Fresh Air - Delroy Lindo is claiming victory
Episode Date: March 5, 2026Delroy Lindo is Oscar-nominated for his role as Delta Slim in Ryan Coogler’s ‘Sinners.’ In a wide-ranging conversation with co-host Tonya Mosley, he talks about preparing for the role, growing u...p in the U.K. as the son of a Jamaican immigrant, and a special phone call from Spike Lee. He also shares what was going through his mind when he was onstage at the BAFTAs when a man shouted a racial slur. To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley, and my guest today is Delroy Lindo, an actor whose presence
has shaped film and theater for more than 50 years. From West Indian Archie and Spike Lee's
Malcolm X to the charming and cruel drug kingpin and clockers to a father guarding an unspeakable
secret in the cider house rules. For me, Delroy's characters often feel lived in, complicated,
and hard to shake. In Ryan Cougler's latest film's Senors, Lindo played
is Delta Slim, a hard drinking, deeply knowing blues harmonica player in 1930s, Mississippi.
Blues, wasn't forced on us like that religion.
No, I said.
We brought this with us from home.
It's magic what we do.
It's sacred.
Delroy Lindo is nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Delta Slim,
his first Oscar nomination in a 50-year career.
Sinners leads all films this year with 16 nominations.
Lindo trained at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco
and made his name in the theater, Broadway, Yale Rep, and the Kennedy Center,
performing August Wilson and Lorraine Hansberry before Spike Lee brought him to film audiences.
Over the decades, he's moved between stage film and television,
from Get Shorty and Ransom to his turn as the Razor.
sharp attorney in the good fight. In 2020, he reunited with Spike Lee for Defy Flibe Floods,
playing a traumatized Vietnam vet, returning to the jungle to recover buried gold and the remains
of a fallen soldier. D'Elroy Lindo, welcome to fresh air. Thank you. Thank you for having me.
Thank you. I want to set up sinners for those who have not seen it and to remind those who have
seen the film. So Sinners is this haunting Southern epic set in 1932, Mississippi. And, and
and twin brothers, Stack and Smoke, both played by Michael B. Jordan.
And they return home from Chicago to open a juke joint,
only to find that their plans are overtaken by this supernatural evil as vampires.
And hoodoo, and there's buried trauma, and it all converges into this single horror-filled night.
And I want to play the scene where we first meet your character, Delta Slim.
In this scene, Stack approaches you at a train station where your brother,
busking and tries to convince you to play at the juke joints opening night.
And you're hesitant at first until Michael S. Stack wins you over.
And Stack speaks first.
I'll give you $20 to come play at our juke tonight.
Yeah, I wish I could.
I'm going to be messing this tonight.
Simms I am there every Saturday night.
They ain't paying you $20 a night.
I know that.
You ain't paying no $20 a night.
You paying $20 maybe tonight.
Tomorrow night, the week after that?
Nah.
I've been to messiness every Saturday night for the last 10 years.
Messia's going to be there another 10 years after that, at least.
I play and I get as much corn liquor as I can drink.
Sending like me, I can't ask for more than that.
That's my guest today, Delroy Lindo, as Delta Slim and sinners.
You know, there's kind of a ryeness to your character.
There's a little bit of humor there.
You know, he knows exactly what he's,
worth and he kind of is not going to settle for what he feels like could be a flash in the pan,
you know?
I read that in the first draft of the film, as it was written, your character kind of begins
and ends there.
And you kind of told the director, Ryan Coogler, like, he needs to be built out more.
He's rich.
And I want to see him more in the film.
Is that true?
So, no, it wasn't that my character began and ended with that first scene.
What it was was that the introduction was so dynamic
that what happened in the second half of the screenplay,
I was not as present.
I was there, but I was not as present.
And since Ryan had introduced the character,
my character, Delta, Delta Slim,
so dynamically, I spoke with Ryan and I said,
how can we enhance my presence
in the second act of the film?
And Ryan understood that, and he assured me that we would work on enhancing my presence in the second act.
And he did.
Talk to me a little bit about your preparation for this man, because there is a knowing.
There's a scene that I love so much.
It's where you and Stack, Michael B. Jordan and a preacher boy are driving through.
In the car. You're in the car. You know exactly the one I'm talking about.
