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  • Golden Globes 2024: See All the Nominations Here

    Golden Globes 2024: See All the Nominations Here

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    With a new broadcast home on CBS, new owners, and a vastly expanded voting body, the Golden Globes 2024 will aim to resume their place in the awards-show pantheon when they air on CBS and Paramount+ on January 7. They’ll be helped, most likely, by having some major stars in attendance. Hits like Barbie and Oppenheimer earned a large number of nominations across many film categories, as expected, while television favorites like Succession, The Bear, and The Last of Us dominated in the television categories. And even though their films are not figuring as prominently in the Oscar race, stars like Jennifer Lawrence, Matt Damon, Timothee Chalamet, and Nicolas Cage all earned nominations thanks to the comedy and musical categories, meaning the Globes very well might be the starriest event of the busy awards show season.

    In terms of nomination tallies, Barbie led on the film side with nine — aided by those three song nominations — with Oppenheimer close behind with eight, and Killers of the Flower Moon with seven. On the TV side no one came close to Succession’s whopping nine nominations in drama, but The Bear and Only Murders in the Building were dominant in the comedy categories with five nominations apiece. 

    See a complete list of the nominations below, updated live as they are announced. The 81st Golden Globe Awards will air live on CBS and stream on Paramount+ on Sunday, January 7, 2024, at 5 p.m. PT/8 p.m. ET.

    FILM AWARDS

    Best Motion Picture – Drama

    Anatomy of a Fall

    Killers of the Flower Moon

    Maestro

    Oppenheimer

    Past Lives

    The Zone of Interest

    Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy

    Air

    American Fiction

    Barbie

    The Holdovers

    May December

    Poor Things

    Best Motion Picture – Animated

    The Boy and the Heron

    Elemental

    Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie

    Suzume

    Wish

    Cinematic and Box Office Achievement

    Barbie

    Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol. 3

    John Wick: Chapter 4

    Mission: Impossibles – Dead Reckoning Part One

    Oppenheimer

    Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie

    Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour

    Best Motion Picture – Non-English Language

    Anatomy of a Fall

    Fallen Leaves

    Io Capitano

    Past Lives

    Society of the Snow

    The Zone of Interest

    Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama

    Annette Bening, Nyad

    Lily Gladstone, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Sandra Huller, Anatomy of a Fall

    Greta Lee, Past Lives

    Carey Mulligan, Maestro

    Cailee Spaeny, Priscilla

    Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama 

    Bradley Cooper, Maestro

    Leonardo DiCaprio, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Colman Domingo: Rustin

    Barry Keoghan, Saltburn

    Cillian Murphy, Oppenheimer

    Andrew Scott, All of Us Strangers

    Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy

    Fantasia Barrino, The Color Purple

    Jennifer Lawrence, No Hard Feelings

    Natalie Portman, May December

    Alma Poytsi, Fallen Leaves

    Margot Robbie, Barbie

    Emma Stone, Poor Things

    Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy

    Nicolas Cage, Dream Scenario

    Timothee Chalamet, Wonka

    Matt Damon, Air

    Paul Giamatti, The Holdovers

    Joaquin Phoenix, Beau is Afraid

    Jeffrey Wright, American Fiction

    Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role in any Motion Picture

    Emily Blunt, Oppenheimer

    Danielle Brooks, The Color Purple

    Jodie Foster, Nyad

    Julianne Moore, May December

    Rosamund Pike, Saltburn

    Da’vine Joy Randolph, The Holdovers

    Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role in any Motion Picture

    Willem Dafoe, Poor Things

    Robert de Niro, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Roberty Downey Jr., Oppenheimer

    Ryan Gosling, Barbie

    Charles Melton, May December

    Mark Rufalo, Poor Things

    Best Director 

    Bradley Cooper, Maestro

    Greta Gerwig, Barbie

    Yorgos Lanthimos, Poor Things

    Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer

    Martin Scorsese, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Celine Song, Past Lives

    Best Screenplay 

    Greta Gerwig and Noah Baumbach, Barbie

    Tony McNamara, Poor Things

    Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer

    Eric Roth and Martin Scorsese, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Celine Song, Past Lives

    Justine Triet and Arthur Harrari, Anatomy of a Fall

    Best Original Score 

    Jerskin Fendrix, Poor Things

    Ludwig Goransson, Oppenheimer

    Joe Hisaichi, The Boy and the Heron

    Mica Levi, The Zone of Interest

    Daniel Pemberton, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

    Robbie Robertson, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Best Original Song 

    “Addicted to Romance,” She Came to Me

    “Dance the Night,” Barbie

    “I’m Just Ken,” Barbie

    “Peaches,” The Super Mario Bros. Movie

    “Road to Freedom,” Rustin

    “What Was I Made For,” Barbie

    TV AWARDS

    Best Television Series – Drama

    1923

    The Crown

    The Diplomat

    The Last of Us

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    Katey Rich

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  • Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

    Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

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    Erika Alexander and Jeffrey Wright in Orion/Amazon MGM Studios’ American Fiction.

    Claire Folger/MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Producer Jermaine Johnson worked primarily as a literary manager for clients like first-time movie writer-director Cord Jefferson (whom he’s represented for close to a decade) before the pair collaborated on Jefferson’s darkly comic adaptation of the novel Erasure by Percival Everett, which Jefferson wrote on spec with Johnson’s encouragement. 

    Naturally, first-time filmmaking meant an inherent learning curve. “Day one was a tough day because Cord didn’t really feel qualified to tell Jeffrey Wright how to act,” Johnson recalls. “He did not feel like he was the guy for the job.” That meant adding pep talks to Johnson’s job description. “The conversation was, ‘Hey, man, Jeffrey wants to be directed. Actors want to collaborate and get in the clay with you,’ ” he says. “Next thing, he’s just in there, between takes, talking to Jeffrey, playing around with it. And they established a rapport, from day two on.”

    Shooting constraints prompted production to relocate from New York to the Boston area, where Jefferson would be able to film the scenes at Monk’s (Wright) family beach house in the Massachusetts coastal town of Scituate. “You start to crunch the numbers and think about what it takes to shoot in New York,” Johnson says. “Once we landed on Boston, it was a very quick yes.”

    Northeastern weather, however, proved one of the main production challenges. “I learned what it takes to light a beach at night. That is an extremely difficult task,” Johnson says of a scene in which Leslie Uggams, as Monk’s aging mother, wanders away from her home. Rigging lights amid 20-mile-an-hour winds proved nearly impossible. But for the 80-year-old actress, the wind was no problem. “We’ve got Leslie the legend out in this weather, and she is such a professional that she did as many takes as we needed,” Johnson says, adding that Uggams was “just the brightest light there.”

    Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    From left: Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    Seacia Pavao/Focus Features

    An Oscar winner for Rain Man, Mark Johnson wasn’t cowed by Alexander Payne’s rigorous commitment to getting his story right. But The Holdovers, set in a New England boarding school over Christmas break, proved a particular exercise in patience. “With Alexander, the script is understandably the most important part of moviemaking,” Johnson says. “He spent a lot of time [giving first-time feature writer David Hemingson feedback] on it.” One of the main developmental changes was expanding the character of grieving chef Mary, played by Da’Vine Joy Randolph. “I really do believe her performance is the heart of the movie,” he adds.

    Finding financing for a story on this scale — an intimate, humanist dramedy centered on Mary along with Paul Giamatti’s weathered teacher Paul Hunham and troubled schoolboy Angus (newcomer Dominic Sessa) — also proved a challenge: “It’s not a big, bombastic subject. Paul Giamatti has such great respect, but is he a big box office name? No,” says Johnson. But midscale films about life are “the movies that so many of us really enjoy,” he says. “These movies are harder and harder to put together. Movies that I’ve made from the very beginning, like Diner or even, quite frankly, Rain Man, I wonder how we would go about putting them together today?”

    Another challenge was location: The preppy Barton Academy where most of the movie takes place is actually a composite of multiple New England schools — though all that snow is, remarkably, very real (about “85 percent” of it, anyway). “I’ve had people come up to me after screenings saying, ‘Oh, I went to that school,’ ” says Johnson. “Well, no, they didn’t, because that school didn’t exist.”

    Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    From left: Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    Eric Chakeen/A24

    Writer-director-producer Sean Durkin had been obsessed with his drama’s subject matter — the Von Erich wrestling family — since an early age, having read about them in magazines and watched old tapes of their matches. When he began writing the script, he was very conscious of the constraints he would need to adhere to. “When I started out, I really did all the line producing myself,” says Durkin, whose films include Martha Marcy May Marlene (2011) and The Nest (2020). “I’ve never been able to separate financials. I’m so envious of writers who can just not worry about it. I’m very conscious of how to craft a world and to be aware of the type of budget [for] the film I’m making.”

