Fresh Air - Cynthia Erivo's Road To 'Wicked'
Episode Date: November 17, 2025Erivo speaks with Tonya Mosley about the parallels between her life and the experience of her ‘Wicked’ character, Elphaba. She also talks about singing as a child, using perfume to get into charac...ter, and why she shaved her head. Erivo's new memoir is called ‘Simply More: A Book for Anyone who Has Been Told They're Too Much.’Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, it's Carrie.
Our co-host, Tanya Mosley and I will be doing an end of the year Fresh Air Plus bonus episode,
answering listener questions about the show and about ourselves.
You can send the questions now to Fresh Air Plus at NPR.org, with Plus spelled out.
That's Fresh Air Plus at NPR.org.
This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley.
There's a moment in the new movie, Wicked for Good.
When Elphaba, the so-called Wicked Witch, stops defending herself to a world that has misunderstood her
and simply exists on her own power.
My guest today, Cynthia Arrivo, brings that moment to life with a depth that is also personal.
In part two of Wicked, Erivo captures Elphaba's evolution from outcast to someone who claims her own story.
A journey Erivo also explores in her new memoir, simply more.
The book traces how she learned to shed other people's definitions of her as a woman, as a black artist, and as someone who was sometimes told she was too much.
Arivo first broke through on Broadway and the color purple, winning a Tony Award for her portrayal of Seeley.
She went on to earn an Oscar nomination for her portrayal of Harriet Tubman and later portrayed Aretha Franklin in Genius Aretha, for which she was nominated for several awards, including an Emmy.
Arivo is also a recording artist, blending gospel, soul, and cinematic pop.
Last year's Wicked and the new film, Wicked for Good, are adapted from the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical.
The new film continues Elphaba and Glinda's story, exploring what happens after their fates diverge and the myth of the Wicked Witch takes hold.
And Cynthia Arrivo, welcome back to Fresh Air.
Hello, thank you very much.
You know, there is something extraordinary about watching Wicked and then Wicked for Good
and reading your memoir at the same time.
There's so many parallels there.
When did it click for you, that your personal life and that connection to Elphaba were so close?
I think I had an inkling that there was a connection soon after I started doing the music, singing the music, learning the music.
But I think it really actually clicked when I was making the music.
film, when I was playing the character, that I realized, oh, this is, this is a lot closer
to home than I had imagined.
But I didn't realize that there were so many sort of real parallels, the relationship with
her father, the relationship to being in spaces that don't really include you, all of that
sort of dawned on me as it was happening.
So the feelings you see in the movie are very real feelings because they're sort of immediate.
Was there a particular moment during that time period where it hit you?
You said, wait a minute, this is me.
We were shooting, and this is going to sound so strange because it's such a small moment,
but we were shooting the scene when Nessa Rose is about to be sent off to school
and their father asks Alphabet to take care of Nessa.
And I remember he speaks to her quite harshly and the feeling.
that I got in that moment sort of was a click moment for me.
It was that moment that I realized, oh, this relationship is a complicated one.
That was when I sort of thought, oh, I recognize that.
What's so interesting about that is that the story of Wicked had been living with you for years.
I mean, we're talking over a decade or so.
The first time I discovered it was when I was 20 or 21, yeah.
Director Jean Chou actually asked you during the audition.
what does Elphaba mean to you?
And you told him the story of defying gravity,
which was a song that you had learned several years before.
Yes.
When you were in school.
Yes.
You write about this in your memoir, simply more.
And I want you to read exactly what you said to John.
Can I have you read it?
This was the exact piece of music I escaped into when I was in drama school.
If I was having a really bad day or was miserably aware of how odd I think,
out there, an outsider who couldn't connect with the others, I would hide out in a music room
with a friend, Michael. We'd sing this together. We'd stay in that little room until the very last
minute before we had to go back to class, belting our hearts out. This song gave me refuge,
singing it during a very vulnerable time in my life. These songs made me feel safe.
That was also the first time that you shared out loud, how alienating. I think.
school was for you.
