Fresh Air - Best Of: Scarlett Johansson & June Squibb / Mark Ronson
Episode Date: October 4, 2025Oscar-nominated actors Scarlett Johansson and June Squibb talk about their new film, Eleanor The Great. In Johansson's directorial debut, a woman starts passing off her deceased friend's Holocaust... survival story as her own.Also, Grammy-winning producer Mark Ronson talks about his memoir Night People—a love letter to the '90s club scene in New York City. He's 50 now and still DJing, but some things have definitely changed. "I used to be leaving the club and dialing the dealer on the way out of the club -- and now I'm making an appointment with my acupuncturist online as I'm leaving the club because my back is just so jacked." Follow Fresh Air on instagram @nprfreshair, and subscribe to our weekly newsletter for gems from the Fresh Air archive, staff recommendations, and a peek behind the scenes. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This message comes from 48 hours.
Want more 48 hours?
Four days a week, the 48 hours podcast is bringing one of TV's most popular true crime series straight to your ears.
Listen for original reporting and exclusive insights.
Follow and listen wherever you get your podcasts.
From W.HYY in Philadelphia, this is Fresh Air Weekend.
I'm Tanya Mosley.
Today, Scarlett Johansson and June Squibb.
The two Academy Award-nominated actors discussed their new film, Eleanor the Great, Johansson's directorial debut.
It's about a woman who starts passing off her deceased friend's Holocaust survival story as her own.
Also, Grammy-winning producer Mark Ronson on his new memoir, Night People.
A love letter to late-night New York City and how his early days spinning records shaped everything that came after.
He's 50 now and still DJing, but some things.
have definitely changed.
I used to be leaving the club and, like, dialing the dealer on the way out of the club,
and now I'm making an appointment with my acupuncturist online as I'm leaving the club
because my back is just so jacked.
That's coming up on Fresh Air Weekend.
This message comes from Rinse.
Who knows that mastering the perfect house party table spread takes time, but so does laundry.
So Rinse takes your laundry and hand delivers it to your door expertly clean.
And you can take the time once spent sorting and waiting, folding and queuing, to finally pursue your real passion, rolling delicate roses of Capacola alongside meandering ribbons of Ammon Serrano, transforming a humble plank of weathered barnwood into a show-stopping charcuttery spread.
Rinse, it's time to be great.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Dignity Memorial.
When you think about the people you love, it's not the big things you may.
miss the most. It's the details. What memories will your loved ones cherish when you're gone?
At Dignity Memorial, the details aren't just little things, they're everything. They help families
create meaningful celebrations of life with professionalism and compassion. To find a provider
near you, visit DignityMemorial.com. This message comes from 48 hours. The seemingly random murders
of a beloved couple left the town of Davis, California paralyzed in fear. Join correspondent Aaron
Moriarty for 15 inside the Daniel Marsh murders, available wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tanya Mosley. A 94-year-old woman, displaced in grieving the loss of her
best friend and roommate, makes an audacious choice. She begins telling her deceased friend's
story of surviving the Holocaust as if it were her own. It's deceptive and morally complicated,
but for Eleanor, it's the first time in years she truly
feels seen. That's the premise of Eleanor the Great, a poignant and humorous film that moved
first-time director Scarlett Johansson to tears when she initially read the script. To honor the
story's weight, she cast actual Holocaust survivors alongside her lead. At the center is June Squibb,
94 years old, and having the creative run of her life. The Academy Award nominated actor
has worked for over six decades. But it wasn't until Nebraska,
in 2013 that she became a household name.
Now with Eleanor the Great, following her recent triumph in Thelma,
she's starring yet again as the lead in a story
that centers on the very real experiences of someone still navigating life in their 90s.
Johansson herself knows something about breaking barriers.
The two-time Oscar nominee has navigated the industry since she was a kid.
She's built a career that spans intimate dramas like marriage story.
and global blockbusters like The Avengers films,
and now she's directed a film that explores grief and forgiveness,
and who has the right to tell someone's story?
Scarlett Johansson and June Squibb, welcome to fresh air.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Well, June, you have this sharp wit in Eleanor the Great.
We have seen this in several of your roles,
but there is this mix of bite and charm,
and I want to give listeners a sense of it.
I want to start with a scene from early in the film.
Eleanor, your character and her best friend Bessie,
played by Rita Zohar, are shopping for kosher pickles
when a stock boy makes the mistake of saying he thinks
that all pickles are basically the same.
And Eleanor basically lets him know what she thinks about that.
Excuse me.
They are the closest kosher.
They're supposed to be right here.
I guess we're up.
Hello? Do you have in the back maybe?
Well, we have a bunch of other pickles right here, and honestly, I think all pickles taste the same.