    Most of the film takes place in the wrestling arena known as the Sportatorium or on the Von Erichs’ Texas ranch, and simulating those spots proved surprisingly difficult. Preparing to shoot in Louisiana, the scouting team had their work cut out for them. “We really covered the entire state to find the right feel for the ranch,” Durkin says. After landing in the Baton Rouge area, finding a warehouse that could house a wrestling stadium was equally tough. Production designer James Price “was going into every single building that could work size-wise, but it’d be the wrong shape inside, or the wrong texture.” The solution was found in a furniture showroom. “It was just a bunch of fake living rooms. We had to convince the place to let us clear out everything, knock down all the walls.”

    Zac Efron and the cast worked intensely to transform physically to play the Von Erichs, though Durkin didn’t require it. “I wanted them to feel comfortable getting to whatever shape they felt was best for the character,” he says. But for the wrestling, authenticity was key. “They had to learn how to wrestle all the way through from top to bottom, and do multiple takes,” he says, noting that he filmed matches live in front of an audience. “We got really lucky with the Baton Rouge crowd, because they were really into wrestling. It was really quite beautiful, that energy between the background [performers] and the actors.”

    Kristie Macosko Krieger, Maestro

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Jason McDonald/Netflix

    Kristie Macosko Krieger was originally planning to produce a Leonard Bernstein biopic directed by her longtime collaborator, Steven Spielberg, with Bradley Cooper signed on to star as the famed conductor and composer. When Spielberg made the decision to step away from the director’s chair, Cooper offered his own name as a replacement, and asked Spielberg and Krieger to watch an early cut of his directorial debut, A Star Is Born

    Krieger recalls, “Twenty minutes into the film, Spielberg got up and walked over to Bradley and said, ‘You’re directing this fucking movie.’ ”

    Cooper had a clear vision of the details he wanted to bring to Maestro, and he would not budge on any of them. “He was like, ‘We’re absolutely going to go over many time periods,’ ” Krieger says. (The film spans from the 1940s through the 1980s.) Cooper also worked with prosthetics designer Kazu Hiro for three and a half years to transform his face into Bernstein’s. “He wouldn’t stop until he got it right,” Krieger says.

    The film was shot on location in New York’s Carnegie Hall and Central Park, in England’s Ely Cathedral and at Massachusetts’ Tanglewood Estate. Some desired locations, however, were impossible to get. “We could not shoot in the Dakota apartment [on Central Park West],” she says. “Bradley wanted to re-create that to almost exactly what it looked like. He enlisted Kevin Thompson, our production designer, to build the entire Dakota set.”

    Cooper also insisted they shoot with live orchestras, which meant that the film could not shoot during the height of COVID and had to be postponed. “But again, he wasn’t compromising,” says Krieger. “He was like, ‘It will look better, it will be better, it will be the movie that I want to make.’ He made all of us better as department heads in figuring out this film, so none of us were settling, either.”

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Emma Thomas has worked as a producer for her husband, Christopher Nolan, “on pretty much all of his films, ever,” as she puts it. “When I first read Chris’ script, I thought it was the best he’d ever written. It was very clear that he was approaching the story with a large scope in mind, as a blockbuster.”

    But despite Nolan’s pedigree and Oppenheimer’s seemingly endless scale, the biggest production challenge was working on a minimal budget. “It’s about very difficult and weighty subjects,” Thomas explains. “I wasn’t daunted by the things he was proposing shooting, but I knew that the only responsible way to make a film this challenging, that was inevitably going to be R-rated and three hours long, was to make it for a reasonable amount of money. And a reasonable amount of money was probably going to be about half of what anyone else would do it for.”

    Proposing a budget cut in half to department heads meant each sector of the crew had to find creative ways to consolidate resources. “Our production designer, Ruth De Jong, got really smart about ways in which she could build things, with a very targeted eye, building only what was necessary for the shots,” says Thomas. “Our DP, Hoyte van Hoytema, said, ‘There are things that I can do to go faster: to only have one camera, to do as much handheld as possible.’ Our actors were all on set all the time, ready to go as soon as the camera was ready. Those are things that added up to us being able to finish the film on this incredibly punishing schedule.”

    Building Los Alamos, the site of the atomic bomb’s creation, meant battling freezing temperatures in the mesas of New Mexico. “The weather was so cold, it was impossible to dig into the ground because it was frozen,” says Thomas. “We had snowstorms and windstorms. And that was just when we were building the town. Once we got the shoot there, we had another great big windstorm, and we weren’t even sure that the tents were going to stand.” But the production ultimately used the weather to its advantage. “It looks amazing on film — that shot of Cillian when he walks up to the Trinity Tower, and climbs up it, that’s real wind.”

    Paul Garnes, Origin

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Courtesy Array Filmworks

    Paul Garnes had worked as a producer with writer-director Ava DuVernay in the past, but it had been some time since the pair had operated outside the studio system. “In the early days, we were at Netflix,” he says. “[Origin] got caught up in the industry slowdown. Ava made the really bold choice to go out and make this independently.” 

    That decision made things more exhilarating and terrifying, Garnes says. “In every production, there’s some executive that you can call and say, ‘Hey, this is happening, what do we do?’ We didn’t have that. It was just me and Ava. We could really only depend on each other.”

    The film spans centuries and continents, with scenes in Berlin at the height of World War II, aboard slave ships in the 1600s and in the streets of contemporary India. The decision to finance independently meant working with local governments to shoot in as many historical locations as possible. “We weren’t going to build a bunch of sets on soundstages,” Garnes says. “Outside of the slave ship sequence, because obviously slave ships don’t exist, we shot everything else pretty much on location.”

    That made for some awkward asks. “Could we shoot a Nazi rally in downtown Berlin, in the place where that book burning in the Bebelplatz really happened?” says Garnes. “We didn’t know at the time, but they had never let anyone film there.” Filming also took place at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. “It’s a sensitive place. You don’t want to cause any stress or damage or anything to a place people visit in very solemn moments.”

    As a home base, production landed on Savannah, Georgia, where they were able to re-create a concentration camp. Bringing in those extras meant “Ava [taking] very careful time to get the background talent to understand what they were doing, who they were,” says Garnes. A sequence portraying the murder of Trayvon Martin was also filmed in that area, as well as scenes set in cotton fields in the 1930s South. 

    This story first appeared in the Dec. 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • 2023 European Film Award Winners (Updating Live)

    2023 European Film Award Winners (Updating Live)

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    The 36th European Film Awards have kicked off in Berlin with several of this year’s hottest award season contenders vying for the top honors from the European Film Academy.

    Justine Triet’s acclaimed French courtroom drama Anatomy of a Fall, Jonathan Glazer’s harrowing Holocaust drama The Zone of Interest and Aki Kaurismäki dark, droll Finnish love story Fallen Leaves, all of which have received major awards buzz, are multiple nominees and all up for the top prize of best European film. Other best film nominees include Matteo Garrone’s Io Capitano from Italy, and Agnieszka Holland’s Polish drama Green Border, both of which look at the refugee crisis on Europe’s borders.

    Sandra Hüller is a double nominee in the best actress category, for her starring turns in The Zone of Interest and Anatomy of a Fall, and is going up against Fallen Leaves star Alma Pöysti; Leonie Benesch, nominated for İlker Çatak’s The Teachers’ Lounge; Mia McKenna-Bruce, star of Molly Manning Walker’s How To Have Sex; and Eka Chavleishvili for her starring role in Elene Naveriani’s Georgian drama Blackbird Blackbird Blackberry.

    Hüller’s Zone co-star Christian Friedel is in the running for the best European actor honor, competing with Mads Mikkelsen for Nikolaj Arcel’s The Promised Land, Josh O’Connor for Alice Rohrwacher’s La ChimeraFallen Leaves co-star Jussi Vatanen and Thomas Schubert for Christian Petzold’s Afire.

    EFA’s Excellence Awards, the craft section of the European Film Awards, were announced ahead of Saturday’s gala. Arcel’s 18th-century Danish Western The Promised Land picked up best cinematography honors for. J.A. Bayona‘s real-life drama Society of the Snow won best visual effects for Félix Bergés and Laura Pedrobest and best hair and make-up for Ana López-Puigcerver, Belén López-Puigcerver, David Martí and Montse Ribé. The Zone of Interest won best sound design for Johnnie Burn and Tarn Willers, and Laurent Sénéchal took the best editing prize for his work on Anatomy of a Fall. Emita Frigato won the EFA for best production design for Rohwacher’s Italian drama La Chimera, and Markus Binder took best score for his soundtrack to Jessica Hausner’s health cult satire Club Zero starring Mia Wasikowska.

