Fresh Air - Riz Ahmed is chasing acceptance in 'Bait'
Episode Date: March 23, 2026In his new Prime Video series, ‘Bait,’ Riz Ahmed plays an actor auditioning to be the next James Bond. Ahmed says Bond is a "symbol of aspiration, this unattainable kind of self" his character is ...pursuing. He spoke with Tonya Mosley about being his own worst critic, why he connected to Hamlet, and his early days as an MC on pirate radio. 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
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley. A struggling British Pakistani actor lands the audition of a lifetime as James Bond.
Word gets out, and the internet goes wild. And suddenly, his life starts to resemble the very character he's auditioning to play.
He's in a chase sequence, except he's not chasing a villain. He's chasing acceptance.
That's the setup for Bait, a new prime video series that is part spy thriller, part family comedy,
part psychological unraveling, and entirely unlike anything else on television right now.
My guest, Riz Ahmed, wrote, created it, produced it, and stars as the lead character, Shah Latif.
Bate opens with Shah in a tuxedo, doing a James Bond screen test.
He's debonair, commanding, in control, James Bond personified.
And then he forgets his lines.
Tell me.
When it's just you all alone
How do you live with yourself?
Do you even know who you are?
Lime?
Cut!
Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry, Helen.
It's all good. It's all good.
It's just...
We're on a bit of a schedule.
Yeah, that's why I was thinking. Quick reset back to once I'll nail it this time.
How are you blowing this audition?
I know the speech.
I know it.
My call.
Yeah.
You f*** up every time.
I'm at the exact same moment.
What is this a prank showing, wearing a hidden camera?
That's funny.
No, I just have a very particular process.
I've got my head around it now.
I'm ready.
Sorry, guys, we just have to...
Yeah, well, just a minute.
Sorry, how was your weekend?
That's good, thanks, that was yours.
Great.
Yeah, what did you do?
Just, yeah, thanks, thanks, Jim.
My second, stop it.
Sorry.
You know what?
They didn't want to see you.
I had to convince them, so this is on me.
I've got a confession to make.
I'm light-headed from fasting.
It's the holy Muslim month.
It's called Ramadan.
It involves no eating and drinking in the day.
I'm light-headed from a bit of a cultural understanding.
Well, I've just seen you drink apple juice.
Six takes in a row.
I tried.
This moment is the beginning of a wild ride as we watch this character unravel.
And Riz has said,
embedded in this show is a hunger to belong
and what it costs someone
when they finally get close to the thing
that they've been chasing their whole lives.
Riz is an Emmy Award-winning
an Oscar-nominated actor
who is known for many roles,
including The Night of,
an HBO crime drama
in which he plays a college student
whose life shatters
after being accused of murder.
And sound of metal,
he played a punk drummer
grappling with sudden hearing loss.
And in The Long Goodbye,
he's part of a British Pakistani family
whose ordinary Sunday is shattered by a far-right militia.
Riz Ahmed earned an Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film.
This spring, his adaptation of Shakespeare's Hamlet
opens in theaters.
And Riz, welcome back to fresh air.
Thank you so much for having me back.
Well, after that failed screen test that we just heard in that clip,
your character, Shah goes to the dressing room
and then he goes over the monologue he forgot during the audience.
audition, and then he starts berating himself in the mirror for failing that test.
I actually want to play that, and then I want to ask you something on the other side of it.
Let's listen.
You knew it.
You knew it.
What's wrong with you?
Do you know who you are?
I'll tell you who you are.
Your failure.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
You are ashamed of yourself because you're ashamed to your family.
Nobody.
Nothing.
Um, come in.
Um, I, uh, forgot to grab your mic.
Oh, that is so agonizing. A crew member comes and said they probably hurt the whole thing.
Yep.
You know, I mean, I love that scene, um, Riz, because, um, that internal chaos, you know, it's, it can become a whole thing.
It's never just an audition when you're a brown actor, is it?
Yeah, I mean, so much of the show is taken from my own experience, you know.
I'm that guy who you were mentioning the night of.
