This week on the NPR Politics Podcast, President Trump has never been more unpopular, and the midterms are now less than six months away. So the intensity of opposition that's waiting for a lot of these Republican candidates in a general election is very, very high. The politics of a wartime economy this week on the NPR Politics Podcast, listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. From WHY in Philadelphia, this is Fresh Year Weekend, I'm Tanya Mosley.
Today, Ethan Hawke. He stars in the new movie, Blue Moon, about lyricist Lorenz Hart, half of the Broadway duo Rogers and Hart. Hawke also appears in the new streaming series, The Lowdown. Now 55, he's been making movies since he was 13.
And sometimes he says he forgets just how old he is. Now I'll be sent a script and it says, Billy, age 19, skateboarding down the street, and I always think, oh that's my part. It takes me a while to realize, oh, Billy's father, age 55, gruff and I've been around the edge of my... Oh, that's me.
Also, we hear from actor and director Tim Robbins. He reflects on 30 years of making films, and why he believes live theater can sometimes speak to us in more profound ways than film can. I know that as a child, when I saw something transformative, something that blew my mind, I can still remember those plays. That's the power that theater has.
It can actually transform a consciousness. That's coming up on Fresh Air Weekend. This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tanya Mosley.
Here's Terry with our first interview. My guest Ethan Hawke stars in two new movies. In Blue Moon, he plays lyricist Lorenz Hart. In the horror film Black Phone 2, he's a serial killer who dies and becomes a spirit and he haunts people's dreams.
Let's start with a clip from Blue Moon, directed by Richard Linklater. It's set on the night of the opening of Oklahoma, the first musical that hearts long-time songwriting partner Richard Rogers wrote with another lyricist, Oscar Hammerstein. There's an after-party at Sartis where theater people would go on opening night and wait till the reviews came out. Hart gets there first and talks with the bartender, feeling he's become insignificant because he was abandoned by Rogers, and he's complaining about how false and sentimental Oklahoma is.
Rogers had moved on because Hart had been drinking too much and was no longer a reliable partner. Hart claims to have become sober, but he ends up drinking a lot at Sartis. In this scene, after Rogers arrives, he talks with Hart. Hart's trying to convince Rogers to collaborate on a satirical musical about Marco Polo.
Rogers is played by Andrew Scott. Ethan Hawke as Hart speaks first. can do something so much more emotionally complicated. We don't have to pander to what's wrong with it.
Are they a pandering? What do they say? I love to believe. White Christmas?
I don't believe white Christmas. Well, maybe audiences have changed. They still love to laugh, but not in that way. In your way.
They want to laugh, but they also want to cry. They want to feel. Ethan Hock, welcome to Fresh Air. And congratulations on all the new work you've been doing.
I've been really enjoying it. You said that making Blue Moon stretched you and the director Richard Linklater to the boundaries of your abilities. What made it so hard for you and so different? Well, first off, I guess the emotional complexity.
I mean, there's the verbiage. The Larry Hart is at this opening night party. And it's kind of like he feels if he ever stops talking, he's going to be shot and killed. And so he just cannot stop talking.
So there was the amount of text I had to learn. But there's the complication. He's incredibly, what is it? It's called the correlation of opposites.
He's two things simultaneously all the time. He is incredibly jealous. And he's incredibly happy and proud of his friend. He's gay and in love with a woman.
He's the most diminutive, smallest person in the room. And he's the biggest personality in the room. The whole experience of making it, I felt I was being asked to play two things at the same time, which is, of course, why I want to do it. It was wonderful.
And it was like the way real people are. But it's challenging. Every now and then you do, you bump up against a part that presses you to the wall of your ability. And you know you can never be as good as the part is demanding of you.
And that's a kind of thrilling spot to be in. So you're playing someone who thinks that their height, their hair, makes them really ugly and unappealing. Plus he's gay and he has to hide that from the public. Well, it's legal in 1943.
He does have to hide it. No, absolutely, right, right. So in a way, talking all the time is a distraction from all the things that he thinks are unappealing about him. And he's also very short.
I think he's like five feet or under. You're pretty tall. And you had to have a comb over for it, which is literally not attractive. So you had to feel very much not like yourself.
Well, it was interesting. I was being directed by a man who's directed me. And this is our ninth film collaboration. So he knows every trick in my toolbox.