Excuse me?
Eleanor. No? Are you listening to this? All pickles are the same?
I heard.
Hey, Charlie. Nice name. How long have you been working here, Charlie?
I don't know, like a few weeks?
That's cute.
Well, yesterday was Delivery Day, and you know how I know that?
Because we've been coming here every Friday for the last 16 years.
Can you count to 16, Charlie?
Well, of course.
Here's what you're going to do.
You're going to go to the back.
Bessie, point to the back so Charlie doesn't get lost.
You're going to turn left at the shampoo, go all the.
way down the aisle. Now, I know it's complicated, Charlie, but stay with me and you'll find the
pickles that my friend needs, okay? Okay, go fetch. That was my guest, June Squibb, and Eleanor
the Great, directed by Scarlett Johansson. June, the scene is definitely funny, but there's
something more going on here because Eleanor is kind of asserting herself at the two
of them being dismissed. And it's something that plays throughout the entire film. What drew
you to this character? I just felt she was such a human character and had so many feelings
and she kept revealing herself. Something new about her constantly in the script. And all that
was very attractive to me. And it was well written. So I just felt, yeah, I want to do this.
Is it true that you wrote Scarlett a letter once you signed on to this asking her to be a part of it?
Yes, when Scarlett was interested in directing it and the producers asked me if I would write a letter and they were going to include it in the package of letters or whatever it was they were sending Scarlett to try to convince her to direct the film.
So I did.
I don't think I said too much in it.
I think probably something like, will you come and do the film?
And then June offered me a large cash sum, which I still have not yet received.
No, I didn't.
Maybe a mocha blended or something like that, but not money.
Scarlett, I mentioned that this script made you cry when you read it.
Do you remember that moment when you just knew you had to be a part of it?
Well, I firstly was, I had received the cover letter from June.
Yeah, I didn't know anything about the script, only that June Squibb,
wanted to take on a leading role and what could it be at the stage in her career?
I mean, June said she turns a lot down. I'm sure she must because, you know, it's such a huge
effort to commit to something like this for any actor. And I was just very intrigued. And it was
clear to me upon, you know, first reading it, okay, this is, you know, a character who suffers
this devastating loss. And she is having this, you know, very challenging time navigating
this move back to Manhattan
after 40 years of not living there
and she's a 94-year-old woman
who feels invisible
in the current economy environment
and then all of a sudden
this plot twist
which you described earlier
this lie that Eleanor tells
in a moment of
I think real deep loneliness
and isolation
and an attempt to connect with a community.
And what grows out of that lie was so unexpected.
It just felt very, it was surprising.
And it's rare to feel surprised when you read a script.
A lot of times, scripts are very formulaic,
or they're based on, you know, IP that you're familiar with,
or, you know, you can kind of see where the story is going.
But this one just felt really original and unique.
When you took on the challenge, you're like, okay, this is so interesting, I'm going to do this.
How did you wrestle with those moral questions as a director, making it funny because it is very humorous, but also taking on such a heavy topic?
Well, I mean, the humor certainly was written in. Tori Kamen, who wrote the script, you know, it was a sort of thesis that she built around her grandmother, who was very, very close with, who similarly moved back to New York after many decades.
of living away, you know, as a much older woman. And those very biting lines, those salty
lines, even from Rita's character, Bessie, are some of them are verbatim, her grandmother's
words. And so I grew up in New York, I, you know, had a Jewish grandmother and who was also
could be very dry and she was very funny. And I don't know, that humor felt familiar to me.
It was like dialogue, vocabulary that I just got.
And so that was baked in.
And, of course, having June with her incredible comedic timing and, you know, her expression and her vocal cadence and, you know, she's the perfect person to be delivering those zingers.
But as far as the sensitive, you know, balance and subject matter, you know, I think as a director,
and I think even as an actor too
it's not really my job to kind of
judge these characters
and what they do
or if I have any
judgment, I'm probably not the right
person to be supporting
the story. I think it's, you know, I hope
that the audience, if I
do my job, right, by the end of the film
is able to abandon any
judgment and have empathy and compassion
for the characters
and certainly for Eleanor's
deception and understanding
why she does what she does.
Mm-hmm.
Scarlett, you made this intentional choice to cast real Holocaust survivors and the group support scenes.
How did that idea come together?
I think it was pretty obvious that that was necessary because when you start to talk about
casting people for it, it just felt kind of like a phony.
How do you wouldn't even know what I would be looking for exactly?
It just felt very important and a must, an absolute must, that we identify survivors that wanted to participate and then we're able to participate.
And, you know, can we create an environment where, you know, those people could sit with us for a couple of days and not, you know, in general comfort.
