Fresh Air - Sterling K. Brown Was Told By Hollywood To Lose The "Smart-Guy Thing"
Episode Date: January 1, 2025Brown won an Emmy for his portrayal of Christopher Darden in The People v. O.J. Simpson, and another for This Is Us. He now appears in the film American Fiction. He spoke with Terry Gross about losing... his father, how his feelings about the O.J. Simpson case changed, and prejudice he faced in Hollywood.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air.
I'm Terri Gross.
Happy New Year.
We're continuing our holiday week series featuring a few of the 2024 interviews we particularly
enjoyed.
Today, it's an interview with actor Sterling K. Brown.
I've admired his work since I first saw him in the mini series, The People vs. O.J. Simpson.
He played Christopher Darden, one of O.J. Simpson's prosecutors
in one of the most controversial trials
of the 20th century.
Brown won an Emmy for that performance.
Since then, he became well-known
in the popular NBC series, This Is Us,
a show that brought many viewers to tears
and won him another Emmy.
He took off long enough from that job
to play a prince in Black Panther.
He's also appeared in comedy,
including a memorable Emmy nominated performance
in Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
He was nominated for an Oscar last year
for his role in the Oscar winning film, American Fiction.
We started our interview talking about American Fiction.
It stars Jeffrey Wright as a novelist who is black.
He writes about fiction that's pretty obscure, as a novelist who is black. He writes about
fiction that's pretty obscure, like a novel based on the Greek tragedy The Persians by
Aeschylus. No one wants to publish his new novel. It seems to him that the only books
white publishers want by black authors are books about being poor or in gangs or addicted
to drugs or being a pregnant teenager. To prove his point, he
writes a book conforming to those expectations using a pen name to
disguise his identity. He's offered a huge advance, the book becomes the
bestseller, and he gets even more money when the film rights are sold. But the
pseudonym leads to unexpected trouble. Sterling K. Brown plays the writer's
brother. He's a plastic surgeon
who's currently having money problems because his wife has left him and has taken half his
practice after discovering he's having a gay relationship. He's just come out as gay and
is going a little overboard in reconstructing his identity. The film is a funny satire about
race and the publishing industry while at the same time probing complicated
family relationships.
Sterling K. Brown, welcome to Fresh Air.
So happy to have you on the show.
Terry, thank you so much for having me.
I'm delighted to be here.
Did you experience any of the same type of preconceptions about what it means to be authentically
black in your personal life or in your acting career?
Absolutely.
I found it definitely when I got to Hollywood in the early 2000s that the idea of being
intelligence was something that I needed to shed.
Many casting directors would be like, he's got this smart guy thing.
If he can lose that, then he'll be much more castable.
I think that similar to what you were saying in your intro
with regards to the kinds of stories
that folks were willing to put money into
had to deal with black folks overcoming certain adversities
and dealing with certain traumas.
And I think that that was also linked
to a certain socioeconomic wash
that they thought was appropriate for how blackness needed to be portrayed in
order to be quote unquote authentic.
When you were an economics major and then you interned at the Federal Reserve, did you
want to be in business or economics?
Yes.
I think at that point in time in my life, Terry, the most important thing was being
able to pour back into my community in a way that was substantial.
And the only way that the primary way that felt most substantial was through financial
resources.
So my goal was to make money.
I felt like my mom sent me to this fancy college prep school and
I got into Stanford University.
I felt like the most important thing that I could do to show my appreciation is make
sure that I was able to be a contributing member of the family,
a contributing member of the community in terms of financial resources.
So I said, what better way to make money than to be an economics major,
learn what money does and how I can make more of it, right?
And what I found through my first year at Stanford
and through this internship at the Federal Reserve Bank
was that while I was good with numbers,
I wasn't really interested or passionate
about the inner workings of what it took to make money.
Like money in and of itself wasn't a driving force for me
that motivated me to continue.
I couldn't see a life just making money
if I wasn't doing something that excited me or
ignited me in a more passionate, spiritual, holistic sort of way.
Okay, so you found the passion in acting.
Yeah.
But this reminds me of a line that you say in American fiction.
So your brother, the main character in the story who's the novelist who can't get published.
Um, you say to him, like, you know, me and your
sister, you're like, we're doctors, we save people.
Like, what, what can you do?
Revive a sentence?
And, and so that reminds me, like, did you worry
like, okay, so I'm not going to give back to my
community through learning about economics and
money.
Um, what will being an actor give back
to my community?
