Fresh Air - Sarah Snook Almost Didn't Audition For 'Succession'
Episode Date: May 5, 2025Snook, who played Shiv Roy on Succession, was just nominated for a Tony for playing all the characters in The Picture of Dorian Gray on Broadway. "I don't know what comes after this," she says. She ta...lks about playing 26 different parts in Dorian, why she almost didn't audition for Succession, and the word she could never quite say in an American accent. Also, Ken Tucker shares a remembrance of the leader of Pere Ubu, David Thomas.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Tune out the noise and listen every weekday. This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross. Our guest today is Sarah Snook. She's best known for
playing Shiv Roy on the show's succession. Now she's on Broadway in a one-person show,
an adaptation of the Oscar Wilde story, The Picture of Dorian Gray. Last week, she received
a Tony nomination for best leading actress in a play. She spoke with Fresh Airs and Marie Baldinato.
It's hard to describe Sarah Snook's performance in The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Snook plays all 26 characters in this stage adaptation of Oscar Wilde's novel from 1890.
It feels like you're watching a two-hour sprint.
She's giving a nonstop monologue,
a crazy athletic solo performance.
For those who don't remember this Gothic horror story,
it's about a young man, Dorian Gray,
who falls in love with his own beauty
when an artist friend paints a portrait of him.
He loves his own image so much
that he makes a wish, a Faustian bargain,
that allows him to stay
young and beautiful while his portrait ages and decays.
The show uses pre-recorded snippets of Snoke, playing different characters, projected on
huge video screens.
There are cameras, iPhones, and lightning-quick costume and set changes all used to tell this story that culminates in Dorian's spiraling
and ultimately facing his sins and his mortality. When Sarah Snook did this play for a run in
London last year, it earned her an Olivier Award, which is the British equivalent of
a Tony. This isn't the only award that she's received, she won an Emmy and two Golden Globes for playing
fan favorite Shiv Roy, the daughter of Logan Roy on the show Succession.
Sarah Snook was born in Australia where she went to drama school and received many accolades
for her work on stage and screen.
Her films include Jobs, The Dressmaker, and Memoir of a Snail.
Sarah Snook, welcome to Fresh Air.
Hi, thanks for having me.
Well, the creator of this adaptation, Kip Williams,
a fellow Australian, when he approached you
about taking on this role or these roles,
what was your response?
I read that you said that if you had seen the show,
you might not have agreed to do it.
Yes.
Well, I was pregnant at the time.
I think I was like seven months or something,
and my first baby,
and so that kind of ignorance is bliss,
kind of world of what is to come,
and the efforts of parenting at the same time as doing this particular show.
If I had seen the show,
I think my husband particularly, if he had seen the show,
he would have said, this is not a good idea.
This is not something you do if you have a newborn?
No.
This is not possible.
I mean, it's not impossible, obviously, but it takes a lot of concentration and support,
not just from myself, from the family and from my team.
As we've mentioned, you play all characters in this show, and you're also the narrator of the story.
How do you differentiate between the characters?
Do you develop the characters in the same way
you would if you were just playing one part in a play?
If you were slumming it and only playing one part.
How am I going to go back to just playing one character?
I don't know what comes after this, what tops this,
sort of, overimulation of characters.
To differentiate between the characters, I think lots of different things.
In some ways, a blessing and a curse, we had only two weeks of rehearsals before doing
the pre-recorded portion of the show at the end of 2023. And so it really meant that I had to make
sharp and considered decisions quite early.
And part of that was created out of doing a lot of voice work
with Geraldine Cook, my voice coach in Australia,
and working on what timbre and tone and pitch and speed,
pace, et cetera, each of the and pitch and speed, pace, etc.
Each of the characters had and accent,
as well as what physicality came from that.
It's very much a physical sensation of
each character sits somewhere differently in my body.
How do you develop these different voices?
If you could talk a little bit more about that.
And then how do you keep them straight?
Yeah, I don't know how I keep them straight.
Someone asked me actually the other day,
have you ever gotten them confused?