    The European Film Academy also presented several filmmakers with honorary accolades. Spanish director Isabel Coixet (My Life Without Me, The Bookshop) got the European Achievement in World Cinema Award. Oscar-winning British actress Vanessa Redgrave (Julia, Howards End) received the European Lifetime Achievement honor. Legendary Hungarian filmmaker Béla Tarr (The Turin Horse, Werckmeister Harmonies) was presented with the Honorary Award of the Academy President and Board, a rare achievement. Tarr is only the sixth filmmaker to be so honored, following directors Manoel de Oliveira, Andrzej Wajda and Costa-Gavras, and actors Michel Piccoli and Michael Caine.

    The Euroimages European Co-Production Award, honoring excellence in cross-border film production, went to Lithuanian-based producer Uljana Kim. Through her company, Studio Uljana Kim, she has produced some 34 features and documentaries, almost all co-productions, including The Gambler (2013), Teesklejad (2016) and The Year Before the War (2021).

    From outside the film business, Turkish executive Güler Sabancı, chairperson of Sabancı Holding, received the European Sustainability Award, for her philanthropic work to promote sustainability practices across multiple sectors.

    Full list of winners for the 2023 European Film Awards

    European Film

    Anatomy of a Fall, dir. Justine Triet

    Fallen Leaves, dir. Aki Kaurismäki

    Green Border, dir. Agnieszka Holland

    Io Capitano, dir. Matteo Garrone

    The Zone of Interest, dir. Jonathan Glazer

    European Documentary

    Apolonia, Apolonia, dir. Lea Glob

    Four Daughters, dir. Kaouther Ben Hania

    Motherland, dir. Hanna Badziaka, Alexander Mihalkovich

    On the Adamant, dir. Nicolas Philibert

    Smoke Sauna Sisterhood, dir. Anna Hints

    European Director

    Justine Triet for Anatomy of a Fall

    Aki Kaurismäki for Fallen Leaves

    Agnieszka Holland for Green Border

    Matteo Garrone for Io Capitano

    Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of Interest

    European Actress

    Sandra Hüller in Anatomy of a Fall

    Eka Chavleishvili in Blackbird Blackbird Blackberry

    Alma Pöysti in Fallen Leaves

    Mia McKenna-Bruce in How To Have Sex

    Leonie Benesch in The Teachers’ Lounge

    Sandra Hüller in The Zone of Interest

    European Actor

    Thomas Schubert in Afire

    Jussi Vatanen in Fallen Leaves

    Josh O’Connor in La Chimera

    Mads Mikkelsen in The Promised Land

    Christian Friedel in The Zone of Interest

    European Screenwriter

    Justine Triet and Arthur Harari for Anatomy of a Fall

    Aki Kaurismäki for Fallen Leaves

    Maciej Pisuk, Gabriela Łazarkiewicz-Sieczko and Agnieszka Holland for Green Border

    İlker Çatak and Johannes Duncker for The Teachers’ Lounge

    Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of Interest

    European Discovery – Prix FIPRESCI

    20,000 Species of Bees, dir, Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren

    How To Have Sex, dir. Molly Manning Walker

    La Palisiada, dir. Philip Sotnychenko

    Safe Place, dir. Juraj Lerotić

    The Quiet Migration, dir. Malene Choi

    Vincent Must Die, dir. Stéphan Castang

    European Animated Feature Film

    A Greyhound of a Girl, dir. Enzo d’Alò

    Chicken For Linda!, dir. Chiara Malta, Sébastien Laudenbach

    Robot Dreams, dir. Pablo Berger

    The Amazing Maurice, dir. Toby Genkel

    White Plastic Sky, dir. Tibor Bánóczki, Sarolta Szabó

    European Short Film

    27, dir. Flóra Anna Buda
    Aqueronte, dir. Manuel Muñoz Rivas

    Daydreaming So Vividly About Our Spanish Holidays, dir. Christian Avilés

    Flores Del Otro Patio, dir. Jorge Cadena

    Hardly Working, dir. Susanna Flock, Robin Klengel, Leonhard Müllner, Michael Stumpf

    European Cinematography

    Rasmus Videbaek for The Promised Land

    European Editing

    Laurent Sénéchal for Anatomy of a Fall

    European Score

    Markus Binder for Club Zero

    European Production Design

    Emita Frigato for La Chimera

    European Costume Design

    Kicki Ilander for The Promised Land

    European Visual Effects

    Félix Bergés and Laura Pedrobest for Society of the Snow

    European Hair and Make-Up

    Ana López-Puigcerver, Belén López-Puigcerver, David Martí and Montse Ribé for Society of the Snow

    European Sound Design

    Johnnie Burn and Tarn Willers for The Zone of Interest

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • How ‘Asteroid City’ Became Wes Anderson’s Most Visually Ambitious Movie Yet

    How ‘Asteroid City’ Became Wes Anderson’s Most Visually Ambitious Movie Yet

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    Yeoman: It’s very difficult to try to blend comedy and grief in the same scene. Jason was able to portray both things within the scene. We shot it during the middle part of the day in a harsh sunlight. Jason’s angle actually is a little bit backlit at that point, but if you look at the other, the shots of the kids from the side, the side angles, they’re very kind of harshly lit, front-lit, a lot of harsh midday sun. In a movie that Wes isn’t directing, I would be inclined to throw a giant silk up and just try to soften the whole thing out. But Wes wanted to have that feeling. Before we started shooting, we looked at movies, The Bad Day at Black Rock and Paris, Texas, and how they use the sun in those movies to become really a character. They weren’t afraid of shooting at midday, and they weren’t afraid of harsh sun, which is typically, for most cinematographers, something you prefer not to do.

    In all honesty, I was a little skeptical about that approach at the beginning, but as I saw more and more of our dailies, I grew to really embrace it and realized that we were creating a world. You’re out in the desert in the middle part of the day. During the digital intermediate in post, we took a little contrast out, and it kind of took a little bit of the edge off that hard light, I think. But again, it was all natural light. I would’ve shot it way later in the day if I was scheduling it, but we kind of wanted to embrace that feeling.

    Anderson: I don’t think it’s such harsh sunlight, this scene. I don’t love to have everything be backlit with, I guess, what I look for, is some simplicity in it in terms of the lighting. But to me, Jason’s character and role is the center of the whole movie, and this scene is a crucial one, and so for me, it was just, on the set, I’m just an audience member. Jason was so good playing this scene and so surprising. He’s just so interesting, and so for me, this scene is one of the crucial ones along with the other one with him and Margot Robbie. Those two scenes are the tentpoles of the movie.

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    David Canfield

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  • The Power of ‘Godzilla Minus One’ and an Awards Season Mailbag

    The Power of ‘Godzilla Minus One’ and an Awards Season Mailbag

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    Sean and Amanda react to the surprise box office hit of the weekend, Godzilla Minus One (1:00); share preliminary thoughts about Poor Things and why it’s seemingly losing steam in the awards races (18:00); and then open up the mailbag to answer your questions on all things Oscar season (32:00). Finally, they update their Best Picture power rankings (1:30:00).

    Hosts: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins
    Senior Producer: Bobby Wagner

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

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    Sean Fennessey

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  • ‘The Boy and the Heron’ Is a Perfect Feather in Hayao Miyazaki’s Cap

    ‘The Boy and the Heron’ Is a Perfect Feather in Hayao Miyazaki’s Cap

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    You never know what Hayao Miyazaki has planned. The legendary director, animator, and mangaka has been the face of Studio Ghibli since the Japanese company’s inception in 1985; in the decades since, his films have become as much of an event overseas as they are at home. In an animation landscape dominated by simplistic stories, his films always challenge preconceptions. His latest, The Boy and the Heron, is his most surprising yet.

    Miyazaki delights in things that are more than what they seem: an animal that might also be a person, a building hiding the doorway to a new world. The Boy and the Heron’s titular boy is 11-year-old Mahito, who comes of age during World War II (much like Miyazaki himself did), then stumbles into a magical, menacing fantasy land. That’s not to say it lacks Miyazaki’s trademark whimsy: The “villains” are bumbling oversized birds in uniform, albeit carnivorous ones.