And he was really asking me to disappear. He wanted me to be Larry Hart. And so even the man has spent years of his life editing my performances. So anytime he would see me, he would say, I saw you.
I saw you. And he was. I saw you Ethan Hawken on their heart. And not Larry.
And so the physical things are kind of easy. They're superficial, ultimately, if they don't unlock the soul of the man. Anybody can shave their head and do a comb over. But it was really the soul of a person who was loathing themselves.
And at the same time, thinks they're smarter than everybody else. And his intellect is his only power. His pride in his work is his only self-worth. And that is being stripped for him on this night.
I mean, imagine if you only worked with one other person for 25 years and you achieved incredible heights, and this person now doesn't want to work with you anymore. So it's truly heartbreaking for him. Because I think he's smart enough to know that the world is changing. We're in the middle of the war.
The jazz age is being left behind. Something new is happening. And he's not going to be a part of it. And he feels a titanic plate shifting, and he's being sent away to Antarctica or something.
And that's what I think he feels. So I'm under five feet tall. And I might be shorter than he was. So how to play somebody short and having to look up at people.
What did you learn about my life at my height? The world is so stupid in the way that it imagines power and intelligence and grace. And tall and handsome, tall, equating power, tall, equating authority. It doesn't.
Beauty is as beauty does. We all know this. It was as a male. I think it's even more different.
Because I remember there was a man who was really helping me with the height and how to achieve it. We were kind of trying to do it with old-school stagecraft. And he had built a floor that he could put his feet through. And then where his shoes on his shoes, he really appeared a foot shorter than he did.
And his wife, who they've been together for decades, came to him and was looking at him. She's, wow, if you were this tall, I wouldn't love you. It was really a heartbreaking experience for him. That he really wanted to share with me.
It confused him deeply about what we associate as sexuality, what we associate with strength. And it did unlock for me just even all my normal ways of flirting up all these scenes with Margaret Qualley, who's a beautiful young woman. And she would just giggle at everything I say and pat me on top of the head. And it was extremely patronizing.
And you had to find a different set of tools to get her attention. So I don't know that I could speak intelligently about it, but I could feel it in my guts. We're listening to Terry's interview with Ethan Hawke, who stars in the new movie, Blue Moon, about lyricist Lauren's heart, and also stars in the new streaming series, The Low Down. We'll hear more of their conversation after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Year Weekend. So you've played at least two brilliant but self-destructive artists, Jet Baker, the great jazz trumpeter and singer, who had several addictions. And Larry Hart, who died of complications from drinking way too much. It's not uncommon for talented artists.
Oh, and River Phoenix, who you work with, Taito and Overdose. Philip Seymour Hoffman. Oh, and Philip Seymour Hoffman. Yes, right.
It's not uncommon for talented artists to have a self-destructive side or a need for the kind of medication that they believe the addiction provides for. Do you feel like you understand why those two things so often go together? Well, first off, I think issues of addiction are complicating and destroying so much of society. And so many people are in pain.
And these are painkillers. And I think the artistic community, to be driven to create usually is motivated by some sensitivity and extreme sensitivity. I have seen it my whole life. You mentioned River, and that was extremely complex and upsetting thing that happened in my early 20s, his passing.
And then Middle Age brings its own demons, which happened to my friend Phil. And I think part of my collaboration with Rick and part of why I love working with Richard Linkletters, he has so much joy in his life. And when I was young and becoming friends with him, he was one of the first artists I met who really didn't see self-destruction as a romantic well to draw from. He had so much joy and love of life.
But I do enjoy playing these parts because I do understand it. I grew up with so many men of the theater who were in so much pain. And they were some of the most ferocious, and intelligent, and kind, and good people that were full of so much self-loathing. And when I first read the script, I was desperate to play this guy.
You're very hard. Yeah. So, River Phoenix, you made your first movie with him, the explorers. So he died at age 23 and 1993 of an OD of morphine and cocaine.
Was that a warning for you? Like, don't touch this stuff? Were you ever seduced by the relief of addictive drugs? I don't know what flashes through my mind is when River and I were doing the explorers.
We both love James Dean. James Dean smoked a camon-filtered cigarettes, and we thought it would be cool to go out, and we stole a pack of camon filters and went out in this field, and some oak-free of them. And River turned green, and he vomited. And when he passed, I thought about that moment that we all have different bodies, and some of us can press the limit, and our bodies can handle it, and we can learn from it.
