Fresh Air - For Sebastian Stan, 'The Apprentice' Playing In Theaters Was The Win
Episode Date: February 11, 2025Sebastian Stan is up for an Oscar for his portrayal of President Trump early in his career, when Roy Cohn was his lawyer and mentor. Stan says Cohn schooled Trump in "denying reality and reshaping the... truth." He spoke with Terry Gross about his childhood in Romania, wearing prosthetics for A Different Man, and his breakthrough role on Law & Order.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross. My 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.
Cone 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alienated and withdrawn from other people.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 mini-series Pam and Tommy, he played Tommy Lee, Motley Crue's drummer and Pamela
Anderson's husband. A lot of Stans 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 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 in 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.
Am, 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's fine.
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 their treasurer.
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 going to 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.
You're trying to just give us the one and only same. 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, Mrs. 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, um, 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.
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.
After choosing that clip I read that you improvised some of that scene.
That whole clip actually was improvised, yes.
The scene and the script, as it was written, it started out with, you know, it just said
Donald finishes introducing Trump Tower, and he sits down and he goes, well, what do you
think, Mr. Mayor?
And he goes, oh, very fascinating, what do you call it?
But in the matter that we had been shooting,
by the time we got to the scene, I was already prepared
to sort of have something ready,
because our director was always encouraging.
And, and really the script was asking for this, you know,
it was, it was always asking for,
for the beginning and the end of, of the scenes,
which weren't there, you know, we had a lot of the middle of the bulk of the scenes, which weren't there.
You know, we had a lot of the middle of the bulk
of what we needed, right?
That was written, but there were many times
where we needed to kind of like find out
about what surrounded it.
And, you know, that was part of what I did to prepare
many times the night before with this scene
and other scenes where I would very kind of surgically
construct an improvisation in his way of speaking that I would get from
various interviews that I'd collected over time and things that he had said to Barbara Walters and
Larry King and
Many things that he had said to Ed Koch and all kinds of footage that I'd placed
together.
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.
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, the revenge tactics,
all that we go in depth in the film that he 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 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 undelt with
that we're all having to kind of just, you know,
deal with and pay a price for.
Well, applying him, I'm sure you had to be him
and see things from 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 gonna 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 informative years
where I didn't feel safe and changing countries and changing schools and changing homes and
Caretakers coming and going and 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 it's always power and and mistrustrust and paranoia and everything is transactional.
That's how he operates.
Trump sent a cease and desist letter to the filmmakers trying to prevent the film from
opening in the U.S. He accused the film of defamation and interference in the election.
The film was set to be released in the fall of 2024, a couple of months before the election. I'm
wondering with that cease and desist letter, if you felt like you were suddenly or your
film was suddenly the target of the same kind of tactics that you learned as Donald Trump
in the film, so that you were living, you were living the tactics that are played out
in the film, except this time you weren't Trump, you were on the other end,
you were on the receiving end of the threats.
Well, when the letter came in,
it was about an hour after the movie
had finished premiering at Cannes.
And we were in such a place of exhilaration
to have even gotten to Cannes
and actually finally premiere the movie to
what many who have witnessed standing ovations at Cannes told me was a really genuine seven to eight minutes standing ovation.
You know, we were in such a relief and just joy of even having gotten there with many obstacles coming that when this
letter came in, you know, it was almost pretty much on target, right,
for what we were all expecting.
I mean, no one had did the movie,
expected him not to, you know, behave that way.
I mean, tremendous work by lawyers and fact checkers
and everything were done on preparing for that.
And so it was like, okay, well,
here's this next sort of hurdle.
Let's see if the movie will come out.
Maybe it won't.
So regarding the film on Trump's social media platform,
Truth Social, he wrote,
so sad the human scum,
like the people involved in this
hopefully unsuccessful enterprise,
are allowed to say and do whatever they want
to hurt a political movement, which is far bigger than any of us. MAGA 2024. When you came
to America after growing up under communism in Romania then moving to
Vienna with your mother and then coming to the US, I'm sure you didn't expect to
become a famous actor. I'm really sure you didn't expect to portray a former and now a current
American president and have the president see the whole film as an insult, try to stop
it from opening, and call everybody involved with the film human scum.