I remember waking up in the middle of the night, two years after I rapped on the night of
and going to the mirror and redoing scenes that the whole world had already seen.
I'd already been handed awards for this performance.
I'm like, no, I got it.
I've got to get it right.
And the inner critic is such a kind of big part of this show.
And, you know, honestly, like, yes, the show is drawn from those experiences.
experiences, but it's not about being an actor. It's about, as you said, being caught up in a
chase sequence where you're chasing acceptance and running away from your own inner critic. And so
we felt early on in the show you needed to see just how mean Shah's inner voice can be about
him. And I just wanted to be kind of like vulnerable and open about that. I mean, I've, I've definitely,
you know, I've done exactly that. Like I said, going to the mirror, redoing the scene,
saying you're useless, you crap, you know what you're doing.
And I feel like that's something that is very, very relatable outside of auditioning or being an actor or anything like that.
It's we're often our own worst critics.
Yes, you know, I know a lot of people will be watching this series and thinking is Riz playing himself, playing a character.
And so much of this, you, well, all of it, you wrote.
So it comes from real experience as well as your imagination.
But what did Bond in particular represent to you as a British-Pakistanian?
kid growing up in London.
Yeah.
Well, I want to deal with the first part of what you said first, which is Isra's playing
character playing himself.
And if you don't mind, I want to say something that you said to me just before we
started recording the interview.
I said, look, how did you like the show?
And you said, I feel like I am Shah.
You said that, Tanya, you said, I feel like, damn, I'm that person.
If you don't mind me saying, so many people have been saying that.
And yes, there's a lot of me and Shah.
But I think actually there's a lot of Shah in all of us, more than we like to admit.
And really the show is about this feeling that life sometimes feels like one big audition.
You know, we all feel like we have to perform this version of ourselves that knows the script
that, as you said, is commanding and decisive and desirable.
The best public version of ourselves, we're performing that.
But actually the gap between that public self and the messy vulnerability of our private selves
is often huge, you know.
And that's true whether you're talking about,
how your life is actually going
versus the Instagram post you just got up
put up or that you saw of someone else
or like how professional and put together
you're seeming on a Zoom call
when actually you're not wearing any pants
you know just out of the frame
and so there's
just to answer your question
like I feel like I'm playing
I'm trying to draw on a feeling
that is personal to me but I think it's personal to a lot of people
and then that extra component though
of playing the man
James Bond.
Like he is considered the ultimate, you know, in every way.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, you know, the show isn't really about James Bond,
but James Bond is a very important symbol because he is the ultimate symbol of success.
Yes, sure, as an actor he is, you know, the pinnacle of cinematic achievement.
And yet it's also just, you know, for any of us.
He's this archetype of like, like I said, decisiveness, desire.
ability, being in control, being unflappable, of being invulnerable.
And so I wanted the character of James Bond to serve as this symbol of aspiration, this
unattainable kind of self that Shah is hunting down almost.
And in chasing this symbol, is he abandoning himself?
Is he abandoning where he's from?
Is he abandoning his family?
Has he forgotten actually who he really is?
And so the show is trying to deal with that.
And I think that that's something that, you know, we all kind of go through where we're often pulled between the people we were and the people we want to be.
And actually, the healthy equilibrium is probably somewhere in the middle, you know.
Probably that thing you want to be is like an attempt to escape yourself.
And that thing you were is maybe, you know, a version of yourself you need to evolve out of.
But we often feel pulled between those two polarities.
How long did it take for you to work on this concept, this idea, and come to what is a genre-bending series?
Oh, man, I started kind of scrambling down ideas for this show in 2014.
And I started doing that because, as I said, the gap between my public and private self started becoming so big and so stressful, they actually started feeling kind of hilarious.
I'll give you an example.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, like the week that it got revealed that, you know, okay, I'm in the new Star Wars and they released it, released a cast photograph of us all on set.
That same week, I got banned from my local supermarket for suspected shoplifting because my washing machine had broken.
Only clean clothes I had were flip-flops, bright pink swim shorts, a bright green puffer jacket and a tank top.