And I said no, because it was true.
And since then I have twice gotten them confused.
There were two instances on stage that I did the slightly wrong voice for the wrong character.
And Kip happened to be in the audience on one of those shows and he didn't notice, so that was good.
It was a kind of chaotic moment, which I was aware of, but no one else else was so that was a good cover at least. I think the process of finding it in the body with the voice and the physicality
really helped because when I come to perform them, you know, the Basil for instance is
very, his very, the tone of his voice or the temper of his voice perhaps is quite brittle.
Basel is the artist who did the portrait.
Yeah, he's the artist. So he sort of sits quite on the gum ridge,
just behind the teeth, and there's something centralized, I guess,
like it's very focused down and right.
It's hard to explain actually now that I'm thinking
about it. And there's quite an obvious clue for Lord Henry where the narrator said Lord
Henry languidly. So there's quite an expansive quality to Lord Henry and there's something
that's very somewhat like molasses, like he's very juicy and also something about aristocratic British
men who are able to hold court and speak widely on subjects. Lord Henry has quite a deep voice,
but they actually have quite a range of pitch in their voices. And if you listen to Stephen Fry,
he's talking up right at the top level of his pitch
and then right down at the bottom in the same sentence.
And it really holds your attention.
And that was something we really wanted to find
for Lord Henry.
Now, in an interview, I heard you say that when you were a
kid, you used to love listening to cassettes of poems
of Roald Dahl. And you used to love listening to cassettes of poems of Roald Dahl.
And you used to memorize them.
And I tried to find it online.
I couldn't actually find it.
But I was thinking that if you memorize those poems and they were read by British actors,
listening could have been like great training for you doing the picture of Dorian Gray,
which is a bunch of different flowery British
characters.
It absolutely was. It was such a strange, strange like thing to have as a reference,
like a feel, a real body reference really from my childhood of Roald Dahl's revolting
rhymes which weirdly enough I think Marian Margulies read one of the characters or one
of the poems and when I met her I didn't realize thisulies read one of the characters or one of the poems and when
I met her I didn't realise this until I was thinking about the Roald Dahl's element of
it all and went back and I was like oh man I should have told her that she was such an
inspiration to me as a kid through her voice, through the ability like how her storytelling
and characters really spoke to me when I was a kid. Through the help of cameras and recordings, of you doing the other parts, you're actually
acting opposite yourself. Is it odd to be acting with yourself as a scene partner? And
this is like a version of yourself that was recorded a few years ago.
Yeah, it's really, it's really strange. It's really strange because, well, what it does,
particularly because I can't see myself ever, really. There's only once that I can see myself,
which is the character of Alan Campbell. But otherwise, I just have to listen to the
audio recording aspect of it because I'm either in the back back of stage or I'm in front of the screen
or I'm behind the screen. I can't interact with it in that way. It really forces you
to listen to what the person is saying, to what I'm saying, and forces you to be really
imaginative, really engage with your imagination and how that makes you
feel and what part, what words are springing out to you tonight and what parts of the tone
or how it's been delivered is springing out. And maybe that's come from, yeah, listening
to audiobooks when I was a kid a lot and having that imagination sustained in that way.
Well, the performance is highly choreographed.
You have to be very precise.
You have to get to a mark or where you're supposed to be
in time for you to interact with a recording
that you performed as another character.
You say there are sequences where you have seconds
to get lines out.
Otherwise, the scene cues will be off.
Yeah, they'll just keep going.
They're the worst kind of actors that I'm working with.
They're on.
They don't wait for you.
They don't wait for me at all.
They'll just barrel on, and if I don't keep up, it's my fault.
Yeah, I mean, the hardest one of that is the Lord Henry sequence in the dinner party scene
where there's seven.
And you're playing all those seven other guests.
Yeah. How many is it?
Dorian, two, three, four, five, six, I think.
No.
Yeah. It's all me.
You're playing all the other guests.
Yes.
But I don't think of them as me at all.
I think of them as the characters.
I can only see a side version of them as me at all. I think of them as the characters.