Like, what meaning does that have in the larger world?
Great question, and it's something that I thought about for a while.
And so when I told my mom that I was going to change my major, I knew that she will probably
have some questions for me in terms of why I wanted to do it.
But most importantly, I had to let her know that I prayed about it.
And I said, yes, ma'am, I had.
And I felt led.
And that gave her permission to give me permission to dive into it without any sort of regrets
or second questioning.
I want to talk to you about the role that you got your first Emmy for.
And that's the role of Christopher Darden in The People versus O.J. Simpson,
which was the first season of American Crime Story.
You won an Emmy in 2016.
You were, you know, Darden was one of the prosecutors,
one of the two prosecutors,
and he was portrayed by O.J. Simpson defenders,
by people who thought O.J. was innocent,
as having the job so that the prosecution could present a black face. by OJ Simpson defenders, by people who thought OJ was innocent,
as having the job so that the prosecution
could present a black face.
Correct.
But Darden really, I think, deeply believed in OJ's guilt.
So I wanna play a clip from the closing argument
that you make in The People Versus OJ Simpson.
So here we go.
Ladies and gentlemen, to grasp this crime,
you must first understand Mr. Simpson's relationship
to his ex-wife, Nicole.
It was a ticking time bomb.
The fuse was lit in 1985, the very year they were married.
Officers responded after Mr. Simpson beat Nicole
and took a baseball bat to her Mercedes. Officers responded after Mr. Simpson beat Nicole
and took a baseball bat to her Mercedes.
Then in 1989, Nicole had to call 911 again, fearing for her life.
When officers arrived, Nicole ran towards them, yelling,
He's going to kill me.
He's going to kill me.
She had a black eye, a cut forehead, a swollen cheek.
In her torn bra, Nicole pleaded with the officers,
you've come up here eight times.
You never do anything about him.
And they want to tell you that the police conspired
against Mr. Simpson.
This case is not about the N-word.
It is about O.J. Simpson and the M-word.
Murder.
Now, I'm not afraid to point to him and say he did it.
Why not?
The evidence all points to him.
In February 1992, Nicole filed for divorce. She was running away from the man who said he'd kill her.
She saw the explosion coming.
Why else fill a safe deposit box with threatening letters from the defendant,
a will, and police photos of past meetings.
She knew that the bomb could go off at any second. And then it did.
Now I'm going to skip ahead to the end of your closing argument.
He's a murderer. He was also one hell of a great football player.
But he's still a murderer.
When I saw the series, I thought, oh, you look so much
like Christopher Dawson.
It's just, you're so good in it.
You were in college at Stanford during the trial.
What did you think of O.J. at the time?
Did you think of his guilty or innocent?
I'm gonna be honest and say like it was
it was a second consideration.
It wasn't the first thing on my mind. I think that was sort of what a lot of us were experiencing was that we wanted
the criminal justice system to work in favor of someone who looked like us,
because we were accustomed to it working against us. But in terms of seeing someone
beat the system, who doesn't typically beat the system, I think that was the driving factor,
at least for me, in terms of why I rejoiced in his innocence at the time,
in the not guilty verdict, right?
And it was such a strange thing to step into, Terry,
having been so pro-OJ and anti-Darden as a young person,
to have an opportunity to step into that other person's shoes and
experience life from their perspective.
And it was me and my friend Sarah Paulson had the best time on that show because she
would read Marsha's book, I would read Chris's book, we would read excerpts to one another, we would go
over the evidence and the evidence is pretty overwhelming. I'll say this that if you didn't...
She was the main prosecutor and your partner in the trial.
Correct. And the way that it was set up even in the room, in the courtroom, like we had
sort of crappy kind of chairs and the dream team had
like these spinning swivel chairs that had like nice armrests on them and
everything. And Sarah and I would look over at them and like, gonna beat these
bastards. You know what I mean? Like completely convinced that we were
gonna sort of like retell the trial and it was gonna come out the way that we
wanted it to.
Did you see, as a young man,
did you see Christopher Darden as a traitor
for prosecuting a black man?
Absolutely. Hands down, 100%.
He was persona non grata, as far as I was concerned.
Like, you're trying to take down one of our heroes.
I think... I think that's the way
a lot of black folks will relate to people who quote-unquote
make it, celebrity or otherwise, but particularly celebrity and particularly at that time, we
have so few people that are able to make it to a level of esteem notoriety, what have you, that the idea that the system, the man that
America is trying to bring them down and that a black man got attached to being Christopher
Darden to the wrong side, it felt like, why are you allowing them to use you? That was definitely my perspective at age 18 or 19
when it happened.