I'm dragging a massive bag of dirty clothes around to the laundromat.
I remember it's my brother's birthday.
I haven't got him a cake. I go to Tesco's. I'm trying to get him a cake. They got no cake. I buy a frozen pizza with birthday candles. I'm a checkout. It seems like an insane thing I'm buying anyway. It's like, yeah, birthday candles and pizza. I'm dressed insanely. I've got this massive laundry bag. And I forgot to beep it properly on the checkout and other pizza. And it goes off and security. Like, yeah, this person looked kind of shady. And we get into a back and forth. And I'm so frustrated at one point, I go, dude,
I'm not shoplifting. I'm Star Wars, man.
And they go, okay, this person is definitely crazy.
And you're banned.
You're never coming back here.
It's just an example about like the messy chaos of who we really are
versus the image of success that's somewhere out there publicly.
And again, that's not just true for an actor.
That's true of everyone who's posting their best selfie on Instagram, you know?
So I started jotting down these little stories to try and just process them and make sense.
I knew there was something in these contradictions and juxtapositions
that was about me making sense of my own experience.
but also that just felt kind of universal
if I could just get a handle on it
and so I spent many years jotting down these
these ideas
and then it was when I met my co-show runner
Ben Carlin we put the writers room together
and all this kind of stuff we realized actually
the perfect symbol
for this show is James Bond
and that was partly also because my name had been mentioned
in relation to James Bond casting
in some articles
and stuff over the years.
So in the meta kind of spirit of this show,
where we're trying to be as meta as possible
and have fun with that,
actually that's a perfect symbol.
You know, it's a perfect symbol
for a character who wants to be anything other than himself,
who would you want to be?
He'd want to be James Bond.
There are so many good one-liners in this show
that have to come from real life.
And so hearing that story about you inside of the convenience store
and saying,
I'm Star Wars.
There's actually a scene with your ex-exam.
girlfriend who she's a writer, she's a columnist, she puts the scathing piece out about Shah.
And in one scene, she says like, point blank, someone is talking to the two of you.
And she says something like, he wants to play a white character, to which Sha your character
pushes back with, he's not white if he's me.
To which she responds, he wouldn't be white.
You would be.
And oof, you know, what are, what were you doing in that exchange with that?
exchange? Yeah, well, you know, we don't really want to come up with any answers. I have none,
you know, I really want to kind of like explore the different sides of the representation
conversation in that moment, really, you know. I think it's an important conversation. I also think
it has its limits. I also think it's been weaponized and turned into an economy in some ways and a
competitive race, you know, representation merchantry. And I think it also can sometimes be a distraction from
real systemic change, you know, the tokenism of window dressing can hide like bigger, bigger issues
that lie beneath sometimes. So I think there's an interesting kind of back and forth that
they have there. There's really kind of getting into some of that nitty gritty, but again,
without answers, just trying to kind of put it all out there. But I think what's really interesting
actually is what's underneath that conversation is a personal relationship about, you know,
that they're they uh this is a conversation between my character shah and his ex jasmine played by the
amazing retoo aria from umbrella academy and polite society and really what's going on there
underneath the kind of sociopolitical think piece jousting is two ex lovers who are trying to jab at each other
and push and pull and look for validation and get one up on each other because they're hurt because they both feel like
the other has left them behind in some way.
And what was really important to me more than anything
is that this show didn't exist in a conceptual space.
It's about characters.
It's about relationships.
You know, everyone has the one that got away.
And I was like, well, what if Sean, the one that got away,
have their whole entire episode together?
Yeah, it sort of flips the series for one episode
to be kind of a romantic comedy.
Yeah, we try and flip the series the whole time.
And, you know, there's a spy thriller episode.
There's a romantic comedy.
There's a kind of surreal episode.
There's one that's almost like the Bond gala, you know, like James Bond turns up at the kind of, you know, black tie event and hijinks ensues.
You know, we've got that.
We've got all these different flavors and we've got an Eid episode as well.
You know, I felt like we've got Christmas episodes, Thanksgiving episodes.
I want to have an Eid episode.
