Fresh Air - Best Of: Sebastian Stan / Questlove On The Genius Of Sly Stone
Episode Date: February 15, 2025Musician and documentary filmmaker Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson is back to talk about his new Hulu documentary about Sly Stone. It's called SLY LIVES! (aka The Burden of Black Genius). ... Also, actor Sebastian Stan talks about portraying Donald Trump in the film The Apprentice. Stan is originally from Romania, born during a communist dictatorship.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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From WHYY in Philadelphia, I'm Terry Gross with Fresh Air Weekend.
Today, musician and documentary filmmaker Amir Kwaslov-Thompson is back to talk about
his newest documentary on Sly Stone and his band The Family Stone.
It's called Sly Lives, the burden of black genius.
Also, Sebastian Stan talks about his Oscar-nominated portrayal of Donald Trump.
In the film, The Apprentice, he plays Trump early in his career.
The filmmakers received a cease and desist letter from Trump's lawyers, and Trump called
the filmmakers human scum.
Human scum.
You know, our writer received a lot of death threats,
a lot of anti-Semitic remarks.
As a result of that, usage of words.
Stan is originally from Romania,
born during a communist dictatorship.
That's coming up on Fresh Air Weekend.
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This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Terry Gross.
Today, Amir Kwestlev-Thompson is back to talk about
the life and legacy of Sly Stone.
Thank you for letting me be my slave again. Thank you for letting me be myself again
Questlove's new documentary called Sly Lives, aka The Burden of Black Genius, is about the impact of Sly Stone and his band Sly and the Family Stone on music and culture.
Sly got his start as a DJ and record producer in the early 1960s, formed a multiracial band with his brother, sister, and other musicians,
and went on to record hits like Everyday People,
Dance to the Music, Family Affair, and Stand.
Their music influenced Prince, George Clinton,
and Funkadelic, The Ohio Players, Earth, Wind, and Fire,
and many hip hop artists.
The film also covers the problems that came along
with fame and drugs that took Sly down. Questlove is the co-founder of the hip-hop band The Roots which is the
house band for the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon. If you feel as if you just
heard him on our show, you did when we talked about his other new documentary
focused on Saturday Night Live's music guests and music sketches over the past
50 years. That one's called Ladies Ladies and Gentlemen, 50 Years of SNL Music.
So let's talk about your slide documentary.
I really love this film.
I want to start with a song,
and it's their first big hit.
It's Dance to the Music.
It's so catchy, and I'd like you to point out what makes
this song special in its moment,
which was 1967 or eight?
This is 1968.
Okay. So what makes this song so special in its moment?
Sly will invent the alphabet for which most of pop and R&B or black music
will write from for, you from for the next 60 years.
Like we're still writing from his dictionary to this day.
And so, okay, we have a four-minute song to make.
How many micro songs can we have in this particular song?
In other words, a typical Sly the Family Stone song
has a bunch of elements that will grab everybody.
Like most songs will just have one specific hook, like this is the chorus,
this is my hook, okay here are my lyrics. Instead Sly will do a four bar part that's like earworm,
you know like that'll grab you and then he'll do another four bars that will grab someone else.
you know, like that'll grab you and then he'll do another four bars that will grab someone else. So, you know, lyrically and melodic wise, his formula is also the world's funkiest nursery rhyme music.
Like, look at Everyday People, his number one hit. Everyone knows Everyday People.
Everyday People is basically the schoolyard version, like the lyrics of that song, the melody of that song
is basically schoolyard taunting.
Nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan, nyan.
There is a black one who doesn't like the v-v-v-v-v.
And his whole thing is like,
if it can appeal to a kid, to a first grader,
then melodically you have them.
And rhythmically, his rhythm section,
Gregorico on drums and Larry Graham on bass,
specifically Larry Graham's right thumb,
are probably the two most
revolutionary aspects of Sly's music.
And that's because Larry Graham is a bass player
who used to play in bands without a drummer.
So as a result, he would have to hit his bass
in a very specific way so that you could feel the rhythm
because there's no drummer there.