You're driving through the cotton fields.
Yeah.
And you start to talk about a lynching.
Yeah.
And there's so much in that that feels so real.
There's a knowing in you.
You're starting to tell the story, and then you just break out in humming.
And that reminded me so much of my grandfather and hearing him sometimes he'd talk,
and then he'd just start humming.
And I want to know where that comes from, from you, that knowing, you know,
that you brought to that character.
First of all, thank you for what you just said about your grandfather, because various people have mentioned to me that that scene and my presence reminds them of an uncle or their grandfather, somebody that they knew from their families.
And that is a huge compliment, but more importantly than being a compliment, it's an affirmation for the work.
To answer your question, it started my preparation for this, started with Ryan sending me two books,
blues people by Amiri Baraka, who was Leroy Jones when he wrote the book, and Deep Blues by Robert Palmer.
And I read those books.
That was my intro into the world of sinners.
And in reading those books and then referencing those books throughout production,
I was given an entree into the worlds, the lifestyles of these musicians.
There's a certain kind of itinerant quality that they moved around a lot.
The constant for them is their music.
So that there is this deep-seated connection to the music.
And because they are following where the music,
takes them, that then becomes an intrinsic part of their lifestyles.
I've heard you say that for characters, you first look at maybe those similarities, and then
you look at the differences, and then you work from there.
That's exactly right.
That particular scene, though, where you're talking about the lynching and then you just go
into humming, it's almost, it also signifies something else for me.
Like sometimes when there's, there are no words for some things.
There are no words.
And when there are no words, that's where the blues comes in.
There's where the music.
That's exactly where the music comes from.
And yet another affirmation for me, Tanya,
in terms of how people have received this work,
it's incredibly affirming that audiences, many audiences,
have made the connection between the pain of what I was experiencing
and the birth of the music.
And I certainly was not thinking about that in the moment.
Was it scripted?
No.
The humming, the hollering.
Yeah, yeah.
No, it was not scripted.
It happened organically on probably the sixth or seventh take.
And what is so beautiful about that moment and its retention in the film,
It was born of a company of people all working together.
And what I mean by that is we had a very specific distance to get the same.
We had a finite amount of real estate to get the scene in.
We started at point A, and by the time we got to point B or point Z,
I had to have finished the monologue.
It was a three-page monologue.
Within a certain amount of time.
Within a certain amount of time.
And then we had to turn the car around, turn all the equipment around, and go in the opposite direction and do it again.
And then turn around and come back and go in the opposite direction and do it again.
On probably the sixth take, and I'm forever indebted to Mike playing stack, Mike didn't stop the car.
We got to what was supposed to be the endpoint, and he veered off into the underbrush and kept going.
Ryan kept the cameras rolling.
Autumn Durald Archipa, brilliant cinematographer.
She was right there.
We continued filming.
And as a result of that, it gave the scene more time to breathe and for us extra time, more time to be in that moment.
And it's important for me to articulate this every single time I talk about that aspect of the scene.
We were very much working in concert.
We were very much working as an ensemble at that point.
I may have been the conduit for what happened,
but Michael B. Jordan was right there, a stack.
Miles Caden asked preacher boy was right there.
We were all in the car together.
Ryan kept the cameras rolling.
Autumn was right there in the DP.
We were all working together, and that is what captured that moment.
Now I want to turn to something that happened last week when Linda went to London to celebrate the film at the Baptist.
So, Delroy, you've been on a roll.
Can I stop you one second with all due respect?
With all due respect.
I'm actually not going to talk about this.
Not at all.
You're not going to talk about it.
And why are you laughing?
I'm laughing because in the intro when you said, oh, yes, we'll be talking about what happened with Bata.
I saw you chuckle a little bit.
Because I said, no, we're not.
Tell me why.
I have made two comments about what happened, and I feel that for me that is all I need to say.
And the comments that I have made, which I will repeat for you.
Can I first tell people what we're talking about?
Absolutely.
Absolutely, please.
So while you and Michael B. Jordan were on stage presenting an award for the BFTAs, which is basically the UK's version of the Oscars, very high honors, a man in the audience named John Davidson shouted a racial slur.
And Davidson has said the outburst was involuntary, and he's apologized.