I can only see a side version of them as well,
because the screen is obviously not three-dimensional.
But weirdly enough, because it's six different people,
and each of those was shot individually and then comp together,
and there's the magic of that.
They're all doing different things at different times.
And the more you look at the visual, the more you can find something new. There's something
that I didn't realise or had forgotten that I'd done as the Duchess that is quite nice
to play off of against. And I'm like, oh, she's thinking that there, that's funny.
Which is, I can't do anything with that verbally,
but I can use it to act opposite and to create something new for Lord Henry's performance.
One thing I want to add about the play is that it's funny. Not only the turns of phrases
or the performance, but there's also this cheekiness to it. Like the narrator is a bit
cheeky. And there are also other choices that you make. The way you switch from character to character can be quite funny.
Yeah. I mean, it is a lot of fun to do. And the narrator really is, in a sense, Oscar
Wilde. You know, I'm not playing him as a character, but there is his energy and his
wit is definitely infused naturally into that
role because it is the character based on the prose of the book. You know, it's Kip's
turned a Victorian novel into a play and a Victorian novel that wasn't meant to be read
out loud. It wasn't like a Dickens or anything like that. It was meant to be read and in episodic form in a way.
So, it's somewhat difficult to turn that into dialogue as well as into something that
is accessible to an audience now.
And part of creating that has been to keep the wit that Oscar Wilde has inherently in
that text. I want to ask about Succession. The show is about a rich and powerful family. The patriarch
Logan Roy, played by Brian Cox, runs a media company. His health is deteriorating and his
children are jockeying for control of the company for power and, of course, for their
dad's love. You said that originally you didn't want to audition
for the role of Shiv Roy.
I'm guessing this would have been over around 10 years ago
now.
Why didn't you think the role was right for you at the time?
I think because I personally don't have an experience
by association or proximity with wealth at that level.
But I also, I guess I didn't understand the show so much.
And I didn't at that time want to be a secondary kind of handbag character to
the men in the show who were going to be, I think billions had just come out.
I was like, oh yeah, I can see that.
It's straight white men in business.
There's no room for me there.
So I don't think I'll have a very interesting through line.
Maybe I don't think I'm going to get this role anyway.
So I don't want to audition.
My friend, I was auditioning for something else and already had hair and makeup on, which
is such an effort when you're doing self-tapes.
I don't know, other people might not think it is, but I find it a real effort doing a
self-tape in the first place.
But I was doing a self-tape for something else and so my friend did, just read the lines,
just have fun, let's just try and do it.
And I am forever grateful for her.
Do you remember what you did or what your take on it was that might have sort of, even
though you originally didn't think it was the role for you, made them take note of you
to be Shiv?
I don't know.
I mean, there probably was a level of insouciance or attitude about not feeling right for this
and like, you know, without using it, that's
a succession word, F you for making me audition for this when you know I'm not right for
this, like that's a bit shiv to be honest.
Like that's.
Like a little above it but also like.
Showing up.
Angry and wanting to win the test.
Yeah, exactly.
Wanting to win the test.
As Tom says. There. Yeah, exactly. Wanting to win the test. As Tom says.
There you go.
Yeah.
Well, it occurred to me that the way Succession was filmed may have had some similarities to
the way you perform your current role in Dorian Gray.
I think that for Succession, there were numerous cameras following the cast as they did scenes,
kind of like the cameras that follow you on stage.
Are there similarities?
Yeah, there are similarities. did scenes, kind of like the cameras that follow you on stage. Are there similarities?
Yeah, there are similarities.
I mean, very different in terms of the specificity required for
Dorian and the fluidity allowed in Succession.
But something about the proximity of cameras and the kind of subtextual or
subconscious awareness of them as a character in both Succession
and Darien has been really useful to have experienced that in Succession. It was never
like they are definitely a character and we're going to dramaturgically make them feel like
that. But just the presence of, you know, like Gregor, one of the camera operators,
one point he was on the other side of the couch. I was doing the scene, he's behind my back on the other side of
the couch, I look over, yep, he's still behind me on the other side of the couch.