And of course, once he's in the Sly system,
he events kind of a thumping, plucking thing,
which I guess most of your listeners would probably be
familiar with the way that the Seinfeld theme sounds, b-d-b-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d- Larry Graham from Sly and the Family Stone, AKA Drake's uncle.
Oh, really? Literally?
Yeah, Larry Graham is, well, you know, Drake's name is Aubrey Graham.
Drake's father is Larry Graham's brother.
But yeah, he revolutionized a way to play bass.
And so, I mean, pretty much he just invented the idea of, like, ear candy.
Like, a whole bunch of micro ideas inside
of one three-minute song. And that's the genius of Sly Stone.
All right. Thank you for that. Let's hear dance to the music.
Dance to the music Dance to the music Dance to the music
All we need is a drummer For people who only need a beatin' yeah
I'm gonna add a little good talk And make it easy to move your feet I'm gonna add some bottom So that the dancer just won't hide
You might like to hear my organ I'll set, Sally, right now
Cynthia, Jerry, what? If I could hear the horns blow
Cynthia on the throne
Yeah!
Listen to me, Cynthia and Jerry got a message that said, Oh, the squads go out.
So that was Sly and the Family Stones, 1968 hit, Dance to the Music.
And the drumming is so infectious.
It's like, it's hard not to move when you hear that.
And it's not fancy.
So what people don't know is that Sly basically
considered Dance to the Music like his sellout song.
Sly had released this really intelligent debut album
called A Whole New Thing,
which is probably my favorite album of his entire canon.
But it was way too wordy, way too smart, way too nerdy, just so ahead of its time
that only a certain few latched onto it.
And the rejection of that album kind of depressed Sly. And his label said, look, you know,
like, you're doing way too much.
You got to simplify it.
People aren't as smart as you are.
Like, instead of you being the smartest guy in the room,
be a relatable guy in the room.
Like, people just want to dance to the music.
And kind of in a very bitter, scoffy way, like, he's like, all right, well, do people want to dance to the music and kind of in a very bitter, scoffy way.
Like he's like, all right, well, people want to dance to the music.
Fine.
And so he did a very sarcastic thing.
And so he's like, all right, well, people want to dance to the music.
Fine.
I'm going to make a song and I'm going to teach them how to dance to my music.
And essentially dance to the music is an instructional introduction on who we are.
Hey, I play the bass.
Doo doo doo doo doo doo doo.
I play the drums.
Gee gee gee gee gee gee gee gee.
I play the keyboards.
And literally, that's the song.
There's no lyrics to the song.
It's just a sing-along.
But what Sly doesn't realize is that in his very sarcastic,
bitter, middle finger type of way, he includes everybody.
And people grasp to it.
And so, Dance of the Music is one of those accidental number one songs that he didn't
intend on catching on.
It was more of like a just a bitter, here, you guys want, you know, regular food instead
of this, you know, meal I cooked up for you, fine, take your sandwich and get out of here.
And people gravitated towards it, so.
But there's a lot going on in that song, including like the, the kind of scatting part.
Yeah, so what he includes is, you know, a very, you know, the drum beat that is played
there is kind of a precursor to what we will call four on the floor.
And ten years later, four on the floor will just be, you know, whereas in the 60s,
four on the floor means that the snare, the kick, and the hi-hat are all doing
chh chh chh chh chh chh chh chh chh.
You know, it's teaching your body how to dance to it.
Ten years later, they'll take the snare and the hi-hat away, and it'll just be the kick.
Boom, boom, boom, boom.
And that will be the disco rhythm.
You know, what we call Boots and Cats.
Boots, cats, boots, cats.
Boots and cats.
So, Sly will basically kind of give you the prototype of what will be the disco pulse in the late 60s,
but you know, he's writing the blueprint
of what modern dance music will be in 10 years.
But then he also does a lot of things
that become beats for hip hop artists later.
Yes, so again, Sly believes in micro examples. Another artist will make one hook, one melody,
one lyric, just one thing, whereas Sly will probably try to cram in seven ideas at the
same time. Sly puts a lot of attention to harmony, which is a church thing,
so that makes people feel comfortable like, oh, they went to church because they sing
harmonious. But then Sly knows the importance of unison. Unison singing is where everyone sings in
the same register. So like, you know, think of the idea of like when Billy Joel's Piano Man comes on,
you know, that's the type of song that you hear in a bar and, you know,
everyone sings together as they hold their mug of beer and, you know, sing along.