And you have made some comments about it, and I want to hear what you have to say about it.
The only thing that I've said is that at the NWACP Awards,
Ryan and I were presenting an award.
And right before we went on stage,
I said to Ryan that I wanted to just say something.
He didn't know what I was going.
I said, let me just, before we start reading the teleprompter,
I have something I want to just say.
And what I said to the audience were words to the effect
that Mike and I, sinners, company of people,
appreciate all the love and the support that we have received as a result of what happened at BAFTA.
And the fact that I could stand there in a room predominantly of our people.
Of black people because it's at the NACP Awards.
The NWACP Awards.
Yeah.
I could stand there and feel safe, feel loved, feel supported, and just simply affirm the love and the support that they have given us.
And I just wanted to officially, formally say thank you to our people and to all of the people who have supported us as a result of that incident.
And then the second thing, I was at the after party, the Bafters, and I don't know what I was thinking.
but a gentleman came up to me at the after party and said he introduced himself and said,
oh, I'm with Vanity Fair.
Nat should have told me, this is a journalist right here.
He said, I'm with Vanity Fair.
It didn't occur to me.
This is a journalist.
But what I said to him was, look, it would have been nice if somebody from BAFTA had
spoken to Mike and I.
Yeah.
And that's all I said.
And that's all I am going to say.
Oh, I'm sorry.
There was one other thing that I said.
I'm sorry.
I said it was an example of something that could have been,
that started out negatively becoming a positive
from the standpoint of the love and support that we had received.
And I received a text, a biblical text that I want to just share with you.
And the verse of the day is,
my wife sends
verses
affirmations
to various people
be not overcome of evil
but overcome evil
with good
Romans 1221
a negative turned
into a positive
which essentially
is what I didn't quote
that Bible passage
I told her
that when she sent me
that's God I wish I'd have said that
DeRoy I feel like
that's
answer to my question. You know, when I saw the clip of that, I think like a lot of people, because
I've had quite a few conversations about this with people, we immediately look to your face.
And we were searching your face. And of course, we're searching your face. We're searching Michael
B. Jordan's face, but we're searching your face because you are a renowned actor who's been around
for a long time. And so so many of us kind of look to you on
how would I respond to that?
And how is this man who is an elder, who we look up to,
how is he responding to it?
Sure.
And I wanted to know what you told Michael B. Jordan afterwards.
When you guys are one-on-one and you're talking about this thing,
that's a very real thing, yes, to have someone with Tourette's syndrome,
blur that out, that's a whole other thing.
But in general, your relationship with that word.
Mike and I spoke on, this is Tuesday,
Mike and I spoke on Sunday for the first time,
just amongst our cells.
After it happened, yeah.
After it happened.
This past Sunday, Mike and I spoke.
And it was interesting because we both had a similar,
individually, we both had similar responses
because you have to understand.
We had jobs to do.
We were the first presenters of the evening
and we had to read that teleprompter.
And we both did exactly that.
Now, my wife says that I adjusted my glasses.
And she said she knew when I adjusted my glasses.
Something was happening internally.
I was not aware that I had adjusted my glasses.
But there was a nanosecond, a nano of a nanosecond.
a nano of a nano of a nanosecond
when I'm thinking, wait,
did I just say what I thought I heard?
But then, and it truly was a nanosecond,
one had to read the teleprompter
and get on with presenting the award.
So, you know, there was no time at all.
I processed in the way that I processed
in a nanosecond,
Mike did similarly, and we went on and did our jobs.
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
So.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
You know, what's also kind of ironic is the connection to the word because of the character that you play, played on the good fight.
Oh, how about that?
Sure.
Yeah, it's power, this word, the N-word, who gets to say it, what happens when it's used for a long time.
And I actually want to play a clip that went viral even before the pretext.
BAFTAs. So this has been a thing. Way before the
Baptist. Yes. It's of you as
your character, Adrian Bozeman
on the Good Fight, and you're
encouraging a white television host
to say the N-word on
air. Let's listen.
I see racism against whites
every day, every single
day, yet I'm a racist for pointing
that out. Adrian, what's your take?
Take on what?
What Chuck just said?
Is racism just a one-way street?
I think that's his opinion.
Look at your firm, Adrian.