And within three seconds I turn and throw another line back over my shoulder and he's
right behind me. He has crossed the couch somehow, he's like leapt over it with a camera
in hand. And that kind of agility from the camera operators,
both in Dorian and Succession is very similar.
Wait, so you would sort of perform the scenes
and it was kind of the camera people's job
to sort of anticipate where you might go with it?
Yeah, in some sense, yeah.
We would do a director's rehearsal
and we would know the approximate areas
that we would need to be in.
And then the camera operators with direction
from the cinematographer and the director
would be telling them, you know, be in this, okay,
double down on that line, keep going,
or do a crash zoom to here or there.
Like being in the right areas and the right spots.
We would tend to light the room for the scene, or light one side and
then the other side, so there was no coming down the line, set up, set up,
set up, changing the lights each shot, each frame.
It was very just, yeah, there was a lot of freedom in that way of working and I loved it. It
was great. It meant that the scenes really had a lot of energy between the characters
and that we in that particular way of working we had a lot of space to fill in the gaps
I think and that was where you know the camera operators and the DP knew, okay, we know that Sarah's in the corner in this
setup, but actually she's been told, as is always the case in succession, you're likely
to be on camera, so have an opinion on everything. Just be acting. You can't just sit back and
relax for a moment. And that kind of attention to what's happening in front of you
is really fun to work with, but then also was really valuable
for transitioning onto something like Dorian,
because you're never sitting back.
You're never, oh, I'm not on camera,
so I can just switch off for a second.
You're always on.
You're on stage.
You're always on.
Yeah, the thing about your character, Shiv,
she's an observer.
She sometimes hangs back and watches
as her brothers, her father, people in the company interact and she seems to
process it and you can see that on your face. Can you talk about how you thought
about Shiv as an observer? Yeah, I mean sometimes it just came out of me as
Sarah feeling like I couldn't compete in the level of like comedy, humor or improv that
Kieran at the level that he's able to deliver.
Kieran Culkin.
Yeah.
So half the time it was like I just keep my mouth shut and have an opinion that I'll
keep to myself.
The camera will pick it up.
And that sort of somewhat developed into a character choice as much as it was an acting
choice, an actor's choice. But yeah, I think it's right for her though
as the younger sister of a, you know, oftentimes a room full of men. You're just kind of like,
all right, let me watch my stupid older brother and my even stupider older brother and my
even stupider older brother fight themselves out and tear themselves
down and get themselves into a knot and then I'm here I am dad you know I've just I've
just been sitting here you know there's there's a cunningness and a cunning quality to Shiv
and a part of that is just being the observer and waiting her turn.
Sarah Snoek just received a Tony nomination for her role on Broadway in the stage adaptation
of The Picture of Dorian Gray. We'll talk more about Succession after a break. I'm
Anne-Marie Baldonado and this is Fresh Air.
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I want to play a scene from succession. This is actually the last episode.
The board of the company is meeting to decide the company's future and who will take over. Would it be your brother, Kendall or Shiv's brother,
Kendall Roy, or would the board approve a sale to a tech company?
After all the votes are in, Shiv is the deciding vote.
She walks out of the room and the brothers,
played by Jeremy, Strong and Kieran Culkin follow her.
You can't be CEO.
You can't because you killed someone.
Which?
What?
Which?
Which?
What, like you've killed so many people you forgot which one?
That's not an issue.
That didn't happen.
Wait, it didn't? As in what?
It's just a thing I said. It's a thing I said. I made it up.
You made it up?
It was a difficult time for us and I think I, you know, whatever, must have something
from nothing because I just wanted for us all to bond at a difficult moment.
Wait, it was a move?
Oh.
No, no, there was a kid.
There was that kid.
So there was a kid.
I had like a toke and a beer and not, I didn't even get in the car.
Hold on.
What?
I felt bad and I false-memoried it.
Like I'm totally clean.
I can do this.
Wait. Did it happen or did it not happen?
It did not happen.
Ah!