Very much so, yeah.
What was it about that moment that it came to you to actually be vulnerable and tell?
And also, that was a show of the connection between you and Elphabah as well.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I felt really safe in that room.
I felt like John would understand it.
And I also knew that in order to really connect with this character,
to really help people understand that I knew and
understood who this character was, who this person was, that I had to be vulnerable, that I had
to share the experience that I felt that this character had been through. And I felt like this
character needed the vulnerability that I can sometimes be afraid of sharing or being. I'm
better at now. But in that moment, I just thought, if I'm not honest about what I feel or have felt
or how this music has made me feel
and I think I'm leaving something on the table
that is important.
That experience that you had
at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
that was a very difficult time for you.
Maybe one of the most difficult times
in your entire career.
Yeah.
Yeah, I just felt like people really didn't understand me
and at the same time,
whilst not understanding,
didn't really make very much room for me either,
that it was sort of one.
a judgment was made, that judgment stayed. I think I was lucky enough to have one or two people
during that time who really looked out for me, who cared for me. But it was a tough experience
to be there because I really just didn't think I fit. And lots of strange, interesting
microaggressions from people who now are not at the school. But it was, it was an interesting
tough time. What were they telling you about yourself? Or how did you think they perceived you?
I think they thought I was unfocused and troublesome. I think they thought I didn't care about my work.
A lot of people, there was sometimes, well, there's one person in particular who made a comment about
my body. It was too muscular. I needed to stop going to the gym. And at that point, I just was like,
Well, I like the body I'm in.
And so to have someone who was teaching, who was supposed to be, you know, mentoring me, to say that was just, it was just horrifying.
You were a young girl.
You had grown up in South London.
You had to work your way through school.
And that was part of the issue was that you, unlike other students, had other jobs.
You were working as a background singer.
Backger singer in the bar at a theater.
Yeah. I was working at a shirt and tie shop as well over the weekend. And so I was like, I was working a lot. And that happened because when I first got there, I was given the opportunity to go and do backing vocals for a band that would have paid for my tuition in its entirety. And when I asked if I could take the time off, which was two weeks, I was given an ultimatum either to stay.
let the
gig go
or leave
and take the gig
but I couldn't come back.
What an impossible position
to be in.
And I didn't want to leave
so I stayed.
During your time there
you were given these bit roles
but there's this moment
that you write about
where you were asked to sing
for another singer
who had laryngitis.
But you weren't asked to be on stage.
No, I was backstage.
Backstage.
And then they would lip-sink.
Yes.
And you did it.
Yeah.
It's one of those moments that I,
I've started to learn to forgive myself for
because I felt so,
previously I felt so mad at myself.
So I guess there's a part of me
that's a little bit ashamed
that I would sort of give up my voice in that way.
But it's also why I'm vehemently protective
of the way I use my voice.
I do not say yes to everything at all.
It takes a lot for me.
It has to mean something for me to sing and has to make sense.
I will never give my voice to someone like that again because it felt like someone removing a gift that was meant for me and giving it to someone else.
And it just felt in the moment really awful.
And I remember feeling really wrong.
It felt wrong.
I want to play a clip from the latest installment of Wicked because we learned that the Wonderful Wizard of Oz is a fraud.
But in this film, you're standing up to Oz, who is oppressing the animals.
And I want to play this clip to illustrate this.
It's you as Elfaba, Ariana Grande as Glinda, and the Wonderful Wizard of Oz played by Jeff Goldblum.
And he's telling you why efforts are meaningless.
Right. Let's listen.
Elphaba, uh, I've missed you. Can't we start again?
Yes, please. Just say yes.
No. Don't you think I wish I could? I would give anything to go back to a time when I...
When I actually believe that you were wonderful.
A wonderful wizard of Oz.
No one believed in you more than I did.
But there's no going back.
And we can't move forward
not until everyone knows what I know.
And once they know the truth...
I'm not going to believe it.
How can you say that?
No, no, I'm just being straight with you.
I could tell them that I've been lying to them
till I'm...