You know, luckily living in New York, you know, there was a lot of different roads that we could kind of go down Jessica Hackt, who's a fantastic actor and an extraordinary in the film who plays Lisa.
Eleanor's daughter. She is very involved in the Jewish community here in New York, and so she was able to
identify a couple of our survivors just through the community. And also, we worked with Rodaf Shalom,
the temple that we shot the film, actually, where Eleanor's character was about mitzvahed.
They helped us to identify some people. The Shoah Foundation also helped us out. So we just kind of
sent out the that signal.
And we were very, very fortunate to be able to come up with the group that we did.
And tomorrow we'll be having our screening in New York, and, yeah, we'll be inviting our group to come and enjoy the film with their family.
I'm so excited for them to see it.
Because that population is dwindling.
They're not many.
Very fast, the population is dwindling.
I think it's also why we must keep the story.
We must do it.
which is what I think Scarlett and I did with this.
I mean, we make people look at it and remember and understand.
Scarlett mentioned that there was a planned bat mitzvah for you in the film.
You actually had to learn Torah for this role.
Yes, I did, and I did.
It's a sore subject.
Yes, because it didn't end up in the film.
June was dreaming her Torah portion.
I was.
And then we ended up cutting it, and she was so bummed.
You can hear the bitterness in her voice, doll.
But it didn't make it in the film.
You got to find a way to have that out there.
It's an extra.
Well, Strz says eventually it will get out.
It's going to be on the B-sides.
Yeah.
June, as someone, you converted to Judaism decades ago.
Yes.
Yes.
In the 50s.
In the 50s.
You married someone who was Jewish, that's why.
What was it experience like diving deeper into that story into those texts where Eleanor's journey?
It's also, I would imagine, personal growth.
It wasn't.
And I kept thinking back, you know, if I was sitting, studying it or something.
And I would think back to that time when I was studying Judaism with this wonderful young rabbi in Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio.
Where you're from?
It was very exciting. I loved it. I loved doing it. And I love meeting him and becoming close to him. And we just talked about everything. He was just a great, great guy. And he married us. So that was, and my husband said he married me. He didn't marry him at all. But it was a very exciting and wonderful part of my life, really was.
Scarlett, you discovered not too long ago that you had family lost in the Holocaust. Is that right? I did, actually. I was on the Henry Louis Gates show Finding Your Roots. And I knew that I had lost relatives in the Warsaw ghetto. But I certainly didn't know how many, several members of my family, a whole family of people and young children. And looking at the
register, one of the members who had escaped went back, you know, after the war and after the ghetto had been destroyed, really, yeah. And, you know, had to go back and to kind of take a notice of, you know, this is what they died from, this is how old they were, you know, almost like a diary of that. And so to see the handwritten names, ages, I know, children, you know, that they were dying of, you know,
You know, what was listed either starvation or, you know, diarrhea, or it's so profound and moving and horrifying just to hold that document.
Yeah, and, you know, I've spoken to friends of mine, too, actually, who have very similar stories of members of their family that they lost in the Holocaust, meaning similar in the sense that the details were kind of lost for, for,
for decades and that actually that my you know friends of mine that are at the same generation as
myself were uncovering the secrets of the past I think because there's so you know one of the
interesting things I think about Bessie's stories that she says you know I've not told anyone
not even my own children and I think a lot of survivors live you know holding those stories
like a horror they don't want to recount or relive and so there's a lot of these stories that are
still have not been uncovered and, you know, are kind of lost in time. And so if you have a
living relative who's lived through the Holocaust, you know, to be able to, I mean, the work that
the Show of Foundation does to preserve those stories is so vital. It's so important, especially
because the population is dwindling rapidly. You mentioned earlier your grandmother. And I wondered
if you had had a chance to talk with your grandparents about what you had discovered before
they passed away.
No, I never did.
I think it would have been very, very painful.
The relatives of mine that I lost in the Holocaust were lost in the Holocaust were actually on my
maternal side, my mom's father, his family was from right outside of Warsaw.
And again, I mean, he was, I think, very removed from that.
part of his family. It was almost like
a shame nobody talked about.
Like, don't look back.
He would have been
devastated to have
seen those papers, I'm sure.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, we're talking with
actress June Squibb, who stars
in the new film Eleanor the Great,
and Scarlett Johansson,
who makes her directoral debut with the movie.
We'll continue our conversation
after a short break. This is Fresh Air
Weekend.
On NPR's TED Radio Hour, investigative journalist Hilka Shelman digs into how companies are using AI for hiring and what it means for your job search.
We are at a tipping point. We have AI tools generating your resumes. We have avatars interviewing other avatars for jobs. Like, you know, it's AI versus AI.
Listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
In the U.S., national security news can feel far away from daily.
life. Distant wars, murky conflicts, diplomacy behind closed doors on our new show, sources
and methods. NPR reporters on the ground bring you stories of real people helping you understand
why distant events matter here at home. Listen to sources and methods on the NPR app or wherever
you get your podcasts. I want to talk a little bit about your career, June. I've heard you say that you
knew you wanted to be an actor from the moment you left the womb. And I was just wondering what kind
of career did you envision for yourself? I think I always thought more I would be on stage.
I never thought about film or television as a career. I don't know why. But my early career was
the theater, of course. And so, you know, that just, that just seemed what it would be.
Your Broadway debut was in the musical Gypsy in 1959.
You developed this nickname, The Dirtiest Mouth on Broadway?
Yes, because I had a dirty mouth.
Okay, paint a picture for us.
Of course, this is NPR, so you can't, like, use all the words.
No, I won't go into it, but what did that look like it?
I was very quick with the curse words.
And I looked about 12.
I think I was in my 20s when all that happened.
in the 20s or early 30s.
And I looked so young.
And so it was like, what does she say?
But I had a dirty mouth.
There's no other way to describe it.
Tell me about your path into comedy.
When you stepped into theater, were you always taking on these kind of roles?
Or how did you find that voice, that comedic side of you?
It was the Cleveland Playhouse.
That's where I was before I came to New York.
And I went in as a student, and I ended up on staff, and I was there for five years and all.
And that's where I started.
I had always danced, but I started singing there.
And they put me into almost every musical as the comedian.
And so when I went to New York, I went with a group of people from there,
and it was just like everybody assumed this is what I was going to do,
and this is what I ended up doing.
for about 20 years.
Scarlett, you mentioned that you grew up in New York
and your grandmother also lived there too.
Can you talk about your grandmother
and the time that you spent with her as a kid
and maybe how that informed you directing this movie?
Oh, I was very close with my grandmother, Dorothy.
She was a fiercely independent woman.
She lived independently forever.
She was like a safe haven for me. I would escape to her apartment in Hell's Kitchen most weekends. You know, she introduced me to all the free arts in the city. We would see jazz in Lincoln Center and we would go to the Tisch School and see plays and young playwrights. And, you know, I got so much out of my friendship with my grandmother. And I think, and she just enjoyed me tremendously. And we would,
would talk about everything, you know, everything, our family, we would talk about the family dynamics. We would talk, you know, later on. And when I was older, I would talk to her about, you know, boyfriends, sex, our bodies, you know, her experience aging, what she was experiencing physically, politics, all kinds of stuff. You know, we had such a profoundly special deep friendship, you know, and I think that our friendship really, when I read the script,
of Eleanor the Great. I was very moved by the friendship between Nina and Eleanor because it did
remind me very much of the dynamic I had with my grandmother and the ease we felt in one another's
company. Scarlett Johansson and June Squibb, thank you so much for this film and this
conversation. Thank you. Thank you. Scarlett Johansen and June Squibb's new film is Eleanor
the Great.
Music producer and DJ Mark Ronson's new memoir, Night People, takes us back to a New York that no longer exists before Mayor Rudy Giuliani's crack down on nightlife, before camera phones and bottle service transform the culture forever.
It's a story of how a young outsider with a British accent found a place in the 1990s club scene, learning to read,
read crowds, dig through crates, and create the perfect mix of venues where the city's
tribes collided. Rappers and models, skaters and socialites, everyone glamorous and a little
lawless. Night people, as he defines them, are different than people who simply enjoy a night
out. They become their best selves once the sun goes down, and daytime is just the warm-up.
Those formative years spinning records would shape everything that came after. Ronson is
a nine-time Grammy winner, producing career-defining albums for Amy Winehouse and Lady Gaga. He's also
behind hits like Uptown Funk with Bruno Mars, Shallow from a Star is Born, and the Barbie soundtrack.
Mark Ronson, welcome back to Fresh Air. Thank you so much. Thank you, Tanya. Thanks for having me.
Yeah, you know, Mark, this was a really fun read, and it had me thinking that most of us experienced the
DJ from the dance floor. So this book really gives us a glimpse.
of what it's actually like for the DJ.
You're able to just make the room explode
by the decisions that you make
and you describe in this book
how nothing compares
to the first time you feel it.
Take me back to the actual first time
you actually experienced that rush.
Yeah.
So the first time I had that feeling,
I was at my mother's wedding
to my stepfather
and I think I was 10 years old.