And we can tell us, turn green, and River was very sensitive, extremely sensitive, and it's part of his genius. I don't know. Does that make sense to you? Trying to communicate that?
Yes. And some of us get second chances, and some of us are DNA-as-hardwired to protect ourselves, and some people don't have those guardrails. And I don't understand it, and I know that the answer is you have to know yourself. And yes, to your question, was it a warning?
Of course it was a warning. But we all get warnings. And I sometimes think a lot of it is accident, and I wish, I remember when we were 23, I felt that we had lived. And now here I am, and I've lived twice as long as River.
River didn't get to be a dad, and River didn't get to have the experiences of the rollercoaster ride of the ups and downs of a profession. I almost feel sadder about his death now, because I would love to see him. I'd love to see what he thinks now. He was such a political young man, and he was such an idealist.
I would love to see what that looked like at 55. And I would love to see the artist that he would be, an art he would have made. I can't believe that Phil's gone. The life of why I act sometimes is to impress those two men that I was friends with.
You know what I mean? I think about them all the time when I'm performing, because they were the gauge by which I judged myself, and they still are. I want to ask you about time. The film Boyhood was shot, directed by Richard Linklater, who just directed you on Blue Moon, was shot over 12 years.
And as this family age, as the children and the divorce parents age, the actors age. So that was a long-term commitment. Blue Moon takes place on one evening. It's practically shot in real time.
So making movies that play with time like that, especially Boyhood over 12 years, I'm wondering if that has shaped your understanding of time, what time means to you. It has so much and you're not even mentioning the before trilogy, which is shot over 18 years. Oh, yes, no, that's right. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And each movie was separated by a few years. Nine years, yeah. I think it's part of the hook of Linklater and I's friendship as we both have an obsession with it. Think about it all the time.
It's omnipresent in our awareness. And I think that acting, did Poets of Society came out and I started being sent scripts on 18, 19 years old. And now I'll be sent a script and it says, Billy, age 19, skateboarding down the street. And I always think, oh, that's my part.
It's just the way I read Scripps. It takes me a while to realize, oh, Billy's father, age 55, gruff and other around the edge, I'm like, oh, that's me. I'm forced always to look at that. I remember watching the first screening of Boyhood with Patricia Arquette and I was sitting next to each other.
She talks with you. Yeah, and she leans over to me and says, wow, they're growing up and we're aging. And it's funny, I don't know where that turn happens where we stop thinking of ourselves as growing. But acting forces you to be aware of time.
Cinema naturally does it. The stories I gravitate to, particularly in the films with Richard Linklater, seem to be, I often think, father time is the main character of all the films we've done together. So how is getting older affecting a relationship with the passage of time? Well, you're just hitting me with some real lightweight questions.
Yeah, you're welcome. Well, it's arresting for anybody. I think when you get over the age of 50, it is I feel it very powerfully. I feel a desire to work.
I don't know if you feel that, but I feel I'm aware of how much of the road has already been walked and I'm very conscious of I find myself often thinking, how old was Jeff Bridges when he did True Grid? Am I older than him now? Am I younger than him? How old was Peter Weir when he directed Dead Poets of Saddy?
I'm older than he was now. I thought he was an old man. I'm very aware of how many more years I might have to contribute and I don't like wasting time anymore. I'm very aware of how many people mentored me and cared for me.
Am I doing that for others? Am I meeting my responsibilities as a citizen? Those questions are on my mind all the time. Then there's this other voice which is, am I enjoying my life?
Mm-hmm. And I do want to enjoy it too. And how much of this work that I'm obsessed with is eroding at my sense of play and joy and spontaneity and living and being in the moment. And it is strange for the older you get I have no awareness of wisdom.
I only have awareness of how many things I thought I understood that I don't understand and more questions come in the door. I want to talk with you about the lowdown. I'm really enjoying this. And you play an investigative journalist for a kind of underground paper.
I can't remember whether you correct the person. Long form magazine. Long form magazine. Yes.
He calls it a paper and you say no it's a long form magazine. And you are very, very eccentric. You investigate power and corruption in Tulsa where this is set. And you also break all the rules of journalism.
You get beaten up a lot. And I'm like the tough guys in a lot of hard-boiled film noir and novels. When you get beaten up you hurt. Yeah.
I'm crying. I cry. Yeah. And so I want to play a short scene.
