographs of what happens at the end of that show. People did do that. They did sort of operate on themselves.

    I’m fortunate that I cover the Tonys season each year, so I got to see in 2015 and 2017 your return to Broadway, which you hadn’t done theater in 14 years when you came back to do Old Times and then M. Butterfly, that’s 2015 and 2017. What made you decide, you’re at a very different point than when you had last done theater, I guess just what goes into the equation that now is the time to go back and do that?

    I think that I had to because I don’t think if I’d have left it any longer, I’m not sure I would’ve done it. It’s very scary when you haven’t done it for that long and to go back in there and go, “Have I still got that? Do I still have that energy? Do I still have that skillset?” And I wanted to do it, and it was scary and it was terrifying, but I did three plays. I did another one after that. But it was just a decision at that time of going, “Actually, if I don’t do this, I might never do a play again, so I should maybe do it.”

    Yeah, that was a treat to see you do it. In that aftermath of that is Gemini Man, which is the one I mentioned where you and Ang Lee again work together. Then there’s Impeachment: American Crime Story where thanks to the magic of you learning an Arkansas accent and a lot of makeup work, you are Bill Clinton. And I guess I should ask about, and I want to ask about that one, because it’s not often that you’ve played real people who not only have lived but are living. How does that affect things?

    Well, when it came to me, I was like, “Well, that’s crazy. Who would’ve thought of that? I’m English. I’m not even American playing somebody.” And also terrifying the idea of playing somebody that everybody knows so well and through a period that is very incredibly well known. And then I started to sort of dig into him a little bit and then I was like, “Oh no, I think I might have to do this.” And there’s a high chance of failure taking on something like that. But there was something about being scared and what I really got into is the idea of going into all the original footage and getting as close as I could to everything, the pausing, the hiccups. Now, only nobody would ever know this, but if you look at the rhythm of what he says, I did it as exact as I could. I didn’t do any interpretation of anything. I studied exactly. And if they tried to change the dialogue and neaten it upward, I said, “Please, please. The hesitations are everything. It’s there for you, let me use the real thing.” And it’s very close. But it was one of those where it was scary, but I got something bit inside me.

    This brings us to the last year during which you have been in two TV limited series that have been just widely seen, widely discussed, pretty cutting edge in different ways. So I want to start with A Murder at the End of the World, this is you playing Andy Ronson, a billionaire tech guy who brings together an array of brilliant people to his compound in Iceland, including an amateur detective and her ex-boyfriend, the latter of whom turns up dead and the mystery goes from there. This is from Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij, the team behind The OA. Recently had Emma Corrin on the podcast and talked about this with them, but I want to get it from you because I think you were very involved during the writing of this, what was the main appeal for you of playing a guy who maybe might have some echoes of, I don’t know, an Elon Musk or somebody else like that today?

    I think they’re very cool, fresh, exciting filmmakers. I really do. And we had a lot of talk as the script was being written, and I just think that in some ways they break a lot of rules. They don’t do things how you’re supposed to do it. Sometimes I think that with their work, the journey to where you’re going is where it’s at really, just getting to that place. It’s not about having a very rigid structure. It floats and discovers and delves into all kinds of things on the way to where you’re going. And I think they’ve got a very, very fresh take. And the idea of doing a who done it, it’s a classic who done it, but making it with a super cool young female girl, which why haven’t we seen that before, by the way? And about AI, which is a very, very hot subject, and it just felt like something I wanted to dive into with them.

    That’s great. The other one just slightly more recently is Monsieur Spade, which you’re playing Detective Sam Spade 20 years after the events of, let’s say, the Maltese Falcon, right? Left San Francisco, now in the south of France and battling emphysema, not really in the game, and gets drawn back into the game. This is Scott Frank and Tom Fontana, who Scott Frank was coming off of The Queen’s Gambit, Tom Fontana has done many great TV things of his own. I want to ask you how that outreach began, but I also want to first read back to you a quote from a 1997 New York Times profile of you. “He’s executive producer and will star as Philip Marlowe in Trouble Is My Business, based on a 1939 Raymond Chandler story. He chose a Chandler piece that hadn’t been filmed before he said because, ‘The last thing I need to do is be compared to Humphrey Bogart.’” So that project didn’t end up happening, this one did. How did you come around to the idea of the Humphrey Bogart similarities, comparisons?

    Well, I mean I’ve always loved that genre and I’m a massive Humphrey Bogart fan. When Scott called me up about doing this, I’ve got an original Maltese Falcon poster behind me on the wall. I take a shot, I go, “You’ve come to the right guy. I’m crazy about this.” And I know that really when you’re sort of reinventing, I mean it’s very hard to do noir. We didn’t get the Marlowe script together, and that was partly because it’s a very hard genre to reinvent because we kind of think we know it. We know all the cliches. And when Scott called me and said, “I’m going to set it in France,” and I go, “Well, there we go. We’re already in a different.” But I suppose what I should have done is gone, “I’m going to do my version of Sam Spade,” and I did the opposite and went, “I’m going to really dig into Bogart.” I watched everything and I studied his voice and I just indulged myself because I’m such a fan of his. I lifted only his dialogue, nobody else’s, from Casablanca and Maltese Falcon. Casablanca is … Well, I say I did it. My assistant Bobby is here, he did it. I didn’t do it. But Casablanca, Bogart actually doesn’t speak for that much. I can’t remember the exact minutes, but maybe less than 20. And I just had them in my ears day to day because we’re shooting in the south of France and I wanted to get into, although he’s older, although he’s living somewhere else, he’s still that guy that comes from that place. So yeah, I had a great time on that. And Scott Frank, for me, is one of the great writers out there at the moment.

    With the last minute, just a couple of assorted random quick things. Could there be more of Monsieur Spade?

    I hope so.

    You do? If you got one do over in your career, take something that you passed on, pass on something that you took, do something that you did differently, what do you think? What comes to mind first?

    Nothing, because nothing’s perfect.

    If in 50 years there’s a college course on great actors and each session involves a discussion of a different actor as well as a screening of one representative example of what made them great, what would you hope they would show, if they have to pick one project of yours? They got to show these students what was Clive Owen about? What today, I understand the answer might change tomorrow or whatever, but what would you like them to see?

    Luckily I don’t have to. They have to pick it.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Julianne Moore on Reuniting with Todd Haynes for ‘May December,’ Why ‘Far from Heaven’ Almost Fell Apart and Why Oscars Matter

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Julianne Moore on Reuniting with Todd Haynes for ‘May December,’ Why ‘Far from Heaven’ Almost Fell Apart and Why Oscars Matter

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    Julianne Moore, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is one of the greatest screen actresses of her time, or any other. The winner of an Oscar, an Emmy and a BAFTA Award, two SAG, Golden Globe and Spirit awards and three National Board of Review and Critics Choice awards, she has also been awarded the best actress prizes of the Berlin, Cannes and Venice film festivals. She has rarely been part of a film or TV project that wasn’t at least very good, and in which she herself wasn’t great.

    Moore’s latest film, May December, is no exception. A Netflix dramedy in which the star plays a woman married to a much younger man (Charles Melton), who was underage when they first hooked up 20 years earlier. Her character is now being observed by a Hollywood actress (Natalie Portman), who is set to play her in a film. It marks Moore’s fifth collaboration with director Todd Haynes. For her performance, she already received a Golden Globe nomination; has pending nominations for Critics Choice and London Critics Circle awards; and seems likely to land her sixth Oscar nomination.

    Chosen in 2020 by the film critics of The New York Times as “one of the 25 greatest actors of the 21st century so far,” Moore has been described by the Los Angeles Times as “a bona fide Hollywood star with strong indie roots who remains impossible to pigeonhole” and by The Guardian as “the most talented actress of her generation.” Slate wrote that she is a “human Stradivarius of an actress,” who “has been so good, for so long, in such a variety of better-than-average movies — is there any other A-list actress who’s chosen her roles with such consistently excellent taste, or collaborated with as many ambitious young directors? — that it’s easy to take for granted her steady presence in some of the best American cinema.”

    Over the course of a conversation at the L.A. offices of The Hollywood Reporter, the 63-year-old reflected on her nomadic childhood and how it led her to acting; the most important roles of her career, including those in 1995’s Safe, 1997’s Boogie Nights, 1998’s The Big Lebowski, 2002’s Far from Heaven, 2010’s The Kids Are All Right and 2014’s Still Alice; her special relationship with Haynes; plus much more.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast: Martin Scorsese on ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Blending His Past Films, the Marvel Controversy and Almost Directing ‘Schindler’s List’

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast: Martin Scorsese on ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Blending His Past Films, the Marvel Controversy and Almost Directing ‘Schindler’s List’

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    Martin Scorsese, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is one of the greatest filmmakers of all time, and, in the eyes of many, the greatest filmmaker alive today.

    Over the course of a career spanning nearly 60 years, Scorsese has directed 26 narrative features and 16 documentary features, among them 1973’s Mean Streets, 1976’s Taxi Driver, 1980’s Raging Bull, 1990’s Goodfellas, 1995’s Casino, 2006’s The Departed, 2013’s The Wolf of Wall Street and, most recently, 2023’s Killers of the Flower Moon. The adaptation of David Grann’s bestselling book features a script co-written by Eric Roth and Scorsese, who also produced the film, which stars his two great muses, Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio, plus breakout Lily Gladstone. It follows a series of murders in the Osage Nation after oil was discovered on tribal land in the 1920s.

    Described by TIME magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world, Scorsese has been the recipient of just about every honor that exists. Those include an Oscar, three Emmys, a Grammy, four BAFTAs, three Golden Globes, two Directors Guild Awards, an AFI Life Achievement Award, a Film Society of Lincoln Center tribute, a Kennedy Center Honor, a Cecil B. DeMille Award and a BAFTA Fellowship, among many others. He has also been recognized with achievement awards from the Venice Film Festival, the Cannes Film Festival and the Berlin Film Festival.