And they had like a really small
little wedding in the garden
of this summer rental
and even though my stepdad was this really
successful huge rock star
he was in the band Foreigner
and wrote all these songs I want to know what love is
waiting for a girl IQ
it seemed like the music at the wedding was almost
an afterthought like I think they were playing
like a tape deck in the house that was wired
to some speakers in the garden and then
one point as the sun was going
down the music just kind of stopped entirely
like you heard the cassette like kind of snap
and Mick just looked at me
and he was like, Ma, go put something off,
And, you know, obviously, this felt like all the responsibility of the world in my hands, like this little kid obsessed with music, like my stepdad saying, like, you can control the music, you know, like at this wedding.
So I ran in the house, and there were all these cassettes on the floor, and I remember, like, searching through them, and there was nothing that seemed right.
And then I saw timepieces, the best of Eric Clapton.
And I was like, ah.
And even in my, like, 10-year-old brain, I saw the song Wonderful Tonight on there.
And I was like, that is an appropriate song for now.
That is like my mom, my mom looks wonderful in her dress, and it seems romantic, and I'm going to put that on.
I quickly queued it up, you know, had some crazy 80s cassette deck with an auto cue and found the song hit play.
And I remember standing inside the house looking through the window as my stepdad pulls my mom in for like a slow dance and the moon.
And, you know, I even say in the book, my memory here is blurry and it might be a little Hollywooded out.
But it was like he brought her in, she's luminescent in this dress.
And I just stood there watching this scene, slightly drunk off this feeling of like, oh, my God, you know, this is my music playing out there.
But also, it was this thing.
It was like the first time in my life, I genuinely have a memory of having done something right.
So, you know, obviously at that moment, that wasn't like my Spider-Man Genesis story.
I wasn't something like, I know I'm going to be a DJ.
I didn't even put this together probably until I was writing the book,
but it really is one of my most sort of visceral early childhood memories.
Well, you make this distinction between people who enjoy a night out and night people,
people who kind of just become their best selves once the sun goes down.
And when did you realize that you were also a night person?
Well, I think it's one of those.
those things, you know, when I was 18 starting out as a DJ in clubs in New York, music was just my passion. So I'm chasing this thing at night because if you're a DJ, obviously you work at night. But then as I was writing the book and I started to piece together like, wait, this really tight-knit crew of maybe 200 people that we saw it all the time that were all a little broken in their own way or maybe it's too much of a generalization to say everybody was like, you know, falling
a part or a vampire but there was this thing that just the people that I saw out night after
night were people that the daytime was just like a little too like the bright light of day it
was like too much for people maybe they were running from something running towards something
looking for community so I realized you know I came up with the term night people because I thought
that applied to our little cracked community of people you also were were raised by night people
You mentioned your mom, you mention your stepdad, Mick Jones.
He would actually wake you up in the middle of the night on school nights.
And I think you were in middle school to get your opinion on foreigner mixes.
Yeah.
What do you remember most about those nights?
I just remember thinking it was so cool that he valued my opinion.
You know, I was so obsessed with music and he had a home studio.
And the idea of being in his home studio,
watching him craft these demos
and trying to learn how to work these tape machines
and stuff was so cool.
Like his home studio was my favorite room in the house.
So the fact that he would wake me up at 2 in the morning
and be like, play me these mixes
from the latest foreign songs and ask my opinion.
I just, I mean, I've so valued my time spent alone with him
because he was out of the house and on tour a lot
and I was so close to him,
but also feeling like my opinion meant anything
really meant the world to me.
Mark, I mean, it's,
your life, so it's normal for you. But I think for any foreigner fan or even those who just are
aware of foreigner, to hear that you were in the room as he was going through these mixes,
some of them went on to be very popular songs, iconic songs. Are there things that you remember
where you were listening to those beginning, like the beginning stages of music that would
become the tapestry of our lives? I don't remember specific songs, but I don't remember specific songs,
I think it was the first time that he brought a mix home and played it for me,
and then he played me a mix of the same song, you know, a week later.
And I said, I kind of liked the other one, or I was, you know, nine years old,
squeaky English accent.
I kind of like the other one because it had a, the bass was a bit louder.
And he was just like, what?
Like how?
And then he checked and with the engineer, like, was the bass louder?
And I think after that he realized I had these sort of like bizarre, like recall for these things.
I think he started to value my opinion, but no, it is crazy to think that I was listening to as he was like, I want to know what love is in these songs that would become classics.
Like, I can't tell you how much of my, you know, opinion actually went into the final product, but it was so, it was so important to me.
I really can't get over that he wrote, I want to know what love is about your mother.
I know, and, no, that's insane.
And then also the song that he wrote
Waiting for a Girl Like You
Before he tried to convince my mom
That he wrote it for her to
And she was like, not having it
She's like, but you wrote that four years before you met me
But he was like, but I was waiting for a girl like you
I think he was just trying to be romantic or something
But yeah, she wasn't having it
Let's take a short break
If you're just joining us
We're talking with Mark Ronson
About his new memoir, Night People
Which chronicles his formative years
as a DJ in 1990s, New York City.