You get the benefit of no bid contracts because you're an African-American firm.
Now, as a white lawyer, what am I supposed to think of that?
I don't know.
I think Chuck is pointing out a double standard here, Adrian.
Take hip-hop.
We've talked about this on the show before.
You have African-American rappers saying inward this and inward that, but a Caucasian can't.
So say it.
Say what?
Say the word you want to say.
I'm not saying that I want to say it.
I'm just saying that I can't.
So you can't.
Say it. Say it right now.
I will say it with you.
This is hypocritical. You know we can.
Sure you can. This is America. Both of you.
Say it.
All right. I think we can move on.
Why move on when you want to say it? Both of you want to say it.
Okay, this makes you laugh. The funny thing about it is people really thought this was real for a very long time.
It's gone around. I remember singing thinking.
I need to know what context that was in, but it's actually from a show.
A TV show.
Why do you think, I mean, first off, there's something about watching a black man who's like saying,
just say the thing that we're all thinking and we know that you're thinking you want to say, say it.
But what was going through your mind in that scene?
And why do you think it has taken such hold?
It's taken hold because the sentiments contained in the scene are real,
which is to say that as a black person,
I know, we all know, I assume that behind closed doors, there's not such decorum that is exercised.
Behind closed doors, it is said.
It is probably said liberally.
And there is this hypocritical, what I was pointing out, rather than me being the hypocrite, they were the hypocrites.
Because the fact of the matter is, you know you want to say it.
and you say it behind closed doors.
You know, you do.
So I think that the reason that it took hold, as you say,
is because the sentiments in the scene are very, very real.
Our guest today is actor Delroy Lindo.
We'll be right back after a break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air.
This is Fresh Air.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and my guest today is actor Delroy Lindo.
He's nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
for his role as Delta Slim,
and Ryan Cougler's sinners.
He's also known for his collaborations
with Spike Lee and Malcolm X,
Crooklyn, Clockers, and Defive Bloods,
and for his role as Adrian Bowsman
on the CBS series The Good Fight.
Before the break, we were talking about
a racial slur shouted at Lindo
and Michael B. Jordan at this year's BAFTAs
and the weight of that word in his life and work.
Do you remember the first time you...
Someone called you the N-word.
I don't, but I do.
remember the first time I was othered because of the color of my skin. And interestingly,
I'm writing a memoir right now. Yeah. Um, um, plug, plug, plug that will be out in,
in 2027. And I referenced this incident in the book. I do remember very, very clearly
what happened. And my utter confusion,
How old were you?
Five.
Oh.
So I was born in England, and my mom was a nurse, and I'm Jamaican.
My mom went to England as part of a movement of Caribbean peoples from the Caribbean to England,
and they became known as the Windrush generation as a result of the boat,
called the Empire Windrush that transported approximately three hundred,
Jamaica, mostly Jamaican men from the Caribbean to England in June of 1948.
My mom arrived into England in 1951, so very, very, the beginning of the wind rush movement.
I was born very soon thereafter, and because my mom was studying to be a nurse,
they would not allow her to have an infant child with her on campus.
So as a result of that, I was sent to live with a white family
in a white working class area of London.
And this wasn't just daycare or babysitting.
No, no, I lived with them.
I live with them.
Very loving family, by the way, I was loved that was cared for.
But as a result of living with this family in this all-white family,
neighborhood, I went to an all-white elementary or primary school. And I was literally, I mean,
literally the only black child in an all-white school. So one afternoon, after school had ended,
I was playing with one of my
playmates
I thought he was one of my
I thought he was a playmate
and we we had exchanged
garments
I had I was wearing
like his sweater
I had it tied around my neck
and he was wearing
my sweater or my jacket
tied around his neck
and we were pretending to be superheroes
right
and we were on this patch of grass
and we had our hands out
like Superman we were flying
and having great fun.
And at a certain point in our game,
a car pulls up,
and this kid that I was playing with goes over to the car
and has a very short conversation with whomever was in the car,
which I now know was his parent, his father.
He comes back, and he takes.
He throws my garment that he had been wearing around his neck.
He throws it at me and grabs what I'm wearing, his garment that I'm wearing around my neck and grabs it from me.
He throws my garment at me, grabs my garment from me and says, I can't play with you.