    For Killers of the Flower Moon, specifically, he has already been awarded multiple best film and best director awards, including from the National Board of Review and the New York Film Critics Circle. Killers was also chosen as one of 2023’s 10 best films by the AFI Awards, and Scorsese was nominated for best director and best screenplay at the Golden Globes. He also received nods for the best director at the Directors Guild Awards and the Critics Choice Awards, where he was nominated for best adapted screenplay. Oscar nominations are almost surely to follow.

    Over the course of a conversation at the Hotel Bel-Air, the 81-year-old reflected on the tug of war that he felt as a kid growing up in Little Italy between his faith and the reality of his life, and how that shaped the films that he made. He also opened up about the origins and evolution of his special relationships with De Niro and DiCaprio, with whom he has made 10 features and six features, respectively; how he almost directed Schindler’s List; how he feels about the Scorsese vs. Marvel controversy; how Killers of the Flower Moon is sort of an amalgam of his gangster films, period costume drama, family film and trilogy of films about faith; plus much more.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Danielle Brooks (‘The Color Purple’)

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Danielle Brooks (‘The Color Purple’)

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    Danielle Brooks, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is a tremendously gifted stage and screen actress who is equally at home in dramas, comedies, musicals and everything in-between.

    Also, there’s something about Brooks and colors. Indeed, the two parts for which she is best known are prison inmate “Taystee” on the Netflix comedy-turned-drama series Orange Is the New Black, on which she appeared from 2013 through 2019 (The Daily Beast called her “the breakout actress of the show”); and strong-willed 1920s woman Sofia in the musical The Color Purple, which she was a part of on Broadway from 2015 through 2017 (bringing her a Grammy Award and a Tony Award nomination), and to which she returned for the film version that has been a huge hit since debuting in theaters on Christmas Day of 2023 (which has already brought her best supporting actress Golden Globe and Critics Choice award noms, with additional recognition likely to come).

    Over the course of a conversation at the London West Hollywood hotel, the 34-year-old reflected on her journey from Greenville, South Carolina, to Juilliard to fame; how her part on Orange Is the New Black expanded from two episodes to series regular to show-stealer — and how The Color Purple first entered the picture for her during Orange’s fourth season, creating a juggling-act for the ages; why she doubted herself even when she was garnering massive acclaim for both of those productions; how she, felt years later, when it was uncertain that she would be offered the chance to reprise her part in the big screen adaptation of the musical version of The Color Purple; plus much more.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Olivia Rodrigo (‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’)

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Olivia Rodrigo (‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’)

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    Olivia Rodrigo, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is a tremendously gifted singer-songwriter who is, at just 20, arguably the biggest pop star in the world.

    The New York Times has called her “Pop’s brightest new hope,” “a modern and somewhat signature pop star,” “the promising new voice of her generation” and “the most important new pop starlet of the last few years.” USA Today has described her as “a hero among Gen Z listeners.” Rolling Stone has labeled her “One of pop’s biggest, brightest, most fascinating and most brilliant stars,” “an artist with her own voice… who is definitely here to stay” and has “managed to put together a one-of-a-kind catalog already… both of her albums sound like other artists’ greatest-hits collections.”

    With her 2021 breakout single “Driver’s License,” Rodrigo became the youngest artist to debut with a single that hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and two subsequent singles, “Deja Vu” and “Good 4 U,” also went to No. 1, staying there for eight weeks, two weeks and one week, respectively. Both of her first two studio albums, 2021’s Sour and 2023’s Guts, went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200. In 2023, she became just the 16th artist to simultaneously hold the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s three most important charts, the Hot 100, the 200 and the Artist 100.

    She is also a Grammy darling. In 2022, she was nominated for best new artist, album of the year and best pop vocal album for Sour; record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performance for “Driver’s License”; and best music video for “Good 4 U.” She ultimately won best new artist, best pop vocal for Sour and best pop solo performance for “Driver’s License.” Ahead of the Grammys ceremony that will take place on Feb. 4, 2024, she is nominated for record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performance for “Vampire”; album of the year and best pop vocal album for Guts; and best rock song for “Ballad of a Homeschooled Girl.”

    Plus, on Jan. 23, 2024, she may also pick up a best original song Oscar nomination, as well, for the first tune that she has ever written for a film, “Can’t Catch Me Now” for The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes.

    Over the course of an interview at the Los Angeles offices of The Hollywood Reporter, Rodrigo reflected on her path to performing, and how acting gigs on Disney Channel TV shows ultimately led to a record deal and “Driver’s License.” She also opened up about what it was like creating and releasing her first album in the middle of a global pandemic and her second in the immediate aftermath of mega-fame; how she approaches songwriting generally; and how writing a song for a movie is different than writing one for herself; plus much more.

    You can listen to the conversation (above) or read a lightly edited version of it (below)!

    * * *

    Olivia, thank you so much for making the time to do this. I really appreciate it.

    Oh, thanks for having me.

    Absolutely. Let’s go back to the very beginning: where were you born and raised, and what did your folks do for a living?

    I was born in Temecula, California, which is about two hours out of L.A. My mom is an elementary school teacher, and my dad is a therapist, so I was very nurtured growing up. My mom was a teacher at the school that I went to, and I was a child actor when I was young. I was very driven and really wanted to succeed in this acting world, so my parents would drive me to L.A. and back three times a week. That was sort of my interesting upbringing, but yeah, my parents are wonderful.

    Your dad is Filipino-American, your mom is white. Was being biracial something that you were conscious of — or that other people made you conscious of — when you were a kid?

    It’s funny, I actually don’t think I was particularly conscious of it until I made my way into the industry. The schools that I grew up going to were always very diverse, and I had a lot of Filipino friends growing up. But yeah, it wasn’t until I sort of started making music and being more front-facing that girls would be like, “Oh, wow, it’s so nice to see Asian representation in music!” And I was like, “Oh, yeah, that’s cool. Yeah, I’m that.”

    Was music a big part of your life growing up? Were your parents into it? What were you listening to?

    Music was a huge part of my life growing up. I can’t ever remember a time when I wasn’t obsessed with it or where I didn’t write songs even. I was writing songs since I was 5 years old. My mom has old home videos of me just babbling. There’s this video that I watched recently where I was writing a song about being lost in the grocery store, which is a very 5-year-old issue to have! And I did musical theater in school and was in the choir. My parents listened to a lot of alternative rock, and I remember falling in love with that when I was maybe 12 or 13, and that’s definitely a big influence on me, as well as just female singer-songwriters. I remember I got a record player for Christmas one year — my grandma gave it to me — and so my mom and I would go to the thrift store, and we’d find little records to put on my record player. One of the records — she was like, “Oh, you’d really love this” — was Tapestry by Carole King. I remember hearing that record, and life just kind of changed after that. So I’ve always really revered female singer-songwriters.

    I think I read that ’90s stuff was particularly big for you — Alanis Morissette and people like that?

    Yeah, Alanis Morissette, No Doubt, The White Stripes, the Smashing Pumpkins, bands like that, I just was so obsessed with in my teenage-hood and still am now.

    I try to read everything that’s out there about my guest before an interview, and I recognize that sometimes things are inaccurate, but I was wondering, is it true that you lost some of your hearing? If so, that makes it even more amazing that you’re so gifted at music…

    Yeah, it’s kind of unusual. I am half-deaf in my left ear. I never knew until kindergarten or so when they’re doing the tests on all the kids, and they were like, “Oh, you’re a little hard of hearing.” It’s interesting. One of my friends is this great photographer, Petra Collins, and she has really bad vision, and so we always joke that I make music because I have bad hearing, and she takes photos because she has bad vision.

    What came first, the desire to make music or the desire to act?

    I always loved music so much. Funny enough, the reason that I got into acting was I had this singing teacher who was really lovely, and I would sing all these songs with such passion and fervor, and my singing teacher was like, “Oh, you should maybe do acting lessons. You really love expressing yourself while you sing.” So, the singing kind of always came first. I was on set when I was 14 or 15, and I just remember being so excited to go home so I could sit at my piano and write songs. It’s always been my first love. I love acting too, for totally different reasons. But yeah, writing music has always been first in my heart.

    In singing, you’re pouring out your own heart. In acting, you’re inhabiting someone else’s heart. With the exception of writing a song for a movie, it’s just a totally different ballgame, right?

    Yeah, it totally is. In some ways, I feel like my experience acting growing up has really helped me in my career now. I mean, for starters, I think when you’re working on a set that young, you really are taught professionalism and work ethic — it’s just ingrained in you — and I’m so grateful for those lessons. And I think it taught me to never be ashamed of feeling big emotions. I’ve never felt like I needed to make myself smaller or censor myself because I just grew up where it was an environment that fostered that sort of emotion. So I think that that sort of helps me be brave in my songwriting maybe.

    I think you do bring a performative element to your singing, putting an additional sugar on top with a little extra snarl or something when you’re singing. I guess the skills bleed into each other.

    Yeah. What’s so funny is my producer, Dan [Nigro], who I made my last two records with, if he’s not getting a vocal take that he really likes, he’ll turn on his camera on his iPhone and film me, and suddenly I’ll do a take that’s super emotional and perfect. I think it’s just, I don’t know, in my bones — the actor girl in me just has to have the camera on.

    I particularly feel that with “Can’t Catch Me Now,” your song from The Hunger Games film — you sing it like someone who’s being mischievous.