We'll continue our conversation after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
You paint this vivid picture,
but I want to go a little bit deeper into the sheer physicality of your job
because I would just guess that New York City is not for the feign of heart for DJs.
Because today, you just have kind of like a computer or a thumb drive with your music,
but back then you had to lug these big,
crates of records through the city to play gigs. How many crates, on average, would you take to a gig?
And, like, would you jump in a cab? Would you be on a subway? Would you be climbing upstairs?
Oh, my God. I mean, all of it. I mean, so I, the standard that I would take on any given night was probably three crates, you know, with 100 records each and maybe like a giant bursting bag because you're taking old school disco and classics, old school hip hop, new school hip hop, R and
reggae, a little bit of house
music. So if you're doing a
four or five hour set, which is what we're doing
most nights, that's what you're bringing. So
if I was playing a cool club,
I had a bunch of friends with me. Everybody wants
to get it and get some drink tickets. If I was
playing a not-so-cool
club, like it's playing one of my
uptown, like, paid the bills
gigs at a bar on the upreyside.
Nobody was coming with me. And those
were the nights when, you know,
I mean, I kind of write about it.
Like, sometimes leaving my apartment would be
like that riddle of the teacher in school, the fox, the farmer in the bag of grain and the fox and the chicken and the farmer has to take them across the thing.
So I had three crates and put one in my front door to keep the door open, call the elevator, put one in the elevator to keep the elevator door open, go back for the third one that was in the apartment, put that in the elevator, pick up the one that was in my apartment door, bring that over on the way and kick the one that's holding the elevator door open, all the way down says, I'm already breaking a sweat.
and then repeat the whole thing in reverse.
And that was like in the apartment,
that was only one building where I ever had an elevator.
The rest of it were like four or five-story walk-ups.
So you were really like, yeah, you had broken a sweat
before you were even in the cab on the way to the club.
But it's, I was 22, you know, my back could take it.
It's a little bit different now.
Yeah, what's your back like today?
Yeah, it's not very grateful to that 22-year-old DJ.
It's, I have like, you know, listen, it's not like,
maybe being a chef or another intense line of thing
where you're just like covered in cuts, bruises and calluses.
But I still have, I only found out two years ago
that I have this crazy arthritis in my right foot
from 25 years.
The doctor, when I went in, he was like,
oh, I watched a YouTube video of you.
I notice you kind of like really aggressively tap your foot
while you're DJing.
And I had never thought about this
because you're just tapping to the beat.
He's like, yeah, that happens to,
musicians in the fill like even just tapping your foot for 30 years at the thing so i i've named
it dj foot because i just like want it to be like my own but no it's and then i mean this i'm not
proud of anything but like terrible tinnitus i have my back is completely messed up from you know
25 years of headphones on you've got your neck crooked to one side um which looked kind of cool
you know like that always is kind of the stance it's the stance it looks cool
but it's not great for you.
Is there something you miss about it, though?
I mean, it's much easier now.
You just got your computer in front of you, I would guess.
Yeah, you know, in the book, I wanted to keep it as diaristically
and just really only in the 90s.
And it's really only in the epilogue where I'm walking around downtown
with my daughter strapped to me in the baby beyond,
seeing the clubs and talking about what it was like then versus now
with the laptop versus the hundreds of records.
And a good friend of mine read the book, and he said, I really like the book.
He goes, it just sounds like you really miss playing vinyl.
So you should just only play vinyl till the end of the year.
And I don't know why.
I was just like, okay.
So I started to play records again and been playing out in clubs in Brooklyn and downtown.
And it really has been this joyous restart of my love for DJing.
So I'm very grateful to it in some ways.
But in other ways, like, yeah, carrying those records around, just insane, going down into a basement and coming back up.
And, like, I used to, I hope this is okay.
Like, I used to be leaving the club and, like, dialing the dealer on the way out of the club.
And now I'm making an appointment with my acupuncturist online as I'm leaving the club because my back is just so jacked.
But it's been incredible playing vinyl again, actually.
I didn't realize how much I had missed that process.
I want to talk a little bit about that power.
in control that you have to move people.
There's this night you described where you made people go literally nuts.
It was at a club called Sweet Thang.
Can I have you read?
Absolutely.
One night, around 1 a.m., I dropped a new cut called Dejaveau Uptown Baby.
Only a few weeks old, its hometown pride refrain had already taken over every club
and radio station in NYC.
When the chorus hit, as the crowd chanted,
uptown, baby, up town baby, we gets down, baby.