    Given the director’s age—83 in January—and characteristically slow animation process, the persistent rumors that he’s about to retire may well be true this time. But what a note on which to end, daringly remixing all of his favorite things into one strange and wistful fable. Despite its fantastical setting, this is by far Miyazaki’s most serious film. A melancholy thread runs through it, inviting us to accept that though all things must end, endings can also be new beginnings. “Animators are getting too old,” Miyazaki told The New Yorker almost 20 years ago. He himself never has.

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    Emma Stefansky

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  • The Finals gets surprise release during the 2023 Game Awards

    The Finals gets surprise release during the 2023 Game Awards

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    The Finals, one of the buzziest new shooters of 2023 despite only existing in beta, finally has a release date. It’s out… right now! Developer Embark Studios announced the news at the 2023 Game Awards.

    Created by ex-Battlefield devs, The Finals is a free-to-play first-person shooter in which various teams of three shoot each other a bunch to see which team is the best at shooting the other teams. Embark Studios ran a closed beta in the spring and an open beta spanning from late October through early November that racked up 7.5 million players.

    One of the huge draws of The Finals is that it’s not a battle royale. There’s no circle or storm or slowly encroaching safe zone. You also don’t really get punished when you get eliminated, save for a brief 20-second respawn timer. Matches last no longer than 15 minutes. It feels like a throwback to the deathmatch modes that dominated the mid-2000s, except it’s as gorgeous and technically impressive as any other modern shooter. Nostalgia for an earlier, arguably simpler era of gaming is no doubt a factor in The Finals’ popularity.

    The other huge draw is that every single building can explode.

    Last week, I got a chance to play The Finals during a closed media session meant to illustrate The Finals’ final state before its launch. I cannot express how frequently the thing I was standing on exploded.

    Image: Embark Studios

    For the most part, that tracks with Polygon’s more extensive preview of The Finals from earlier this year. The general concept is that you’re a contestant in some sort of shiny, violent, futuristic game show. Matches take place on maps like Monaco and Las Vegas. (Get it? Because gambling!) When you’re eliminated, you turn into a pile of coins. (Also because gambling.) Buildings, however, don’t suffer such a cartoonish fate. Shooting a wall or floor with an RPG causes it to collapse into a pile of rubble. When a building takes enough structural damage, the whole thing comes crashing down — even if you’re meticulously perched on the eaves, trying to get the drop on an opposing team.

    You can choose from three classes, simply named “light,” “medium,” and “heavy,” each replete with all the gear and movement speed (or lack thereof) you’d expect from those barebones classifications. For the session, Embark paired attendees off into squads of three. We played two different quick-play modes: Quick Cash and Bank It. Both modes tally your score not by how many eliminations you have but by how much cash you can steal from opponents and deliver to various drop points. But I’ll be honest: The shooting in The Finals is so distractingly solid — so emblematic of the golden age of Battlefield — I couldn’t help but spend my time prioritizing spraying and praying over learning “rules” and “objectives.” You’re welcome, teammates!

    A player of The Finals runs up stairs behind a teammate wearing bunny ears.

    Image: Embark Studios

    The Finals also features a tournament component with higher stakes than the quick-play modes. If your squad doesn’t finish in the top two for your existing round, you’re eliminated from the bracket. (I’m not sure what happens after the first round, because our squad finished last. Twice.)

    I’d be remiss not to mention our experience playing The Finals was marred by technical difficulties. Such things are generally excusable for a beta; that is, after all, the whole point of betas. Still, for roughly half the games we played, one or two players of our three-person squad would inexplicably fail to load in. When we’d successfully get into a match, for about half of those matches, one player would get dropped. Since The Finals does not have an option to rejoin an existing match, one party member getting kicked out meant we all had to quit. (Let the record reflect that we totally would’ve won all of those matches otherwise.)

    Aside from those hiccups, which may very well not be present at all in today’s full release, The Finals is an energetic and competent multiplayer shooter I could see myself dipping into for a few rounds when Halo Infinite gets too frustrating. Players have by and large moved on from the sort of arena-style gameplay on display here, so sure, like the contest that defines this game’s minimalist lore, The Finals is ultimately a gamble. But it’s one I hope pays off.

    The Finals is out now on PlayStation 5, Windows PC, and Xbox Series X.

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    Ari Notis

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  • ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer’ Among AFI 2023 Film and TV Award Honorees

    ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer’ Among AFI 2023 Film and TV Award Honorees

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    The American Film Institute has unveiled its choices for the year’s 10 best films and 10 best TV shows.

    The AFI Awards for films, which fete both Hollywood tentpoles and indie fare, goes to American Fiction, Barbie, The Holdovers, Killers of the Flower Moon, Maestro, May December, Oppenheimer, Past Lives, Poor Things and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.

    On the TV front, the 2023 AFI Awards go to Abbott Elementary, The Bear, Beef, Jury Duty, The Last of Us, The Morning Show, Only Murders in the Building, Poker Face, Reservations Dogs and Succession.
    The honorees will be recognized at a private reception on Jan. 12, 2024, at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills.

    The intimate and non-competitive AFI Awards show each year draws the biggest creative and industry names in Hollywood to salute the year’s best offerings from the film and TV industry.

    “As our nation and our world continue to navigate difficult times, AFI is honored to shine a proper light upon these works of art that lift us up and, ultimately, lead us to empathy,” Bob Gazzale, AFI president and CEO, said in a statement on Thursday.

    “That we do so without competition is AFI’s hallmark, and we are proud to gather this community of artists together – as one – to celebrate their extraordinary contributions to our time,” Gazzale added.

    The AFI Awards, chosen by a jury comprising AFI trustees, artists, critics and scholars, honor creative teams as a whole by recognizing those in front of and behind the camera.

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    Etan Vlessing

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  • Billie Eilish: What I Was Made For

    Billie Eilish: What I Was Made For

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    I don’t ever remember writing a song about how I was actually feeling in the moment, because I was bored by that. Who cares about what I feel like today? (Of course, it turns out that a lot of people care, which is really cool.) But writing “What Was I Made For?” I wasn’t thinking about myself, or my life. I was just inspired by the perspective of a character. It was only afterward that I had a realization: It actually was about me. A lot of the time it is a subconscious thing, writing about myself, but doing it in a way that feels safer. It’s kind of trippy. I was thinking about a character, but it turns out I am the character.

    The week after the song came out, I didn’t get enough sleep because I just stayed up watching videos that fans made for it. I can’t tell you how cool it was to feel like I was part of something that was bringing people together, all gender identities and generations from all over the world, and I loved that so much of it was bringing women together with all of those videos of people’s girlhoods and mom-and-daughter relationships. I have a lot of internalized misogyny—I did not ask for it and I don’t want it, but it’s there—and I’m constantly retraining myself not to think that way. “What Was I Made For?” brought women together in this beautiful but devastating way: We were all bonding about the traumas of being a woman in the world.

    As a young female in the industry, I sometimes find myself fighting real resentment, but that’s the world that we live in. My body, face, and abilities are scrutinized in a way that a man’s just aren’t. I didn’t realize how relatable “What Was I Made For?” would turn out to be. People started to point out the lyrics and say, “Oh, my God, Billie wrote this for me, because this is how I feel.” Hearing people talk about how much their experience as a woman resonated with what I wrote was so sad, but I also felt less alone.

    As a girl, I think the freedom of being a little kid is something that we don’t really ever get back, and we don’t realize it until it’s gone. You feel like a person—then suddenly you’re being looked at by grown men, you’re growing body parts you don’t recognize, and you get your period. Sometimes I see eight-year-old girls, and I think, Oh, my God, look at how free you are! You hit a certain age and it’s about to be the worst stage of your life.

    I directed the video for “What Was I Made For?” and it’s one of my favorite things I’ve ever made. The hard thing about directing, especially when you’re not super experienced, is that you have this vision, but you don’t necessarily know how to achieve it. You’re trying your best trying to convey to people how you want it to look, but how do you even know the words to describe it? I felt very confident in what I wanted, and I asked about the things I didn’t know. When you get to the place that I’m at in my life, you hear a lot of “Yes.” I might not know what the hell I’m doing, and people will be like, “Yes, cool, let’s do it!” So I really ask everybody, “If I’m doing this in a weird way, please tell me. I want to learn.”