So that's a very inclusive type of thing.
So when everyone's singing in the same key without harmony, it's not intimidating.
Like the worst singer and the best singer can unify.
So he knew the power of unison singing, which is included,
and harmony singing, which is a spectacle and type of dance rhythms and innovative bass sounds.
Like just every new idea that was unexplored in 1967, 68 and 69, Sly was the pioneer and the
first person to do those things. My guest is Amir Kwaslov Thompson.
His new documentary, Sly Lives,
aka The Burden of Black Genius,
is now streaming on Hulu.
We'll hear more of our conversation after a break.
I'm Terry Gross and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
I want to play another Sly track and talk about it with you
because I found the film so interesting in really pointing to specifically what makes Sly's music so interesting and catchy,
and why so many people, as you put it, use his vocabulary.
So I want to play Everyday People, because this has significance in a lot of ways.
I mean, Sly's band is made up of black and white musicians,
male and female musicians, and every day people
speaks to inclusivity.
So can you talk about that a little bit
in terms of the types of music that
are drawn on in Sly's music and the kind of inclusivity
that he represented within the band
and in some of his lyrics?
Sly's role,
Vernon Reed of Living Color kind of painted that,
this marks the first time that a black singer
is kind of stepping out of the roles that we were
traditionally playing. You know, before Sly it was like you were strictly singing
about love songs, in particular about relationships. You really weren't giving
any commentary about everyday life or things that are relatable in the present
to the audience that you're serving. It's almost like music before Sly was almost a fantasy, if you will,
like a means to escape your present situation.
Sly uses his music as a means to sell humanity.
Everyday people is a great example
where he's essentially saying that,
hey, like I breathe air like you do,
I bleed like you do,
there's some things that we have in common,
there's some things that we don't have in common,
but we're all the same person.
And sometimes, especially during that period,
during the civil rights period, especially
with that time in which Martin Luther King has died and Malcolm X has died and Mecca
Evers has died and the Kennedys died and kind of the dream of the civil rights period died.
That kind of messaging at the time seemed very necessary for,
you know, there was questions in the air like,
what do we do now? So, Slide kind of accidentally
inserts himself in the leadership position,
kind of in the name of just trying to find relatable content
to his lyrics because, you know because a lot of his music is very self-confessional and very relatable,
kind of in a way that Dylan was also affecting music with his songs at the time.
I guess Sly wound up being the unofficial spokesperson for Black people.
Well, let's hear Everyday People and this is from 1969. Sometimes I'm right, and I can be wrong My own beliefs are in my song
The richer, the bigger, the trumber and then Makes no difference what group I'm in
I have everyday people, yeah, yeah
There is a good one who can accept a green one for living off a bad one
Trying to do the skinny one, they find a spouse for different folks And so on and so and screwed and screwed and screwed
We got to live together
I am no better than neither are you We are the same in whatever we do
You love me, you hate me, you know me and then
You can't figure out the bag again
I have everything you want
There is a laundry man that doesn't like his short
Wherefore being such a rich one that no one else will find
One who takes a kind of nursery rhyme part
to it.
Yeah.
There is a nun, a nun, a nun, a nun, a nun, a nun.
Yeah.
And that has, like I said, the message of inclusivity and togetherness.
But as someone in your documentary points out, that alienated a lot of black listeners in the sense that,
you know, police were beating up black people,
which of course you could say today as well.
But it was a very,
it was, and also like black power was becoming a thing.
It was risky. Yeah, it was risky because, again, this song is released
right on the edge of the razor.
Like, there's always a time in American history,
and today is no different.
There's always a time in American history
where we're just right on the edge, right on the precipice of like, you know, a kind of explosive end result, you know.
And for someone to sort of come in waving a proverbial,
like white flag, that's a risky thing because, you know,
one, we do see the evidence of the abuse that's given, but
it's also like who's going to be the first person to kind of come to half court, to the
50-yard line?