And that was the end of the game.
That was the end of the game.
But you know, the thing about that story and the fact that you were so young, five years old, you couldn't have known.
like the full weight of that. It took you time. But it's a story that is stuck with you because you knew
that that was a signal of something. Well, it was a signal of my undesirability, right? So the answer
to your question was not necessarily specific to being called the N-word, but it was very specific
to being racially othered. These are imprints. Big time.
How's the writing for the memoir going?
Because, you know, I'm so fascinated.
I'm deeply obsessed with memoir, and I love writing them.
But one of the things that, like, I know about it is that it breaks you wide open.
You're able to see parts of yourself that you, through the process.
How has that process been for you?
And how do you hold these stories?
because you said it's going to open your book, for instance.
That means that that was an imprint that has carried you throughout your life, you know?
Yep.
It's been healing, actually.
I'm not denying that it has opened me up.
I've been compelled to scrutinize myself.
And I'm using that word very advisedly scrutinized.
It's a scrutiny.
It's an examination of oneself.
But in my case,
Because a very, very, very significant part of what I'm writing has to do with re-examining my relationship with my mom.
And so my mom is a protagonist in my memoir.
It's not, and I'm told by my editor and by my publisher, that one of the attractions to what I'm writing is that it is not a classic,
quote unquote celebrity memoir.
I am examining history.
I'm examining culture.
I'm looking at certain
passages of history
through the lens of the windrush experience.
Let's take a short break.
My guest is Delroy Lindo,
nominated for his first Academy Award
for his role as a blues musician,
Delta Slim, and Ryan Cougler,
sinners. We'll continue our conversation after a short break. This is Fresh Air.
This is Fresh Air. And today I'm talking with actor Delroy Lindo. He's nominated for an Oscar
for his performance in Senors, which leads all films this year with 16 Academy Award nominations.
Before the break, we were talking about his life growing up in the UK with his mother as part
of the Win Rush Generation. You went to get a master's degree. I did. And study. I did.
This, this was that, and that wasn't that long ago, right?
No, 2014.
Yeah, I got a master's from NYU in 2014.
I came to formal education late.
I got my undergrad degree in 2004 from San Francisco State University,
and I got my master's from NYU in 2014.
So.
But you wanted to delve deep into your mother's experience in the win-rush.
I had to.
I had to.
I had to.
because
you see,
it's interesting.
I heard myself say that
and I didn't know
I was going to say that.
I had to.
I had to do that.
You had to because.
I had to because
my mom deserved it.
And not only is my mom deserving,
all by extension,
all the people
of the Windrush generation
are deserving
because that is a story.
Stories about Windrush
are not part of global cultural lexicon
commensurate with its impact.
The people of Windrush changed the definition
of what it means to be British.
There are all these black and brown people
there to fore members of what used to be called the British Commonwealth.
And they were invited by the British government to come to England, the United Kingdom,
to help rebuild the United Kingdom in the aftermath of the destruction of World War II.
My mom was part of that movement.
Yeah, yeah.
They helped rebuild construction.
construction industry, transportation industry, critically, the health industry, the NHS, the National Health Service.
My mom was a nurse.
And when I was going into, the reason that I went into NYU was because my original intention was to write a screenplay about my mom.
Oh, ah.
I wanted to write a screenplay about my mom
because I looked around
and I thought,
huh, where are the feature films
that have as protagonist
a Caribbean female, a black female?
Where are they?
Now, there may be some out there,
and I've seen one,
not directed by a black person,
but I wanted to address that.
I wanted to correct that
what I see as being an imbalance.
What's your mom's name?
My mom's name is Anna, Cynthia, Moncrief.
Sometimes she would go by Luna Moncrief,
and that's a whole other story.
But my answer to your question is why,
why do I need to do this
is because my answer is
my mom deserves
a story about her
and my editor
said to me last week
I'm pretty certain it was
in the aftermath of what happened
of Bafters
and the various
stories had surfaced
on the internet
essentially people get
just giving me love.
Yeah.
And my editor sent me a text, and she said,
your mom would be so proud.
And I know she's proud.
I know she is.
When did she pass?
1996.
I was in New York.
I was at the Four Seasons Hotel on 57th Street,
doing a junket for a film that I had done called
I think it was ransom.