And so we very deliberately trying to layer in and thread multiple different genres because honestly I feel like my life takes place in.
different genres. I feel like right now I'm here, you know, lucky me, you know, pretending to be all
clever talking to you guys on fresh air and I'm going to walk outside and slip on a banana peel
and like fall flat on my face and suddenly I'm in a slapstick, you know? And it's like we wanted
to have that multiplicity, that tonal whiplash. Um, because honestly that's just what I enjoy.
And I felt like if I can make something, it's a full meal that is a romance and a spire thriller.
and a family drama, but overall a comedy,
then I could also just solve a very personal problem,
which is me and my wife squabbling over what we're going to watch.
You know, let's get in there and try and do it all.
I marvel at the multi-nature of this series.
As I'm watching it, I'm just thinking,
how did he pitch this, you know?
How does one pitch something like this and get it greenlit?
Because it's so well done,
but it also can't really be explained in one.
line, you know. Oh, thank you. That means the world to me. You know, it's, it's interesting you
say it can't be explained in one line because throughout the whole process, we struggled with that,
right? And then when we got to the very end of the process, we actually found a way of summing up
the whole show in one word. And that word is bait. Yes, and what does that mean?
I want to unpack it for a minute, right? So bait is a British slang word, which means being
blatant and in your face and attention seeking. There we go.
that's what my character is doing for much of the series.
Bait is an online term about trolling or provoking people online.
That's a big part of our show as well, that element.
Bait in Urdu means your loyalty or your allegiance.
And that is something that Shah is contending with.
It's home versus ambition, east versus west.
Bait in Arabic and Hebrew means home.
And so much of this show is a love letter to home and it's about family
and how far do you travel from home in order to please home?
in order to please home or help home, you know.
And then, of course, there's a big spy thriller element to our show,
and bait is something that's used as part of a trap.
And so it's that.
So it's a weird thing where only in retrospect we realize like,
oh my God, we accidentally stumbled on the perfect title for this
that actually communicates the entire layer cake of this show.
It is all those flavors, and the word bait means all those things.
That's remarkable that you stumbled upon.
Like knowing those meanings outside of the traditional meaning of bait, that wasn't when you all said, oh yeah, let's come up with bait.
Did you have all of those before you?
No.
Do you know where?
I often have to explain what the word bait means to American collaborators because I say it all the time.
Often I'll come up with an idea, you know, we're spitballing in the writer's room and I'll go, what about this?
And I go, actually, that's too bait.
That's a bit bait.
I mean, I don't want it to be as bait as that.
And they go, what do you mean?
And I was like, oh, bait means like too blatant.
It's not subtle enough.
And of course, that's British slang because the most important thing you have to be is a Brit is understated and subtle and, you know, reserved.
And so bait is a kind of derogatory kind of slang term.
Sir Patrick Stewart, best known as Captain Picard and Star Trek, he appears in bait in a role that I will not spoil except to say that it's not what you'd expect.
And I wonder what does his presence do in the story that no one else could?
First of all, it elevates the story just by the fact that it's Patrick Stewart in this story.
I mean, he's such a hero.
You know, I don't want to say too much about the role he plays because it is very particular and I don't want to give anything away.
I guess I'll just say that working with him showed me that your art can kind of only be as big as your heart is, you know, if that doesn't sound too cool.
corny. Like you kind of have to have a capacity for such receptivity, humility, generosity,
an empathy in order to kind of be an artist of that stature and at that level.
You know, just the kindness, the openness, the openness, 84 to step into this story.
I remember having to explain, you know, various kinds of British slang and Urdu's
swear words to him, you know.
It was nothing but just always engaged, always interested,
always shall we do it again?
Yeah, he was just such a pro and such a gentleman.
I'll really cherish that experience.
Our guest today is award-winning actor Riz Ahmed.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air.
Hi, this is Molly C.V. Nesper, digital producer at Fresh Air.
And this is Terry Gross, host of the show.
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Riz, let's talk a little bit about Shakespeare because it wasn't really your thing as a kid
until a teacher I hear introduced you to Hamlet.