Loud enough to be heard five blocks away.
I duck the volume and drop the instrumental, the buster rhymes,
put your hands where my eyes could see on beat under their voices,
remixing the room itself.
There was a half-second delay as their brains processed what just happened,
and then they ignited like an energy rocket from floor to ceiling.
For eight bars, it felt like we'd all leapt into another dimension.
Okay, so in that moment when there's that half-second delay for everybody's brains to process what just happened, that must have felt like an eternity.
What does that feel like up there where you're taking a chance in trying something new?
You're not sure if the crowd is actually going to respond to it.
It's just, it's such a visceral memory of all the times because there were, you know, thousands of the times that I would do that.
You would drop the volume.
So the whole crowd is chanting, up, Talmud.
Uptown baby, and as they're chanting,
that's all they're thinking about, you drop.
Kajikung, chung, chagong, chagong.
The bus rhyme, the instrumental.
So they're still chanting.
There's a split second where they have to realize,
oh my God, he's dropping this other song that we love even more
as we're singing under it.
So you are literally remixing the room.
Whenever you do one of those mixes,
we used to call them word play mixes,
where you go from like the line in one song,
there's a line in Snoops,
gin and juice where we got and they ain't leave until six in the morning and then on six in the
morning you drop go right into naz uchi wali because he's referenced that song so they ain't
leave until six in the morning is now naz so you've just done this slick on-beat uh transition from
snoop to naz and of course like you know it takes a half second for the brain to realize but it's
still on beat and you just get this like crazy like blowback this charge from the crowd all going
like, oh, at the same time, you know, they call it the scream, the chant, whatever it is.
And it's like clay or Play-O, like the whole crowd is this thing that you're able to mold together.
It's incredible.
It's kind of why I can't stop DJing.
It's like still a feeling that I only get from this one thing, no matter sort of what else I do in my work as a producer.
Okay, Mark, so the crowds that you're playing for in the early.
in mid-90s, it was such a blend, as you say, hip-hop heads and fashion kids and artists.
But you also write about being Jewish in hip-hop, often one of the few white faces and having
advantages that most DJs didn't with your family money and your connections.
And I'm wondering how did you balance being an outsider who, on one hand, you needed to prove
yourself with being an insider who already had like certain doors open yes um yes of course when
i started off djing like coming from this like nice family uptown with a stepdad who's a rock star
and my mom who was this like larger than life um you know she was out in the parties out in the
scene in new york sort of amazing rock and roll artist mom um i was horribly embarrassed of all of it but
It's probably like more in a teenage way when you're just like, oh, mom, like, do you have to come to the club when I'm DJing?
Meanwhile, everybody thought it was the coolest thing that my mom came to these like hole-in-the-wall basements and clubs.
But yes, I think in a kind of immature way, I thought that that would make me, like, quote-unquote, other in this scene where really, like, the scene was just about showing and proving.
I remember Funkmaster Flex in an early article in the New York Times, and it was like,
like it was I just remember being like this is the nicest thing anyone's ever said out of me
he knows it doesn't matter who his family is where he's from he knows how to rock a room
like blah blah and that was like you know obviously flex at the time is the absolute biggest figure
in new york hip-hop but yes i did have advantages that other people really didn't have of course
my mom bought me the turntables for graduation i had a stepdad who was a musician who nurtured
like, you know, my musical, what I wanted to do as a kid.
So I had to really deal with that and address that really out in the open in the book
because, of course, I had advantages and stuff like that.
But I also, you know, worked my ass off, and that's kind of like the two sides of the book.
It also sounded like something you did, and stick with me here.
Like, it sounds like maybe that tension also pushed you to find your own.
lane to do something different. I actually think I want to reference the ACDC Back in Black
moment. You talk about this moment where you took some risks, where you brought in other
types of music, not just old samples, but also like rock music that actually helped you develop
your signature offering. And to do this, I want to actually play a little bit of back in black,
so we remember what that sounded like. Let's listen.
I'm back in the news from the news from the next to be in the house because I've got to be a bad
yes I know dead news from the news that's kept me hanging around and never let it
stop because you're giving me high I've got the hearse cause I never die I got nine lines
That was A.C.D.C.'s classic back-in-black. And Mark, you tell this story of how you took this gamble to smuggle this song into what you call the hottest hip-hop party on the East Coast. What did you do with it and how did you know it would work?