And I'm digressing.
The answer to your question is, my mom passed in 1996.
That's the answer to your question.
I talk a lot.
Well, I'm talking to you, so you're answering the things that I'm asking you.
But you know one thing I notice about you?
What did you want to say?
I want to say that five blas when I was doing, and I don't want you to forget
get your question. I was doing a round of press for the Five Bloods, which was doing COVID.
And so therefore, a lot of the most all of the interviews and interactions with the,
with journalists and press were virtual. And I had done an interview with a journalist up in San Francisco.
And when the article came out, and I'm saying this for a very particular reason, when the article came out,
she referred to me as the garylless Delver and Lindo.
I didn't know what garyllis meant.
Yeah, you had to look it up.
I had to look it up.
I had to look it up.
So I looked it up and it said excessively talkative.
Well, that's so funny because the thing that I think about you is you're very intentional with your words and language that you use.
And I want to know where that comes from.
I notice that when I hear you talk every time.
I said, oh yeah, he's taking the moment to make sure he's finding the right words.
I hope so.
I hope so.
Ironically, it is a result of how I was educated.
And the irony is I was educated in England.
I don't know, four or five, six years ago,
I found a notepad in my garage,
an essay book that I had written
when I was probably 13 or 14 years old.
I was in high school.
And I looked at what I had written.
This was decent writing for a 13th.
And so even at that age,
I apparently had a relationship to language.
And English language was always one of my favorite subjects
in school and high school.
So I think it probably comes from the way that I was educated
and then having become an actor
and my domain is words.
Yeah.
Right? So I try to be careful.
And you want to be understood.
Really be careful to be understood.
That's so interesting about finding your 13-year-old self in your writing and saying, okay, this was really kind of cool.
This was good.
You spent a significant amount of time the first few years of your life in the U.K.
And then you lived in Canada for a while.
Then you all moved to the Bay Area.
I went to San Francisco to study at the American Conservatory Theater.
Yes.
You don't have an English accent.
Did you ever?
Of course I did, yeah.
And somebody, you know, I get asked this fairly frequently, you don't have an English accent.
And then somebody, I was recently asked, well, could you, could you do it?
Could you do it if you were asked to?
And I have this joke and I say, and my mantra, yeah, I can do it if they pay me.
But, but yes, I had an English accent and yes, I could still pull it out right now if you need.
me too. I'm not going to.
There's a part of me
that's waiting for
and I have no clue
if this will ever happen
and if it doesn't happen, it's fine. It really
and truly is fine. But there's a part of me
that's waiting to be offered
a piece of work
that will permit me to use that
London accent.
The other thing is
similarly to
I don't speak with a Jamaican accent,
but I am able to speak with a Jamaican accent.
You know anybody who saw West Indian Archie?
I was using a Jamaican accent there.
And I did a film called Wondrous Oblivion in London in 2001,
and I was playing a Jamaican man in that.
And that actually is when I discovered Windrush
during the rehearsals for that film.
But I remember one of the people from the office,
from the production office, came on set.
one day and she was watching the work
and I overheard her say
because I was speaking with the Jamaican accent in that film
and I overheard her saying
oh my God he can do it
my guest is Delroy Lindo
nominated for his first Academy Award
for his role as a blues musician
Delta Slim and Ryan Coogler's sinners
we'll continue our conversation
after a short break
this is fresh air
this is fresh air
and today I'm talking with actor Del
Elroy Lindo. He's nominated for an Oscar for his performance in Senors, which leads all films this year with 16 Academy Award nominations.
Okay, let's talk about the Oscars now. And I'm going to, I'm actually going to get into, I want to talk about this conversation by first talking about the Five Bloods, because it's one of, I will say it's one of my favorite movies. I mean, gosh, if I want a release to cry, I will turn on that film.
One of your most celebrated roles was Paul, a traumatized Vietnam vet unraveling in the jungle, a man carrying decades of rage and grief.
When the nominations came out for the Five Bloods and your name wasn't there, I've heard you say that you were deeply disappointed.
That might qualify as the understatement of the year.
Okay.
Actually, my representatives at the time called me the morning, and I thought they were joking.
When they said your name wasn't on.
Yeah.