It did not happen. I wasn't even there.
It did not happen.
Dude.
Vote for me. Just please, vote for me.
Shiv, vote for me.
No. Yes! Shiv, don't do this. You. Vote for me. No.
Yes! No.
Shiv, don't do this. You can't do this.
No.
Yes!
Absolutely not, man. Absolutely not.
No.
Why?
No. Why?
What? Just-
I love you. I really- I love you, but I can't.
F***ing stomach you.
This is disgusting.
It doesn't even make any sense!
I'm the eldest boy!
I am the eldest boy!
And you know, it mattered to him. He wanted this to go on.
That's a scene from Succession.
What's it like to hear that scene now?
It's so funny. Oh my gosh.
Listening to it and kind of, you know, forgetting, I guess, the hear that scene now. It's so funny. Oh my gosh.
Listening to it and forgetting,
I guess, I've forgotten the lines.
Getting to listen to it and I guess not seeing
the visual of it is really, really, that's so fun.
What great writing. Oh my gosh,
Jesse, such great writing.
It just makes you go like, oh no,
no Kendall,
you did not just say that.
What? It's so cringy and heartfelt and gross and wonderful.
It's just like, it's yeah.
Jesse Armstrong is the creator of Succession.
A lot has been made about how some of Succession was improvised.
And once I heard Kieran Culkin,
who played your brother Roman,
say that you're his favorite improv partner.
Can you talk about the improv or if there was a lot of it?
And even in that scene we just heard,
there's your character and Kieran Culkin's character
reacting to what Jeremy Strong is saying
and like all the nos and the like,ofs are feel like very in the moment.
Yeah, definitely. I mean, that's the sort of the funny thing about this show and the
writing in the show. I would be hard pressed to know which parts were improvised and which
parts weren't. But I would suggest that most of the like the oofs and the nose and the
interstitial kind of moments, I always felt that those were improvised and that was the beauty of it where we could be
live and real and expressive without worrying about going over someone else's line for sound or
for stitching them up for reacting too loud or whatever it was,
which gave everything a lot of aliveness and energy.
I want to play another scene from
Succession. This is a really emotional
scene. It's when Logan Roy's children
find out that Logan is dying. They're all
on a boat celebrating the wedding of the
oldest son, Connor. They've received a
call from Shiv's husband Tom, played by
Matthew McFadden, who's on a plane with
Logan when he's passed out in the played by Matthew McFadden, who's on a plane with Logan
when he's passed out in the bathroom and isn't responsive.
Tom calls the siblings to share the news.
Kendall and Roman have tried to say goodbye
and have handed the phone to Shiv, who's just finding out.
Hey, Dad. Uh, hello.
Um, you're gonna be okay?
And I'm sorry, is he dead? I don't know if he's dead. Is he dead? Dad? Uh, hello? Um, you're gonna be okay?
And I'm sorry, is he dead?
I don't know if he's dead, is he dead?
I don't know.
Tom? Tom?
Hey, hey.
Is he, is he even alive?
I don't know honey.
Are you just being nice to me? Is he gone?
He's, uh, I don't know. I don't know. We, he, uh...
We don't know. We don't know.
Okay, I'm putting you back there, okay?
Uh, okay. Well, um, I don't know what to do.
You're by his ear.
Yeah.
I'm gonna put you back there.
Okay, just go private, be somewhere private.
Just speak. It's weird, but speak, okay?
Like, you never know. He might hear you.
Uh, Dad? Um, hey.
Dad?
Daddy? Uh, I love you.
Uh, uh, don't go, please, not now.
No, I, uh, I, I love you, you f***.
God, I don't know, um, there's no excuses for me.
But I...
And it's okay.
It's okay, Daddy.
It's okay. I love you.
That's a scene from Sex Session.
That episode was such a killer,
and it shows how the siblings are still their father's kids.
They hate him, but they still love him and want his approval.
Was that episode difficult to film?
It was challenging in its expectations, but rewarding because of that.
I think the challenges were we were all on a boat in the East River.
I can't remember if that was docked at that point.