This is toward the beginning of the first episode. So you're investigating a powerful wealthy guy who runs an investment company. He's been buying up a lot of black owned businesses and you're wondering like what's this about? Tracy let's play as that guy.
You've walked into his office dressed way too casually for a meeting like this. And you start looking around the room picking up things, examining them, sniffing the carafe of brandy and being intentionally sarcastic and rude. So let's pick it up with the clip. Nice to meet you in person.
We do have a lot of other business. Yes. I'm sure you do. This place is so fancy.
I've never even been back here. Yeah, just some of the perks. You know, I should have gone in the investment firm business instead of rare books. But Laura, sure it was too.
Right? Or some kind of writer. I'm a truth story. Sorry, say again?
I am a Tulsa truth story. A truth story. What exactly is it? I read stuff.
I read stuff. I read stuff. I drive around. And I find stuff.
Then I write about stuff. Some people care. People say that I am obsessed with the truth. How about that?
So Ethan Hawke, the series is inspired by film noir, but it's also kind of a satire of the genre. Your character talks tough, but as I said, getting beaten up a lot. Are you a fan of noir novels, you know, hard-boiled novels or film noir? I am.
I love it. I mean, I'll never forget the first time I saw Chinatown or the long goodbye or the big Lebowski for that matter or some of the other Philip Marlowe Bogart. You know, I love all that stuff. And you know, one of the things I love about genre films is you can use the genre to be entertaining and you can fill the story up with substance and message and ideas, but it's still entertaining because you're inside the genre.
So what was your take on this character? Like what did you model him on? I loved this character. It's been a funny year for me because Blue Moon is probably the most different I've ever pushed myself outside the framework of my own identity.
And then the lowdown is I just, I just relate to Lee. He's keyo-tate chasing windmills and running into propellers. He's a dreamer and an idealist and self-centered and doesn't see his own blind spots and he's more on and I just completely relate to him. And he can say the right thing all the time and do the wrong thing all the time.
And out of that, obviously comes a lot of humor. I kind of saw Lee as a guy who was frozen in 1996 or something. I'm still wearing the same pants I wore back then. I got the same bellbuckle I wore back then.
He still listened to the same music he listened to back then. And I admire him. And I also identify with his shortcomings. And Sterling is really fun to work with.
I had a great time on reservation dogs. We got along like a house on fire. And I can't remember a time I just ran with the character like I did with this one. Ethan Hawke has just been great to talk with you.
Thank you so much. And again, congratulations on all the work you've been doing so many good things. I'm tired after all the questions you guys. I love your show and I love NPR and I really appreciate what you guys do.
I'm thrilled to be on your program. So thanks for having me. Oh, thank you for saying that. It's so great to have you.
After Ethan Hawke speaking with Terry Gross, he stars in the new movie Blue Moon about lyricist Lorenz Hart and also stars in the new streaming series The Lowdown. Four years after their Oscar-nominated comedy, The Worst Person in the World, the Danish born Norwegian director Yul Kim Trier and actor Renata Ritesvay are together on a new drama that's sentimental value. The movie, which also features Stella and Skarsgard and Elle Fanning, won the Grand Prix at this year's Cannes Film Festival and will represent Norway and this year's Oscar race for Best International Feature. Our film critic Justin Chang has this review.
Few filmmakers are as attuned as Yul Kim Trier to the inner lives of young people. In superb movies like Repris, Oslo August 31, and The Worst Person in the World, he has probed the artistic dreams and frustrated desires of characters trying and often failing to figure out who they are. Trier's thoughtfulness is apparent, even in his more middling films like the Jesse Eisenberg drama, Lauda Vimboms, and the Supernatural Thriller Thelma, both of which were keyed in to the profound ways our families can mess us up. Complicated parent-child relationships are also at the heart of sentimental value, a new drama that many have hailed as Trier's best movie to date.
But I've seen the film twice now, and although it's thoughtfully crafted and well-acted, it strikes me as one of Trier's lesser efforts, the kind of lofty, self-consciously mature work that often gets more praise than its richer, livelier predecessors. Renata Ritesvay, the radiant star of The Worst Person in the World, here plays Nora, an accomplished stage actor whose mother has recently died. As she grieves with her younger sister, Agnes, wonderfully played by Inga Ibs' daughter, Lilius, Nora must deal with the return of their longest-ranged father, Gustav, played by Stohan Skarsgard. Gustav, a film director of some note, abandoned the family when the girls were still young.