The guy said, it didn't happen, man.
You were so certain.
I had been made to feel certain because of all of the talk outside of me was,
you're going to get a nomination, you're going to get a nomination, you're going to get a nomination, you're going to get a nomination.
So I got drawn into that.
And I remember the gentleman said, no, it didn't happen, man.
And I thought he was kidding.
I thought he was pulling my leg.
I was going that morning to get a COVID shot.
I went, I was in New York.
I was in New York.
I went to this facility on 96th Street.
And I got my shot.
I came out.
And my phone rang and it was Spike.
And we talked.
and we commiserated.
I've said this in the past,
but I'll say it now,
just officially,
Spike, if you hear this, man,
it meant the world to me that you called me.
And that we had that conversation
that meant like everything, bro.
Because I was reeling.
So, yes, I was disappointed.
Because, I mean,
you put your foot in that role.
I mean, like, you know, you embodied it.
It wasn't just my big toe, was it?
I put my foot in that thing.
Well, you're now nominated for an Oscar
for Best Supporting Actor for Senors.
First off, congratulations.
Thank you very much. I appreciate it.
You know, it's the highest honor for an actor.
And yet, it sometimes is like a biggest curse for a black actor.
How do you hold that very true tension?
And I'll say it's a curse because oftentimes many black actors have said things dry up after this.
It's like you've hit the ceiling.
I worked with Lou Gossett some years ago, and Lou, for me, was one of the greats.
Lou Gossett Jr. was one of the great actors with a capital G.
And he won an Oscar.
And he won an Oscar.
In 1983.
He told, yes, an officer and a gentleman, and I think he told me he didn't work for a year after that.
I've heard Hallie Berry speak about her disappointment after she won the things her career, and I don't want to misquote, because I do not know Hallie Barry.
No, but she has said this. She said this even on this show.
It didn't quite, things didn't happen for her the way she thought. But what I will say, and this is important, I am not and I will not view it as a curse because,
I am claiming the victory in this process, no matter what happens,
and what does that mean?
It means that just as after the disappointment of the five bloods,
I had to pick myself up and keep going,
and that was something that Spike and I talked about.
You got to keep working, man, something that I said to my son
after he suffers a disappointment on the basketball court
because my son is very similar to me.
He likes to win.
He does not like to lose.
Hey man, you got to pick yourself up.
You got to pick your head.
Keep your head up, bro.
There's always the next game.
And what I had to tell myself
on the heels of Five Bloods
was, I've got to keep working.
So in terms of this moment,
absolutely am claiming as much as I can
the joy of this moment.
I'm not saying I don't have trepidation.
I do.
It's the reason I was not listening
to the broad,
this year when the nominations were announced, I did not want to set myself up.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
But I'm claiming the victory, Tanya.
And what that means for me is attempting as much as I can to fortify myself and know in my heart that I will continue working as an actor.
I absolutely will.
I have never taken my marbles and gone home
as a result of whatever disappointments
the vicissitudes of the industry
and I want to believe and I want to claim
that I will not do that now
I will continue working
and I pray to God this doesn't
that is something that I would tell
any, any
young person, young actor
young practitioner of any craft
in the face of disappointment
yes you have the choice
of taking your marbles and going home if you want to,
what will that get you?
You have to keep moving forward,
and that is what I will do.
Doer Lindo, this has been such a pleasure to talk with you.
Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you so much.
I really appreciate it. Thanks for having me. God bless you. Thank you. Thank you very much.
Delroy Lindo. He's a veteran actor with a 50-year career,
and he's just received his first Academy Award nomination for Ryan Coogler's Sinners.
If you'd like to catch up on interviews you've missed, like our conversation with Jesse Buckley, the star of the film Hamnet, who's nominated for an Oscar for her performance, or with legal scholar Rick Hassan on Trump's plan to push legislation that would change how every American citizen registers to vote and votes. Check out our podcast. You'll find lots of fresh air interviews. And to find out what's happening behind the scenes of our show and get our producers' recommendations on what to watch, read, and listen to.
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Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger.
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Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shorak, Anne-Marie Baldinado, Born Krenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Susan Yacundi, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez-Wistler.
Our digital media producer is Molly CB Nesper.
Thea Chaloner directed today's show.
With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosley.