Who's going to cross the aisle and start a kumbaya moment and sort of dismantles whatever conflicts that we have.
And that's the role that Sly's music played.
Whereas, you know, the messaging of his music was always encouraging,
always, you know, a cheerleader of justice and a cheerleader of positivity.
And unfortunately, even though the music spoke of that optimism,
inside he was sort of falling apart at the seams because there's a pressure of,
or a burden, which is why we call it the burden of black genius. There's
a burden when one puts themselves in that position where they often have to come up
with the solutions or the answers to why society is the way it is.
AMT. AMIRA BENNETT It's been so great to talk with you. And I just think all these
projects you're doing, it's really remarkable. I really look forward to the Earth,
Wind and Fire movie now.
Well, whenever I do a press run,
this is one of my favorite highlights.
I'm so glad that for the last 20 plus years,
this has been the springboard for my projects coming out.
I thank you for receiving it.
Amirah Questlove Thompson's new film is called Sly Lives,
AKA The Burden of Black Genius.
It's streaming on Hulu.
My next guest, Sebastian Stan, is nominated for an Oscar
for his starring role as Donald Trump
in the film The Apprentice.
It begins in 1973 when Trump is 27,
still working for his father's real estate
development company and trying to make a name for himself. The company is being
sued for discriminating against black people in its rental units. Trump
convinces his father to hire Roy Cohn as their attorney. Cohn was infamous for
being the chief counsel to Senator Joe McCarthy's Senate investigation into
suspected communists. Cohn becomes Trump's mentor, teaching him how to admit
nothing and deny everything, go on the attack, and intimidate through the threat
of lawsuits, or through actually filing lawsuits. Cohn is played by Jeremy
Strong, who's also nominated for an Oscar. Last month, Stan won a Golden Globe for
his starring role in A Different Man,
as a man who's disfigured by a genetic condition that has grown fleshy tumors on his face.
The tumors disappear after taking a new drug, and he emerges quite attractive,
but remains alienated and withdrawn from other people. In the film I, Tanya, Sebastian Stan
played Tanya Harding's boyfriend, who plots to disable her ice-skating competitor, Nancy Kerrigan.
In the miniseries Pam and Tommy, he played Tommy Lee, Motley Crue's drummer and Pamela Anderson's husband.
A lot of Stan's fans know him from the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Bucky Barnes, a recurring character in the Captain America films.
Let's start with a scene from The Apprentice.
Trump is planning to build Trump Tower and is trying to convince New York City Mayor
Ed Koch that it will be so extraordinary Koch should give him tax breaks.
It will be so good for New York.
Rory Cohn is also in the room.
You'll hear him jumping into the conversation.
I really think this is going to be one of the most exceptional buildings anywhere in
the world and frankly there's never been anything like it. 68 stories tall, 28 sides,
a million square feet. Every unit will have amenities like you wouldn't believe and the
high floors have exceptional views over Central Park. The lobby, the floors will all be marble,
pink Paradiso marble from Italy. It will have the largest atrium in the world, a 60 foot
waterfall spanned by shops and retail
and restaurants, and I think it's going to be
something very special.
Frankly, there's never been anything like it.
And what are you going to call it?
Trump Tower.
Trump Tower?
Oh, that's interesting.
Look, he has a great track record,
so we think this is a very reasonable ask.
Well, as I frequently say about his buildings, the merit to find the thing is we're just not He has a great track record, so we think this is a very reasonable ask.
Well, as I frequently say about his buildings, the merit to find the thing is we're just not going to give you the tax breaks.
Why would we?
I mean, I can't let you get rich on the backs of the people of New York and they atrociously...
Well, Mr. Mayor, I mean, first of all...
Look, Mr. Mayor, my client is...
Well, you're not, you're not, Mr. Mayor, because I'm building a 68-story building that's gonna employ 5,000 construction workers.
And we have heard stories about the construction workers
working on your projects.
They don't get paid, they have liens against you, Donald.
I'm trying to employ people in New York
and turn us back around towards the future.
And you're being a very unfair guy,
because frankly, what do you know about me?
What do you know about the amount of money
that I made on my own?