Forgive me, blue in the face,
but wouldn't make any difference.
They're never going to stop believing in me.
You know why?
Because they don't want to.
That's my guest today.
Cynthia Aribeau and seen with Jeff Goldblum and Ariana Grande and Wicked for Good.
You all shot this back-to-back, Wicked and Wicked for Good.
Not back-to-back at the same time.
At the same time.
Simultaneously, yeah.
Did you have to hold anything back emotionally as you were moving through these two different
storylines that one kind of evolves from the other?
Yeah, it was really interesting because sometimes I think we had shot quite a bit of the first movie,
but not nearly enough to say we'd almost finished no way.
We were nowhere near and then we were sort of all the way into the second
and we were sort of tandeming between the two movies.
So there were days where luckily you would sort of know where the character was at this point
and you'd have some sort of hindsight for where they had come from
and what they had been through in order to move into the second movie.
But there were sometimes where you're sort of guessing, really,
because you hadn't shot a certain scene.
You're just sort of assuming that the scene is going to feel this way.
How did you navigate that?
Did you just surrender to the idea?
Yeah, you have to.
And also, I think both of us actually, Ari and I,
both of us sort of made really specific decisions about how we looked,
what we walked in, the clothes we were wearing,
so that even the sense that we were wearing,
because I always find a scent for each character that I play.
What do you mean by scent?
Perfew.
I always find a scent for each person.
But this time I found a scent for each alphabet.
So Alphabur who was young wore a very different scent to Elphabur, who is older.
And so sense memory was a lot to do with how to sort of click back into where we are in time.
Oh, this is so interesting.
Can you slow down for a moment?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
First off, how did you come to that idea and what sense did you choose?
I started doing this a long, years and years ago.
The first time I did it, I think I did it with Harriet, and hers was like cedarwood and lavender, I think it was, but like essence with a base oil, not a perfume, because I wanted it to feel like something she could find that she could, you know, discover, make.
I wanted it to feel like it was off the earth.
and then I realized how powerful it was for me
and so I kept doing it with my characters
so with Elphabah I knew that they had to feel different
so Elphabah who's younger I sort of messed around with
like big florals like really deep florals
so tuberose, rose, rose, lilies
and then I mixed it with like a tobacco oud.
And sometimes I find a scent and it's not right and I go back and I go,
and it's a real, something will say, this is the one.
Oh, this is so fascinating.
So Elfielba for good, what was her scent?
Hers, you'll never believe me.
But it was a scent called Witchie Woo.
Oh.
which when I found it, I thought there's no way this is going to work.
It will be way too on the nose.
Where did you find it?
I was staying at Soho Farmhouse in the UK and they have this little sort of gift shop.
And in the back they have a few perfumes and I saw all this scent.
It said, which you woo.
And I thought, I'm not going to like this.
I'm not going to like it.
It's too on the nose.
there's no way.
So I sprayed some on my hand
and immediately I wasn't convinced.
But you know how perfume changes.
Your body, your scent, your own natural oils and stuff.
Change the scent.
So I go away and I keep going back to it.
My body is like, no, this is a really good scent.
There was a reason it was there for you.
Go back for it.
So I go back for this scent.
So I'm wearing witchyoo and I'm wearing,
and this time like a grown oud.
And this helped you keep your mind around the different emotional notes between the two movies.
Yeah. Do you think that has something to do with, because you have synesthesia, which means you can see color when you sing, the music.
Yeah, music.
Do you feel like this might be connected?
I'm sure. I think my senses are heightened. So I know I have a heightened sense of smell.
And obviously with music, there's a heightened sense there. So I think, I think maybe. But I've never thought.
of it that way. I've always thought of it as just another access point to each of the characters.
It's just sort of the character's way of telling me another bit about who they are, you know, what
calls to them, what is part of their DNA. And that is another thing that I think just I've sort of
discovered along the way. Because it isn't the same ever. I've never worn the same thing for any
character. There's some pretty intense training that goes into this role, both physical, emotional.