    Writing that song for The Hunger Games was such a cool experience. I got to put myself in another character’s position while writing the song, so it is sort of acting — it’s character-work for sure. I write lots of my songs from a very diaristic place, and when you sit down to start an album that’s full of diaristic songs, it’s sort of like the world is your oyster, there’s just so much that you can do, and sometimes it’s a little overwhelming. But having these parameters to work in as an artist are sometimes really inspiring — it’s nice to not have every color on the palette and as big of a canvas as you want. Sometimes it makes your brain work differently to have restrictions. So it was a really awesome experience. I’m lucky that I got to do it.

    In terms of your acting career, it seems like it almost didn’t happen because, from what I was reading, your early auditions were not quite panning out. Did you have a conversation with your parents about potentially stopping?

    Yes. It’s so crazy. It was so long ago. My parents are so not stage parents whatsoever. It was always me being like, “I need to go to these auditions! I really want to book this role!” They were so hands-off and so zero-pressure, which is nice. But I remember one September or something, my mom being like, “Okay, well, we should just try until Christmas, and if nothing happens ’til Christmas, then we’ll do something else and you can just do school. You love school, it’ll be fine.” I was like, “Okay, fine.” And lo and behold, as the story always works, you get something on December 24th or something like that!

    And, for you, that was the lead in an American Girl movie?

    Yeah. I did an American Girl movie when I was 12 years old.

    Only a year later, you got your first Disney Channel show, Bizaardvark, which was a big part of your life from 2016 through 2019. It was for that that your family moved to L.A.?

    Yeah. We took the two-hour drive up and moved here, and I learned guitar actually for the show. My character had to play guitar, so that turned out to be very fruitful as well. It’s a skill I use all the time now. But yeah, that was kind of the start of my working girl era.

    Your parents and you picking up and moving to L.A. — that must have been a big change for all of you, no?

    My parents were really supportive and I thank them to this day for making that sacrifice for me. But yeah, I mean, everything changed then, even beyond moving to a new place. I got out of school and started being homeschooled and just spent my time around a lot of people that were a lot older than me all the time, and that certainly affected me in my life. And I think it made me feel comfortable being alone, and I think that probably was good for my creativity.

    How did you get that first — but not last — show for the Disney Channel? Was it through a regular audition, or did they see you in American Girl or something else?

    Oh man, I can’t remember too specifically. I think it was just a regular old audition. I just walked in with my little sides and did my thing, and fate had its way.

    As you mentioned earlier, it was while you were working on that show that you started writing songs for the first time. Do you remember what inspired you to do that?

    That’s a good question. I don’t know. I think I really started taking it seriously around 14 or 15. I was sort of alone on these sets, and at 14 or 15 you have big emotions — there’s lots of angst going on — and I think I needed some place to put that. I needed to have some medium that helped me feel understood. It sounds so cliche, but it’s so true — especially when you’re that young, it’s like you’re talking to a friend. I was so dramatic. I remember sitting on my piano in my room and just crying. I needed to get it out.

    One of my favorite quotes of yours that I came across prepping for this was, “I literally wrote breakup songs before I’d ever held a boy’s hand or even remotely dated someone.” So you had your genre from the beginning?

    Oh my God, yeah. It’s so funny how that’s so innate in us sometimes. I was writing these devastating heartbreak songs — never had my first kiss. I remember the first song that I wrote on a piano — I was probably like nine years old — and it was this feminist song about how I don’t need a man. I’m now like, “What kind of sexism were you enduring at nine years old?!” I don’t know.

    So you go from Bizaardvark almost directly into — I’m going to just take a big breath before I say this — High School Musical: The Musical: The Series.

    It’s a hard name. It’s a hard title.

    Was that another audition?

    Yeah, it was another audition. I remember going in and doing chemistry reads, and I remember singing for the audition — it’s a big singing music show, obviously, I mean, it’s in the name — and I remember that being really exciting for me at the time.

    The guy who cast you, Tim Federle, has said that he didn’t know that you were as passionate about or talented at singing at the outset. But you wound up writing a song for the first season’s fourth episode, “All I Want,” which made it all the way to the Billboard Hot 100 back in 2020. Do you remember how that came about?

    Yeah. I am very grateful for Tim. He’s given me so many amazing opportunities. I don’t think I’d be where I am right now without that, but yeah, that’s so true. When I got onto High School Musical, I was writing all these songs, but I was so shy and I’d just keep them to myself. I think going on that show and having music be such a big part of it kind of emboldened me to be more open with it. I remember I posted a song on my Instagram — I forget what the song even was or how it went — and Tim really liked it. They were doing pitch sessions, trying to write a song for this episode, and I guess they referenced the song that I put on my Instagram, so Tim was like, “Well, why don’t we just have Olivia write it? If we’re trying to make a song that sounds like Olivia wrote it, let’s just do it.” And for the life of me, I don’t know why he took a chance on a super green 16-year-old like that. But I wrote that song “All I Want” and it did really well. I think TikTok had just started becoming a thing when that song came out, so it was one of the first songs to get traction on TikTok. We were like, “Music on TikTok? Wow!” Now that’s our whole world. But yeah, that’s how I got my record deal, and everything sort of happened off of that one song, so I’m very grateful for it.

    Is it possible that the song that he saw you put up on your Instagram was an early version of “Happier”?

    Oh, that might be right. I think there were a few, actually. The version of “Happier” that’s on my Instagram is how I found my producer Dan. Dan actually saw that video and was like, “Oh, I really like her,” and sent me a DM.

    So which came first: the record deal that you signed shortly after “All I Want” or Dan? I wondered if it was the record label that suggested you and Dan work together, but you’re saying that he reached out after you already had a deal in place?

    I think that I had a deal set up. But I met him on this very fateful day — it was the last day before the world shut down for COVID, and I remember I went into Interscope and met everyone. I think I knew I was going to sign there. And then right after that I went to Dan’s studio and played him all of my demos on a little guitar. And so that was one of the most important days of my career. It’s just so funny where a little Instagram DM can take you.

    You probably get a lot of random DMs. What made you say about Dan, “This guy is somebody I would like to explore the possibility of working with”? I know he has his own background in music, but was that something you knew? What did you know about him?

    I didn’t know much. I knew that he made my friend Conan Gray’s album, and I really liked that album — I was obsessed with it at the time, as I am still, so I was a fan of him for that. I think I was following him because I was just a fan of his work. But yeah, he’s really incredible — he was in an emo band growing up, so I think our tastes are very similar in certain types of music, and he’ll definitely send me so many references that I really resonate with. It’s a good match.

    Now, many people have come out of the Disney Channel and had some degree of a music career, certainly not many at the level that yours has gone to, but almost all of them first signed with the Disney label, Hollywood Records, and as a result, were very managed. Let’s just say “fame-fucker” would not have been possible.

    Yeah, that’s for sure.

    You seem to have figured out, in the aftermath of “All I Want,” that there’s an alternative to just going through the Disney pipeline. And the other thing, which is even more amazing, is that you knew to fight to keep your masters, which is not something that too many people do or get. What went into those decisions?

    I just think I’ve been so incredibly lucky. I’ve really had the privilege of having people work with me who are really actually looking out for my best interests. So I could sign to whatever label I wanted to — I had that carved out of my Disney deal — and getting my master’s. In every aspect of the business, I’ve just always wanted to forge a path for myself that will never infringe upon any of my creative decisions. I’ve always wanted to make every business decision that will allow me to do whatever the hell I want with my music. That’s always been my main prerogative besides money or any of that stuff. I feel very fortunate that people around me have been so accepting and have let me do what I want to do for so long.

    You mentioned that you signed your record deal and started working with Dan just before the world went into chaos. So how did that work? Because you essentially made “Driver’s License” and then Sour, which really introduced you to the world, during lockdown, right?

    When lockdown started, I made a promise to myself that I would try to write a song every single day. I was like, “Well, I’m not going to set anymore. I got to have something to do.” So I wrote a song every day for six months or so, and it was such a good exercise for me as a songwriter. I think I was really starting to find my pace as a writer, and Dan and I were both like, “Hey, I’m not going anywhere” — Dan’s like, “I’m just hanging out with my wife,” and I’m like, “I’m just hanging out with my parents. So I feel like it’s safe for us to come and work in the studio.” So those were really magical days. I think I found out so much about myself and about the music that I liked writing through those studio days with him.

    I hope I can tee up some questions about specific songs because I think it gives a little window into your creative process. The first one obviously has to be “Driver’s License,” which is the first one that anyone heard beyond “All I Want.” It came out on Jan. 8, 2021. Billboard called it, “A brilliantly detailed tear-jerker.” The New York Times called it, “Razor sharp, damningly intimate songwriting” and “one of the great singles of the 2020s.” It debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, partly thanks to TikTok, and so you, at 17 years and 338 days old, became the youngest solo artist ever to debut at number one on the Hot 100. The song spent eight weeks at number one and set a new record for Spotify streams for a debut single by a female artist. Just unbelievable stuff. What first gave you the idea to do that song, and did you ever imagine that it could take off even a fraction as much as it did?

    Yeah, absolutely not, is the short answer. It’s insane thinking about it. I mean, I was just so heartbroken at the time. I was 17 going through my first heartbreak and I was literally just writing songs to survive and feel better. I wrote that song one morning after driving around through my neighborhood — after literally just getting my driver’s license. I remember feeling like it was really special, though. Sometimes when you write a song, it feels like it’s just coming through you. It doesn’t happen very often — it’s very rare — but when it happens, you get super excited. It’s really special. And I remember that being one of those moments, and I was really excited. I remember I walked into Dan’s studio a few days later and I said, “Dan, I think I just wrote the best song I’ve ever written.” He’s like, “Okay.” So I played it for him and we wrote the bridge together and kind of fixed things up and yeah — it’s insane, you reading all those statistics, it’s so strange. I was 17 and I just remember all of that happening and I was doing my statistic finals in my house.

    That’s where I want to go next. From the moment it first went out to the public, let’s say, can you just give me a little idea of how your life changed in the next week?