So what changed your mind?
Was it stepping into Christopher Darden's role,
becoming him for the series,
or was it examining the facts more closely?
Yes, yes to both of them.
Yes, that's the yes to both of them. The DNA evidence is overwhelming. My perspective as a human being has shifted in terms of also in terms of playing Christopher Darden like who was the
voice for the people who were murdered. They don't have anyone to speak for them.
So someone has to do it, right?
Even getting into Darden's book
in terms of being a prosecutor, he's like,
we need to have a Black presence
in all facets of law enforcement,
whether that is as police, whether that is as prosecutors, as defense attorneys,
like a presence in all of those things means that we can work from the inside.
And I think that that's sort of an admirable perspective that he has on how law enforcement
can work at its best.
So let's talk a little bit about This Is Us.
And this is a series, this was a series, an incredibly popular series about three siblings.
And the white mother was pregnant with triplets, but only two children survived.
So the father, who's also white, decides like he planned on taking home three babies, and
that is what he's going to do.
So he adopts a baby born the same day,
who is left at the door of a firehouse.
Now that baby is black.
So you're the adult version of that black baby
who grew up in the white family.
So you're set apart from the family in two ways.
You're the only black person in the family,
and you're the only sibling who's not a twin.
Yeah.
Part of the series set in the present,
you're married to a black woman, you have two children and later adopt a twin. Yeah. And part of the series said in the present, you're married to a black woman, you have
two children and later adopt a third.
So I want to play a scene from the first episode.
You've been searching for your biological father and you finally found where he lives.
So you drive over there, you bang on his door, and as soon as your biological father opens
the door, you make a little speech.
So let's start with the banging on the door.
Yeah, yeah, it's tough with all that banging.
I heard you the first time banging on the door.
Who the hell is that?
My name is Randall Pearson.
I'm your biological son.
Thirty-six years ago, you left me at the front door.
But now hold on, just let me say this.
Thirty-six years ago, you left me at the front door of a fire station.
Don't worry, I'm not here because I don't want anything from you.
I was raised by two incredible parents.
I have a lights-out family of my own.
And that car you see parked out in front of your house cost $143,000, and I bought it for cash.
I bought it for cash because I felt like it, and because I can do stuff like that.
Yeah. You see, I turned out pretty all right, which might surprise a lot of folks
considering the fact that 36 years ago, my life started with you leaving me on a fire
station doorstep with nothing more than a ratty blanket and a crap-filled diaper.
I came here today so I could look you in the eye, say that to you, and then get back in my fancy ass car
and finally prove to myself and to you
and to my family who loves me
that I didn't need a thing from you,
even after I knew who you were.
You wanna come in?
Okay.
I love how that ends.
So the father's played by Ron Seifhas Jones, who died a few months ago.
But I love how you casually, how he casually invites you in after this long negative harangue
about him and you just say, okay.
Talk about deciding how to play that and whether you talked about how to play those final notes,
whether you talked about it with Ron Cephas Jones.
So that was one of the audition scenes for the show.
Did you audition with him for that scene?
No, no, no. Auditioned by myself, you know.
So in that scene, I remember thinking that...
What I understood from reading the pilot of the show,
and what was very sort of surprising
in terms of how it landed on people ultimately, was that it made me laugh from beginning to end.
And so I was always sort of focused on like the amount of light that the show had.
And so when people talk to me about it, they're always talking about the tears that the show
caused.
But I think both of those things are true.
So I felt like in that scene, like you have to be able to...
You can't live too much in one tone.
Otherwise, the show becomes monotonous.
So you're able to go in and you give this man
the peace of your mind, but at the same time,
all you really want
is to be in relationship.
And so you see that front-facing anger towards this man,
but really what he wants is to be understood,
to understand why he left in the first place,
and ultimately to be loved.
So Ron Cephas Jones, who was in that scene with you,
your biological father in the
series, he died a few months ago.
And, um, Andre Brauer, who you also work with, and we'll talk about him a little
bit later, he died at the end of 2023.
And then you also worked on Black Panther and you knew Chadwick Boseman who died,
um, of cancer
at a young age, shocking everybody because he didn't make it public.
I'm wondering if that made you think about your own mortality.
Yes, first of all, yes.