What do you remember about that first encounter with the play?
And what did it kind of unlock for you?
Yeah, it's really interesting.
I, like many people, felt like Shakespeare is the epitome of everything I'm on the outside of.
It doesn't belong to me.
It's stuffy.
It's elitist.
and I've got a government-assisted place to a private school
where I felt like an outsider for many different reasons.
And I was lucky enough to have an English teacher called Mr. Roseblade,
who was a white Jewish middle-aged man from a different place in the UK,
thought we had nothing in common.
But he spoke fluent Punjabi.
And he brought me Hamlet and said, you know, this thing,
this story, this character,
it's at the heart of the establishment that you feel so alienated from.
in many ways.
But have a read of it.
You might recognize yourself in this character,
and I did, like millions of people have, right?
Hamlet being a character who feels out of place.
Hamlet himself feels like an outsider.
He feels like he doesn't belong.
Like, no one understands.
And it really spoke to me as a teenager.
But more than that, what I realized was,
hang on a minute, this Hamlet story set in medieval Denmark
actually is exactly like growing up in Wembley.
This is about who you can and can't marry.
This is about everyone's squabbling over the family business.
This is about the reality and lived experience of spirituality, ghosts and spirit possession,
which is par for the course.
It's part of our lived experience culturally.
And this is also actually kind of pivots on a story point of marrying one's sister-in-law if your brother dies,
which is a cultural tradition.
I think it's actually a Jewish tradition
and an ancient Hindu and South Asian tradition.
I've actually grown up with people
who've had to do that.
If their brother has died tragically,
they themselves are unmarried
with the consent, obviously,
of their sister-in-law and the conversation
that they have, they go,
shall we get married?
It's a way of protecting the orphans
and protecting the widow.
So this didn't feel like
this antiquated, kind of slightly out-of-touch piece to me.
I was like,
if you put it in my community, in my experience, this is right now.
This is completely vivid and completely urgent.
And it was then at the age of 17 that I very precociously had the idea that, man, I want to,
I want to make a movie of this one day.
And I want to set it in that place.
And in doing so, I hope to kind of render this story more vividly in a more urgent modern way
than maybe I've seen it.
And make it just make it feel real.
because all those things are so real in that environment.
What did you have to kind of work through to get to this adaptation?
Because you could have just played Hamlet and put on a movie adaptation of Hamlet as it is.
You know, I really believe that the amount of time it took was kind of quite divinely guided in a way.
And that's because I feel that this is the moment for this story.
You know, it's a story.
Hamlet is a story.
and it's a character who is grieving the illusion
that the world was ever a fair place.
And I think that's how we're all feeling now.
We're all grieving and reeling from this realization
that, okay, I knew the world was unfair,
but now the shameless, brazen unfairness of it
is just kind of laid bare.
And it's about grieving that illusion
and it's also about feeling powerless
in the face of how unfair it is.
And it's actually feeling kind of complicit
in it and gaslit about it.
And that's what the play is about.
And I think that this is when it was meant to be told.
But for us creatively,
the part that we were struggling to unlock
is how do you not make this feel just like
a Shakespeare performance and a poetry recital?
How do you not make this feel like a kind of self-congratulatory
like actor wants to take on the classic?
And actually, that was the opposite of how we wanted it feel.
And it really took us meeting Anil Karia, the director.
And it was after I collaborated with him,
on the short film The Long Goodbye for which he won an Oscar,
that I was like, oh, I think we know how to do this.
We need a director who's worked a lot in rap music videos.
We need a director who has actually can render poetry in a very raw way
and give us raw action in a very poetic way.
And that's what he did in that short film.
And that's what he does in his films.
And we connected and we had a long conversation
about how this has to feel like music, you know?
There's the classic line from Hamlet to be or not to be.
That is the question.
And in your version, Hamlet delivers this famous soliloically,
basically speeding through the rain at 100 miles an hour.
And I want to play a little bit of it.
Let's listen.
To be or not to be.
That is the question.