    I think I didn’t fully realize how much my life was going to change after that song. I was just like, “Wow, people really like it!” I’m like, “Billboard charts? What’s the Billboard charts?” I was kind of just learning about all of this stuff, and I was taking my finals. I was a senior in high school. The only thing that changed is that people started sending me flowers and stuff. I was like, “Oh, that’s nice.” It was lockdown, so you couldn’t really go out into the real world and see it. I couldn’t play a show. I couldn’t go meet people who were listening to the song. So it was very insular in a way that I think was actually really beneficial for my mental health. I think that’d been really overwhelming if I got the full brunt of it.

    And you were smart enough to know to get off of social media, right?

    I just deleted my TikTok and Instagram, and other people posted for me, or I’d redownload it to post and then get back off. I think I knew myself and I knew that I would get in my head. I was finishing up making Sour at the time, and if I was on social media and could see everyone’s opinions of me all the time, I think I would’ve made a record that was pandering to them or something like that. Not exactly what I wanted to make. But yeah, I’m proud of my little 17-year-old self for doing that. It’s a tough thing.

    Now, a week later, I believe, you went back to work on High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, only now as the biggest thing in music. Was that weird? Did they treat you differently?

    People were really wonderful. I mean, to me, I didn’t feel different, and no one really treated me different. I think that I didn’t fully realize the breadth of that song. I was just like, “It’s just another day. It’s just a song that I really love. Wow, cool. People like it.” I don’t know. It sounds funny to say now, but at the time I just didn’t really grasp it all, I don’t think.

    The other two singles that came out before the full album were “Deja Vu,” on April 1, 2021, and “Good 4 U,” on May 14, 2021. You became the first artist in history to have their first two and their first three singles in the top 10 of the Hot 100. Sour became the first debut album to score two number one singles on the Hot 100, “Driver’s License” and “Good 4 U.” So if anyone thought that “Driver’s License” was a fluke, that was quickly put to rest. Why was the album that they were ultimately all part of called Sour?

    I really love four-letter words — I mean, obviously I love explicit words too, but I think I was trying to write a song called Sour for a long time about, yeah, milk gone sour, a relationship or something like that, and it was just a bad song. But I was like, “‘Sour’ is good though.” And yeah, I don’t know, it just felt like angsty and brokenhearted, which is what I was feeling at the time.

    When you and Dan started putting that album together, did you sit down and say like, “Hey, this is going to be the theme of the album: it’s primarily going to be about heartbreak”? Or did you just write songs, which coincidentally turned out to have some things in common?

    At that point in my career, I was writing songs just to get through life. They were all to personally help me. I didn’t think that they were even going to come out, which I think is maybe sort of the beauty of some of those songs. There’s an innocence to them. But yeah, I remember not being happy that it was a breakup album, though — I was really dead-set like, “We have to put a love song on there, Dan. Let’s put a love song on!” But I was just nowhere even close to being in love. So that obviously didn’t work out.

    I think it’s hilarious that people are like, “Why do you write so many breakup songs or heartbreak songs?” And you were like, “What do you want me to write about, income taxes?”

    I know! I’m like, “Why are you listening to all heartbreak songs?”

    The other thing that many of these songs have in common, as you and others have noted, is that they are dealing with emotions that many times it’s sort of frowned upon for a girl to express — anger, jealousy, spite, sadness, etc.

    I think on a personal level, I’ve always felt more comfortable showing sides of my personality in my songwriting, sides of myself like guilt and shame and jealousy and anger and all of these feelings that I talk about a lot in my music that I try not to express in my daily day-to-day life, maybe for good reason. It’d be bad if I was just ashamed all the time in my regular life. But I think that’s sort of the beauty of songwriting, is that it can help you access those sort of hard to articulate emotions and give them somewhere to go, as a songwriter and also as a listener.

    You said about “Good 4 U,” at one point, that you probably wouldn’t say those words to someone’s face, but it felt nice to be able to get them out in another way.

    Completely. Writing songs is just getting stuff off your chest. That’s all it is.

    “Deja Vu” was one of the first times that people noted how specific your songwriting is — with references like Billy Joel and “Uptown Girl,” etc. — while still feeling universal.

    Thanks. Yeah, I try. I mean, I love specificity in songwriting. I think all of my heroes are really good at using specifics to get their message across. And so yeah, it’s always been something that I’ve really tried to achieve, so thank you for saying that.

    Sour spent 52 non-consecutive weeks in the top 10 of the Billboard 200. It was Spotify’s most streamed album of 2021. It went four times platinum. And then came the Grammy nominations. You got seven nominations, one in each of the big four categories, which is something only 12 other people had ever done — album of the year, record of the year, song of the year and best new artist — and you end up winning three, including best new artist. Can you talk about the significance of the Grammys — not just being there, but the fact that they, as much as anything, are sort of an indication of the music business that you were entering essentially embracing you.

    That was one of the craziest days of my life. I had always followed the Grammys from a very young age. My mom and I would watch together. The Grammys usually happened in February, and I always said, “February’s my favorite month, first because of the Grammys, and second because of my birthday [on Feb. 20].” But yeah, I loved it, and my mom and I would always make predictions of what we thought was going to win Song of the Year, so it was just so fun even just go as a fan of music.

    Had you ever gone before? Sometimes people buy tickets or whatever.

    No, I’d never gone, but I loved going to the Grammys Museum in downtown L.A. I would go all the time when I was a kid. I used to live near there, and my mom has a funny story of taking me there when I was 14 or 15 or something, and I told her, “Mom, one day I’m going to win a Grammy.” And she remembers saying to herself like, “Okay, that’s not going to happen.” But she was like, “Okay, I believe in you, Olivia!” So I maybe did her proud on that one.

    I don’t know for sure, but I imagine best new artist might have been the one that you wanted the most, and you got it.

    Yeah. I mean, it’s so exciting to even be in the running for something like that. It just is so cool to be included in that community of musicians. You sit in the Grammys and you look around and it’s like, “My God, Joni Mitchell’s over there, Brandi Carlile’s over there,” and all these people that you just grew up being so inspired by, it gives you chills.

    And now they all knew who you were, right?

    Overwhelming!

    You talked to Joni Mitchell, right?

    Oh my God, yeah. She said she liked my dress. I was like, “Thank you!!!”

    I recently had on the podcast somebody who I know you recently did our songwriter roundtable with, Dua Lipa. You and she were the two breakouts of lockdown. You both put out a great first album that everybody loved, and then faced the big question: what do you do with your second? Do you kind of double-down on what worked the first time? Or do you take this opportunity to show that you can do other things? But what if that doesn’t work out? Take me into your thought process.

    It was incredibly daunting to start out writing Guts. I had so many voices in my head and there was so much pressure. There were lots of days where I’d walk in the studio and — me and Dan, we jokingly called it, “the dread.” We’re like, “I can see the dread in your eyes, producing that song.” “I can see the dread, writing that verse.” “I can see the dread in your eyes.” So it was a really challenging experience for me as a songwriter to try to tune out all that noise and just try to make something that inspired me, because, at the core of all creativity, that’s where it should come from. It shouldn’t come from trying to make a song that you think is going to do well on the charts. That never actually does well on the charts, if you just try to make something like that, I think. But yeah, it was a lesson, I think, in discipline and perseverance for me, just showing up every day and sitting at the piano, even if you feel really overwhelmed and scared, just showing up and sharpening your skills as a musician or a songwriter.

    You went into the first album not unknown but at a very different level of being known. Going into the second one, you were very known, as you reference in “Vampire” and other songs on it. After releasing the first album but before writing the second, did you have time to go experience life? Even with people behaving very differently around you?

    Yeah, I definitely did experience a lot of life. I mean, the albums were two years apart, two fairly formative years for me. I made Sour when I was 17, 18, and I made Guts when I was 19, 20. I feel like I’m a completely different girl than I was back then. Lots of personal growth. I did talk about how my life has changed in regards to success or public attention. But I don’t know, I like to think that if you boil any of those songs down, they’re about betrayal or heartbreak or anger, all things that are very universal. And so I think if you just try to concentrate a feeling into the most essential parts, that’s sort of what I tried to achieve.

    With Guts, you leaned into rock much more. Is that just how the songs you were writing happened to turn out, or did you consciously set out to write an album that was more rock-heavy than the first one?

    I wanted to do something more rock. I’d always loved rock music, like we were talking about before, but I never quite knew how it fit it into my voice and my style and my style of songwriting. And I think we were just starting to figure that out towards the end of the Sour process — we added “Good 4 U” and “Brutal” last in the track listing. So I think I just wanted to expand upon it more on this record, and it was so much fun. I am really excited to play all those songs live. They feel very much like me.

    All 12 of the songs on Guts were very well-received but particularly “Vampire,” which debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, fell out and then came back to number one, which doesn’t happen very often. That one seems to be about heartbreak, like songs on Sour, but also about being taken advantage of as a famous person, right?

    I think it’s about betrayal. It’s a very angry song to me. I think that it’s also about me taking responsibility for putting myself in those positions. I think that was a big theme on this record, is growing up and realizing that you’re not always the perfect victim in every situation. Sometimes you are, but most of the time not. I think it was just me maturing and realizing the part that I had in all of these situations that I was writing about.

    It’s a song that starts out quiet and then builds to a rock operetta — it really explodes. What came first, the words or the music?

    I wrote an early version of that song by myself on the piano, and I wrote [sings] “Blood sucker, fame fucker,” and that was the part that Dan was like, “Oh, yeah, that’s good!” So I wrote the verse in the chorus, and we kind of fixed it up together and wrote the song on piano to begin with. The production took so long. God bless Dan, he was the most patient man in the world. I would just go crazy. I really wanted a song like “Come On Eileen,” where it gets faster and then there’s like tempos all over the place. So if you listen to the song, it gets faster towards the end, but oh my God, we were stressed over half of a BPM and like, “Oh, this voicing of this chord isn’t right.” It was really a labor of love. So that one took a while, but I really love that it shows.