And I would say even predating all of those beautiful souls transpiring was my own father,
who passed away at the age of 45.
And so I thought about it since then,
when I was only 10 years old.
And my brother and I will have this conversation.
My brother's 14 years older than me, so he's 61 now.
And he'll always say that no black men in our family
have lived beyond age 65.
And I remember thinking that
like, that may be true for them, but it does not have to be true for us. And so I've been
very conscientious in terms of health and lifestyle choices that I try to make for myself
to be here for as long as possible. I have two beautiful boys, Andrew 12, Amari 8, and I
want to be here to experience and enjoy them as much as possible and beyond them
I'm looking forward to, if they indeed have children, to being able to enjoy and
experience those young people as well.
So, you know, some things are out of our control, Terry, but the things that are within our control in terms of diet and exercise, in terms of water consumption,
or whatever else there is out there, I try to make myself as informed as possible so I can be around in the healthiest version of myself
for as long as I possibly can.
Well, speaking of exercise.
Yes.
You go around shirtless a lot.
I don't go around shirtless a lot.
Wait, wait, wait.
Your character does in American fiction after he comes out.
And so we can see your chest, and it is very ripped.
So you've been in the gym a lot.
So I know you're doing your part in terms of, uh,
in terms of exercise.
I appreciate that.
So let me reintroduce you here.
If you're just joining us, my guest is Sterling K.
Brown.
We're going to take a short break and then we'll
be right back.
I'm Terri Gross, and this is Fresh Air.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Dignity Memorial.
When your celebration of life is prepaid today,
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Planning ahead is truly one of
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What's in store for the music,
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we're making some fun, bold predictions for the new year. Listen now to the Pop Culture
Happy Hour podcast from NPR.
Do you make resolutions in January? We do. Specifically, we make pop culture resolutions.
We also check in on what we resolved to do this last year. Did we catch up on all those
classic movies or finally write that novel? Find out on the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR.
This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross. As part of our holiday week series of interviews we particularly
enjoyed from 2024, we're listening to my interview with Sterling K. Brown. He co-starred in the
movie American Fiction. He won an Emmy for his portrayal of prosecutor Christopher Darden
in the miniseries The People vs. O.J. Simpson and had a small but important role as a prince
in Black Panther. He was one of the stars of the popular TV series This Is Us, where
he portrayed Randall Pearson, the adopted black son in a white
family.
He won an Emmy for that role too, and was nominated for another for his guest appearance
in the comedy series Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
When we left off, we were talking about how his life was changed by his father's early
death.
You know, so you're talking about like losing your father when you were 10 and he was in
his 40s.
You know, one of the focal points of
this is us is the loss of the father.
So much of the story is flashing back to the
impact of the father and the father's death
on the three siblings lives.
Um, so I'm wondering like in the day to day
world of your lifetime, how much of it has spent
been spent thinking about the loss of your father and how much of it has been spent thinking about the loss of
your father and how much of his loss, this is a lot to ask in one question, I apologize.
It's all good, go for it.
But how much of that loss affected your sense of who you were, of your own confidence, your
self-esteem, your identity?
You could probably talk for hours about that.
So I apologize for packing that into one interview question on a radio.
Akuna Matata, I will try to synthesize and make it as concise as possible.
My dad is one of the most beautiful people that I had an opportunity to know in my life.
And it was a short time, but it was full and meaningful. I was my dad's only son.
I have other siblings, but I am my dad's only son. And my mom would often come up to my dad,
whose name is Sterling Brown Jr. and say like, Sterling, you're gonna spoil that boy.
But I tell you what, the love that he poured into me is still with me. There are
specific moments of interactions that we have. I would sit and watch boxing matches and football
matches with my dad. Like those were his two favorite sports, so they're probably kind
of my two favorite sports as well. We would wash his car outside where he'd play his Michael McDonald
8 track in the pink El Dorado Cadillac as we washed it and we'd listen to like, I keep
forgetting how you made it so good. You know, whatever it was. Like we have moments of bliss
that are so ingrained into my soul. And while you don't remember all of the specifics, you
remember that like that man loved me as much as any human being could love
another human being. So your father was Sterling Brown Jr. but you went by your
middle name Kelby until you were 16. Correct. Why did you go by that name? Why
did you change it back to Sterling Brown and keep the K as the
middle initial?