You don't know anything, to be perfectly honest, Mr. Mayor.
You don't know me at all, but you will.
You'll never forget me after this
because I won't forget what you just did.
Trump Tower will be built with or without you.
Okay.
You're about to be sued, Mr. Mayor.
Sebastian Stan, welcome to Fresh Air.
It's a pleasure to have you on the show.
I think you're great.
Thank you. Thank you for having me.
So after choosing that clip, first of all, I should say,
some listeners were probably thinking,
he doesn't sound like Trump.
What would you say to that?
Well, I mean, I would say that Trump did not
sound like Trump when he was in his mid to late 30s, which is when that was sort of
happening. And I think that I did make some conscious choices very carefully with the
voice, not only just to honor the age and what he sounded like at the time, which to
me sounded very different than today, but also to not lean into it as much as it's become popular to do.
Because a big challenge with this role
was obviously to avoid falling into caricature
and into sort of the version of a cartoon
that he's somewhat become.
Um, one would argue even willingly on his own part,
whether he's aware of that or not.
Because the voice along with mannerisms
and other physical characteristics that he has
that we've become so accustomed to
and we've been so over-saturated with,
really had to be kind of very,
I had to very carefully select and maneuver them
and kind of earn them over the period of time of the movie,
very much like he did as he grew into what we see today,
but in part because I needed to bring audience in on this journey,
as opposed to alienating them from the beginning with what they've already sort of know and expect.
You made the film while Biden was president in between Trump's two terms.
What's it like watching his second term after having played him?
Well, that's a really great question and it's one where there's no real clear answer that
I can give you.
It's a mixed bag.
It's a mixed bag.
I mean, in a lot of ways, a lot of things look very predictable to me, especially having
studied him for this film.
The victimhood, blaming blaming the revenge tactics,
all that we go in depth in the film
that he had absorbed from Roy Cohn.
You really do see, I think even if you look
at the inauguration, I mean, and even at the debate,
right, with Kamala Harris, I mean, you really see
what we talk about in the movie, of these sort of ways
he's learned to flip it around on the other person and kind of just always just be denying reality and reshaping the truth
as long as it fits his narrative and the complete utter lack of lack of acceptance for any criticism
or any wrongdoing or anything whatsoever. So it's eerily familiar.
It's predictable.
It's also, I may say, tragic because I guess for me,
you know, I also feel like I saw a version
of this overweight kid that was paranoid and insecure and desperate
for attention that was made to pay a big price at daddy's big betrayal, sending him off to
military school where he had to kind of, you know, whatever happened there that dehumanized
him further and the revenge that he's been enacting out, you know?
And at the same time, it's hard not to sort of
find some of it upsetting as well
because I do feel so much of it is rage and anger
that's been suppressed and un-dealt with
that we're all having to kind of just, you know,
deal with and pay a price for. Playing him, I'm sure you had to be him and see things from him, his point of
view, which requires you, the actor, to have empathy for Trump, the character that you're
portraying.
Well, I think as an actor, you have to kind of go through a process where you look at
what are the things here that I feel
that are useful for me to do this in the right way that it's asking of me, and what are the
things that I feel that are going to work against me.
And then you have to sort of become an investigator, and you have to, in a way, be a bodyguard
to the character you're playing. And I've wrestled with a degree of powerlessness as a child that I felt growing up as a result
of a lot of change that happened very quickly in formative years where I didn't feel safe
and changing countries and changing schools and changing homes and caretakers coming and
going and so on. And that's affected my life in a certain way. But I would argue nowhere
near the degree of powerlessness that I feel he must have gone through in order to create
such an ulterior ego to the extent that he has, because that's what I really see it's about with him. It's always
power and mistrust and paranoia and everything is transactional. That's how he operates.
TARI GROSS Sebastian Stan is nominated for an Oscar
for his portrayal of Donald Trump in the film The Apprentice. We'll hear more of the interview
after a break. I'm Terry Gross and
this is Fresh Air Weekend.
I want to move on to another new film of yours which has been playing on HBO lately and I
assume on Max and that's A Different Man for which you won a Golden Globe in January. And
in this film you're afflicted with neurofibromatosis,
which is a genetic disease that creates fleshy tumors,
and for you, fleshy tumors on the face.