Whether it's nobler in the mind to suffer
Slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
Or to take arms against the sea of troubles
But by opposing end them
To die to sleep
No more
Or by asleep to say we end the heart
Take a thousand natural shocks
The flesh is there to
The consummation devoutly to be wished to die
wish to die, to sleep, to sleep with a chance to dream.
There's the rub.
That is my guest, Riz Ahmed, in his latest film adaptation of Hamlet.
And Riz, you've talked about this before, but for most of us, we're kind of taught that this speech is about suicide.
Basically, Hamlet is weighing whether life is worth living.
And you came to believe something entirely different is happening in those lines.
What do you think Hamlet is actually asking?
Yeah, I don't think it's about suicide at all.
It's about fighting back against depression,
even if you know you will lose everything, possibly even your life.
It's actually very clear in black and white in the text,
the active verb here is about taking up arms.
You know, what he's saying is there's two choices.
You can carry on being.
And it's very interesting. He says, be. Not living. Just be. You can exist. And you can exist and just suffer all the oppression and all the unfairness and all the injustice of the world and all the insults that life throws at you. Or you can fight back. But fighting back might mean you will no longer be.
So it's really about whether we are willing to pay the price of true resistance, you know.
And it's actually a very, very radical speech.
It's very confronting.
It's tackling a taboo subject, really.
You know, the idea of taking up arms and resisting oppression and the powers that be.
It's a dangerous idea, actually.
You can get you arrested if you discuss that openly to this day.
You and your director, Anil Karia, you all became new fathers while making this film or were new fathers while making this film.
Is that right?
That's correct.
Yeah, yeah.
And that ended up being a big part of the process, actually.
Yeah, how so?
How did it becoming a father kind of change what you thought this play was actually about or the process itself?
Well, I guess it struck me that this is a play in part about fatherhood and about the absent father.
and I didn't fully understand that
until I myself became a father
you know until I became actually an absent father
in the sense that I was away for much of the day
you know awake before my kid was awake home after my kid had gone to sleep
and I started to understand that emotionally
but actually it was more the effect it had
on me physically because, you know, I'm waiting to, I want to play this role.
It means so much to me this story, like 15 years of developing the script.
I want to get ready for this soliloquies.
And what would happen is me and Anil would turn up on set on like two hours sleep,
one hour's sleep, like 45 minutes sleep.
Because your baby was a newborn, yeah.
And the baby was a newborn, exactly, and his child was sleep regressing.
And what I realized after, first I was just like,
well this is all just going to be a total failure now.
And then I realized that, hang on a minute,
he's exactly how Hamlet feels.
The word that is repeated most frequently in to be or not to be
is the word sleep.
This guy is not sleeping.
He needs to sleep.
He hasn't slept.
He's unraveling from that as well.
And it actually infused a kind of very raw,
kind of quite vulnerable,
quite frazzled,
kind of texture, I think, to my performance that I could never have planned or controlled.
You know, I think you can kind of feel a lot of that exhausted kind of disarray in the performance.
And honestly, that's the version of Hamlet I'm interested in is not the version who is the smartest guy in the room,
spouting, commanding poetry.
The version of how many I'm interested in is the most stressed and vulnerable and under pressure guy in the room
who continues to speak because the words are failing him.
He can't find the right words.
I mean, Shakespeare was a wordsmith.
He's working in verse and rhythm.
And I'm thinking about your background in rap and your politically charged album.
And I'm wondering, did that hip-hop instinct shape at all how you heard and delivered these lines?
Yeah, very much so.
much so. Here's my take on it. A lot of people find a block with Shakespeare because they'd find it difficult
to understand what the words mean. I totally get it. I often feel the same way. Here's a thing.
People in Shakespeare's day themselves did not speak like that. They didn't say that. Shakespeare made
up like between three and five thousand new words. I think there's some estimates. The word eyeball
is a word that he made up.
You imagine hearing that for the first time?
A what ball?
An eye, what?
He made that up.
And one thing that he played with all the time was rhythm.
Rhythm, rhythm, rhythm, rhythm.
And so in the same way that when I listen to
some of my favorite rappers, new songs,
I don't know what they say the first time round,
but I am totally wrapped.