    Score has been such a big inspiration, and it’s part of why I want to direct and edit my own videos. I think of music visually, and I think of visuals musically. If I edit something, the cuts have to be fully in sync with the music. With the “What Was I Made For?” video, I had my mom sit in a chair in the yard while I played the song and I did all the moves exactly how I wanted them to be. Somebody watching that video may not think about it much, but the camera is moving on all the correct beats, and with the lyrics and melody of the song.

    I have my little secret list of directors that I would love to shadow or make something with, but I keep it to myself. How embarrassing is it if you say it out loud and then it doesn’t happen? (Okay, I definitely dream of doing something with Phoebe Waller-Bridge. I love, love, love her.) I would love to direct something big someday, but it’s cool to be part of other artists’ stuff as well. The whole creative process surrounding “What Was I Made For?” was nothing but mutual admiration. And to be a part of something so giant, and so important to the world—this is historical shit. Funnily enough with this song, there was no pressure. Finneas and I were sitting there as if we were puppets and the song was writing us. It felt like there was no world in which that song wasn’t going to be written. We were so moved that it was unstoppable.

    As told to Joy Press.

    Hair, Benjamin Mohapi (Billie Eilish); makeup, Emily Cheng (Billie Eilish). Produced on location by Anna Sabatini. For details, go to vf.com/credits.

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    Billie Eilish

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  • Emerald Fennell on Creating “Just Pure, Visceral Madness” With ‘Saltburn’

    Emerald Fennell on Creating “Just Pure, Visceral Madness” With ‘Saltburn’

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    In Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn, Oscar nominee Barry Keoghan stars as Oliver Quick, a middle-class student at Oxford University who becomes infatuated with his handsome and wealthy classmate Felix Catton (Jacob Elordi). As the school year ends, Felix invites him to spend the summer with him and his idiosyncratic family at their massive country estate — the eponymous Saltburn. 

    Fennell’s follow-up to her Oscar-winning debut, Promising Young Woman, Saltburn is a psychological black comedy inspired by Gothic literature, tracing Oliver’s struggle to fit in with the strange and rich family that hosts him at their home. But twists and turns abound in Fennell’s satire of the British class system, which she describes as “Barry Lyndon meets indie sleaze.” 

    Emerald Fennell

    Mike Marsland/WireImage

    Calling out other films set in similar environs (including Oscar-winning features The Remains of the Day and Atonement), Fennell deliberately plays with preconceived notions of British identity. “What happens when we take the most restrained genre about the most restrained people — to restrain it to the extent that it’s just pure, visceral madness?” Fennell asks.

    The result is a wild and seductive tale of debauchery, eroticism and power, slowly unraveling to reveal that few of its characters are who they appear to be. Creating the world those figures inhabit proved great fun for Fennell, who turned to some of her favorite films, books and art to construct a mood board for Saltburn’s aesthetic. 

    Here, she shares with THR the inspirations for the film’s visual style as well as its expertly plotted screenplay, built on the bones of a particularly British kind of storytelling. 

    John the Baptist by Caravaggio

    Thunderstruck/Alamy Stock Photo

    Caravaggio’s paintings of the biblical figure were numerous — and, as Fennell says, “very sexy.” The contrast of the white skin against red fabric has always caught the director’s eye, and that aesthetic went into the interiors of the Saltburn estate. “We’re framing a huge, sumptuous, almost biblical kind of place — everyone is in velvets and silks, lying on chaises in a formal setting,” she says. She also found inspiration in how Caravaggio depicted the male body: “There’s a lot of tension under the skin.”

    The Go Between

    Courtesy Image

    Fennell calls L.P. Hartley’s 1953 novel, which tells the story of a young man who feels like an outsider within his Victorian-era boarding school, “a British staple.” She adds: “It’s exactly what makes this genre so thrilling. This is the skeleton of the story, a man going through all of his old stuff and realizing his life hasn’t gone the way he wanted it to, and he sets out to resolve things.” The novel also was adapted for film by Losey and Pinter in 1971.

    The Servant

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    This 1963 drama directed by Joseph Losey and written by Harold Pinter stars Dirk Bogarde as the servant to a wealthy Londoner. “Losey and Pinter’s collaborations are so electric, because they have an undeniable erotic power,” says Fennell. “That power relies entirely on the threat of violence — not just literal violence, but a complete chaotic upending of the status quo.”

    Pet Shop Boys

    Courtesy Image

    At a late night karaoke party, Oliver is convinced to sing this Pet Shop Boys track — only to realize it’s intended to make fun of him. “It’s one of the most romantic songs ever written,” says Fennell of the tune, told from the perspective of a kept man. “The chorus is, ‘I love you, you pay my rent.’ There’s some simplicity to that transaction. You could argue it’s cold and cynical. But the underlying truth is something we’re all looking for.”

    Oxford The Last Hurrah

    Courtesy of ACC Art Books

    Dafydd Jones’ photos are both sordid and idyllic, capturing student life at Oxford in the 1980s — a direct reference for Fennell’s 2007-set social satire. “What’s so great about Oxford, Cambridge and the aristocracy is, like … pick your century, right?” she says. “Dafydd catches those moments of genuine exhilaration, wealth and youth.”

    This story first appeared in a November standalone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • Beyoncé Backlash, and Lenny Kravitz Missed the Source Awards

    Beyoncé Backlash, and Lenny Kravitz Missed the Source Awards

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    Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay react to undefeated Florida State being snubbed by the College Football Playoff committee (13:31), before discussing criticism of Beyoncé’s concert film screening in Israeli theaters (37:45) and Lenny Kravitz’s comments on feeling shunned by Black media (55:25). Plus, a legendary drummer opens up about playing uncredited on Beatles records (1:15:26), and an Ohio woman is charged with a felony following a miscarriage (1:26:55).

    ‌Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay
    Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Ashleigh Smith

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

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    Van Lathan

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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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  • The Animation Awards

    The Animation Awards

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    Jess, Jomi, and Steve are back to celebrate the world of animation in 2023! Listen as they move through the awards for best animated movie, favorite animated TV series, and more!

    Hosts: Jessica Clemons, Jomi Adeniran, Steve Ahlman
    Producer: Jonathan Kermah
    Additional Production Supoort: Arjuna Ramgopal

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

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    Jessica Clemons

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  • Robert Downey Jr.’s Third Act: ‘Oppenheimer’ Is Just the Beginning

    Robert Downey Jr.’s Third Act: ‘Oppenheimer’ Is Just the Beginning

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    That was the appeal of making Oppenheimer with Nolan and his producing partner Emma Thomas, who, like the Downeys, are another husband-and-wife filmmaking duo prone to taking big swings. “For him, Chris and Emma have just figured that out like nobody else,” Susan says.

    Even their process for casting has a no-nonsense streamline to it. “When you’re doing a Chris Nolan thing, basically you get a phone call: ‘Chris wants you for this. Will you come read the script at his house?’ ” says Susan, who joked that her husband’s curiosity clashed with his, let’s say, more inert tendencies. “Robert’s like, ‘Wait, I have to drive that far east?… Okay.’ Once he was willing to do that, I already knew his mindset was very open.”

    The Oppenheimer team was surprised to meet a movie star who was willing to cast off his armor. “Honestly, he kind of subverted all my expectations of him,” Thomas says. “We’ve often talked about how amazing it’d be to work with him, but we work in a very specific, fairly stripped-down way. I wasn’t sure how he was going to adjust to that way of working because, when you’re a big movie star like Robert, that isn’t necessarily the way you’re used to working.”

    But his Avengers experience had also prepared him for being part of Oppenheimer’s gargantuan ensemble, one of 79 speaking roles in a cast that includes three best actor Oscar winners. Downey’s Strauss clashes repeatedly with Murphy’s Oppenheimer but also with his own aide (played by Alden Ehrenreich) and even with Albert Einstein (Tom Conti). Fueled by a potent mix of sincere conviction and petty grievance, he commands scene after scene of crowded public hearings, strategy sessions, and backroom machinations, but without the bemused pizzazz of his Marvel alter ego. Strauss may be a politically savvy survivor, but he’s also a black hole of personality who doesn’t so much fill a room as draw everyone into his own.

    As he had on his Marvel films, Downey relished the opportunity to stray from best-laid plans, carefully mapping out a scene with filmmakers and crew only to go rogue. “From a creative point of view, he came extraordinarily well prepared,” Nolan says. “It’s a very complicated part, and he had it absolutely down. And he also had a number of, I wouldn’t call them improvisations because a lot of it was very carefully planned, but he had a number of embellishments, things that he wanted to bring to the character, things that he wanted to try out.”

    Nolan and cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema would follow Downey in a room as he delivered monologues that stretched multiple pages.

