Fresh Air - The voice of SpongeBob, Tom Kenny

Episode Date: February 27, 2026

We take a trip to Bikini Bottom and revisit our interview with Tom Kenny, who plays SpongeBob on the popular Nickelodeon cartoon series, and in the new ‘Spongebob SquarePants’ film. Kenny’s been... voicing the character since the show began in 1999. In 2004 he talked about creating the voice, including experimenting with inhaling helium.TV critic David Bianculli reviews ‘Man on the Run,’ the new documentary about Sir Paul McCartney in the decade after the Beatles split up, and Justin Chang reviews the new erotic drama ‘Dreams,’ starring Jessica Chastain. To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Support for this podcast and the following message come from Arctic Wolf, providing AI-driven cybersecurity for seamless protection and resilience, combining technology with security expertise to help organizations manage cyber risk. More at Arcticwolf.com slash NPR. This is Fresh Air. I'm David B. and Cooley. The latest SpongeBob SquarePants movie, The SpongeBob Movie, Search for SquarePants, is now streaming on Paramount Plus. And that's reason enough. to revisit our interview with Tom Kenney, who has been providing the voice of animation's most celebrated Sponge. Since it premiered on Nickelodeon in 1999. Spongebob SquarePants isn't the oldest continually running animated series currently on TV. Comedy Central's South Park first appeared two years earlier in 1997. Both shows have launched popular Broadway musicals and movie spinoffs, and, like Fox's The Simpsons, which launched as a series way back in 1989, all have had a major impact on the current generation, which has been watching these shows and characters all their lives.
Starting point is 00:01:10 When I teach television history to young 20-somethings in college, the one show with which they are more familiar and fluent than any other is SpongeBob SquarePants. They all know and love the antics of SpongeBob and his undersea pals, including Patrick the Starfish, Squidward the Octopus, and Mr. Crabbs. All these characters and more were created by Stephen Hillenberg, who was a marine science educator as well as an animator. He died in 2018 at age 57, but his characters and his series live on. In Search for SquarePants, Spudge Bob wakes up one morning to discover he's had a small growth spurt, making him 36 clams high, which, to a sponge who's been waiting all his life to be tall enough to be allowed on to amusement park ride is a big deal. As his friend Patrick notes, he's now a big guy. Tom
Starting point is 00:02:06 Kenny is the voice of SpongeBob. Bill Fagerbocky is the voice of the Starfish Patrick. Patrick, I've never felt so respected before. You're used to it, buddy. And do you know what the best part of being a big guy is? What is it, Patrick? No, I'm asking. It means I finally get to do what every little guy dreams of doing when they grow up. You don't mean? That's right. Ride the big guy roller coaster at Captain Footie Beards Fun Park! Woo-hoo!
Starting point is 00:02:39 Somehow, this leads to an adventure where SpongeBob sails away with a nefarious ghostly flying Dutchman, whose voice is provided by Mark Hamill of Star Wars fame. It's more silly than scary, but between all the sightgags, goofy jokes, and bouncy music, manages to teach subtle lessons about friendship, loyalty, and even maturity. Tom Kenny, as always, provides the voice of SpongeBob. Before taking that role, he was a stand-up comic and a cast member of Mr. Show, the HBO sketch series starring Bob Odenkirk and David Cross. He spoke with Terry Gross in 2004, when there also was a new SpongeBob movie being released.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Let me ask you to describe SpongeBob for someone who's never seen the cartoon. Oh, wow, yeah. SpongeBob SquarePants is a little square kitchen sponge, even though he was born of sea sponges. It's kind of an accident of nature. But he lives in a pineapple under the sea, works in a fast food restaurant called the Krusty Crab in the undersea community of Bikini Bottom. What else can I tell you? He pales around with an incredibly dim starfish named Patrick Star has a crabby neighbor named Squidward Tentacles who lives in a giant Tee. he had next door to him. He's incurably optimistic and enthusiastic and kinetic. And yeah, and he has a cartoon show on Nickelodeon. Now, if you're doing a voice for, say, a cartoon animal, you know, animals make noises, so you could, you can maybe base your voice on like a cat's meow or a dog's bark or, you know, a beers growl or something. If you're doing the voice of a human character, humans really speak. If you're doing the voice of a sponge, there's really like