I mean, when you were even training to audition, is it true that you would try to sing while you
were swimming? Yes, I would sing and so I'd do laps then sing, and then I'd run and then I would
sing. I just wanted it to be in my body. You know, it's the idea that if I'm doing something
that's strenuous and I can sing it whilst I'm doing the thing that's strenuous, when I'm standing still,
it'll just be there. I won't actually have to work that hard for it to be there.
Let's talk a little bit about where you grew up. You grew up in South London. South London.
Stockwell.
Stockwell, yeah.
You grew up with your mom and your younger sister.
Yes.
Are there voices like yours?
As in singing and speaking?
Yes.
My sister can really sing. She'll hate me for saying it out loud.
But I think she has a beautiful singing voice.
My mom, I think my acting ability came from my mom
But she loves to sing
And she loves music
Was there a lot of music in your home?
All the time
All the time
Were you guys singing together?
Yeah, me and my sister would harmonize together
My mom would sing in the car
And we would sing along
Christmas morning is really, really fun
Because it starts at like 6 a.m. in the morning
And then just goes till the middle of the night
When did you know that your voice could make people feel?
I had an inkling that something was happening with my voice at about five
because I was asked to sing Silent Night for a nativity.
I think it was because I was just not shy that they asked me to sing it.
I don't know that they knew I could sing.
Or maybe they did, but I had no idea.
I was just happy to sing the song because of people's reaction.
I knew that it made people happy.
I know that much.
You can, you know, it's basic.
You see people smiling, people clap, people stand.
They're happy.
And I connected it with that.
But I think it was when I was maybe about 12,
when people kept asking me to sing.
Like, I was on the school playground and it would be lunchtime.
And other kids would say, hey, can you sing?
Can you sing this?
Yeah.
Then I would sing it.
And they would get their other friends and they'd go,
Cynthia's going to sing, you know.
And then talent shows started coming up and they would ask if I would sing.
And that's when I knew that something that I could do.
something with my voice. I think when I really understood that it could make people feel,
I want to say I was about 18. I sang at a place called Troy Bar, which is like an open mic.
It was like a little restaurant that had an open mic night every Tuesday or Thursday.
And I one day decided to get up and sing and you could hear a pin drop.
Do you remember what you're saying?
I sang Say Yes by a band called Floatry.
Oh, of course.
Yeah.
Would you sing a little bit?
Is that asking too much?
No, no.
Loving you has taken time, taking time.
But I always knew you would be mine.
I recognize the butterflies inside me
Oh, sense is going to be made tonight, tonight
All you got to do is say yes
All you got to do is say yes
Don't deny what you feel, let me undress your baby, open up your mind
Just rest
I'm about to let you know
You make me so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so.
Was it a cappella like that?
It started that way, and then the pianist,
I remember his name was Oscar, played for me.
And every time I went back to that place, he would just start the song.
He would just start the song.
So I didn't ever have a choice.
He would always just sing this.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, I'm talking with Cynthia Arrivo.
She stars as Elphaba and Wicked for Good.
And she's written a new memoir called Simply More.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is fresh air.
Hi, it's Terry Gross.
If you'd like Fresh Air interview collections with filmmakers or comics or musicians or staff favorites and more, sign up for Fresh Air Plus.
It will make those car rides, meal prep, and the treadmill more entertaining.
And you'll get daily Fresh Air podcast episodes ad-free.
Learn more and sign up at plus.npr.org.
Hi, this is Molly C.V. Nusper, digital producer at Fresh Air.
And this is Terry Gross, host of the show.
One of the things I do is write the weekly newsletter.
And I'm a newsletter fan.
I read it every Saturday after breakfast.
The newsletter includes all the week's shows, staff recommendations, and Molly picks timely highlights from the archive.
It's a fun read.
It's also the only place where we tell you what's coming up next week, an exclusive.
So subscribe at W-HY.org slash Fresh Air and look for an email from Molly every Saturday morning.
You didn't grow up with your dad.
You don't know much about your dad.
No.
And I know him.
I've met him.