No, definitely not.
So what did it feel like when that happened? Again, it's like,
it's in line with the recent White House little boy
stomping their feet into the playground,
crying wolf response about the film getting the nominations.
I think it's important to look at that
and ask oneself if the movie is really just
sort of so irrelevant,
then why warrant that reaction from him to begin with.
And second of all, I mean,
it might be because the truth hurts
and there is something truthful to the movie,
one of them probably being that, you know that he doesn't like anyone else taking credit for the way he is.
But I think it's also, it was very difficult to kind of minimize it also, right?
Because you're talking about the language and the words being used, human scum.
I mean, that's something, you know,
our writer received a lot of death threats,
a lot of antisemitic remarks, a lot of things, right?
As a result of that usage of words,
which are not dissimilar from words
that have been used by dictators, right?
So there's that.
Do you sense an element of fear in the entertainment industry? No, I mean Trump has promised
retribution against his perceived enemies.
Yeah, I think there's a degree of fear or I would argue and I think also as we've experienced
it some degree of confusion about how to feel and how to deal with his sort of him being
president again, which is not a wrong response.
It's a human response. I just, I guess as we see it, as long as fear and difference or ignorance is not what's driving things,
where they become sort of accepted, then as it pertains to art, then you should have whatever emotions you need to have.
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, which is 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 neophimimitosis,
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. 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 people come up and they tap you
on the shoulder.
And so these are all very similar things that Edward or people that 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, 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, you know, I don't think I ever experienced that in my life and it was incredibly lonely.
You know, I think I've spoken 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.
Danielle Pletka Well, let's take a short break here. If you're just joining us,
my guest is Sebastian Stan, and he's nominated for an Oscar for his starring role as Donald Trump
in the film The Apprentice. And he won a Golden Globe last month for his performance
in A Different Man. We'll be right back after a short break. This is Fresh Air.
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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 we only had one hour of news a night.
That was the TV we had.
You know, only one hour of television a day.
Oh, that was it?
With the exception of New Year's Eve, which, you know, 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.
You know, 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, you know, he had been in the Navy, he'd worked on a cargo ship, you know, and he had
helped a lot of people escape the country and and there was you know, he
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 term 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 heralded a hero in a way to them.
Is he still alive?
No, he's no longer alive.
Were you ever able to talk to him about this?
I did, yeah. Yeah, he
about this? I did, yeah. He passed away recently, but 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.
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 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 incredible, you know, 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.
And really, really was proud to have come here and been able to have had an opportunity
to start a life, you know, and get his passport and work and earn a living and be free, you
know.
And these are all things I thought about when I was doing 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. That's the American dream and that's what the movie to me is the apprentice that that 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 he see in this country and what did this country give us and and how far you?
Can go I mean?
There's a lot to talk about but hopefully you know what I mean
You know when you came here you had already lived in Romania There's a lot to talk about, but hopefully you know what I mean.
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 of 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.
You know, 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 mean, 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.
I'd cut my hair in sync or backstreet boys.
It was like that mushroom haircut
that DiCaprio had in Titanic.
You just wanted to be, you just wanted 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 to fit in and you know, you had to learn that from scratch.
You come to America, you try 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, I, well, I, I think you're right.
But I think this is what acting did for me.
Acting liberated me from that.
I mean, I, 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 this stage door 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,
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 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. We need to take a short break here. If you're just joining us, my guest is
Sebastian Stan. He's nominated for an Oscar
for his starring role as Donald Trump in the film The Apprentice
and he won a Golden Globe last month for his performance in A Different Man.
We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air.
So retracing your path
again, so you grow up in Romania. When you're around eight or nine, you move to
Vienna where your mother is a pianist. Is your mother still alive? Oh yeah, my mother is.