So you're kind of treated a bit like an outcast
because people stare at you, they might move away.
The character who you're attracted to,
who seems to be very fond of you, just recoils
when you try to touch her.
So then you're part of a new drug experimental trial, and the drug cures the condition.
The tumors kind of fall away, and you're very attractive underneath.
You have a beautiful face.
It's your face. It's Sebastian Stan's face.
But your character doesn't change.
You're alienated, you're isolated,
and that's not going to change.
I'm wondering how much this film made you think about looks
and how looks determine how people are treated
in this world with just something a lot of us think about all the time.
Well, of course. I mean, how could it not?
I mean, there were a couple parts to the film that I sort of related to.
I mean, one, you know, I struggled with weight when I was a little kid.
You know, I had my own. And obviously, coming from a different country and trying to learn a new language
and fit in, right, I had my own experiences
where I felt alienated or where I felt people acted differently
towards me because I was different or I sounded different or whatever.
There was that piece.
Then there was the piece of...
which actually I wasn't aware of, which Aaron Schimberg,
the writer, director and Adam Pearson, who also stars in the movie, who has neurofibromatosis,
made me aware of, which was this piece about how as a recognizable person, recognizable
actor on the street, I am sort of public property very much in the same way that somebody with
a disability is actually, you know.
And I have experienced that invasion of privacy.
I experienced it daily when I walk around or if I'm sitting at lunch, someone's filming
without my consent or someone's whispering or you feel people look at you or sometimes
I, you know, people come up and they tap you on the shoulder.
And so these are all very similar things that that Edward or people that have had, you know,
have stood out for various reasons deal with all the time.
And the third part of it was that once I got the prosthetics on, which were incredible
by this artist Mike Marino, I went out on the street and I really walked around New
York City and sort of experienced people's reactions firsthand. And I got to see how limited the narratives
around disability and disfigurement are.
Tell me about what you experienced doing that.
Well, I mean, it was incredibly informative, obviously,
for me as a character in terms of the physicality
that I discovered from it.
I mean, for one, I could only see out of one eye
and hear out of one ear. That affected the way I walked. That affected the distance that I was discovered from it. I mean, for one, you know, I could only see out of one eye and hear out of one ear.
That affected the way I walked,
that affected the distance that I was taking from people,
how I stood, how much I saw, you know,
but also just looking down.
But in terms of the level of self-awareness
and the powerlessness and the isolation that I experienced,
you know, standing on a street,
on a busy corner in Manhattan.
I don't think I ever experienced that in my life.
And it was incredibly lonely.
I think I spoke about this, but a lot of people just either ignored or jumped to this sort
of degree of pity that they feel like they owe you sort of something. And the only people that I interacted
with very briefly that actually seemed, where the connection seemed genuine were kids, you
know. I had this one moment with this little girl who seemed fascinated by the way I looked
and it was just curiosity. And it's curiosity that sort of we lack or we're afraid of when we're dealing
with sort of these differences.
You grew up in Romania. And when you were growing up, I think you lived there till what,
the age of eight or nine?
Yeah, about eight. Yeah, until right after the revolution. Yeah. So you were very young during the end of communism in Romania when the dictator,
Nicolae Ceaușescu, was overthrown. He was the head of the Communist Party there. There
were protests. There were violent confrontations between the protesters and police. In 1989,
as Ceaușescu and his wife tried to escape,
they were captured, he stood trial, found guilty, and was executed. How aware were you
as a child of what was happening in the country you were living in?
Oh, I remember watching the execution on television.
They televised it?
I remember that happening, yeah.
How was he executed?
They were shot against the wall. You know, I do remember that because, yeah. How was he executed? They were shot against the wall.
I do remember that because we only
had one hour of news a night.
That was the TV we had, only one hour of television a day.
Oh, that was it?
With the exception of New Year's Eve, which had television
all night long.
And so I have these vivid memories
about being able to stay up New Year's Eve and how it was this magical time. But TV was very limited and propaganda was very
specific. And there was always a degree of kind of awareness about what you talked about, even
sometimes with your neighbors, because your neighbor could go and tell on you and so on and so forth. I mean, that's sort of like what I took from my mom and my grandparents, you know, when we were growing up.