My mom gave us the space and the choice to grow a relationship.
She gave him a choice to grow the relationship.
But he never really took the opportunity.
Can I have you read a section from the book where you talk about him?
It's actually a poem.
Yes.
Fun facts about my father.
I don't know how old he is.
I don't know his birthday.
I don't know his profession, I don't know his parents' names, I don't know where he lives, I don't have his phone number.
Suffice it to say, I really don't know much about him at all.
I was 16 when he left me alone in a London underground station after an argument about a transit pass.
When he told me he didn't want to be in our lives anymore, I stood there in shock, my head was empty, and then I walked away.
The first step felt like running into a brick wall, pain.
Then, agony.
My emotions opened like floodgates.
I cried so hard I could barely breathe, could barely see.
It was only when I ended up on the wrong train platform
that I realized that I had been walking in the wrong direction.
Just as I made my way to the right platform, there he was.
He was in front of me, walking straight in my direction.
I held my breath.
Maybe he was going to apologize.
Maybe this argument would just disappear.
Before my cascading scenarios could solidify into hope,
he passed right beside me.
He made no eye contact, said nothing.
I was nothing.
From that moment forward to him,
I had ceased to exist.
It was the last day I ever spoke with him.
I do not know much about my father,
but I do know a few things,
his name, that he can whistle, that he always wore a leather bomber jacket.
We both have a gap between our two front teeth, and by some strange stroke of irony,
and because God likes playing jokes, my father can sing.
Oh, Cynthia, first off, thank you for reading that.
Have you heard your father's voice?
Yes, it's a good voice. He's got a lovely voice.
I learned to whistle from him, which is why all of those things are social.
strange because we have so many similarities.
You wrote in a very matter-of-fact way.
Yes.
Was it easy for you to write that?
It was easy to write that now.
I think if you'd have asked me to write it, I don't know, 10 years ago, it would have been really difficult.
But I think, I don't know, I'm in a real, like, place of acceptance, I think, and a strange apathy.
as well. Can you describe that apathy? Yeah, I just, I don't, I don't wish him harm, but I, you know,
it's not like I'm waiting for some grand resolution. I'm sort of okay with it being exactly what it is.
I have no desire to start a relationship. I have no desire to mend a relationship. It doesn't
really occupy my thoughts that much. But it took time to get to that point. Yes, yes, it did.
Because there was a time where you wanted to be able to show him.
Of course.
I am Cynthia Arrival.
Yeah, you're going to miss this.
You're going to miss this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But it doesn't sustain if the point of doing the things you love
or the point of doing a thing that you're good at is to make someone care about you,
is to prove that you are meant to be loved, is to prove that you are worthy of being loved.
It doesn't sustain because really and truly the most.
important love is that of yourself. It has to come from you first. And it was a great driver
that sort of wanting to prove was really fantastic for a time. It was really great. Was there a
particular moment in your career where maybe you got a role or you paid a piece of music
and you thought, my dad's going to hear this or see this? I think maybe up until the Harrier of it all,
I think that's when I thought, oh, maybe he'll see it and think, I messed up, maybe I'll contact it. And I think it was when I had that thought that I thought, I don't know that this is the healthiest thing for me. I think that's actually when I started therapy, just because it doesn't work. And it's so much more joyful when it's not for that.
I'm not going to spoil it, but there is a storyline thread in Wicked for Good where Elphabas' father is very prominent.
Yeah.
Did you ever have a moment while you were filming that
where you were thinking about your own experience?
Oh, I think most of the way through it, to be honest,
I think the time when it really sort of all came to our head is that
in the first movie where in that sort of,
we call it the Oz Dust Ballroom,
that solo dance moment that turns into a duet,
that's when it all sort of comes to a head.
So when you see those tears falling out of my eyes,
that was not rehearsed, that was not planned, it just happened, yeah.
It's how therapeutic that can be for you to actually act it out.
Yeah, yeah, and I wasn't planning for it to be.