    “I think he loved that freedom to move around the room and present himself with whatever energy he felt like: ‘Let’s try it again! Let’s try it a different way!’ ” Nolan says. “However heavy the 70-millimeter camera was, Hoyte would never get too tired. In a way, Robert was probably waiting for him to get tired, but he didn’t. So he was able to really thrash it out, really reach for something and stretch himself.”

    Joe and Anthony Russo, who directed Downey in three Marvel movies, describe the Downey method in similar terms: “When he’ll come back to set, Robert is famous for throwing the plan out the window and climbing on top of the couch and whatever, sort of going off-book,” Joe says. “He does this because he likes to surprise himself. He likes to keep things fresh. He lights up for that.”

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    Anthony Breznican

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  • Making That ’70s Movie: ‘The Holdovers’ DP on Recreating the Era

    Making That ’70s Movie: ‘The Holdovers’ DP on Recreating the Era

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    When cinematographer Eigil Bryld paired with director Alexander Payne on Focus Features’ Nov. 10 release The Holdovers, which is set at a New England boarding school in 1970, one of the first things the Sideways helmer emphasized was that he didn’t want it to “just look like a movie set the ’70s.” The DP clarifies, “He really wanted it to look and feel and sound like it was a movie that was actually made in the ’70s.”

    The Holdovers follows a curmudgeonly high school history teacher named Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti) who reluctantly remains on campus at the fictional boarding school Barton Academy during Christmas break. He forms unlikely bonds with a damaged but brainy student, Angus Tully (Dominic Sessa, in his feature debut), and the school’s grieving head cook, Mary Lamb (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), who has lost her son in Vietnam.

    Bryld and Payne turned to films from the period, including Hal Ashby’s The Last Detail and Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation, for inspiration. “We saw a lot of prints. We found a small cinema in Boston with a very eccentric projectionist who could get all these original prints from his friends. That subculture is very specific,” Bryld remembers, adding that he started with — but quickly abandoned — the intent to use ’70s tools and film stock, which wasn’t readily available. 

    “I was thinking, ‘What is it that I really love about that era?’ ” says Bryld. “There’s a sense of a spirit of the ’70s movies — breaking away from your studios. And all the DPs of the period that I really admired would push the film stock or they would do handheld or whatever. And then I started thinking, ‘That’s really what I should be going for.’ ”

    The Danish DP behind such films as 2008’s In Bruges, 2022’s Deep Water and this year’s rom-com No Hard Feelings tested both film and digital approaches and chose to shoot digitally with an ARRI Alexa. He also created a lookup table (a sort of blueprint for the color grading step) with colorist Joe Gawler. “He’s done a lot of Criterion restoration, so he really knows how the negative ages over time. So I thought, ‘Well, I’d rather build that into it.’ ”

    Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in the Alexander Payne film, which takes place at Christmas in 1970.

    Seacia Pavao / FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    They also used Panavision H series lenses, particularly a 55mm lens, to evoke a vintage portrait look. “They had really a sense of immediacy and intimacy,” the DP says of the lens choice. “A lot of the film is done on that because the film is ultimately, in one way, a lot of portraits.

    “It’s a movie about people who are forced into the frame together, and they don’t necessarily want to be in the same frame,” he adds. “They all have their own portrait. Sometimes they’re in the frame and there’s several people in the frame, but I still thought of it as individual portraits within a group photo.” As the trio become closer emotionally, the DP captures their burgeoning friendships with the camera. “Gradually over time, they come together more and more,” says Bryld. “And that was one arc we were looking for — how we would reflect that, how we framed it and where we put the camera.”

    The Holdovers was filmed in Boston and western Massachusetts at Deerfield Academy, which also happens to be the high school that Sessa attended (according to the DP, the actor stayed in his former dorm room during production). “He was amazing,” Bryld says. “I mean, they’re all great, but obviously Paul and Dominic carry the movie. Paul is a pleasure to work with. He also makes things seem very easy just because he’s so good. There was sort of a calmness that Alexander has and Paul has, that, I imagine, would’ve been incredibly comforting for Dominic.”

    Bryld also served as the film’s camera operator. “That’s where you should be as the DP,” he says. “You should be there, be able to look up and see what’s going on around you, but also create that little community around the camera. I think it’s incredibly important in working with the actors, that it’s familiar faces. It becomes a little bit of a dance between the camera and the actors … that is rarely something that’s put into words, but just something that has to be organic.” 

    This story first appeared in the Nov. 29 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • Transgender Drama ‘20,000 Species of Bees’ Leads Spain’s Goya Awards with 15 Nominations

    Transgender Drama ‘20,000 Species of Bees’ Leads Spain’s Goya Awards with 15 Nominations

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    Spanish director Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren’s debut feature, 20,000 Species of Bees, a touching and tender drama about an 8-year-old transgender child who begins to transition, is the front-runner for the 2024 Goya Awards, the Spanish film academy’s equivalent to the Oscars.

    The film, which won its young star Sofía Otero the Silver Bear for best performance in Berlin in February, picked up 15 nominations for the 2024 Goyas, including for best film and best director. Otero was oddly snubbed in the acting categories, though co-stars Ane Gabarain and Itziar Lazkano were nominated in the best supporting actress category, Martxelo Rubio received a best supporting actor nom, and Patricia López Arnaiz a Goya nomination for best actress.

    In its review of the film, The Hollywood Reporter called 20,000 Species of Bees a “moving chronicle of an 8-year-old’s gradual transitioning, and the effect it has on a family over their summer vacation [which] manages to be both timely and timeless, making its hot-button issue feel like part of a larger, spiritual cycle of life and loss.”

    The biggest movie, in terms of budget, to come out of Spain this year, J.A. Boyana’s Society of the Snow, picked up 13 Goya nominations, including for best picture and best director. The real-life thriller is a retelling of the fateful 1972 crash in the Andes of a charter flight from Uruguay and the harrowing ordeal of its survivors. A Netflix production, it is Spain’s official entry for the 2024 Oscars in the best international feature category.

    Other Goya best film contenders include Close Your Eyes, a moving homage to the power of cinema from master Spanish filmmaker Victor Erice, his first film in more than 30 years. The movie, which premiered in Cannes, received 10 Goya nominations. Un Amor, a psychosexual drama from veteran director Isabel Coixet (My Life Without Me, The Bookshop), picked up 7 nominations, including for best film, while Saben aquell, David Trueba’s biopic of legendary Spanish comedian Eugenio, received 10 noms.

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • 2023 Gotham Awards: Winners List (Updating Live)

    2023 Gotham Awards: Winners List (Updating Live)

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    The 2023 Gotham Awards are being presented at a star-studded ceremony at New York’s Cipriani Wall Street on Monday night.

    Going into the ceremony, Past Lives, A Thousand and One and All of Us Strangers are the leading film nominees, with Past Lives and A Thousand and One each scoring three nods, including in the top category of best feature. All of Us Strangers, though not up for best feature, is nominated for a leading four awards.

    Other best feature nominees are Passages, Reality and Showing Up.

    In the TV categories, Beef leads with three nominations, with Anne Rice’s Interview with The Vampire, I’m a Virgo, Swarm, A Small Light, The Last of Us, The English and Dead Ringers each scoring two nods.

    Since 2021, the Gotham Awards has recognized performers in gender-neutral categories.

    In addition to the competitive categories, the Gotham Awards is honoring a number of films with previously announced accolades: Killers of the Flower Moon is receiving the Gotham Historical Icon & Creator Tribute; Barbie is being recognized with the Global Icon & Creator Tribute; Ferrari received the Icon & Creator Tribute for Innovation; Rustin received the Cultural Icon & Creator Tribute for Social Justice; Air took home the Visionary Icon & Creator Tribute; and Maestro is receiving the Cultural Icon & Creator Tribute.

    Writer Alex Convery accepted on behalf of Air, noting, “The movie really is about knowing your worth and fighting for it, and this is something as artists we experienced firsthand as we walked the picket lines for over 200 days this summer. It was long and grueling, but we made it through and we showed the world that we know what we’re worth.”

    Adam Driver presented Ferrari director Michael Mann with his honor, telling a story about when Mann left his wallet in a 7-Eleven and rather than waiting at a red light to get back to the store, got out of his car and ran across a major L.A. intersection. “It actually was a moment where I felt I really saw Michael; if he does this with lost time on a wallet, how does it translate to being on a film set?” Driver said, explaining how the director “doesn’t want anything to get in the way of what he’s trying to do, including himself.” Mann dedicated the award to late Ferrari screenwriter Troy Kennedy Martin, saying, “He’s really the heart and the core of the innovation.”