I think we were docked at that point, but you know, you're on a boat, you're close quarters. Mark had decided as a group with Jesse and everybody
to shoot that sequence as like a one take.
And so each time we did that scene,
it was a 29 minute take from that room
and then up onto the next level following Jeremy up
or Kendall up and then coming back down.
And then we would go up into the top level following Jeremy up or Kendall up and then coming back down and then we would
go up into the top level room. Yeah, it was hard. It was hard. We shot it over two days
though that that sort of sequence.
I heard the director of that episode and many episodes Mark Mylod talk about how you film
this scene and gave it all of this weight and then you sort of snapped out of it and were your delightful
Sarah Snooks self again. Is that how you usually are able to do things?
Are you able to go in and out like that? Yeah, I made a choice to do that on this one particularly because
Particularly on that discovery moment the lines that Jesse had written this particular speech
I really wanted to learn exactly as
he'd written with all the ellipses and the hyphens and the stuttered thoughts. I wanted to do it
exactly as it was because it was so simple the way he'd created that. And I really could see that
there were thoughts that she couldn't finish, that there were things that were too difficult
to be said said and she's
going between all these sort of emotions. And finding that really sure footing with that and
having felt like I'd rehearsed and prepared well enough to come to the day, I knew that I would
lose the impetus and lose the freshness if I stayed, unquote in character all day. If I was like down in
the dumps and dealing with the passing of my father all day, it's just going to run
out. Like I'm going to get dehydrated in a sort of practical sense because I'm going
to be crying and I'm not going to be refueling enough with water. I'm going to get desensitized
to the fact of my father dying. So I was doing stupid stuff
to actively put myself into a different space. And part of that came from being inspired
by working with a young actress called Lillie Littor in Australia on a film called Run Rabbit
Run and dealing with really heavy things and dealing with really big scenes and seeing
her ability to go into the scene, to be fully present, fully active,
and then because she was using her imagination, because she was a kid, when they called cut,
she was out. She was doing cartwheels, she was getting all that, doing other things.
It was a real eye-opening moment to go like, oh, we're elastic. If you work hard enough,
you can be elastic. If you lean on your imagination enough, you can come in and you can come out.
You just have to be maybe as an adult,
mindful of how you do it,
because you don't wanna shortchange your performance.
But to trust that there is that ability to do that.
My guest is stage and screen actor, Sarah Snook.
She played Shiv Roy
on the Emmy award winning show, Succession.
Now she's on Broadway playing all of the roles in the stage adaptation of the picture of Dorian Gray.
More after a break. This is Fresh Air.
In Syria, the Assad regime imprisoned not just men and women.
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of ours on any given morning. Listen now to the Up First podcast from NPR. I want to ask you about Shiv's marriage to Tom.
And spoiler alert, Tom, the son-in-law, ends up becoming the head of the company.
Shiv's by his side.
I want to play a scene though from earlier in that last season.
Tom and Shiv are hosting a pre-election party when it looks like their candidate is gonna win and there are all these powerful people there but they're so
angry with each other that they go out on the balcony and have a blowout fight.
You betrayed me! You were going to see me get sent to prison Shiv! And then you f***ed me off with that
undrinkable wine
and you won't have my baby
because you never even thought honestly
that you'd be with me more than like four years I'll think.
You offered to go to jail, Tom.
You offered because you're servile.
You're just, you're servile.
You are incapable of thinking about anybody
other than yourself because your sense of who you are, Shiv,
is that f***ing thing.
Oh yeah, you read that in a book, Tom?
You're too transparent to find in a book.
You're pathetic. You're pathetic!
You're a masochist and you can't even take it.
I think you are incapable of love.
And I think you are maybe not
a good person to have children.
Well, that's not very nice to say, is it?
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. but you, you, you have hurt me
more than you can possibly imagine.
And you, you took away the last six months
I could have had with my dad.
No.
Yes.
No.
Yes, you sucked up to him and you cut me out.
It's not my fault that you didn't get his approval.