But as long as you're open to it, that that can happen, that these moments can really help
to move through some things that you maybe didn't know were there to move through
or that the things that you've been through
can come to the surface
and you can use them to connect to the moment.
Yeah.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us,
I'm talking with Cynthia Arrivo.
She stars as Elfaba and Wicked for Good.
And she's written a new memoir called Simply More.
This is fresh air.
Did you know about Harriet Tubman growing up in Britain?
I did. I did.
But we just didn't get enough information on her.
It's like a small little thing in the textbook that takes up maybe one page if we're lucky, if we're lucky.
But when you do further excavation of who they are, when you learn more, you realize just how full a life she led.
How did you decide, because we don't have, you, you were able to dig through the research that is available.
But you had to create a person out of what is like just a black and white photograph and all of,
these little bits of information.
Yeah. I was lucky because when I was playing her, an image had just been unsurfaced of her as a 20-something-year-old.
And it was totally different to the picture that we...
Right. That was new. Because we had only had her as an older woman.
And so that sort of struck questions for me. I was lucky because my director, Casey Lemons, and the writer Greg, had sort of helped guide me through the major moments in her.
life that we never have spoken about and they're there. It's there. Yes, we know that Harriet Tubman
was a hero and saved many people and freed many slaves, including herself. What we didn't know
is that when she was doing it, she was 27. She was a young woman. She was also brokenhearted.
She had left her love behind. She went back to get him and he was with someone else. We don't know
that, why would she continue after that heartbreak? Well, because she couldn't rest. The reason
she continued is because she didn't feel like she actually had obtained freedom until other people
were free. She didn't feel like she had obtained freedom until she could share it with her family.
Also, she was not well. She would black out. She had like a narcolepsy. I actually think
she might have had epilepsy. But those episodes would bring vision.
I learned that she sang.
She was a general.
She led a woman's suffrage movement at a time when really no one wanted any suffrage for black women specifically.
All after she had had her run through the Underground Rail Road, that sort of was done by the time she was 30 something.
Which we sort of think of as what was happening until she was in her older age.
But actually, by the time she was 45, she was a general.
These women you also play, I mean, they're also so purpose-driven.
Yes.
In a way that, like, I also feel this way about Aretha.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
She was.
Yes.
She was.
Were there any surprises you learned about Aretha?
She kept trying again and again and again.
That at the very beginning, she wanted to sort of go in the same route as, like, the jazz greats.
and it didn't work for her
and it was sort of
what about the Ella's
and the Dinah Washington
and it just didn't make sense
for the voice that she had
also for the history of music that she had
but she was trying so hard
to fit herself into a lane
that wasn't made for her
because essentially the lane
that was made for her
was made by her
but there was never an inkling
of her going like giving up
I never felt like there was an option for her
the option was okay this doesn't work well now what what else works yeah that for me was like a real like even when I think about it now I was like that's the feeling I get from her and and that actually something about the transformation that happens with her and music I think is a real spiritual one I think she would disappear into music almost like she was in a trance and then come back again when she was done was there any self-consciousness for you because I think she would disappear into music and almost like she was in a trance and then come back again when she was done was there any self-consciousness for you because
Because you used her real voice in the series to take on Aretha's music and embody her in that way with your voice.
Yeah.
I was curious about the things that she could do.
I realized that there is the skill that this woman had is, I mean, tantamount to no other person like her.
There's no other voice like hers.
There's no other person who sings like her.
Because what she was able to do with her voice is unlike anyone else's that have ever heard.
I want to play you singing from Aretha.
Let's listen.
Yeah.
has got a weakling
I might be a weak child
but I'll give you strength
you told me to leave you alone
my father said come on home
my doctor said
take it easy
Oh, but your loving is a much too strong.
I'm ready to your change, change, change, change, change, change, change, change, chain, change.
Aretha was notoriously private.
Yes.
And also, like, I think the funniest thing to do is to watch Aretha Franklin.
In the interviews, oh, it was my favorite thing to do.
It was my favorite thing to do.
It was my favorite because she's so brilliant.
She's so good.
She's so good at keeping everything to herself and still giving you something.