    “Teenage Dream,” which seems to be about your apprehension about following Sour, is a very different genre. I believe you regard it as one of your personal favorites. What is it about that one?

    That was the first song that we wrote that made it on the record. I wrote that song when I was in the studio and I was experiencing “the dreads.” I was 19 years old and I was like, “Wait, is all my best work behind me?!” Which is a crazy thing to think when you’re 19 years old — your whole life is ahead of you, like the song says. But I think it just succinctly captured not only my fear of making a sophomore record, but my fear of just growing up in general. The line that’s my favorite is, “They all say that it gets better the more you grow. But what if I don’t?” I remember writing that and being like, “Oh, that’s exactly how I feel.” It just always feels nice to have your anxieties and fears put into a song. It feels like more manageable when you can listen to it and be like, “That’s exactly how I feel.” It makes everything kind of feel smaller.

    The last of the songs from that album that I want to bring up, and I think you have said that this is your favorite, is “All-American Bitch,” with a title referencing Joni Mitchell’s The White Album. It starts out with you sounding angelic, and then it just goes nuts.

    Yeah, that one’s my favorite on the record. I really love it. I’ve always been fascinated with this sort of duality of being a woman and feeling all of this rage, but also feeling like you’re in this box and you have to be classy and gracious and never complain and all of this stuff. I feel like that was always a struggle that I was pushing against when I was younger. And so it’s just always been at the top of my mind, and I always wanted to write a song about it. And in this song, I feel like I kind of addressed that. It’s very dynamic. Like you said, the verses are really small and sweet, and the choruses are super enraged, and it’s just really fun. It just captured something that I’ve been feeling for a while, so that’s always a nice feeling as a songwriter.

    So this brings us to an undertaking that was different from anything you’d done before, as far as I know: being asked and agreeing to write a song for a movie, as we started to talk about earlier. How was the request presented to you? Was it, “We would love a song,” or “We would love a song for this specific moment in the movie,” or “We would love this specific kind of a song,” or “We’d be thrilled with anything you care to contribute”?

    Someone just asked me, “Do you like The Hunger Games?” And I’m like, “Of course, I like The Hunger Games! Duh.” So they’re like, “Oh, you should watch [the new one] and see if you’re inspired. They’d love a song for it.” And I was so honored to watch the movie, and really resonated with the main character, Lucy Gray. I think she’s a really interesting, fascinating, complex character. And so after watching that, I did a few iterations of the song that ended up coming out, but it was so much fun to kind of challenge myself as a songwriter to do something like that. It feels collaborative. Someone gives you the character and the plot, and you just kind of inject your own personal feeling into it and paint with your colors. It was so much fun, and I feel really honored that I got to do it.

    You have said that there’s a scene in the movie that sort of inspired the song you wrote for the film, “Can’t Catch Me Now.” Which scene was that?

    Well, if you haven’t watched The Hunger Games movie, don’t listen to what I’m about to say right now, turn off the podcast. But it’s the scene where Lucy finally leaves — she just disappears — and Coriolanus is looking into the sky and shooting, and there’s all these mockingjays around in her voice speaking words that she said, and it was just so fulfilling to watch her finally kind of disobey him and stray from the pack and break away. But there’s always still this mystery about her, which I think was reflected in the song.

    Once you agreed to do the song, how long did it kind of take to come together? Is it something that just poured out, or was it a real process?

    Dan and I wrote it. We wrote the chorus one day and then came back to it. We’re like, “Oh, that was pretty good,” and wrote the verses. It was just a real fun challenge, and it was so fun to sing from another person’s perspective. It’s not every day that I get to do that.

    Rachel Zegler, who stars in the film, is also a talented singer. Did you guys meet before the premiere?

    Yeah, we had actually. I randomly met her in the bathroom at the Grammys. It was like some dingy bathroom, and she was like, “Hey, I know you.” And I’m like, “I know you.”

    The film has proven to be a huge blockbuster. Do you have a theory about why particularly young people are so into the franchise, generaly, but especially this latest installment?

    I think that The Hunger Games is so great at portraying wonderful, complex female characters, and I think that that’s something that we all are craving. Just a great concept. Great books, great movies, great soundtracks. I love all the soundtracks.

    In our last minute or two, here are some sort of assorted, random, big-picture questions. Who are you listening to the most right now?

    Oh, OK! My Spotify Wrapped just came out. I think my number one artist was Chappell Roan. She just put out her first album, and Dan, my producer, produced it, and it’s amazing. So I’m listening to a lot of her. And I think number two was Simon and Garfunkel.

    You performed in some very intimate venues after Sour. Now, for Guts, you’re going to be performing in stadiums and arenas starting February 23, 2024. What are you most excited about or most curious about, as far as that level of a production?

    I’m so stoked. I think it’s going to be so much fun to play those kind of rock songs in an arena too. I’m so excited to feel that energy. I’m so excited to go places that I haven’t been before. I’m really excited to go to the Philippines — I’ve never been — so that’s going to be fun. And I love my band. I have an all-girl band and they’re so wonderful and such great musicians. It’s going to be fun.

    Do you know who’s opening for you? Does it change from place to place?

    Yeah, there’s a few. Chappell is opening, The Breeders are going to open for me, which is really cool. PinkPantheress is going to open for me. A few others. It’s going to be fun.

    What are you most excited for about the Grammys, which will happen just a few weeks before the tour, on Feb. 4, 2024? You’re going in with six nominations, including a bunch of big ones.

    Wow. I get butterflies in my stomach even just answering this question. It’s a very nervewracking night. I just think it’s so fun to get to see all the songs that get performed. It’s just like you get to see some of the greatest artists perform some of the greatest songs, and it’s just an honor to be in the audience and witness all of that. So very excited. Yes.

    I’m sure they’ve asked you to perform. Do you know if you will, and, if so, what you will be performing?

    I don’t know if I will yet. I haven’t had the conversation, but I mean, I would be honored.

    If you could do one of your songs, would it be “Vampire”?

    Yeah, probably. That’s a fun one to sing.

    Okay. Favorite line of a song that you’ve ever written?

    I’m going to say a crazy answer. It’s actually a bonus track that’s on Guts. There’s a song called “Scared of My Guitar.” If you buy a vinyl, it can be on the vinyl, but it kind of exists on TikTok, little snippets. There’s this line that says, “How could I ever trade something that’s good for what’s right?” And I think that was a big thesis for what I was going through in my life these past few years. Things were good and things were happening, and I had so many people around me, but lots of things just weren’t right for me and weren’t in alignment with who I was as a person. And so writing that line kind of made things clearer for me.

    I heard another favorite is a line from “The Grudge”?

    Oh, yeah. I mean, “It take strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong.” Why couldn’t I think of the lyric? Yeah. “It takes strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong.” I was listening to The Smiths on my way to the studio, and there’s a song, I forget which song, where he goes, “It takes strength to be gentle and kind.” And I remember being really angry listening to that song and being like, “What if I don’t want to be gentle and kind?!” And so I wrote, “It takes strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong.”

    And then just one other potential contender, I think — was there something in “Enough for You”?

    Oh yeah. It’s such a sad song. I listened back to it and I was like, “Oh, you were so heartbroken.” I really loved writing the line, “Someday I’ll be everything to somebody else.”

    If the world was on fire and you could only save one of your songs, which song would it be?

    Oh my God, that’s so hard! Maybe “Driver’s License.” I really love “All-American Bitch” too. So one on each album.

    I heard that you took a class at USC.

    Oh, yeah.

    What inspired you to do that, and is that something you might do more of?

    I hope so. I had never really gone to a brick and mortar school — I mean, I stopped going to regular school when I was 12 years old — and I always had a desire to do it, and always had a desire to learn in a classroom about all these things that I was really interested in, in an environment that was a little more structured. So yeah, I went to USC for one class, and I took a poetry class, and it was wonderful. I had a great professor, and I wrote a bunch of poems and learned so much — and I actually turned one of the poems that I wrote in the class into the song “Lacy.” That’s on Guts.

    And were the kids cool?

    Yeah, kids were super cool in the class. They were so sweet. I actually — have you watched Legally Blonde?

    Of course.

    I had a very Legally Blonde first day there. I actually walked into the wrong classroom and sat there and was like, “Oh, I don’t remember this on the reading list. This is strange. Maybe they’re just all really advanced.” And then I walked into the right classroom and I realized that everyone had iPads, and I was like, “Oh, iPads. That’s what kids do these days.” I just had a little notepad and everyone was typing on their iPads and I was writing down little notes with my pen. But yeah, everyone was really sweet and welcoming.

    Are you interested in continuing to act while making music, or is acting now in the past?

    I’m open for whatever. I think acting’s so fun. It’s so nice to be, I think, a part of a community that’s collaborative and creative like that. With music sometimes it’s very individualistic. I am writing my songs and making a lot of the decisions by myself, and that’s wonderful and so much fun. But sometimes it’s nice to kind of have some people to lean on.

    Are you open to doing other songs for films?

    Yeah, I think that’d be so fun. I had such a great time writing this Hunger Games one, and it’s just such a nice challenge as a songwriter. It really stretches you.

    And lastly, if you go to karaoke, what is your go-to karaoke song?

    Okay. Really hard one. If you want to be really advanced, you do “Wuthering Heights” by Kate Bush. “Bohemian Rhapsody” is always fun if you’re with a group of people because then you can each do the little part. But usually, without fail, it’s “Dancing Queen.”