So my mom tells a famous story. She said when I was in kindergarten and I had to spell out
my name for the teacher, I came back home and I said, Mom, I think I'm going to go by
Kelby. And I said, because Kelby is five letters and Sterling is eight, and it's just way faster
for me to get through. I told her, I said, when I'm 16, though, is five letters and Sterling is eight, and it's just way faster for me to get through.
I told her, I said, when I'm 16 though,
you can call me Sterling again.
Now I didn't remember this.
My dad passed away when I was 10, almost 11.
And it had been about five years that I hadn't heard his name
in my life on a regular basis.
And honestly, Terry, it was just like,
I wanted to hear his name.
I wanted to hear the name of Sterling.
So I said, hey guys, could you call me Sterling now?
Because I just wanted to, maybe I felt like I,
and I think I really grieved my father
about five years after his passing away.
I think for the first five years,
I felt like I had to be the man of the house.
I had to keep it together for my mom.
I also believed that my father, and still believe that my father ascended to heaven
so that he was in a better place.
But that still didn't allow me the space to like really just be like, I miss you.
I miss this man.
And so I think it took about five years for me to fully let that out. And then after I
let that out, I was like, okay, I'm ready to hear his name again. So I want to mention another
parallel between your life and your character Randall's life. And this is us. Randall decides
since he was adopted, he's going to kind of pay it back and adopt a girl. And the person who he adopts is in her teens
and her mother is addicted to drugs
and that's why she needs a home.
And your mother adopted two children
when you were in college.
Were they teenagers too?
And why did your mother decide to adopt two children
at that stage in her life?
Good question. They were not teenagers, they were babies.
Oh, okay.
And so my aunt Vera, who I adore, she's always my mom's little sister,
was the collector of things in her family's life, like pets and stuff.
And you'd be like, she got a new cat, she got a new dog.
But my aunt Vera was also dealing with substance abuse issues at that particular time in her life. So she
would buy, get a dog, go to the Humane Society, get a dog, get a cat or whatever and then
she would be gone for a while. So then that dog or cat became somebody else's. My aunt
was also fostering my little brother Robert, who is now 25 or 26 years old, just had a birthday.
And she was fostering and then she went missing for a period of two weeks.
She had dropped my little brother off at my mom's house and my mom called the social worker after a day and said,
listen, I want you to know this little boy is here with me.
Social worker came to the house and said,
are you okay to keep him?
And my mom said, yes, absolutely.
So then my mom became the foster parent
for my little brother, Robert.
Then the birth mother for Robert,
who was dealing with substance issues herself,
was pregnant with twins,
my little sister, Ariel, and my my little sister Avery. And the social
worker said, would you be willing to take on these twins as well? And my mom said yes.
Now, I don't mention my little sister Avery that much because early on in her life, she
passed away from SIDS. And it was very difficult for my mom. She's like,
why would God bring these children into my life to have one of them pass away?
And for a minute was wondering whether or not she would wind up keeping them. But after a moment of
just saying like, my life is more full and rich with them in it than without them, she decided
to continue fostering. And then another two years later,
wound up going through the formal adoption process.
And so my brother Robert and my little sister Ariel have been with us for 25 and 23 years
now.
And my little sister Avery, similar to Kyle is the young man's name, and this is us, the
third of the triplets that didn't make it,
is went on to sing with the angels.
That's quite a story.
Yeah, I have quite a mom. I have to say that too. She's an extraordinary human being.
There's so much that you must have related to in This Is Us.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, your mother must have been very, is she still alive?
My mother is still alive and here's an interesting one, I don't talk about it that often, but
I'm talking about it more now because I think that the universe is calling me into some
sort of action and I'm still figuring out what that is.
My mom was diagnosed with ALS in April of-
Sorry to hear that.
Thank you very much. I appreciate that.
Diagnosed in April of 2018.
She lost the ability to speak in October of 2018.
I think has far exceeded the expectations
of most doctors in terms of lifespan,
because she's still with us and about to go into 2024.
But the joy that my mom is able to hold on to
in the midst of this incredibly debilitating disease,
the smile that she still has for the people
who walk into her sphere is radiant.
And it shows you, it shows me that first of all,
I don't have to allow circumstances
to dictate how I am in the world,
that I still have choice.
I may not have choice over what the circumstances are,
but how I respond to them.
And my mom has been a shining example
of how to maintain radiance
in the midst of a very difficult situation.
My guest is Sterling K. Brown.
He co-starred in the film American Fiction and the NBC series
This Is Us and was in the movie Black Panther. We'll hear more of the interview after a break.