    Gotham Award nominees are selected by committees of film and TV critics, journalists, festival programmers and film curators.

    Separate juries of writers, directors, actors, producers, editors and others directly involved in making films will determine the final award recipients.

    Recent Gotham Award winners have included Oscar winners Everything Everywhere All at Once, CODA, Nomadland, Marriage Story, American Factory, Moonlight, Spotlight and Birdman.

    A complete list of this year’s Gotham nominees follows. Winners will be noted as they’re announced live. Refresh for the latest.

    Best Feature

    Passages
    Ira Sachs, director; Saïd Ben Saïd, Michel Merkt, producers (MUBI)

    Past Lives
    Celine Song, director; David Hinojosa, Pamela Koffler, Christine Vachon, producers (A24)

    Reality
    Tina Satter, director; Brad Becker-Parton, Riva Marker, Greg Nobile, Noah Stahl, producers (HBO Films)

    Showing Up
    Kelly Reichardt, director; Neil Kopp, Vincent Savino, Anish Savjani, producers (A24)

    A Thousand and One
    A.V. Rockwell, director; Julia Lebedev, Rishi Rajani, Eddie Vaisman, Lena Waithe, Bred Weston, producers (Focus Features)

    Best International Feature

    All of Us Strangers
    Andrew Haigh, director; Graham Broadbent, Peter Czernin, Sarah Harvey, producers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Anatomy of a Fall
    Justine Triet, director; Marie-Ange Luciani, David Thion, producers (NEON)
    (WINNER)

    Poor Things
    Yorgos Lanthimos, director; Ed Guiney, Yorgos Lanthimos, Andrew Lowe, Emma Stone, producers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Tótem
    Lila Avilés, director; Lila Avilés, Tatiana Graullera, Louise Riousse, producers (Sideshow/Janus Films)

    The Zone of Interest
    Jonathan Glazer, director; Ewa Puszczynska, James Wilson, producers (A24)

    Best Documentary Feature

    20 Days in Mariupol
    Mstyslav Chernov, director; Raney Aronson-Rath, Mstyslav Chernov, Derl McCrudden, Michelle Mizner, producers (PBS Distribution)

    Against the Tide
    Sarvnik Kaur, director; Koval Bhatia, Sarvnik Kaur, producers (Snooker Club Films, A Little Anarky Films)

    Apolonia, Apolonia
    Lea Glob, director; Sidsel Lønvig Siersted, producer (Danish Documentary Production)

    Four Daughters
    Kaouther Ben Hania, director; Nadim Cheikhrouha, producer (Kino Lorber) (WINNER)

    Our Body
    Claire Simon, director; Kristina Larsen, producer (Cinema Guild)

    Breakthrough Director Award, Presented by Cadillac

    Raven Jackson, All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt (A24)

    Georgia Oakley, Blue Jean (Magnolia Pictures)

    Michelle Garza Cervera, Huesera (XYZ Films)

    Celine Song, Past Lives (A24)

    A.V. Rockwell, A Thousand and One (Focus Features)

    Best Screenplay

    All of Us Strangers, Andrew Haigh (Searchlight Pictures)

    Anatomy of a Fall, Justine Triet, Arthur Harari (NEON) (WINNER)

    May December, Samy Burch (Netflix)

    R.M.N., Cristian Mungiu (IFC Films)

    The Zone of Interest, Jonathan Glazer (A24)

    Outstanding Lead Performance

    Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Origin (NEON)

    Lily Gladstone, The Unknown Country (Music Box Films)

    Greta Lee, Past Lives (A24)

    Franz Rogowski, Passages (MUBI)

    Babetida Sadjo, Our Father, The Devil (Cineverse)

    Andrew Scott, All of Us Strangers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Cailee Spaeny, Priscilla (A24)

    Teyana Taylor, A Thousand and One (Focus Features)

    Michelle Williams, Showing Up (A24)

    Jeffrey Wright, American Fiction (Orion Pictures / Amazon MGM Studios)

    Outstanding Supporting Performance

    Juliette Binoche, The Taste of Things (IFC Films)

    Penélope Cruz, Ferrari (NEON)

    Jamie Foxx, They Cloned Tyrone (Netflix)

    Claire Foy, All of Us Strangers (Searchlight Films)

    Ryan Gosling, Barbie (Warner Bros. Pictures)

    Glenn Howerton, BlackBerry (IFC Films)

    Sandra Hüller, The Zone of Interest (A24)

    Rachel McAdams, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (Lionsgate)

    Charles Melton, May December (Netflix)

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph, The Holdovers (Focus Features)

    Breakthrough Series – Under 40 minutes

    Beef, Lee Sung Jin, creator; Ravi Nandan, Alli Reich, Jake Schreier, Ali Wong, Steven Yeun, executive producers (Netflix)

    High School, Clea DuVall, Sara Quin, Tegan Quin, creators; Clea Duvall, Dede Gardner, Laura Kittrell, Jeremy Kleiner, Sara Quin, Tegan Quin, Carina Sposato, executive producers (Amazon Freevee)

    I’m A Virgo, Boots Riley, creator; Tze Chun, Michael Ellenberg, Marcus Gardley, Carver Karaszewski, Jharrel Jerome, Boots Riley, Rebecca Rivo, Lindsey Springer, executive producers (Prime Video)

    Rain Dogs, Cash Carraway, creator; Cash Carraway, Sally Woodward Gentle, Lee Morris, executive producers (HBO | Max)

    Swarm, Donald Glover, Janine Nabers, creators; Ibra Ake, Donald Glover, Stephen Glover, Janine Nabers Jamal Olor, Steven Prinz, Michael Schaefer, Fam Udeorji, executive producers (Amazon Studios)

    Breakthrough Series – Over 40 minutes

    Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire
    Rolin Jones, creator; Mark Johnson, Rolin Jones, Anne Rice, Christopher Rice, Alan Taylor, executive producers (AMC)

    Dead Ringers
    Alice Birch, creator; Alice Birch, Anne Carey, Sean Durkin, Megan Ellison, Erica Kay, Ali Krug, Sue Naegle, Stacy O’Neil, David Robinson, James G. Robinson, Polly Stokes, Barbara Wall, Rachel Weisz, executive directors (Prime Video)

    The English
    Hugo Blick, creator; Hugo Blick, Emily Blunt, Greg Brenman, executive producers (Prime Video)

    The Last of Us
    Craig Mazin, Neil Druckmann, creators; Neil Druckmann, Craig Mazin, Rose Lam, Asad Qizilbash, Carolyn Strauss, Carter Swan, Evan Wells, executive producers; (HBO | Max)

    A Small Light
    Tony Phelan, Joan Rater, creator; Susanna Fogel, William Harper, Avi Nir, Tony Phelan, Joan Rater, Lisa Roos, Alon Shtruzman, Peter Traugott, executive producers (National Geographic)

    Telemarketers
    Adam Bhala Lough, Sam Lipman-Stern, directors; Nancy Abraham, Dani Bernfeld, David Gordon Green, Lisa Heller, Jody Hill, Brandon James, Sam Lipman-Stern, Adam Bhala Lough, Danny McBride, Tina Nguyen, Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie, Greg Stewart, executive producers (HBO | Max)

    Outstanding Performance in a New Series

    Jacob Anderson, Anne Rice’s Interview with The Vampire (AMC)

    Dominique Fishback, Swarm (Amazon Studios)

    Jharrel Jerome, I’m A Virgo (Prime Video)

    Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face (Peacock)

    Bel Powley, A Small Light (National Geographic)

    Bella Ramsey, The Last of Us (HBO | Max)

    Chaske Spencer, The English (Prime Video)

    Rachel Weisz, Dead Ringers ((Prime Video)

    Ali Wong, Beef (Netflix) (WINNER)

    Steven Yeun, Beef (Netflix)

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    Hilary Lewis

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  • Jeffrey Wright on ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Rustin,’ and the Most Personal Role He’s Played Yet

    Jeffrey Wright on ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Rustin,’ and the Most Personal Role He’s Played Yet

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    “People don’t very often go out looking for a ‘Jeffrey Wright type,’ you know?” says Jeffrey Wright with a laugh. “There’s not a lot of films that are written for a Jeffrey Wright type, so I have to sometimes do a little morphing.”  