Now years later, he surprises Nora by presenting her with a new script and asking her to play the lead role. Nora turns him down, and so Gustav casts a Hollywood star, Rachel Kemp, played by El Fanning. Gustav's movie is being financed by Netflix, which allows Trier to introduce some delectable film industry satire. Rachel is game and loves Gustav's work, but she's clearly ill at ease with the material, partly because she isn't Norwegian, and partly because the character seems based on Gustav's mother, who died tragically when he was just a boy.
In this scene, Rachel meets with Nora, hoping to gain more insight into not only the role, but also Gustav's family dynamics. I didn't want to do the role. I can't work with him. Why?
We can't really talk. But he wanted you to do it. Yeah. Yeah.
I don't know. I can't get a handle on her, you know. The more that I study her, the more lost I feel trying to be her. It's like her sadness is such an overwhelming part of her.
In this scene and many others, Trier directs us to pay attention to his actors' shifting expressions and silences, all the points at things they leave unsaid. When Nora has an unexplained attack of stage fright on the opening night of her play, we wonder if it's rooted in a certain ambivalence about acting, a profession that connects her to her father, whether she likes it or not. sadness and Gustav get along better, possibly because she starred in one of his films when she was a young girl, a brief bonding experience that her sister never had. Gustav, it seems, is the kind of father who can only parent through a camera lens.
It's bittersweet that he treats Rachel with a paternal warmth that he seldom shows his own daughters. In the uniformly strong cast, I like fanning the best. Her character has a bracing and very American directness that cuts through all the rye Nordic reserve. Trier clearly respects the audience's intelligence, which earns our respect in return.
But for every sensitive, perceptive moment in sentimental value, there's another that feels coy, even complacent. Trier and his regular co-writer, Esquivote, seem strangely curious about their character's art. I wanted to see more of Nora's acting, and to hear more of Gustav's script. In lieu of this, the movie floats a lot of wispy notions about how art and life converge.
Even when artists turn out to be lousy parents, it suggests art itself can be a vessel for reconciliation and healing. This idea is not exactly the stuff of revelation, and the movie basically rubbersstamps it without developing or dramatizing it anew. A big part of the story involves the beloved family house where Nora and Agnes grew up, and which Gustav wants to use as the shooting location for his new film. We're meant to see that our homes become repositories of memory, filled with the ghosts of generations past.
But there's something a little precious about these themes, just as there's something pat and predictable about the way the drama resolves. In building toward a redemptive ending, sentimental value lets everyone off the hook too easily, especially Gustav. You can't blame Scarsgard, who plays the role with his typically irresistible, irascible charm. But it's hard not to feel that Trier, in indulging this character, is favoring the priorities of art over the tougher questions of life.
Justin Chang is a film critic for The New Yorker. Coming up, we hear from Academy Award-winning actor and director Tim Robbins. I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air Weekend. This is Fresh Air Weekend.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and my guest today is Tim Robbins, Academy Award-winning actor, director, and founder of the Actors Gang, a theatre company he started in Los Angeles back in 1981 with a group of fellow UCLA students. We sat down in October, and Shabuegan, Wisconsin, after a live performance of his new play, Topsy Turvy, at the Kohler Art Center. Shabuegan itself is a small lakeside city right next to Kohler, a place with a rich art scene. The performance was part of the city's first film festival, which wrapped with a 30th anniversary screening of Dead Man Walking, the second film Robbins directed.
Topsy Turvy is about a chorus that's lost its ability to sing together after the pandemic's long isolation, a metaphor that hits uncomfortably close to home for many. In a way, it connects to what Robbins has explored for more than 40 years, impossible reconciliations between people with opposing beliefs, between guilt and redemption, between isolation and connection. From the Shawshank Redemption to Bob Roberts to his prison theatre work with the Actors Gang, he circles around one question, how do we find harmony when we've forgotten how to listen? Robbins and I talked about why he's taking an experimental play on the road instead of making another prestige TV show, and I asked him about how the COVID lockdown and the isolation that followed affected him.
Here's our conversation. Well, in many ways, the lockdown was illuminating to me things that I had held sacred or had held as truths were challenged during that time. And what it made me do was it made me question myself and question what my beliefs are. And I think that's a very healthy thing.
As a writer, I need to do that all the time. As an actor, I have to do that. So drama is about finding the complexities and the conflicts that we all have within ourselves. I think that's the way to approach these discussions about society at large.