Well, I absolutely didn't know it would work. So obviously, just listening to that song now, it's like anybody with a pulse knows it's hot. It's pretty undeniable.
that record and it was it had been sampled by Rick Rubin for the BC boys KRS had sampled it for
boogie down production it wasn't completely foreign to hip hop but nobody played that record in the
clubs at that time and I was at this club called Spy Bar one night which was this very like one of
the first super trendy exclusive ultra VIP lounges like I remember being at the door sometimes
and watching like Trump get turned away and it was just like it was this it was this place
Leonardo DiCaprio, whatever, the 90s,
like, it was like the place everybody wanted to be.
And the DJs there played a lot of rock and roll.
And half of the time I tried to get in and I couldn't get in.
But one night I'm in there, and they play the song,
and everybody just starts going crazy and, like,
dancing on the couches like at the fall of Rome.
And I just remember being hit by how powerful that record was.
And this was a crowd that was dancing.
It was very unlike the crowds that I DJed for.
But I remember starting to think,
God, I really want to play this at Cheetah, which was the big party on the Monday night,
which is where Mike Tyson and Janet Jackson and Missy Elliott, it really was the place.
So I worked out this mix all week where I could play The Benjamin's by Little Kim and Puff Daddy,
which was the biggest song of the time, and go into this rock and roll remix as a transition of that song,
and then write on the one as soon as Biggie's verse ended, play.
back in black and, you know, obviously, like,
it was the kind of club that if I played and fallen on my face,
like, it's the kind of place something could get,
a bottle could be thrown at the booth.
Like, you don't really know.
Like, it wasn't a place where you really wanted
to mess around too much.
So I played the thing, and I dropped the record,
and it's a split second where it's like,
the crowd is just kind of like, huh?
But it's on beat, everybody's still dancing,
and there's no chance to kind of be too judgmental
your body's still moving, right?
And it feels good.
And by the second time the riff came around,
the club just kind of erupted.
Like, there was this incredible feeling,
like, the crowd, like, just everyone knowing
they were doing something
they kind of weren't supposed to be doing.
Like, this song that we weren't supposed to be hearing it,
I was supposed to be playing it.
They weren't supposed to be dancing to it.
And it was just this great moment.
And from that moment on it did free me up
and made me a little more brave.
And it's funny because, you know,
the mash-up era came quite soon after,
So it's almost a little ho-hum to think of, like, playing back and back in a club.
Like, of course, why not?
But at that moment, there was nothing like it, but it did help me find my own sound and identity.
And that's kind of when I really started to, I guess, get, like, crazy gigs and offers because I was doing something that nobody else was doing.
What are some of the biggest DJing sins, in your opinion?
I'll just say, like, I hate when a DJ does that.
that plays that horn, like, bum-p-b-b-oh, it's like, oh, my God.
The Claxton.
Yes, there's something about that that's sort of like,
it's a little bit like an extra explosion in a film, right?
It's like kind of like, all right,
if you're not making me feel it enough with the music,
like I don't need the horns to be bullied
into having a visceral emotion to this music.
But I also kind of like the air horn.
I mean, there's something about it like that feels very New York radio.
the other ones are like and I sort of talk about them because you know the book I said how to be a DJ in 90s New York City is the title because it's a little bit tongue in cheek no one's ever going to be a DJ in 90s New York City so but there are a lot of things in this book that I feel like at any era might might sort of like help out so there's things like back in that era my era it was a cardinal sin to really play a record more than once in the night
Like, if there was a huge hit to play it five times throughout the night,
it was like this thing, like, oh, you're not good enough to, like,
to rock a night with only playing the big records once.
There was a bit of that sense.
There was this thing, like, never play all the big records when you're the opener.
In fact, you don't play any big records when you're the opener.
I remember DJ.
Like radio hits.
Like, yeah, any of the big club records.
Like, I remember opening for Funkmaster Flex and being so nervous to, like, play anything.
Like I didn't play anything from literally the past seven years or something.
And then the idea of like, you know, playing huge records to an empty room,
like trying to ignite a room before it's ready.
Hmm. Before the room is ready.
So timing just is such a thing.
Like, you have to know it.
You have to be so attuned, which means you kind of have to be attuned to human behavior.
And it's a sense.
Is it something that can be taught?
I mean, that's why they're.
call it, you know, the expression
reading a room. Like, it's like, I don't know
if it literally goes back to DJing, but
it's like reading the floor, reading the room,
reading the dance floor. It's like, there's so much
of it that's just, yes,
it's the interplay between you
and the crowd. You could be
in the best
nightclub in the world with the best
sound system. It doesn't matter if you
if the crowd isn't with you
and you don't have a relationship with them,
that's what it's all comes
down to, certainly for a great night.
Mark Ronson, it's such a pleasure to talk to you, and thank you so much for this fun read.
Thank you so much.
Mark Ronson's new memoir about DJing in the 90s New York club scene is called Night People.
Fresh Air Weekend is produced by Teresa Madden.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosley.