I have given you endless approval and it doesn't fill you up because you're broken.
I don't like you.
I don't... I don't even care about you. I don't care.
That's a scene from the last season of Succession.
Can you talk about filming that scene with Matthew McFadden?
Yeah, that's so weird to listen to.
I feel so sorry for them because you can hear it from more of an objective side.
You're like, oh no, you're such broken people.
Yeah, filming that was so fun working with Matthew.
He's so present and generous as an actor.
He's so giving.
But we rehearsed a little bit the night before and so when we came in,
it was really just like in us, I guess.
Although kind of the well of pent-up aggression, the things that we've never been able to yell at
each other or been able to say as Shiv and Tom was really there, like all the, oh it's really just
deep subterranean in them and really fun to have a go at each other because they
don't argue well. As a couple they never really had good arguments that
would clear the air or see another person's point of view but here they
really go for each other's throats and that was really fun. I mean I think I
just told everyone that I was pregnant as Sarah at that point.
And so hearing Tom say, I don't think you're going to be a very good mother, was an easy
thing to act in response to, because it's all that kind of bound up in there and wondering
whether you will be, you know, as Sarah, let alone as Shiv be a good parent.
And Shiv is pregnant at that point but hasn't told him.
Which makes it even more hurtful.
It's just a horrible, horrible scene.
So again, so well written.
And that's the wonderful bedrock of this show.
Now you grew up in Australia and I read that you grew up near a national park.
So was that very rural or
picturesque?
Yeah, it was so very picturesque and I felt rural, but looking at it now and looking on
like Google Maps, it's like 30 minutes from the center of the city. It's so close to the
center of the city. It's crazy. But this national park's so beautiful.
Yeah, I guess Australia has a real wonderful blurred line between nature and metropolis
or city.
Yeah.
And you have two older sisters, so you were the youngest just like Shiv.
Your parents got divorced when you were young and you moved a bit, but I read that one thing
that was constant was your love of watching movies and your mom even worked for Disney for a
time.
Yeah, she, at one point she was distributing Disney VHS, so she got to bring home a bunch
of those and I loved them.
I really just repeated those all the time. I had Snow White, Cinderella, Little Mermaid,
Lion King, Aladdin, just on repeat in my house.
I read that you were sort of more interested in the character actor or the villain.
Yeah, there's a part of me, the feminist in me is like,
but if you watch Disney films, you might end up wanting to be a princess and
being saved by a prince and a princess can save herself.
You know, like, sure, I mean, that is true.
But also, I grew up watching those films and I was the one who came out of that going like, great, I want to be the Genie.
I want to be Jafar. I want to be Ayago. I want to be Ursula. I want to be Scar.
I want to be Simba. I want to be all the, like, the characters who go and do stuff and who are funny and
strange and weird and get great musical numbers.
Yes, they have the good lines.
They have the great lines.
Well Sarah Snook, thank you so much for joining us.
My pleasure.
Thanks for having me.
Nice to chat.
Sarah Snook spoke with Fresh Air's Anne-Marie Boldenado.
Last week, Snook received a Tony nomination for her leading role in the stage adaptation of The Picture of Dorian Gray. The show's
run has been extended until June 29th. Coming up, our rock critic Ken Tucker
remembers David Thomas, the lead singer for the band Pair Ubu. He died last month
at age 71. This is Fresh Air.
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David Thomas, lead singer and principal songwriter
for the band Peraubou died on April 23rd at age 71.
Thomas and Peraubou emerged from the Cleveland punk rock
scene in the late 1970s and were immediately recognized
as unique artists.
Our rock critic, Kent Tucker Tucker reviewed the band's 1978 debut album,
The Modern Dance, for Rolling Stone,
describing the music back then as harsh, ugly, vivid, and exhilarating.
Here's Ken's appreciation of David Thomas' work. I want to make a deal with you, girl, get a sign by the head and say,
I want to make a deal with you, girl, be recognized by the world,
for you're not a lion in pack, not a lion in pack,
you're better shy than a lion, not a lion in pack, not a line of paper
In 1978, that was most people's introduction
to David Thomas' voice, the central sound of Per Ubu
on the opening song of their debut album, The Modern Dance.