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Dua Lipa (‘Barbie’)

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Dua Lipa (‘Barbie’)

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    Dua Lipa, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is a three-time Grammy-winning singer/songwriter who is one of the biggest pop stars in the world. A Brit who has been described by The New York Times as “a powerhouse young artist,” by Vanity Fair as a “bona fide superstar” and by TIME as one of the most influential people in the world, she has to her name hit singles like “Levitating,” “Don’t Start Now,” “Cold Heart,” “Last Dance,” “New Rules,” “Houdini” and, from Greta Gerwig’s critically acclaimed summer blockbuster Barbie, “Dance the Night,” which on Nov. 10 garnered Grammy nominations for song of the year and best song written for visual media, and is now very much in the running for a best original song Oscar nomination as well.

    Over the course of a conversation at the London West Hollywood, the 28-year-old reflected on her childhood split between London and Kosovo; how she wound up signing her first record deal in 2015; the origins and bangers of her 2017 self-titled debut album and her 2020 pandemic-era second album Future Nostalgia; how she came to be a part of Barbie and wrote, with Mark Ronson, Caroline Ailin and Andrew Wyatt, “Dance the Night”; plus much more.

    You can listen to and/or read the conversation below.

    Dua, thank you so much for doing the podcast. Can you tell our listeners where you were born and what your folks did for a living?

    Yeah. I was born in London in 1995, and at that point, my parents were working in bars and restaurants while at the same time studying in the evening.

    People talk about your work ethic, and I know it’s major, but theirs sound pretty incredible too…

    Yeah. Well, I think I get most of my — not most, I get my work ethic from my parents and seeing them really adapt to any situation.

    Now you’ve spoken about how a lot of your mindset and worldview has been shaped by “the immigrant experience.” You were born in London, but your parents were not. How did they wind up there?

    They fled the Yugoslavian War. They left Kosovo then. My dad was in a band — he was in a rock group — but he was studying to be a dentist, and my mom was studying law at the time. In 1992, they decided to leave Kosovo and come to London. And their life completely changed at that point.

    The fact that your dad had been involved with music, was that part of what got you into music as a kid? How early on were you listening to and kind of a fan of music?

    I think from the moment I came out the womb I was listening to music. Music was so present in my life. Both my parents have always been singing around the house, playing artists that they love. I think I had a good range of knowledge of a lot of amazing artists and songs way before I could even speak. And so music just felt like second nature to me.

    When we listen to your music now, it makes sense based on who you were personally into as a kid…

    Yeah. Artists that my parents listened to a lot were David Bowie and Elton John and Oasis and Blur, and then Blondie. It was such a mix of so many different artists. And I think for me, after listening to and loving all the music that my parents listened to, that became then my favorite music and the music that I always go back to as the music that makes me feel the best. Then, I was maybe nine, 10 or 11 when I discovered my favorite pop artists. And that was like—

    Nelly Furtado?

    Nelly Furtado. It was the Whoa, Nelly! album that really changed my life. Then it was Misunderstood by Pink. And also Songs in A Minor by Alicia Keys. All of these women have such a strong identity, and when you’re a young girl and you hear these artists and their stories — I just felt so connected. So all I wanted to do was sing their songs and listen to their music. They had so much independence and strength and attitude that I was like, “When I grow up, I want to be just like them.”

    That being said, I’ve heard — and I could not believe — that you were being told as a kid that you didn’t sing well?

    I wanted to sing for the school choir, and I have a very deep voice. I think my speaking voice is quite deep, and my singing voice is also like — me being able to go down octaves is my forte. At the time, my high register just wasn’t developed at all. There was a school choir and the music teacher was like, “Okay, who wants to audition for the choir?” And I was like, “All right, I’m going to get up and I’m going to sing.” And he starts playing on the piano and I’m trying to reach this high note and nothing but air comes out and I’m so embarrassed — and it’s in school assembly, so I’m in front of all the kids of all ages, and I’m absolutely mortified in the moment, and he’s like, “Oh, maybe next time.” And I never got the place in the choir. But it was a big moment for me, in the sense of having the confidence to stand up in front of people sing — and not having the outcome that I wanted.

    I was very young to have that experience, but because I loved to sing, my mom signed me up for Saturday classes at Sylvia Young Theater School. I was nine years old when I started going there, and every Saturday I would go and do singing lessons. I had this really great teacher there called Ray, and he heard my voice and really liked my low register, and he was like, “You know what? I’m going to change your class and I’m going to put you in the 9:30 am class,” which was with the 14 and 15 year olds. I was terrified. I was like, “Oh my God, I have to go in with the teenagers — how am I going to get up and sing in front of them?!”

    And he really helped me to believe in myself and have the confidence to stand up in front of the teenagers and sing and feel good about it. It wasn’t that my parents didn’t tell me that I could sing; my parents always told me, “Oh, you’ve got a good voice and you can sing.” But I think hearing it from somebody that’s not your mom or your dad means a lot.

    Then, just as you’re developing some belief in your own abilities, you guys end up leaving to go back to Kosovo?

    Yes.

    What were the circumstances that led to that?

    My parents always had the idea of going back to Kosovo. I think whenever somebody leaves a place because of the war, they leave because of the potential of having a better life, but always wanting to go back to your home, to your family, to the things that that you’ve grown up around. And Albanian was my first language. I’d always spoken English at school and with my friends, but I also spoke a mix of English and Albanian at home, and so when my parents decided that we were going to move back to Kosovo when I was 11 and finishing year six, which is just the end of primary school, I was like, “Okay.” All my friends from my primary school were going to go to different schools anyway. I was going to go to a different country.

    So you weren’t terribly devastated.

    I wasn’t terribly. I was quite excited at the idea of going back. I lived in Pristina for four years, from 11 to 15. I think the thing that was the most interesting was adapting to being the new girl in school and being like, “Not only am I starting in a new school, but I have to adapt to people already having formed friendships.” At the same time, I knew I could speak Albanian, but I thought I could speak it way better than I did because at home everything was fine. When I went to Kosovo, everyone was like, “Oh, you’re speaking Albanian, but almost with an English accent or something.” So it took me a little while to not only get down with the slang — to learn it grammatically — and read and write properly in Albanian, but also be thrown into new friendships and new studies that were so much more advanced than what I was learning in London. I was doing fractions, and then I went and was doing algebra in Albanian. So it was a very big kind of push for me out my comfort zone, while at the same time giving me the opportunity to be really in touch with my roots and my family and my language and my heritage.

    And were you continuing your singing when you got back there?

    Yeah. I had music lessons in school there, so I was singing there. And I think that’s when I did my first performance in front of a crowd. It was like a school event, and I chose to sing “No One” by Alicia Keys. I think there’s a video of it online. I’m so small.

    It went well?

    It went well. You can see me holding the mic and being quite nervous, and then people clap, and I think, with confidence, I put my other hand on the mic. But also, my time that I spent in Kosovo made me realize how badly I wanted to do music and how I needed to go back to London and be in a place where everything was happening — where I maybe might have the opportunity to try and do this as a job. I didn’t feel like I could get discovered in Kosovo. Things were completely different then.

    You were there when they declared independence, right?

    I was there when independence got declared, yes.

    But it was still going to be a long shot to get any kind of career going there…

    Absolutely. Our world’s just getting so much smaller, but at that time, when I was 13, 14, 15, living in Kosovo, it just wasn’t possible to be in a place like that and hope that you might get heard. And so I wanted to go back to London.

    So how does the conversation go? You’re 15 and say to your parents, “I’m out of here” — how did you get them to go along with this?!

    I have younger siblings — I’ve got a younger sister and a younger brother — and when I saw them turn 15, in my head I was like, “I have no idea how I managed to pull this off and get them to let me live on my own.” I was just so determined that I wanted to be in London. I wanted to go back to school in London. I also wanted the opportunity to maybe go to uni in London — I had to go and finish my GCSCs there and get my exams done. Anyway, I’m a very convincing young lady. I think that’s what I’ve gathered from when I go back and ask my parents. Every time, I go and ask my parents, “How did you let me do that?!” It’s so amazing that they had so much trust in me. They are like, “You were just so determined.”

    I feel like I always knew what I wanted to do from a very young age. In order for them to feel safe about the situation and good about leaving me in London — of course I had so many friends and family in London, but a family friend of ours, their daughter was moving to London — to study at the London School of Economics — from Pristina. And so we decided that we were going to flat-share — we were going to live together — and I was going to go to school and she was going to go to uni. And that was that.

    I believe you also did some waitressing, some hostessing, and a little modeling during that period?

    I always loved having a job. My first job was when I was 12 or 13 years old. I was in Pristina and I remember walking home and there was a pharmacy that I had just passed by and there was a woman selling makeup products. It was like the Avon equivalent, but it was a Swedish brand. And I was like, “Oh, I could do this,” slang makeup to the girls in school. I just love the idea of always working. I love to work. And then when I moved to London, I worked in different retail stores. Then as I got older, I started going out, and I was going out a little underage—

    The statute of limitations has expired…

    I was going out and I made some friends in a club, and my first job in a club was when I was 17 and I was working at the door. It was fun. I made some very interesting friends — interesting people in my life that I think just really shaped my experience of being young and living in London and that club culture — and I think that all of those things trickled into my music and my inspiration and where that all came from. Then I left that job because I remember one night my friends couldn’t get in to the club — they didn’t let me let them in — and I was like, “I just don’t want to do this anymore, this is just so horrible.” So then I went to work at La Bodega Negra, which was an upscale Mexican restaurant in Soho. And I worked there up until the point that I got signed.

    This was when YouTube and SoundCloud were really starting to get going — things that may have made it feel more possible to make it when you were in Kosovo, if they had existed. But now you were posting covers online, and then I think you were doing some vocals for a commercial, right?