When you're dealing with them in a play or in a movie, you have to give respect to the other side. So for your writing process, how does the idea of the chorus, because Topsie Turvey, they're a chorus, this collective voice help us think about the division. What was it about that particular way of being able to tell the story that you felt was a way to be able to get at that division? So just a reminder that in Greek theatre, which was kind of the start of what we think of as Western theatre, the purpose of these plays that they did, both comedies and dramas, were to involve the citizenry in a dialogue with the gods.
So the citizenry in those plays were represented by the chorus. And the chorus would have a big dilemma. And the dilemma usually had something to do with something that had happened recently in Athens or in Greece. And what we were seeing on stage was a way for the society to look at what had just happened and be able to explore that, ask questions about it, and see the story told through the dialogue between the chorus and the gods.
And I felt the subject matter of those plays, recent wars that had taken a lot of lives, plagues, different conflicts within the societies, I felt that this was such a unique and extraordinary time that we were living in, that it was up at that level of Greek tragedy and Greek comedy. The degree to which this whole world locked down, this has never happened in human history before. The coordinated locking down of societies throughout the world. I was seeing this develop, I was like, there's got to be one country that just says, we're not doing this.
I just was blown away, but it had this kind of coordinated unanimity and that scared me a little bit. And I was like, well, what is this really about? What is this about? So those questions led me to ask those questions in the play, using the chorus as a means to figure out these people who love singing together at the beginning of the play, they sound beautiful, and then they are told to have to separate.
So how does a chorus harmonize when they are kept from each other? I'm just curious, Tim. I mean, you're an Oscar winner. You can do anything.
You could be in movies. You've done prestige television. What is it about playing in 100-seat theaters and devoting your time to it? What do you think it is about the theater to be able to articulate the story that you're telling in Topsy Turvy that can't really be told anywhere else?
I have complete freedom. And I've always, from the very start, held that to be the most important thing. We started the actors gang out of UCLA in 1982. And when you say we?
I'm talking about eight or nine young punk rock infused actors that just wanted to make some noise and have fun and tell stories. And we did this play called Oubuwa, Oubu the King. This was the first play we did. And we did it in this dark street in Hollywood at midnight on Fridays and Saturdays.
And it was a big success. And it told us that we have this great opportunity and we started doing other plays. Around the same time I started getting work. And I had financed Oubu the King on my salary from delivering pizzas in Beverly Hills.
If you're going to deliver pizzas by the way. That's the place. Good tips. Yeah.
And so then I started working and I realized, oh well, I can fund the next play with this one paycheck. And so I started this kind of dance. And my agents hated it because they're trying to build momentum. And I would say to them, well, I'm happy to work through this time.
And then I'm going to do a play. And they're like, oh, Broadway? I'm like, no, no, I've got this theater company and we're going to do this thing. So I need like three months free, four months free.
And what happened was my perspective was one of use that great gift that you're getting from working in TV episodics and sitcoms and make art with that. So this continued for the past 43 years. Let's go back to a young Tim Robbins. Is it true that you started acting with a street theater group at 12?
First off, how does a 12-year-old find a live theater group on the street? Like, how did that happen? So my sister Adele, who was in the play, so she was working as a stage manager at this place called the Theater for the New City. And they were doing weird theater.
This is like late 60s, early 70s, Greenwich Village. There were plays with nude people in them. And so I got kind of interested in what she was doing. The party did it.
And so Crystal Field, who ran that theater company and still runs it to this day, invited me to be in a play called Undercover Cop. And I was to play a gang member. And it was this kind of satire about what was going on in New York City at the time. And I found myself acting on the streets of New York.
And what that meant was that they would pack a truck with four by eight platforms raised up about two feet, which was the stage. A couple iron bars that held a backdrop and a truck that had all the costumes in it. So we would go to a different neighborhood every Saturday and Sunday and then, amongst August, and set up our stage, set up an audience area, do a little parade in the neighborhood to get more audience, and then do this play for 45 minutes to an hour. What was the reception like?
Do you remember how people received you? Well, you understand. Most of these people are seeing theater for the very first time. We're not going to wealthy neighborhoods.
We're going to all kinds of neighborhoods in New York. And the reception was always great. What one thing those audiences didn't have was the filter that you learned when you go to theater a lot. So there was an awful lot of talking back.