The point that I want to get to, though, with you is that, like, I wonder what you walked away with with that.
Because for the longest time, you know, I think we as fans, we want from those who give us inspiration through their art.
We want to know everything.
We want to know the source of it.
She was very much like, this is what I'm going to share.
Yes.
And this is it.
Yes.
Even when it came down to the story about her life.
Yes.
And so for you as someone who has played her.
Yeah.
And those notes, some of them not really good.
No.
Especially about her childhood.
Yeah.
What did you walk away with and thinking about what you tell and what you don't tell and what rights people have to it?
That it's all very important that what you decide to keep for yourself is okay.
That there is sort of a want.
from others to know everything but your life all of your life isn't for everyone's consumption
each person walking through the world no one knows everything about that person no one
not even the closest people to you there are things that you get to keep for yourself
because they're just yours and i think the wonderful thing about aritha not sharing absolutely
everything about her life is that we got to we got to know her as the
artist that we inevitably have to respect the work and and sometimes that should be enough
sometimes that's enough because that's what she was that's what she wanted to give and i think
we sometimes um we sometimes yearn for more from from artists and actually the artist's job is to
create art and we should be okay with letting them do just that you know is that a lesson
that you had to come into yourself?
Yeah, I think I'm more of an open book than Aretha,
but I'm also okay with keeping some things for myself.
And also I think I love the way artists and actors and stars and celebrities of old
would keep some things for themselves.
It's harder to now, right?
Yeah, but it is harder to because the temptation is to share everything
because there's so much access to ways to share everything.
But there is a choice.
You can choose to share some and keep some.
And I think that it's okay to happen.
Because if you share everything, there's nothing left.
I think a little mystery is okay, you know.
I think it's okay for some people to guess a couple things
and maybe get it right and maybe not.
You know?
Because then there's something left.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, I'm talking with Cynthia Arrivo.
She stars as Elphaba and Wicked for Good.
And she's written a new memoir called Simply More.
More After a Break.
This is fresh air.
Something that you made the decision many years ago is to shave your hair.
And talk about that decision because it also is something that sort of has changed the audition process for you.
Yeah.
It started a long time ago, just as I was coming out of drama school, I don't know, I just knew that I wanted something different. Around that time, everyone who was auditioning, girls who were auditioning, wanted long hair and a particular kind of aesthetic. And I sort of repelled against the idea because I sort of, I didn't want any distractions. I don't know what gave me the idea, what gave me the wherewithal to think. I want to lessen the distraction. I want to lessen the distraction. I want to.
I want them to just see my face.
I want when I walk in for them to see a canvas that can transform.
A blank canvas, a vessel.
A vessel.
That what you see is really me and I can change into the character in front of your very eyes.
And so what I would do is after I left drama school, I cut my hair.
I went to get a hair cut.
And the hairdresser was very, very scared to cut it because my hair was quite long.
It came down past my shoulders.
shoulders. Also, you're black, Cynthia. And you know, our hair means so much to us. It does.
It meant a lot to my mom. My mom was very surprised. I don't think I even told her before I cut my
hair. And when I came back, she was really very surprised and sort of, you cut your hair. What's
going on? Also, traditionally, when we cut a hair, one, it's for heat if you're African,
and often you cut your hair if you lose someone. So there's an understanding of sort of loss
You know that the old added when a woman cuts her hair or changes her hair start, a life shift has happened.
That is very true of the Nigerian tradition.
And so for me, I felt like I went for my own life shift.
I just sort of thought having had it happened right after drama school, it felt like it was sort of leaving something behind and taking from it what I needed and letting go of whatever else I didn't.
and when I cut my hair
I felt
strangely like myself
and the more I have
I felt like I've been steadily moving towards cutting it off completely
and Wicked was the moment when I took it off completely
I realized that my scalp had to be green
so when you watch a Wicked
you'll see that the braids
that it's 360
so you can see my...
In between the braids you can see a green scalp
that is my scalp it is not the wig
it's not the lace of the wig
The lace of the wig is basically translucent.