I'm totally leaning in, I'm engaged.
I feel it emotionally.
It's the same way.
your first experience of this thing is supposed to be like music.
You didn't catch all of the words,
but that word there felt weird enough to make you sit up.
And what you're supposed to do is receive an electric charge
of rhythm and melody and musicality,
just like rap music.
But that's not the actual experience of these plays.
So I wish people, more people spoke about Shakespeare in that way,
because to me it is much more like music than it is like,
you know, an English class.
Did you come to this understanding as that 17-year-old whose teacher introduced you?
Did you see that connection?
Because you were kind of deep in rap at that moment, that time.
Yeah, it's such an interesting connection to make.
You know, I think it's an inevitable one to make, really.
You know, if you're interested in poetry, if you're interested in lyricism,
if you're interested in rhythm, like Shakespeare's doing that.
He's playing in all those arenas.
And so it was clear to me very early on.
Something it isn't also lost on me is at the same time I was studying under Rob Claire
and doing a master's in classical acting, which is essentially just at Masters and just in Shakespeare performance.
That's when I started on the rap battle circuit in London and things like jump off and battle scars and Bombay Bronx
and, you know, competing in all these championships.
And so it did somehow in my mind feel like it's one thing.
If you're just joining us, my guest is actor, writer, musician, and producer Riz Ahmed.
More after a break. This is fresh air.
As you've mentioned Riz, you grew up in Wembley in northwest London, the son of Pakistani parents who immigrated in the 1970s.
Take me back to when you were teenage Riz and you were DJing and rapping.
You started on pirate radio.
How did you discover pirate radio?
So I grew up in the, you know, in the mid-90s in the UK.
I grew up in Wembley.
Wembley is both, you know, the site of England's greatest triumph in the 1996 World Cup
and also, you know, in the shadow of those, of that stadium, I'd go every Sunday to Wembley Market,
which is where you'd buy, you know, buy the Chinese spring roll and the immigrant kind of food stalls
and the fake designer clothes that we'd buy and sell over there,
you know, amongst that kind of working class
and immigrant community.
And pirate radio station culture was just, that was just everywhere, you know.
Yes, you'd have, you know, the BBC radio stations
and the other London stations,
but in between all those airwaves,
all the FM frequencies that were not spoken for,
you'd hear faint crackle
and then the voice of emcees or microphones
that were broadcasting from the roofs of housing projects locally.
And that's pirate radio culture.
So it was there that I was kind of exposed more and more to drum and bass and garage,
particularly when I was too young to actually go to the raves themselves.
As soon as I was old enough to kind of try and hack off whatever faint facial hair I had
and try and like grow it back thicker, you know, I was at the raves themselves.
And, you know, I just loved the music.
love the specificity of London's musical subculture and the UK, I think, does that so well,
you know, because of the clash and the mix of different cultures and different sounds and
influences. So, yeah, I was exposed to it and then I started doing it myself, both at raves
and on pirate radio. And I remember when I went to Oxford and I got in there, I felt like
I'd lost something. I'd lost this thing that I loved. And so I was eager to kind of keep it going.
And that's when I started promoting my own club nights. And it became a really invaluable place
where every week without fail, I could hold my craft. I could try out new lyrics. I could
gain confidence as a performer. And I think it helped me not just as an MC, but as an actor.
How old were you when you recorded the song Post-9-Eleven Blues?
So post-9-11 blues in my first rap track, it's kind of deliberately silly, but also deliberately
it's a satire really
it's a provocative kind of satire
and it takes the shape of an almost like
a nursery rhyme or school kids
jingle
I wrote that when I was 23
I think 22
you know
I just felt like I was surrounded by this
circus of fearmongering
and of paranoia
and mistrust and the war on terror
and being a young Muslim post
9-11 I was like
this is just crazy
Like, how do I make sense of this?
And comedy is really my first love, you know.
So I decided to kind of write this satirical rap song.
It got banned from the British airwaves.
It did kind of like unofficially,
there was a sense amongst radio DJs
that they cannot play it because it's too politically sensitive.