Yeah, she was a pianist and is a pianist. I mean, doesn't play
concertos anymore, but then also became a piano teacher.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
So she took you and moved to Vienna, and there in Vienna, she met a man who she fell in love
with who was the headmaster of a private school in Rockland County, New York on the Hudson
River.
Well, actually, at the time, he was the headmaster of an American International School, AIS,
in Vienna.
Oh, okay.
But I started in German public school, and then I went to the American International
School where they also spoke English.
And that's how your mother met your stepfather.
Yeah, my mom was teaching piano there and then they've met and his name was Anthony
and he also is no longer around.
But I think to this day, I mean, I sort of touched about it in the Globe speech.
I've always thought of being up there at some point if I'm ever up there, you know, of thanking him because it was not easy, I
think, for someone to take on, you know, a single mom with a kid that's not just a kid.
He's like growing and he's, you know, nine, 10 at that point and sort of becoming a father
figure. But he was hugely instrumental in my learning English, coming to America,
I mean, learning with spoon and fork to use like in Titanic, you know, like that was being
a gentleman.
I mean, there was he was a really, really smart man who spoke five, six languages.
He would read every newspaper in every language in different languages every morning.
I mean, it was he was a real example of to me. So then he got a job as a headmaster of a private school in
Rockland County, New York on the Hudson River and you all moved to America and
you became a student at his school. how did that affect your status with teachers and classmates?
Well, again, it was interesting, right, because I sort of felt socially it was awkward for me,
because I couldn't, you know, nobody wanted to go hang out at the headmaster's kid's house over the
weekend. So not to mention with the crazy European mother that cooked weird meals.
Not to mention with the crazy European mother that cooked weird meals. So you started acting in high school. Were you in musicals?
Yes, that's all I was in at the beginning. Yeah, I did Greece, Sweet Charity.
Oh, I love the idea of you doing Greece because you didn't really know what American teenagers were like
and you were trying to be an American teenager and here you are in Greece.
Yeah and West Side Story was another one. I mean but really a big again another
definitive moment for me was this camp, Stage Door Manor. I remember I called
the owner at the time was like Carl Samuelson and and he got on the phone
with me. He didn't know anything about me. He just wanted to know why do you want to be an actor? Because it was expensive and I couldn't really
afford to go there. But you could talk to him and he decided to give me a scholarship
to go there basically. You would go there for two weeks at a time, but you would do
and work on a play or a musical. And he listened to me and somehow realized that, okay, I'm
passionate about acting. I went there over the summer.
And that summer really changed my life
because I got out of the cocoon of the little private school
and I could be away from my headmaster,
except that and my mom, and I was with kids from LaGuardia
in New York City and kids that were, you know,
really well-trained and doing musicals,
and that's where I did Grease.
And also that's also where I met my manager, who I'm still with for 27 years at this point,
who came scouting that one summer and sort of saw me and told me to go meet with her.
So you were 21 when you got your breakthrough role in Law and Order, playing a 15-year-old
boy.
This was in the Jerry Orbach Sam Waterston era.
And so you played a 15-year-old who's kidnapped when he's very little.
His kidnapper told him that his parents were dead and raised him as if he was really the
father and the kid believes like, this is my father.
And the father, or kidnapper,
is accused of murder, of being a sniper,
and it's discovered that it was really the kid who did it.
Did I have that right?
Well, that they did it together.
It was actually based on a real father-son shooters. Okay, so at some point the kid's actual mother who he believes is
dead and his sister who he's never met, I don't think, are brought in to meet the
boy and the boy does not have a very good reaction to it. So let's hear that scene.
Oh my God. Justin. Who is this? It's us, Justin. Jenny and Mom. Where's my dad?
Dad died, Justin.
What is she talking about?
Your real father.
Herman Capshaw is my real father.
I don't know these people.
Justin, what? I don't know why you brought me here.
Can I go now?
Okay, a lot of people when they're on Law and Order for the first time, they're like
a dead body.
But you got to have this emotional breakdown in it.
Oh, God, that was kind of hard to listen to.