More on response. Was it kind of like a call-in response, though? Which is great. And by the way, you learned very quickly that that's a reality you have to deal with.
Not only that, but you have to deal with Mama up for flights, yelling for her kids, or someone yelling, or some guy that's drugged out who's just wandering onto the stage all of a sudden. And he's there and he's like, oh, what's he doing? We have one scene where George Britannia, who plays this guy named Doggafine, and he's a thief. And he grabs one of the characters on stage's purse and runs away.
We had three guys chasing him. He's one of the best I've ever seen him run. He comes backstage and we're all like, no, no, it's just the play. It's just the play.
They were ready to kick his ass. It was so funny. Those were some really good lessons for you as an actor, as a performer. Yes.
And I didn't learn until much later how rooted the street theater of that theater city was in the Commeti del Arte, which is what that was. Back in the 15th and 16th century, it was basically street theater. They wouldn't do Commeti del Arte plays in fancy theaters. They would do them in a public square.
And they were itinerant companies. They would do their show. They'd pack up and they'd go to the next town. And so I've done a lot of exploration into that whole world of Commeti del Arte since and have come to understand how vital and art form it was because they were telling stories that were absolutely relevant to the world around them at the time.
I know this about theater. I know that as a child, when I saw something transformative, something that blew my mind, I can still remember those plays. They're still with me. That's the power that theater has.
It can actually transform a consciousness. It can change an opinion. It can illuminate a truth that in an immediate way, not in a manipulative way, because film can be very manipulative. And it's how long does it last?
Is it candy or is it a substantial meal? Shawshank Redemption is one of your most popular works. I'm sure just about everywhere you go, someone talks to you about it. Is that true?
Yeah, yeah, it's very nice. It's very nice. I was joking with a friend of mine, you know, because we were out and it was about three or four times, someone came up about Shawshank. And they were like, does that bother you?
I said, not at all. You know, because you know what would bother me is if I got famous for a movie where I played Kooky Magoober, that would really bother me. Yeah. Hey, Kooky Magoober, that would be horrible.
That would be a nightmare. But as it is, this is something that's a movie that really moved people. What do you think it is about this movie? Because it wasn't a box office hit when it first came out.
What people are relating to really are the ability to see it over and over again. I was on the phone with my mom and I told her I was coming to do this and she got really quiet and she said, Shawshank, retention is my favorite movie. And I said, yeah, I know, everyone's favorite movie. But what do you think it is about it that people keep going back to it over and over again?
And it hits the tinder place within them. Yeah. I think we all want to believe that despite the challenges we have in our lives, the obstacles that are placed in front of us, that there is a spot on a beach in Ziwat, for us. I think that prison can be a metaphor for other things in life.
There's many people that are in jobs that have to have, that are not particularly liberating, shall we say? There's people in relationships that they should be out of. I think there's various ways that we can close walls around ourselves in our life and imprison ourselves mentally and emotionally. I think the idea that Andy had the long plan and could see a future that was brighter.
I think that's something that people want to believe in. I also believe that it's one of the very few rare stories where you see a male friendship that is not contingent upon car chases or skirt chasing. It's not a buddy movie, which I've done a few of. It's a movie about a real friendship between two men.
A love story in a lot of ways. Does your view of that role and that film evolve as you grow and evolve? I just appreciate it for everything it is. What a gift it has been.
When people come up to me and talk to me about that film, it's not like I love that film. It's that film changed me. That film made me think in a different way. Not to mention the times that I've talked to people that have been incarcerated and I do work with people in LA and California that have been incarcerated.
The actors gang has prison programs. We do rehabilitation inside the California correction system. What that movie means to those that have been incarcerated is profound. This idea of hope, this idea that freedom can be achieved even in the direst circumstances.
So that it's about what's inside. That's why Andy survives. Tim, thank you so much for your work, your honesty, and this time that you've spent with us to tell us just a little snippet about your life and your career. Thank you so much, Tim.
Thank you, Tonya. Award winning after Tim Robbins. Fresh Year Weekend is produced by Theresa Madden. Fresh Year's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our managing producer is Sam Bricker. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Vinthem. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Schorock, Anne Marie Boldenato, Lauren Prinsell, Monique Nazareth, Dave Chaloner, Susan Guckundi, and Anna Baumann. Our digital media producer is Molly St.
Nesvar. Our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson, with Terry Gross, I'm Tonya Mosley.