And...
What was your response to that?
And did it kind of feel a little powerful?
I mean, that meant your words had power.
Let me tell you.
The best thing is,
you can do to an artist who's trying to start out
and get some attention with their work is ban their work.
This is in the era of MySpace that the song
very quickly went very viral
and it gave me a little confidence
and excitement about how maybe I can
if I say the thing that I feel but that no one else is
maybe saying that that is
that can really travel
you know.
My guest is actor, writer and producer
Riz Ahmed. He stars in the new prime
video series Bates.
as well as Hamlet, a modern reimagining of Shakespeare's classic, set in London's South Asian community in theaters April 10th.
This is Fresh Air.
Let's talk a little bit about The Long Goodbye.
It was your first studio album released in 2020.
There's a song called The Breakup, which is the first track on the album, which uses an abusive romantic relationship as a kind of extended metaphor for the relationship between.
the UK and immigrants.
And let's listen to a little bit of it.
Britain's broken up with me.
We had our ups, but now it's broken down.
Let me break down the whole.
I was a mullah.
I had the bling and the girls, grit and the pearls.
My cash was a quarter of the stash in the world.
And this stray pale chick came to trade.
I laid with her, came to pay.
She straight slithered and stayed.
I couldn't kick her out.
She saw I was at war with my son.
and I'm a fool when you're at war with yourself.
You're easy to divide and rule.
She had me locked down.
Beat me red and blue till I knew that right was white and not brown.
When I make you hate yourself, you hand over your crown.
She moved in. I was a guest unwanted in my own house.
Just all my, broke my god off me,
scarred me, got paid off the same back she whipped,
left me hungry, took my industry and independence from me.
Took my door and lent me money, said that it was all to help me.
And she had beef with some German, next man.
I went to war for her twice.
Almost lost my left hand.
That was the breakup from my guest today, Riz Ahmed.
And there is also a short film for The Long Goodbye,
which kind of serves as a music video.
It won an Oscar for Best Short Live Action Film.
Tell me about the decision to use language of love
to talk about belonging and exile and loss.
I feel that the poetic metaphor of love and relationship and longing
is something that I grew up around in the tradition of Urdu poetry
and then reading it and studying it a little bit more as an adult
you know a lot of Sufi poetry if you look at Rumi or if you look at Ghalib
or if you look at you know Ghazal writing from South Asia
the Middle East from Iran, it's often love poetry and love is used as a metaphor and the relationship
and the beloved is a metaphor for God. But it can also be used as a metaphor for other things.
So I kind of feel like it's something that I wanted to borrow from that poetic tradition.
And in fact, the breakup, it has an alternative title in brackets, which is Shikwa. And Shikwa means
complaint. And that's because a very famous poem by, uh, my mom.
Muhammad Dikbal, he has a famous poem called Shikva and then Javabe Shikwa, which is complaint
and response to complaint.
And in that, he's actually complaining to God, saying, God, you've forsaken us as Muslims,
like, you know, we've been colonized and destroyed and wrecked and like, you know, where are you?
You said we should, you take care of us, but you're not there.
And so I wanted to kind of like really touch on that because what I want to do as a rapper is
I don't want to just be someone who's kind of like taken from this incredible African
American tradition. I want to also contribute something of my own tradition and my own heritage.
And so I want to take the poetic forms, the poetic references, the musical backing of my own
South Asian identity and my London identity and the sound system culture there and infuse the two.
And it felt to me like a much more personal and much more emotional way to talk about
political realities is, you know, through this metaphor of love.
Well, Riz, this has been such a pleasure to talk with you. Thank you so much.
Thank you for having me and thank you for the wonderful conversation.
Riz Ahmed stars in a reimagining of Hamlet, which opens in theaters in April,
and the new Prime video series Bate.
All six episodes will be available for streaming on Wednesday.
To keep up with what's on.
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Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers,
Ann Marie Baldonado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth,
Thea Challoner, Susan Yacundi, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez Whistler.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nesper.
Roberta Shorok directs the show. With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosley.