And it was only until later when I sort of learned a little bit more about my father,
who had escaped Romania much earlier and so on and so forth. But I have these images like that on television
and then also seeing the flag with a giant hole
where the communist symbol had been cut out of,
flying on this Dacia,
which is the only car we were allowed to have.
Everybody was allowed to have the same car across
and these teenagers screaming.
So your father was able to get out of Romania
before the communist government fell.
And I know he helped other people get out as well.
Was he still married to your mother at the time?
No, no.
My father was part of that generation of young people that were really trying to
find a way to live around communism and stand up to communism.
And he had been in the Navy, he'd worked on a cargo ship, and he had helped a lot of people
escape the country. And there was, you know, he had created a lot of attention
on him to the point where it was no longer safe
for him to be in the country.
And there was a degree of that that we knew
and there's a degree of that that we didn't know, you know.
But I think in some ways, and certainly a lot of people
that I've spoken to years later about
Who were his friends and who knew him?
He was he was heralded a hero in a way to them
Is he still alive? No, he's he's no longer alive. No, were you ever able to talk to him about this? I
Did yeah. Yeah, he
He passed away recently, but we we had, we were able to sort of connect
later in life, like basically more when I was 17, 18. And he was in California at the
time and it was actually, I was very lucky because I was trying to be an actor and I was coming out to LA.
I didn't live in LA, I was living in New York.
I just graduated from school,
but I needed to come out to LA for pilot season
and auditions and things like that.
And I had no money and I was able to kind of go
and live with him and go audition and use his car.
And so that time we really, we really connected
and I got to know him. And I think by the end of his life, I think we really did become
very close. And that was important for me.
Were you surprised to hear some of the things he told you about his past?
Yes and no. But at the same time, you know, I think one of the things I didn't really
understand is how much he loved America, how much he loved and how strongly he felt about
America, you know, and the 80s and Ronald Reagan and what it meant to make America great again.
the 80s in Ronald Reagan and what it meant to make America great again. And really, really was proud to have come here and been able to have had
an opportunity to start a life and get his passport and work and earn a living and be free.
And these are all things I thought about when I was doing this movie.
These are all things I thought about. And I mean this movie. These are all things I thought about.
And I mean, I had a degree of that that, I mean, it makes me emotional to think about
it, but like, I had a degree of that that I always understood about, you know, that
I was, when I came to New York and my mom and everything, and the amazing opportunity
that I was blessed with to be able to come here, you know, I
mean, for a kid from this country, there are many people that didn't make it, you know.
And so the message was, what are you going to do with it?
You know, what are you going to make out of yourself?
You know, and there was great liberty in that and pressure.
And also, right, that's the American dream.
And that's what the movie to me is,
The Apprentice. That was a lot of what I was trying to understand also. But questions I
had about, you know, where my father came from, what did he see in this country, and
what did this country give us, and how far you can go. I mean, there's a lot to talk
about, but hopefully you know what I mean.
Yeah, well, when you came here, you had already lived in Romania,
you had to learn German from scratch when you and your mother moved to Vienna,
and I think, how old were you when you came to the US?
I came when I was officially, we moved in 95 when I was 12.
We had visited US a couple times before that, and then we moved in 95, summer of 95.
Okay, so you grow up in Romania where there's an hour of TV a night and it's probably just
propaganda.
And then you move to America where everybody just like watches TV and goes to the movies
and is it before, probably before the heavy days of the internet and social media?
Oh yeah, there was none of that.
None of that.
I remember my first movies in a theater were Jurassic Park and Mrs. Doubtfire.
I mean that like, that was, blew my mind, you know.
And you say it blew your mind, but I can imagine that a lot of pop culture did because you
weren't a part of it.
You didn't get to grow up with it the way everybody around you in America did. No, it's true. And actually, I was always behind as a result. Like for instance, with the Beatles
or things that people kind of like just know second nature, I was always discovering them
like too late. So I was never a cool kid in high school because of that. I was kind of
trailing behind.