    Yes, exactly. That kind of goes back to what you were saying about modeling. While I was in school, I was posting covers online — I would just be like, “Hey, I’m Dua, I’m 15 years old and this is my cover of ‘Super Duper Love’ by Joss Stone.” And I was posting a lot online and also, at the same time, always working. I had been scouted in Oxford Circus for a modeling agency, but I was put on a commercial board and got sent out to do some auditions and stuff. And basically, I did a commercial — I had to do the singing for it — and I worked with a producer for two weeks on that, and afterwards he was like, “Hey, do you want to maybe write a song?” And I was like, “Absolutely, I would love to get in the studio and write a song together!” We wrote a song, and then I didn’t hear from him for a while. And then he contacted me and he was like, “Hey, I would love to talk to you about a potential publishing deal.” I was like, “A publishing deal? I don’t even know what that is.”

    Through the covers that I’d posted online on YouTube and on Twitter and SoundCloud, there was a young producer called Felix Joseph who had heard my cover of Chance the Rapper’s “Cocoa Butter Kisses” from SoundCloud. He had contacted me and was like, “Hey, if you ever want to work in the studio together, let me know, but in the meantime, if you need anything, this is my number.” I’d never met him, but I called him and I was like, “Hi Felix. I know we’ve never met, but I was just wondering — I’ve been offered a publishing deal and I don’t even know what that is. Do you have anybody who could help me?” And he was like, “Well, I can’t really give you advice on that, but I’ve got a really good lawyer who you should go and meet and he can chat to you about it.” And so at 17 years old, I go to this law firm in Hammersmith, in London, and I sit down with my lawyer — well, he then became my lawyer, but a lawyer called Lawrence — and he basically was like, “Look, don’t sign this deal. Let me help you find a manager.” And he was the one who kind of sat me down and explained the ins and outs of what a publishing deal was and the different aspects of it. And that was the beginning of everything.

    Yeah. I guess he then connected you with Ben Mawson, who had been working with Lana Del Rey and became your manager. And you’ve said at that point everything changed, in the sense that you soon had a record deal of your own.

    Well, I was just going to the studio every single day and I was writing nonstop. There was a song that I’d written with my friends Tommy Baxter, Adam Midgley and Gerard O’Connell called “Hotter Than Hell,” And that song kind of caught the attention of some record labels. Everything just started happening so fast. That was when I met my A&R, Joe Kentish, who is a dear friend of mine — we still work together to this day because we just have such a great relationship just creating records together. But I don’t know, I felt like he immediately understood who I was as an artist and gave me the space to really grow. I just felt really connected to him and I was like, “You know what? I’m going to sign to Warner Records.” And that’s where I signed my deal.

    And then I threw a little drinks party at La Bodega Negra on the night that I signed, having also kind of handed in my resignation, with the hopes that maybe I wouldn’t have to come back.

    That was in 2015. I know there was a lot of touring and writing over the next two years, and milestones along the way that may seem not as big now as they did at the time — like going on The Tonight Show to perform “Scared to Be Lonely,” I think?

    Yeah. Well, the first ever TV I did was The Tonight Show in 2016 — they were the first American TV that had me — and I actually sang “Hotter Than Hell.”

    Oh! And all of this leading up to the release of your first, self-titled album, in 2017, which people now know went platinum, with six singles that went platinum. I wonder if we can talk about a couple of “case studies” from that. “Last Dance,” you have said, “was the song where we figured out what my sound was going to be.” I know that you’ve separately said that you always wanted to combine hip-hop and pop. But how would you describe what your sound was as a result of “Last Dance”?

    It’s quite interesting hearing that back because I haven’t thought about that process of making my first record in a little while, especially as I’ve been just busy and caught up in working on my new record. But there’s always one song that for me dictates what the rest of it’s going to sound like. Even though looking back on my first record, when I listen back to it, it feels to me there’s so many songs of me figuring out where I was heading next. I was learning so much about myself in the process. I was writing for about three, four years, while at the same time releasing a lot of singles because I felt like I needed to put out a lot of songs in order to be heard before I even put out my first album. So it was a really, really long journey.

    Also at the same time, I basically toured the world three times with that one album, seeing the rooms get a little bit bigger every time. But the idea of merging hip hop and pop, it was because of my love for Nelly Furtado and then my love for J. Cole or my love for Kendrick. What I loved was the storytelling in hip hop and then the way that pop records — dance records — made you feel. But how was I going to put the two together? With the first album, there’s so many songs that sound so different, but they really changed my life in so many ways, where I was learning and leaning in to the songwriting process of being vulnerable and talking about my experiences and emotions, with the idea that maybe someone out there might hear them. This was me spilling my guts essentially for everyone to hear.

    But yeah, it was just such an amazing experience. And for “Last Dance,” in particular, what I loved was the electronic sounds in it, but at the same time, dancey pop sounds sonically with a real personal story intertwined. That was something that I really emotionally made me feel like I was on the right track for that record.

    And it was about being homesick, because you had been out on the road for so long?

    It was about being homesick. I’d written that song in Toronto. It was, I think, October, and it was really cold, and I knew that I was going to be on the road for a really long time, and I was starting to get a little bit of my London blues. And that was the song that I wrote. I think it was more about people telling you that you’re not good enough — it was a bit of an in-your-face record, like, “I’m not going to take that and I’m going to stand my ground and I deserve to be here.”

    Also on that first album was “New Rules,” your first No. 1 in the U.K., first to break into the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, second song by a woman to hit a billion Spotify streams. You’ve also talked about how, when you’re singing, it’s almost acting, as well, or at least inhabiting a character. So even if what you’re singing about is not your experience or your feelings, you can flip it in your mind. Was that what you would say this was an example of?

    Yeah, definitely. It was also very interesting because I love to write all my own songs. I definitely felt like, “Oh, I don’t know if I want to sing this song because I didn’t write it.” But it was a song that I resonated with so deeply. I embodied it. When I sang it, it was mine. And I felt like it was such a strong song about the things that you should or shouldn’t do in your dating life, essentially. I felt so strong and empowered when I sang “New Rules.” Sometimes you manifest an energy into your life — as time’s gone by and I’ve written other songs, I’ve really felt that to be true. It’s like the more you sing something, the more share it with people, you really embody that energy.

    And that was also the case, in terms of flipping things around, with “Hotter Than Hell,” which is also on that album, right?

    Yeah. I was going through a bad relationship when I was writing my first record. And now, looking back— Once I put my songs out, I really don’t listen to them unless I’m preparing for tour or something. But it’s very cathartic to just put them out into the world, and then they no longer belong to me. So now, looking back in hindsight, all the themes that were going through this record were a feeling of wanting to reclaim my strength and my power and where I stood in a relationship, and wanting to give myself this feeling of confidence and that no one could put me down. So it seems to be a common theme in the self-titled record.

    And it’s interesting because what you said you were striving for there could be summed up in the phrase, “I don’t give a fuck,” which is I think the last single that was actually written for that album, “IDGAF”…

    For the album, yeah. It was the last record that made it onto the self-titled album.

    So after that, but before the great second album, was the first time you worked with Mark Ronson, which is obviously going to connect back with Barbie in a little bit. Can you talk about how you guys first connected, with “Electricity”?

    It feels like it’s all very full-circle now with everything Barbie-related. But I met Mark Ronson through my friend Andrew Wyatt. Andrew Wyatt and I had written the very first song I’d ever released, called “New Love” — it was me, Andrew Wyatt and Emil Haney — and it was the first thing that I ever put out with a video. I was very excited. And Andrew’s a very, very close friend of mine — we did two songs on my first album together — and when Mark was working on Silk City, he was speaking to Andrew and was like, “I’m looking for an artist who wants to write a song with me, but who has a deeper, maybe soulful voice”—

    Which he had a little experience with, with Amy Winehouse, right?

    Yeah, exactly. Oh my gosh, I mean, I’ve always just been such a big fan of Mark’s work, but the Amy records are something that I hold very, very dear to my heart. But going back to Mark wanting someone with a deep kind of raspy voice, the first person that came to Andrew’s mind was me. I’m so grateful that I was the person that came to mind, and Mark reached out to me and was like, “Hey, I’m a friend of Andrew’s, and I really like your work, and I would love to write a song with you if you’d be down. I’m doing this thing called Silk City with Diplo.” And I came to the studio here in LA, which was when Mark was living, and we worked on “Electricity.”

    At the Grammys in 2019, you won best new artist and best dance recording for “Electricity”…

    Yeah. It was all happening at the same time. It was just a really surreal moment in my life, that night at the Grammys. I mean, us winning the best dance recording and then me going on and getting best new artist, I just couldn’t believe it. I was absolutely gobsmacked. I feel like even when I think about the speech or how I felt when I got up to accept my award — I think I blacked out in the moment. It just felt so unbelievable that it was happening to me. I was just so grateful. And really from that moment on, my whole life changed.

    I was going to ask about that. I’d love to hear how, on a day-to-day basis, it changed, but also, did you start feeling pressure or putting pressure on yourself? The sophomore album is usually intimidating, especially when you’ve received so much positive feedback for your first album and then this single with Mark, because the question is, I guess, “What do you do? Do you do more of the same kind of thing that’s worked? Do you instead branch out and take a chance that people are going to respond to something very different?” Take me through your outlook and thought process in the aftermath of suddenly becoming somebody that everybody knew…

    Well, gosh, I mean, it was an interesting time in my life because I had a feeling of being celebrated, which was a really lovely feeling after doing something that you really love. But there was also this video online of me dancing and people were laughing at it or whatever. And that was really hard for me as a young artist because I was doing something that I really loved, but I felt the wrath of the internet. I had people telling me, “Oh, she’s got no stage presence,” or “She doesn’t deserve to be here,” or “She’s just not good enough,” or whatever. So I had a lot of that also weighing on top of feeling like I’m on cloud nine and I’m in this really special place in my life and let’s see where I’m going to go next.