Everything Thomas would do for the next 47 years
was already in place.
The high-pitched growl and prickly phrasing,
his stop-start way of blurting out
the lyrics, the surrealist approach to imagery. The band's personnel would change regularly over
the decades. The one pair ubu constant was David Thomas. His singing, his songwriting,
and his immense physical presence on stage. Not for nothing was one of his pre-Ubu stage names,
Crocus Behemoth.
["It's a Lovely Day by the Sea"]
It's a lovely day by the sea.
It's a lovely day by the sea Mr. Potato Head is strumming a guitar
The beggar on the bench is acting lewd and crude
Weakened father's got his kid up for a stroll
Winter bond offshore is shredding the seagulls Thomas's On a lovely day by the sea.
Thomas' death at age 71 brings to a close one of the most significant avant-garde experiments
ever conducted within the confines of pop music.
Emerging from Cleveland, the band was as inspired by the clanking sounds of the city's industrial
factories as it was by the blues that David Thomas loved.
As he said more than once,
we don't promote chaos, we preserve it. Much better than I do, yeah Shut up, shut up
Turn the music down, turn the music down
A beta voice dance the dreamboat
A bearded car who sings like a girl
It ought something that I'm gonna wanna sell you
Shut up! Shut up!
Take a look at me!
You got the reasons
You have intentions
You think that this is real?
Beautiful Shut up, shut up!
Shut up!
Take him on the snow!
On the snow!
Over the years, certain themes recurred in Thomas' songwriting.
He wrote lyrics that revealed a deep knowledge of 20th century hard-boiled fiction.
Novelists like Raymond Chandler, Jim Thompson, and James Crumley would have covered their
ears at Per Hubeau's noise, but they'd recognize a kindred spirit in the man who wrote repeatedly
about desperate getaways in the ink black night, about cynical men and tough women trying
to make emotional connections.
In the extraordinary song called Irene from 2014's Carnival of Souls album, Thomas steals
a phrase from 50s rocker Screamin' Jay Hawkins to tell Irene he thinks their love is probably
doomed.
For a few moments, the harsh clatter of Perubu music subsides.
His croon only underlines his despair. I mean...
You will say you love me
And I will say It's all gonna go wrong.
And I'm gonna turn out very well at home.
Thomas' go-to facial expression was the scowl.
He liked to come off crotchety and did not suffer fools gladly.
In his later years, he'd sing while seated in a chair
on stage, like a king surveying his subjects, like in fact the mad king Ubu in Alfred Jari's
19th century absurdist play that inspired the band's name. This pair Ubu enunciated like a man caught
mumbling in a dream to convey the sound of distraction, confusion, or pure bliss.
In the song Mandy from the 2013 album Lady from Shanghai, Thomas sings the line, I could
sleep for a thousand years.
Another curse that you thought was playing, out of the hole in the hole is, is left of The people overseeing Perubu's Facebook page included this statement in announcing his
death.
David Thomas and his band have been recording a new album.
He knew it was to be his last.
We will endeavor to continue with mixing and finalizing the new album so that his last
music is available to all.
I cannot wait to hear it.
Ken Tucker is Fresh Air's rock critic.
David Thomas died April 23rd. He was 71.
Tomorrow, our guest will be Emmy winner and Oscar nominee
Michelle Williams in the new limited TV series, Dying for Sex.
She plays a woman who finds out she's dying of cancer
and decides to leave her unhappy marriage and her life
behind to seek pleasure
and sexual satisfaction.
She'll tell us about portraying characters experiencing
grief, loss and resilience.
I hope you'll join us.
Just one man
singing a world song.
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 Ganny 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, Anne-Marie Bodonato,
Lauren Krenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique
Nazareth, Thea Challener, Cézanne Yakundi, and Anna Bauman.
Our digital media producer is Molly Sivi-Nesper.
Roberta Shorrock directs the show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Tarik Gross.