What did you do to try to catch up?
Well I think you know the survive mechanism is like you don't want to be different you
know you want to just fit in.
I remember being even like really insecure about my name Sebastian that it was such a
different name.
Everybody in my high school was even in middle school I, was named Anthony, Christopher, you know,
Sam, whatever, like there was all these names. And there was a part of me even wanting to
be named different. So I was petrified about being different, you know, right? It was like
the late 90s. And so you try to wear, you know, the jeans everybody was wearing. I remember
these Genco jeans or whatever. It was like every skater guy had these baggy, baggy jeans. I wanted to get a pair of that.
You know, I'd cut my hair like in sync or backstreet boys. It was like that
mushroom haircut that DiCaprio had in Titanic. You know, like you just, you just
wanted to be, you just want to look like what everybody else is doing.
It seems like you spent part of your early life in hiding.
You know, literally you had, watch what you said in Romania.
In Vienna you had to learn German and to fit in and you know, you had to learn that from
scratch.
You come to America, you tried to be like other teens even though you had a totally
different background than American teens did. So there's a lot that you had to acquire and a lot probably that you had to hide.
Yeah.
No, well, I think you're right.
But I think this is what acting did for me.
Acting liberated me from that.
I mean, it was really around the same time that I found acting, basically in high school, kind of when I was 14, something like
that, and doing a school play. And then I went to the Stagedoor Manor Acting Camp, which was a very
pretty well-known acting camp, met friends there. And I just, I don't know, it just, it was the first
thing that never, that just allowed me or gave me permission to sort of
kind of have more confidence and courage. And so as a result, I think the work has always been,
no matter what it is, you know, no matter how scary it might be or unknown to me it might be,
it's always liberated me. it's never hindered me.
So I'm thinking about your mother here. Your mother moves with you and your new
stepfather to New York. You know, it's always hard to uproot a child and uproot
them to another country. That's probably super hard. But I'm thinking the life you have now,
the respect and fame that you've achieved,
all that you've accomplished,
must make her feel really good about
the decisions that she made and alleviate
any guilt that she might have
experienced at the beginning when you were
trying so hard to acclimate to a new country.
Oh, absolutely. I think so.
I mean, my mother is coming with me to the Oscars.
She's my date. I think she's very proud.
I'm so insanely grateful to her for supporting me.
I had a supporting parent with acting.
A lot of kids do not have supportive
parents like that. So I felt like she did her best, maybe more than her best. And she
made tough choices in her life, but certainly gave me an opportunity in a life. So this whole experience has been all about
being able to thank her and my stepdad.
So at the Oscars, I always wonder,
what's it like if you lose and the camera is on you,
and you have to pretend like I'm so happy for the winner.
That's so wonderful.
Oh my God. The impossible has already happened.
You know, as somebody told me early on when they said,
you know, if you think this is going to be a thankless job,
like, you're not, you know, if you think you're going to do
this movie and someone's going to, you're going to,
first of all, you're going to piss off everybody.
No one's going to, not one person's going to,
whether they care for him or they hate him, they're going to piss off everybody. No one's going to... Not one person's going to... Whether they care for him or they hate him,
they're all going to be pissed.
No one's going to see anything in this,
or any value in this.
So I just keep pinching myself, going like,
I remember that, you know, the season, the CIS letter.
And then, you know, no one wanted to buy the film.
And then it's like, is it going to come out?
And then, oh, we have no money.
There's no billboard on Sunset.
And now here's Jeremy and I kind of going to this thing.
And so it's a funny moment when you're watching that.
Of course, we've all seen Oscars,
and you kind of go, what's going on through everybody's mind?
But I feel the win has already happened here, you know,
for me. And it's, it's, I will be grateful in that moment no matter what at this
point. I know that's like what everybody says, but I think for me genuinely, I, it's
just been so surreal. It's impossible, I think, for me to have any more expectations
at this point.
Sebastian Stanis, it's just been great to talk with you. Thank you so much and good
luck at the Oscars.
It's been lovely. Thank you for having me and I really appreciate your questions and
taking the time.
Sebastian Stan has nominated for an Oscar for his starring role in the film The Apprentice.
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