    It was an interesting thing to juggle, but what I decided, which was the best decision I’d ever made, was I was like, “Right, I’m going to have to start making my new record. I’m going to get off Twitter — I’m deleting this thing off my phone. I don’t want to look at it. I don’t want to think about what other people might want me to do. I don’t want to recreate the success that I had with my first album. I’m so grateful for everything that that record gave me. But I want to branch out. I want to do something different. I want to push myself outside of my comfort zone and prove that I’m here to stay.”

    I had that real fire in my chest. I was adamant to create something that I was really, really proud of, that felt very refined in the sense of, like with my first record, a lot of different songs of me figuring out who I was. This Future Nostalgia album was very much carefully curated for it to all be one world. And it was my first kind of experience of creating an “era,” I guess.

    It was the idea of going back to my early influences, the things that made me feel nostalgic, that made me feel like there was a place where I could be seen and heard — and disco music did that for me. Disco music has done that for history. It’s always been a place of freedom and community and togetherness, and it was the genre of music that brought people together from all walks of life where they could feel like a unit or feel like they were around like-minded people. And that was really the energy that I wanted to bring into Future Nostalgia, but also with influences of Jamiroquai and Maloko and these artists that were just so inspiring to me when I was younger, that I loved so much.

    You poured your heart and soul into this album, which was supposed to come out on March 27, 2020, and then on March 12 or thereabouts, the world shuts down because of the pandemic. How close did we come to not having Future Nostalgia come out when it did?

    It was so heartbreaking because I had started promoting my record already. The last thing I did was I performed at Mardi Gras in Sydney. I remember landing back home in London and all of a sudden things were getting very, very serious. Then it was like, “Okay, things are going to shut down.” And I was about to go on tour, so it was like, “Okay, we’re going to postpone the tour for a couple of months and see.” And then things were just like, “No, they’re completely shutting down.” And so then it was a whole conversation of, “Well, are we going to release the record at this time? What should we do?” And I felt so strongly: Even though in my head I’d envisioned that this was an album that was going to be heard out and get people dancing, I don’t know, it felt necessary to me to get it out there. And I was like, “You know what? Whatever’s supposed to happen with it will.”

    Of course, people loved it. It lifted a lot of spirits.

    And it kept people dancing — in their homes. I’m very, very grateful, that it was the album that did that.

    As we did with the first album, can I just prompt you for a couple more “case studies”? Of course, we’ve got to talk about “Levitating.” This was as big as a song can be: it spent 77 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming only the fifth song ever to spend 70 or more weeks on that chart, which goes back to 1958; most weeks ever on that chart for a song by a woman, passing LeAnn Rimes’ “How do I Live?”; 41 weeks in the top 10, the most ever for a song by a woman and second overall, behind only to The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights”; the longest charting single in the history of Warner Records; and the list goes on. How did that one come together? And why do you think that of all the great songs on that album, that’s the one that took off in that way?

    Well, you never really know with a song, I think. But when I was working on “Levitating,” I went into the studio and Koz [Stephen Kozmeniuk], the producer, basically played a track that he was working on. And absolutely immediately, I pressed the record button on my Voice Memo app and just started the melody of “Levitating.” It was just such an instant feeling for me. I also did it with my really close friends, Sarah Hudson and Clarence Coffee Jr., and when you create something with really close friends and there’s such a beautiful energy and you feel the excitement in the room, you hope that it translates the same.

    I feel like that with a lot of experiences that I’ve had with my music. I always go, “I hope people feel it the same way I felt when I wrote it.” And it was the song that dictated what the rest of the record was going to sound like. That was the one. And it was the time when I left the studio and I was like, “Okay, I’m onto something. I know what I’m doing now.” Yeah, that was the one.

    “Don’t Start Now” went to number two on the Hot 100, making it your highest-charting single to that point, and it went on to be nominated for the record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performance Grammys. You spoke a bit already about your love for disco. I also read that you, like I, love that documentary about the Bee Gees—

    Oh my God — God, I love that documentary about the Bee Gees! So good. How Can You Mend a Broken Heart.

    And this song was an instant disco classic…

    That was the first song that I released from the Future Nostalgia record, really illustrating what the rest of the record was going to be like. It had all these nostalgic influences, disco influences, live instrumentation — but at the same time, it felt so fresh and new. And it was the moment where I revealed my two-tone hair, like the blonde with the dark underneath. And it was my first experience of really starting to create a world around my music. I have so many beautiful memories connected to that, and getting to work on it with my friends Emily Warren and Ian Kirkpatrick and Caroline Ailan. It was just such a massive kickstarter for me in getting people to see a whole ‘nother side of me creatively.

    And then there’s “Break My Heart,” the writing of which, you have said, took you out of your comfort zone — which showed you that it’s actually a good thing to be out of your comfort zone when writing?

    I was out of my comfort zone because it was very personal, it was very in-the-moment. Sometimes when I write things, like I said, I feel like maybe I manifest them. I was like, “Oh my God, am I going to write a song about a guy that’s about to break my heart? I don’t know if I’m ready for this right now.” But that’s really how I felt in the moment, and I think I just learned how amazing it is to be so open about my own experiences. And actually “Break My Heart” was the last one that I wrote for Future Nostalgia.

    So obviously everyone loved Future Nostalgia. Then there was “Cold Heart” with Elton — it was fun to see you two perform that together at his last show in America. And then “Dance the Night,” which I imagine was already in the works before that in order to be ready to include in Barbie. How did your involvement in that project come about? Who reached out, and what was the pitch?

    Mark [Ronson] was the one who reached out to me. He was like, “I’ve been working on the music for the new Barbie film by Greta Gerwig, and it’s quite possibly the funniest script I’ve ever read. There’s a big dance section in it, and I would absolutely love for you to write it with me.” I was on my Future Nostalgia tour, so I was like, “Oh, I for sure want to do this” — I’m such a fan of both Mark and Greta, and to get to work with them in this capacity would be incredible — but I was like, “What’s the deadline? And am I going to be able to do this while I’m still on the road?” Mark and Greta were so excited that I was up for it, and we just made it work. I flew to New York and we spent so much time crafting this bespoke dance blowout party banger, essentially, which was just such a different experience from any of the other experiences that I’d had writing music for myself. Because when I write music for myself, I have such a personal vision in mind. Here, I was writing a story about Barbie, about her character. It was interesting to work to an assignment to write a song about what in the film is Barbie’s best day ever — and then she starts having, as the day goes on, thoughts of death, and from that point on everything kind of goes upside down and she has this existential crisis and has to go into reality and discover the patriarchy. There’s a lot that happens.

    It sets it all up…

    It sets it all up. And it was like, “How do I create a song that really does that moment justice?” Especially with all the cast members in it, all the Barbies dancing in there! And how do I have this underlying story alongside it? It’s like, “Yes, it’s a big disco moment in the film, but lyrically, although it’s got to be fun, I have to be able to tell Barbie’s story in this way, and how are we going to do this?” I wrote it with Andrew Wyatt and Mark Ronson and Caroline Ailin, and it felt like a very 360 moment on how we all got together in the first place.

    Are you thinking, as you’re working on a song like that, “Yes, it’s for a movie, but it also needs to be able to stand on its own at a club? In other words, that the lyrics have to mean multiple things? And would you say it’s harder than writing a song that’s not for a movie?

    Well, I think when you’re writing from personal experiences, you are putting yourself out there in a very vulnerable position. What was interesting here with Barbie is, although we were tailoring the song, pretty much like a score, to the visuals to make it really fit in, the song also stands alone. When the song was finished, what I realized is how much I relate to Barbie, to “Dance the Night,” to the idea of resilience through the adversity of whatever life throws at you, and being able to just carry on and, I don’t know, show a completely another side of me.

    Also, “Dance the Night,” to me, felt like my farewell to Future Nostalgia. When I think back to the time when people told me I couldn’t dance or I had no stage presence and I decided to instead make them all dance with the music I was making, that’s what “Dance the Night” represents to me, that complete shift in my life where I was able to find myself again and really feel like I can stand through anything as long as I have passion and a dream and a want to create something.

    You also play a part in this movie. Are you interested in doing more acting moving forward?

    Maybe. I had a lot of fun doing the cameo for Barbie. Just to be on set and feel the energy of all the cast and crew members — everyone was so passionate and so generous with themselves in every aspect of wanting to make this the best thing that they’d ever made. You can really feel that dedication. Like I said, when I make a song, I hope people can feel the energy of how I felt when I made this record. The same thing goes for the way that this film was made.

    Grammy noms came out last week. How did you learn that “Dance the Night” had been recognized?

    I got a text from a friend who was like, “Did you know that you just got nominated for two Grammys for ‘Dance the Night?’” And I was already on such a high because I had just released my new single “Houdini” and that was just absolutely flying, and then I get this news! I was just absolutely in a massive whirlwind. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I was just so happy to be nominated, especially for a song that means so much to me. I just feel like it’s such a big part of me.

    “Houdini” is the lead single from your next album, which is coming in 2024. You have said this one is going to be more personal than the others…

    The reason why it’s personal is with every experience, with every moment that I’ve spent in the studio, I’ve learned to just open up more and give more of myself and not be afraid of that aspect of my vulnerability. And also just with every record, I’ve been learning more about myself and wanting it to be more organic in different ways, to grow sonically and change it up. This one’s a lot more psychedelic in its production, and I’m just very excited because it feels like a new step for me.

    Lastly, can a song change the world?

    Can a song change the world? That’s interesting. I think music gives people the feeling that you can really imagine a world with peace. It gives you that space to, I don’t know, dive into another world that gives you a lot of comfort and clarity, even when things in the world aren’t going so well. It’s a safe space. So whether or not it can change the world, I don’t know. But for me, it gives me comfort and it makes me feel very much at home, wherever I am.

    Transcript has been lightly edited for clarity.

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    Scott Feinberg

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