I just, you know, so- What was hard about it was kind of hard to listen to. I just, you know.
What was hard about it? What was hard?
Oh, so much acting, you know.
I mean, it just reminds me of like the James Dean School of Acting, you know,
that you go to when you're 18, 19, 20.
But it's interesting.
I hadn't heard or seen that scene in a long time, and everything was very, very charged.
What was it like to see yourself on TV,
and what was it like to have other people see you on TV?
It was hard.
It's really not until recently that I've gotten okay
with watching myself.
In those earlier years and up until recently,
it was very, very difficult. I was
very critical. I've always been very, very critical of myself, which is in part why I can
sort of take criticism very well when people write horrible things about you online. I'm always like,
well, it's nowhere near what I've said about myself. But I remember feeling also this weird instinct
that I was doing something right for myself
and I should keep going.
It was never hindering or in a way.
I have an acting question about the clip that we heard
where your response to hearing it was so much acting.
If you were to give your younger self notes now based on that scene, what notes would
you give?
Don't push anything.
Don't work for something.
I mean, it's funny because when I look, when I hear that scene, what I think about is the
fact that the scene was written and designed for a certain result. And I'm reacting to that, working for a certain result, rather than going in there, not focusing
on the result, right?
And going, let's see what happens based on the work that I've done, which is how I approach
it now.
The result being, oh, I have to have this massive breakdown where I'm showing emotion
and I'm you know
Making it there is a part of that that always feels subconscious and as we know in life that stuff doesn't
Come that way. But again, you're also looking at the format of that show in one hour
You know, they've got a hit certain notes. It was TV. It was right. There's there's things that also
The tone of the thing you're working on.
But I generally what I would say is, you know, I can spot when choices are result oriented now.
OK, we need to take a short break here. If you're just joining us, my guest is Sebastian Stan.
He's nominated for an Oscar for his starring role as Donald Trump in the film The Apprentice.
And he won a Golden Globe last month for his performance in A Different Man.
We'll be right back.
This is Fresh Air.
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, you know, my mother is coming with me to the Oscars.
You know, she's my date.
I think she's very proud, you know, and I'm so insanely grateful to her for supporting
me. You know, I had a supporting parent with acting.
A lot of kids do not have supportive parents like that.
So I felt like, you know,
she did her best, maybe more than her best, you know?
And she made tough choices in her life,
but certainly gave me an opportunity and a life. So this whole
experience has been all about being able to thank her, you know, 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. I mean, listen, I, like I was telling you, I mean, the impossible has already happened, you know, as somebody told me early on when they said, you know, you think 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 not, you know, if you think you're gonna do this movie and someone's gonna, you're gonna, first of all, you're gonna piss off everybody. No one's
gonna, not one person's gonna, whether they care for him or they hate him, they're all
gonna be pissed. And no one's gonna, no one's gonna see anything in this or any value in
this. So, and then sort of, I just keep pinching myself, going like, I remember that, you know,
the season, the CIS letter.
And then it was the sort of, you know,
no one wanted to buy the film.
And then it's like, is it gonna come out?
And then, oh, we have no money.
There's no billboard on Sunset.
There's no, you know, and now here's Jeremy and I
kind of going to this thing.
And so I, you know, it's a funny moment when you're watching that.
Of course, you and me, 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
With this thing. I never that it's it's impossible. I think for me to have any more expectations at this point
Sebastian Stanis 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.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, we'll talk about how Elon Musk got and is using the power to cut
jobs slash federal funding and help place people close
to him in government positions. We'll also discuss the influence other tech billionaires
are having on the Trump administration. My guest will be New York Times reporter Teddy
Schleifer who covers the intersection of Washington's players and tech titans. I hope you'll join
us. To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on
Instagram at NPR Fresh Air.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey
Bentham. Our managing producer is Sam Brigger. Our interviews and reviews are produced and
edited by Phyllis Myers, Ann Riebel Donato, Lauren Crenzel, Theresa Madden, Monique Nazareth,
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Our co-host is Tanya Mosley. I'm Terry Gross.