Starting point is 00:04:26 nothing in nature to base that on. So how did you figure out what voice you wanted to use? Which is actually very freeing in a way because there's no template. So when it came time to come up with a voice, it was just a matter of finding a voice that was child-like and maybe child-ish,
Starting point is 00:04:44 but not a child, non-age-specific, enthusiastic, and just kind of weird. And we've finally settled on this elfish helium helium voice that SpongeBob wound up being and you know this weird you know that was the fun part was before it was even a pitch or even a show and we were just
Starting point is 00:05:05 you know sitting in coffee shops irritating people at other tables going you know what would he laugh like what would his laugh be like and you know how about a dolphin how about kind of like a dolphin like flipper used it yeah that's good and you know it was really a blast And then Steve went in and pitched it to Nickelodeon, and they liked it. It's the only job in all the hundreds of voiceovers I've done that I really didn't have to audition for. I had the job from the get-go, which was nice. You mentioned like the voice sounds as if it's on helium.
Starting point is 00:05:36 Have you ever inhaled helium to see what it would do to your voice? You know, it's funny you should mention that in the seven-minute pilot episode that we did, which as far as we were concerned, might be the only episode. episode of SpongeBob ever made. There was a school of anchovies that invade Spongebob's restaurant and, you know, just this big school of destructive, like locusts, you know, that just descend on the restaurant and go and, and, and, ain't, ain't, ain't, and, and, and, and, and it was, Steve Hillenberg actually brought a tank of helium into the studio, and all of us voice actors just,
Starting point is 00:06:14 suck down the hill. That was the pilot. So I said, boy, if this thing goes, we are going to have a lot of fun. So did it help to hear what your voice sounded like on Heelium? Do you learn something about your voice you didn't know before? Yeah, I learned that I don't really need the helium. Because it's pretty easy to flick that switch and go right up there. Were there voices you came up with for SpongeBob that you rejected?
Starting point is 00:06:42 Oh, yeah. It's all hit and miss on any animated character in any animated show. You're trying to dial in a voice that the creator is hearing in his head. And in the case of SpongeBob, and a lot of the shows I've worked on, the creator of the show has a very definitive idea that he sometimes can't articulate because he himself is not a voice actor of what this character should sound like. So really it's a matter of just letting yourself be dialed in like. a radio or something with the creator going, okay, no, little, little, add 20 pounds.
Starting point is 00:07:17 Okay, now you have five years younger and, you know, maybe he has a deviated septum. Okay, yeah. And, you know, it really is hit or miss. You're zeroing in on this, on this target. And when it hits, it's pretty obvious. Okay, can you just know. Could you do that for me? Could you add 20 pounds to SpongeBob's voice?
Starting point is 00:07:37 Yeah, which when he absorbs water, I guess it's water weight. I have a tendency to retain water, Terry. This is SpongeBob on a very, I'm feeling very obese and very large today. And make him five years younger. Oh, make him five years younger? This is SpongeBob is a child. I am in Sponge Kindergarten. Deviated Septim?
Starting point is 00:07:58 Deviated Septim. I don't know what that means. I'm just a dumb sponge. What was it like for you the first time the voice and the image were matched up? You actually saw a little bit of completed animation of SpongeBob with your voice? It was really great because like I said, I had gone over to Steve's house, you know, even before the pitch was a pitch, and he had drawings and watercoloured paintings of SpongeBob's pineapple house and Squidward's Teakie Head House and the Krusty Kreb restaurant, which looks like an overturned lobster trap. And they were just so beautiful. You know, it was like looking into it aquarium or something. They were just gorgeous. And then when I started to do informal focus group testing at my house, you know, translation, forcing people that drop by to watch my cartoon pilot.