    He’s won a Tony and an Emmy, and has starred in everything from Angels in America to Westworld, but Wright had never encountered anything quite like American Fiction—a movie that really did call for a Jeffrey Wright type. The film, written and directed by Cord Jefferson and adapted from Percival Everett’s novel Erasure, centers on Monk, a down-on-his-luck Black novelist who stumbles into commercial success when he glibly writes a novel that trades in what he considers to be the basest of stereotypes about Black people. “When I was still reading Erasure, I started reading Monk’s lines in Jeffrey’s voice,” Jefferson told Vanity Fair earlier this year. “I started thinking of Jeffrey when I started imagining the scenes.”

    On this week’s Little Gold Men (listen or read below), Wright drops by to chat about starring in American Fiction and tackling a role that’s perhaps closer to him than any other part he’s encountered in his 30-plus years as an actor. “I think this film and this character is more personal for me than any other role that I’ve done, maybe aside from Basquiat,” he says. “This role is probably more similar to who I am than any other role that I have ever played. It didn’t require a lot of alterations. It really just required more emerging and a kind of synthesis of the internal.”

    Wright was more concerned with the external when tackling the titan Adam Clayton Powell Jr. for Netflix’s Rustin. Directed by Wright’s longtime collaborator George C. Wolfe, Rustin stars Colman Domingo as Bayard Rustin, the queer civil rights activist and organizer of the March on Washington, and features Wright in a rather adversarial role as Powell, a pastor and the first African American to represent New York in Congress. Wright was meticulous about capturing Powell Jr., down to the accuracy of his birthmarks. “Powell had these two moles on his cheek,” he said. “So if you want to play Powell, let’s play Powell. Come on.”

    On Little Gold Men, Wright expounds on “the sandwich years,” the lengths to which he’s gone to avoid being pigeonholed in Hollywood, and the extremely personal process that was making American Fiction.

    Vanity Fair: How did you get involved with the project? Were you familiar with the source material, Erasure by Percival Everett? 

    Jeffrey Wright: I hadn’t read the book. I read the book late in the process. I was drawn to the words on the page—that’s usually what kind of catches me first. It was clear that Cord was a sharp thinker and a great writer. He hadn’t directed before, but it was clear from the script that he knew his way around story. What drew me in more so than kind of this sharp satire and social commentary was the story of this man and his relationship to family and to love. 

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Inside Vanessa Kirby’s Mercurial, Darkly Funny Take on Napoleon’s Joséphine

    Inside Vanessa Kirby’s Mercurial, Darkly Funny Take on Napoleon’s Joséphine

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    The strangest thing about watching Napoleon, particularly the scenes between the eponymous French emperor and his first wife, Joséphine de Beauharnais, is that you quickly realize you’re watching a very dark comedy. That’s in part a credit to director Ridley Scott, who brings an absurdist sensibility to the bizarre power dynamics between one of history’s most notorious war commanders and his mercurial empress. But the tone is ultimately sold by the chaotic, boiling chemistry between their portrayers, Joaquin Phoenix and Vanessa Kirby.

    Kirby especially goes in directions you don’t expect. Her performance is impossible to pin down, a marvel of emotional contradictions and compelling resoluteness. In her unyielding stare and poise, it’s easy to understand how she’s slowly driving the world’s most powerful man completely mad. And in the relationship’s more intense, painful, and even traumatic moments, Kirby imbues Joséphine with a subtle empathy, a lifetime of experiences registering across a nervous flicker in the eye.

    With Napoleon in theaters this Thanksgiving weekend, the Oscar- and Emmy-nominated Kirby (Pieces of a Woman, The Crown) joined Little Gold Men for an in-depth conversation about building the most enigmatic character of her screen career. Read on below, and stay tuned for Thursday’s episode.

    Aidan Monaghan

    Vanity Fair: There’s a fascinating power differential between Napoleon and Joséphine. When you go into a movie called Napoleon, about Napoleon, you’re expecting this epic portrait of this brutal war general, and instead, in your scenes, you get this portrait of this really resolute woman and this very insecure, at times very strange man. How did you approach it?

    Vanessa Kirby: We both felt it was one of the most fascinating, contradictory, and complex relationships we’d ever come across. [Laughs] I urge anyone to go in and explore it more. His letters, for example, even as a starting point—it’s unbelievable that you have this, as you say, military general who’s out there on the battlefield, instigating war and conquering land, and then rushing back to his tent to write these letters, which almost feel adolescent in their obsessive-compulsive nature. He wrote to her nearly every day, and she didn’t write him back in the early days at all.

    Looking at their decades-long relationship—how dependent they were on each other; codependent, really—we felt the power shifts within it, the need to possess, [less] a maturing and more a fusing with each other and a need. In any relationship where there’s extreme need and there’s something unhealed in them as individuals when they come together, there’s inevitably going to be something that’s naturally volatile.

    You’ve talked about the openness you had with Joaquin to let loose and go off from what was on the script. I believe the slap in the movie, for instance, was improvised. How did that dynamic between you as actors develop?

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    David Canfield

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  • Matt Bomer Takes His Dark, Sexy Turn: “I Got to Be the Bad Boy”

    Matt Bomer Takes His Dark, Sexy Turn: “I Got to Be the Bad Boy”

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    Fellow Travelers marks Bomer’s first executive producer credit, and only his second producing credit to date; his first came for the latter years of White Collar, which ended nearly a decade ago. What binds those two roles, arguably his most notable onscreen thus far, is the embodiment of deception. In White Collar, a snappy procedural, Bomer played a con artist who lends his unparalleled skills in illegal maneuvering to the FBI. You believe he’s a career criminal because Bomer can sell it with a smirk.

    When the show ended, Bomer was newly out in the industry and realizing his place in it was changing. If a certain kind of leading-man lane had closed to him, his collaborations with the likes of Steven Soderbergh (Magic Mike) and Ryan Murphy (The Boys in the Band) opened up a more fruitful path. “I can’t look back in anger,” he says. A project like Fellow Travelers weighs on him because of what it took even for him to nab to such a juicy part. “I want more queer actors to have opportunities to play roles like this and to be trusted with roles like this,” he says. “I’d be lying to you if I said that wasn’t in the back of my mind.”

    Aside from some voice work, a cameo in the latest Magic Mike movie, and most significantly the acclaimed Murphy-produced adaptation of The Boys in the Band, Maestro is Bomer’s only movie since 2018. His first days in production took place at the music venue of Tanglewood, where the legendary conductor Leonard Bernstein, portrayed in the film by Cooper, performed and taught throughout his life. (Bomer plays the clarinetist David Oppenheim, one of Bernstein’s lovers.) In the Massachusetts woods, he was rehearsing for Cooper, also the director, while producer Steven Spielberg hung around, spontaneously filming Bomer on his own personal camera. “I thought, Oh, my God, it’s like two of my heroes in the same room. How do I do this?’” Bomer recalls. “With Bradley, I felt like I was working with Cassavetes and Orson Welles at the same time.”

    Now a significant Oscar contender for Netflix, Maestro represents another breakthrough for Bomer. He filmed it just before Fellow Travelers and found watching Cooper inhabit Bernstein across different eras impact the way he approached the Showtime limited series: “Watching him jump through all the time periods, I thought, Oh, wow. Okay. You can do this.” He had to go back and forth between Fellow Travelers and reshoots of Maestro in the fall. His head was spinning.

    Not that you’d ever witness the chaos on camera. In Maestro, too, Bomer is cool, collected, and commanding. He sees both Oppenheim and Travelers’ Hawk as people who “did what they had to do.” He sees himself that way, in fact. “When I was first breaking into the business, I did what I had to do to try to get roles,” he says. “And then at a certain point, I hit the fuck-it button.” Maybe so—that unburdening is evident in his rich recent work. But it’s no secret that Bomer is a master of appearances. He’s played suave liars for most of his career; he’s learned exactly what to give to the camera and when.

    In an upcoming episode of Fellow Travelers, Hawk and his new bride, played by Allison Williams, prepare to have sex. Filming of the scene, as always, began with the director calling action. In character, Bomer then reached up and gently pushed Williams’s hair back. The improvised move seemed like a simple, tender, loving gesture—but its function was sneakily practical. The episode’s director, Uta Briesewitz, whispered to Nyswaner, who was beside her at the monitor, “He just cleared her profile.” Bomer knew Williams’s hair was blocking her face. He didn’t ignore it or restart to get through the take; he instead managed to fix the shot’s composition while simultaneously enhancing its mood—and all as if he weren’t doing a thing. “That’s who Matt is,” Nyswaner says. “He’s so aware.”


    Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.

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    David Canfield

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