This is fresh air. This is fresh air. Let's get back to my interview with Sterling K. Brown.
He was nominated for an Oscar for his performance in the 2023 movie American fiction
He won Emmys for his performances in the popular TV series
This is us and the miniseries the people versus oj simpson and was nominated for another for his guest appearance on Brooklyn
Nine nine in the film Black Panther. He played a prince
Well since we've been talking about this is Us and how it relates to your own life,
I want to play your Emmy acceptance speech for This Is Us.
And this was in 2017.
And in this excerpt of your acceptance speech, you're holding your Emmy, and that's what
you're referring to when you say this one right here.
So here's the excerpt of that speech. This one right here. Like this one right here. So here's the excerpt of that speech. This one right here, like this one right here, when I think about it, like Walter White held
this joint, Dick Whitman held this joint. I may have lost some of y'all, but you know,
Google it. And 19 years ago, Detective Frank Pimbleton held this joint as impeccably played by Andre
Brow.
I just want to say, Mr. Brow, Salky at NBC for your support from the beginning.
I want to thank Dana Walden, Gary Newman, and everyone at 20th Century Fox for keeping
your brother gainfully employed.
Appreciate that. I wanna thank my cast.
Milo, Mandy, Justin, Chrissy,
you are the best white TV family
that a brother has ever had.
Better than Mr. Drummond,
better than them white folks that raised Webster.
I love you.
Susan Kalechi-Watson, it is my pleasure
to rep Black Love with you, sister. Let's keep doing it like Martin and Gina
Ron Cephas Jones
You just have to show up and the work is already there brother. Thank you so much for embodying the presence
Which is never in absence. I love you
Our writers you are our life's blood. You can play, you can play, you can play. I can get that loud, nobody got that loud music.
Writers, I love you, you are our life's blood.
Our producers and directors, I love you.
You were so funny in that,
especially when you were being played off.
What went through your mind when the orchestra
started playing to tell you that your time was up,
get off the stage? Oh to tell you that your time was up, get off the stage.
Oh my goodness.
That is, the fact that you played that through to the end
was priceless, because I was like,
I was thinking in my mind, I was like,
this is when I got cut off, isn't it?
Um, I remember thinking that I saw earlier in that show,
Nicole Kidman had won Best Actress in a Limited Series.
And I remember thinking, I was like, okay,
I was listening to her speech.
I was like, oh man, this speech is taking
a little bit longer than the average speech is,
but they're giving her a little bit of latitude.
So I was like, okay, that's cool.
And I was sort of like clocking it on my watch.
I was like, okay, my speech isn't that long.
So I should be okay. And before I came,
what I thought was close to that length, I was like, oh my goodness, they're not going to play
me off. Like it's really, it's not going to happen. I was like, let me just keep talking and I'll get
a chance to finish what I need to say. And I was sort of surprised because like the microphone,
they literally pulled it into the ground, as if
to say, like, bro.
No, are you kidding?
Like, it physically moved?
It physically, like it came, you know, like it had a hole in the ground that it started
to retract back into.
Oh, that's so funny.
I was like, what?
I just figured maybe they would mute it or something, but they physically lowered it.
They physically lowered it, and it was like, it's time for you to go, sir.
And I was a little in my feelings.
I'll be perfectly honest, Terry.
But I was like, OK.
I still won, and I still got a chance
to share with a lot of the people what
it is that I want to share.
You always, in these situations, you always
want to thank your wife.
So I was like, oh, man, my wife is going to be so mad that I didn't thank her. But I know she knows
that I love her. And that if I had more time, I would have got there. So yeah, I was sort
of a state of shock more than anything else. They're like, they're really gonna play me
off.
Well, you protested. You said you didn't play music this loud for anyone else. You know, that's what I was thinking to myself.
So that was all spontaneous. You hadn't rehearsed like, say I'm played off. Here's what I think
I'll say. No, no, completely spontaneous. No, that's great. But thank you. Those speeches,
when you're blessed and have an opportunity to win something, you wanna be able to say something
that sticks to people's ribs.
And I felt like it was a bit of history in terms of,
I was the first black man to win that particular award,
best lead actor in a dramatic series in over 19 years.
And the fact that it came after Andre Brauer
meant all that much more to me.
Because he's been somebody who I've been looking up to the entirety of my career.
Since I started acting at Stanford University and people said,
you know, Andre Brauer went here.
And I did some research and saw the wonderful things that he did in terms of
Shakespeare in the park.