And you can see my scalp underneath the wig, but we spray my scalp green.
The way my face is green, it's included in my hair.
Because I knew that was going to happen.
I thought, well, I guess we'll have to just cut it all off.
This has been transformative because, of course, you wanted to go in as a vessel,
but it seemed like those who were casting had a visceral reaction to it.
Yeah.
So when I went in, I had very strong.
short hair. And that was fine. It was short and blonde, strangely enough, when I went to audition.
And by the time I had gotten to the role itself, it'd grown a little bit more. And then I
cut it. And I think everyone was very surprised that I was going to cut my hair because I think
they were going to just make the lace dark underneath it and let it be like that. And I was like,
but why? Why? If we're going to do it, we should do it. And also when I, when I cut it off,
I really liked what I saw.
So I just went with it.
And I thought there's just one, it's one extra thing that moves me closer to connecting completely with this person.
So that I'm not fooling myself about what I'm seeing in the mirror.
I was asked if I wanted to be painted green or if I wanted it to be CGI.
And I said, I want the full thing.
I want to be painted green.
But that includes my scalp.
that's got to be a long process too yes it is at minimum two hours and 45 minutes
if it's just my face and neck and hands every single time every single time you know the
defying gravity riff it's now just become a cultural yeah phenomenon there's that moment where
kiki palmer is at the end of ACP awards and she just starts singing it you know what's it like
to have your voice become a reference you know it's part of the cultural language
now. I'm one deeply flattered and it's kind of wonderful because many women have had their
riff and they've done it before and of course you have the original by Edina Menzel but
it's just lovely to be part of the lexicon of that now. It's lovely. Yeah. What colors do you see
when you sing defying gravity? Blues, strangely. Different blue like iridescent blues.
Yeah. Ariana Grande sat in the seat where you were sitting for the first wicket.
And she told me that the two of you all made a pact with each other to help protect each other as you move through.
Yes. What was that pact?
That we would make sure that we were always speaking to one another and that it would sort of be between us first if there was a problem, if something was not right, contracts, the whole lot.
How did you know that you had an ally in Ariana?
you just feel it you know the first time we spent time together was probably on my floor
and we sat for like five hours just chatting um and i i kind of just knew you just know you know
it was easy to talk to her it was easy to get really real with her if there was something i was
struggling with or something she was struggling with we would just sort of like find a corner to
just chat immediately we came up with like little safe words for each other if there's like a
if there's something going on or I'm like overwhelmed for something I have a word that I say and if
there's something she's overwhelmed with she has a word that she says you know so that we know
where the other one is yeah and we really like we talk we have real conversations is that rare
for a colleague for a co-star?
I think the myth is that it is.
Is it rare for it to be this close?
I think so.
Is it rare completely?
I don't think so.
I think that we are led to believe that women cannot get along
and women cannot coexist within film
and take care of one another.
but I think that the continuation of that myth
is the thing that makes it true.
But actually, more often than not, all we have is each other.
Cynthia Arrivo, this has been such a pleasure to talk with you.
You too. This was wonderful.
Cynthia Arrivo's memoir is titled Simply More.
She stars in the new film Wicked for Good, which is out in theaters on Friday.
Nobody!
Hit all of us.
No wizard that there is or was
is ever gonna bring me.
I hope you're happy.
Come in her.
She's with him.
Come on.
Bring me down.
So we want to bring her.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, Ben Stiller talks about growing up with showbiz parents.
His father, Jerry Stiller, is known for his role on Seinfeld as Frank Costanza, George's father.
And before that, he was in a comedy duo with his wife and Ben's mother, Anne Mira.
Ben's new documentary is about the recordings his father,
made about his life and marriage.
I hope you can join us.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers,
Roberta Shorak, Anne-Marie Baldinado,
Lauren Crenzel, Monique Nazareth, Thea Chaliner,
Susan Nacundi, and Anna Bauman.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.B. Nesper,
and our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson.
Teresa Madden directed today's show.
With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya.
mostly.