All of his stage stuff and that glory had just come out,
and so you got a chance to see him do his thing in that.
And Homicide Life on the Street was happening,
and by the time I got to NYU,
a TV show called Gideon's Crossing was on ABC,
and he was the main character in that.
And so everywhere I went, I would see this man
doing this incredible work with this incredible integrity,
the way that he carried himself through the work,
not just the work itself,
but just his presence meant something.
I was like, if I can represent the way
that that man has represented,
you'll be doing something all right.
While you were shooting This Is Us,
you got away long enough to shoot a couple of scenes
in Black Panther.
First of all, what did Black Panther comics mean to you
when you were growing up?
I didn't read the comic growing up, but I did when I graduated from NYU. Reginald
Hudlin had done a new series of the Black Panther comic and it was entitled Who is the Black Panther?
And it was a series about five graphic novels that I consumed and loved because I didn't know about T'Challa
Until I was 25 years old and then as I was working on a TV show with a friend of mine
called Army Wives
He asked me he goes are you into any comics?
I said, you know what not hugely but I am into this Black Panther comic. And I showed him my collection and he goes,
dude, he goes, you should try to get the rights to this
so you can make the movie.
And I told my buddy, Drew, I said, dude,
they're never gonna make a black superhero movie.
Get out of here.
And then fast forward.
I was like, I should have got the rights.
So how'd you know it was happening?
Since you couldn't get away for
long because you were shooting This Is Us,
how did you manage to get a role in it?
I auditioned for it and I felt like I did a good job.
I had a meeting with Ryan Coogler,
the director of Black Panther and he goes,
listen, you're not quite right
for this one role who is of the tribe
that is sort of outside of Wakanda,
because he gets to be a big guy.
But there's a role that we have
that I think requires a really good actor,
and it's not a lot of scene time, but it's important.
It sort of like sets the narrative into place.
And I said, bruh, how can I be down?
Because I knew it was going to be a cultural moment.
Because it was something that I could not have conceived
of 15 years earlier when I was reading the comic books
that was now actually coming
to life.
And it was not just coming to life, it was coming to life with the most zeitgeisty movie
studio in Hollywood.
Like the Marvel Cinematic Universe was unstoppable at that particular time and the fact that
they were going to put their eggs into the basket of telling the story of the Black Panther
was enormous.
So for me, it wasn't a matter of like,
oh, I can't get the part that I want, or dah, dah, dah.
I was like, this is going to be huge.
Whatever it is that I can do to be a part of it, I am happy.
And it turned out to be a great role,
where all of my friends, of course,
would be like,
Oh, man, I can't believe they killed you so fast.
Spoiler alert, I die in the thing.
I can't believe they killed you.
But I have to get back to my day job as well.
So the fact that I was able to moonlight
in something that did wind up making history,
it's something that I get a chance to celebrate
until the day that I pass away.
I'm so honored that I got a chance to be in that film.
My guest is Sterling K. Brown. He was nominated for an Oscar for his performance in the 2023
movie, American Fiction, and was one of the stars of the NBC series, This Is Us. We'll
be right back. This is Fresh Air.
This is Fresh Air. Let's get back to the interview I recorded one year ago with Sterling K. Brown.
He's known for his performances in the films American Fiction and Black Panther, in the
TV series This Is Us, and the miniseries The People vs. O.J. Simpson.
I want to play another clip.
And you talked about Andre Brauer.
Yes.
And how your lives intersected
and how you looked up with him.
You got a chance to do an episode of the comedy series
Brooklyn Nine-Nine with him.
And in the series, he plays a police captain
and Andy Samberg plays a police detective.
And of course, Andre Brauer was famous
for being a police detective in Hom of course Andre Brauer was famous for being a police
detective in Homicide Life on the Street, a terrific series that really showed off
his acting quite well. So this is basically a parody, this episode of
Brooklyn Nine-Nine is a parody of a famous episode from homicide in which
Brauer and one of the other detectors are interrogating one witness for the
entire episode, for the entire episode,
for the entire hour long episode.
And that's what happens in the episode of Brooklyn Nine Nine,
that Brower and Sandberg are interrogating you.
You play a dentist who is accused of murdering his partner,
his dental partner, and they wanna get a confession
out of you, and you keep coming up with answers.
So let's play a clip from that episode.
OK.
So the night of the murder, you met with Robert
in the surgical suite.
Why there?
Why not your office?
I was just preparing for the next day's surgeries.
Don't you have an assistant?
Does there?
I'm a meticulous person.
I'm careful how I do things.
So careful that you. I'm sorry, I forgot what I was gonna say.
Come back to me.
Now we did a sweep of the room where you and Robert fought.
Talked. Right, talked.
The entire room had been scrubbed.
It had been cleaned.
It had undergone industrial sterilization to remove all traces of blood and DNA.
It's a surgical suite.
People bleeding there every day, we have to sanitize it by law.
Ooh, I remember it, I was gonna ask.
Did you kill him? No. It's a surgical suite. People bleeding there every day. We have to sanitize it by law. Ooh, I remember it. I was gonna ask.
Did you kill him? No.
If you had said yes, I would have had you.
So, after you and Robert fought...
Talked. You left the office, but you didn't take your car?
I went to a bar with a scotch man.
I didn't want to drive drunk, so I took a cab.
And you didn't have your phone?
I left it charging in my office,
and I didn't realize till I was already out of the building.
Oh, man, if I go 10 minutes without looking at my phone, my pumpkin crop dies on my little farm.
This is not the time for stories about your digital squash, Peralta.
Fine.
Talking about your phone.
Why does it matter that I forgot it?
Oh, if I had it on me, you could have seen it pinging off the cell tower.
Doesn't matter. Didn't have it on me.
So you took a cab to this bar, where we talked to the employees of this coachman.
Nobody saw you there.
Nobody remembers seeing me.
But let me ask you this. Did you kill him?
Nah. You know, it's not surprising nobody remembers seeing me.
The bar was extremely crowded that night,
and I spent my whole time in the corner talking to this woman, Dana.
Oh, so you said.
But when we ran all the credit card receipts,
nobody named Dana bought any drinks that night.
Hey, trust me. Dana wouldn't buy no own drinks.
That is such a great scene and your timing is so good.
I really want to see you in more comedy.
Thank you very much.
It made me smile just listening to it.
It was so much fun to do.
Can you talk about like doing that scene
and like getting the timing right
and getting the kind of nonchalance
that your character is aiming for?
Yeah, it is just dogged repetition.
And you show up, one thing you learn
in the world of television is that you don't get
a lot of rehearsals, so you do a lot of that work
on your own by yourself so that when you come to the set,
you're ready to dance.
And you know that Andy and Andre are going to be ready to go.
So you're like, all right, let me not be the weak link in this threesome here.
Let me show up ready to play ball the same way as everybody else.
And they make it so much fun that it sort of just happens naturally.
You'll go over the scene a couple of times before the cameras start rolling
and then you'll start to do it or whatnot.
And if there's a little bit of a hiccup,
it's just like anything else,
you'll take it back to the beginning and you'll do it again.
And you just breathe, Terry.
I think for me, more than anything else is that
when you try to stay in the moment,
the next moment has a way of taking care of itself.
When you're trying to project to the future and be like,
oh, I hope I make it to this crescendo at the very very end,
then you sort of like wind up missing what's happening just right now. Take it
moment to moment. In life, on stage, on screen, is usually the best recipe to get
to the end of anything. That's what I try to do as a performer. I think those two
gentlemen in particular are wonderful at it.
And so they made it easy for me to join in the symphony.
Thank you so much for coming to our show.
It's really been great to talk with you.
Terry, the pleasure has been all mine.
Thank you for having me, and I look forward to doing it again.
Me too.
My interview with Sterling K. Brown
was recorded in January 2024.
He stars in an upcoming Hulu series called Paradise, My interview with Sterling K. Brown was recorded in January 2024.
He stars in an upcoming Hulu series called Paradise, playing a security guard for the
president.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, we'll conclude our holiday week series with music star and actress
Selena Gomez, one of the stars of the popular series Only Murders in the Building, and Alex
Van Halen, who wrote a memoir about his relationship with his younger brother, Eddie,
and their band, Van Halen.
Eddie died of cancer in 2020.
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"]
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical director is Audrey Bentham. Our engineer today is Adam Stanaszewski. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited
by Phyllis Myers, Ann-Marie Baudinado, Sam Brigger, Lauren Krenzel, Theresa Madden, Monique
Nazareth, Thea Challener, Susan Yacundy,
and Anna Bauman.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nesper.
Roberta Shorrock directs the show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Terry Gross.
All of us at Fresh Air wish you a very happy, healthy, and fulfilling 2025.