Starting point is 00:08:45 Sit on, we're watching Spudge Bob. The clamps come out of the arms of the chair. But, you know, people really liked it more than they usually like a cartoon, especially kids. They liked it more than a little bit. They were just entranced and wanted more. and luckily Nickelodeon took a flyer on it as a series. Now, the movie, the SpongeBob movie, is kind of a musical. There's a bunch of songs in it.
Starting point is 00:09:15 You sing a couple, and one of the songs you sing in the movie is called The Best Day Ever. Before we hear it, can you talk a little bit about what it's like to sing in character? Yeah, yeah, that's a good question. Boy, I've never talked about that before. some voices really lend themselves to singing and even though I didn't really think about it ahead of time it's just serendipitous that SpongeBob did
Starting point is 00:09:43 it's pretty easy to sing in that voice La La La La La La La La La La La La La La La My dog has fleas But there are other voices that I've done Where I'm just so glad I don't have to sing in them You know if you're doing that guy There's not a lot of Not a lot of Sondheim-like range
Starting point is 00:10:00 that you can tap into. But yeah, SpongeBob really, really is fun to sing as. It's sort of like a weird mix between, you know, Jerry Lewis and the guy from the Schlock 70s band Sticks. You know, it's kind of, Hey, Mom, leaving, must be on my way. It's very weird. Where do you place that voice in your head?
Starting point is 00:10:25 Boy, that that, I would have to say that if I were going to draw a circle around the target area, it will be somewhere between my fairly sizable proboscis and my thoraxe. It's definitely up in the nasal cavity back of the throat area.
Starting point is 00:10:43 And Bill Fagerbaki that does the voice of, or it's Fagerbock, or Fagerbaki, he's never told me how to pronounce his name. He says, whatever. I'm not fuzzy, whatever. But you know, his voice as Patrick is just all pushed down right into his big
Starting point is 00:10:59 barrel chest. And then SpongeBob is way up here. So it's, it's kind of a neat contrast between SpongeBob and Patrick Starfish. Well, Tom Kenny, let's hear you sing. And this is from the soundtrack of the SpongeBob Square Pants movie. And here's Tom Kenney singing the best day ever. A song you co-wrote. Yes, I did with Andy Paley, Power Pop Meister. Okay, here it comes. That's Tom Kenny, the voice of Sparendy. SpongeBob and the star of the SpongeBob Square Pants movie. So you actually wrote The Best Day Ever, which we just heard. Tell us something about your approach to writing a song for SpongeBob to sing.
Starting point is 00:12:33 You know, it was this really fun mental exercise where my friend Andy Paley and I, and, you know, if you Google Andy Paley, it's insane. He's produced records by Jerry Lee Lewis and, you know, Brian Wilson and, you know, all these people. But it was very freeing to just put on SpongeBob's brain. and say, wow, well, SpongeBob is this unbridled optimist. He, you know, he jumps out of bed every day and greets the new day with the mantra. This is going to be the best day ever. You know, every day has the potential to be the best day ever,
Starting point is 00:13:03 which is, you know, how we'd all like to be. And then by the time we walk out the front door, we're beaten into submission by life. But, yeah, it was really fun. And we tried to make the song sound like, you know, we were trying to figure out who in rock and roll history has been most in-torn. with their inner SpongeBob. And, you know, and it's John Sebastian from the Lovin' Spoonful. You know, he is SpongeBob.
Starting point is 00:13:28 Do you believe in Magic? You know, Brian Wilson, where, you know, who will write like this beautiful four-minute opus about the wind chimes. These are my wind chimes. You know, and it's like, you know, they sort of have this knaf-like child man sort of sensibility that is SpongeBob. So it's like, let's write a loving spoonful Brian Wilson pet sounds, you know, sort of thing
Starting point is 00:13:50 with SpongeBob singing it and that's where best day ever came from. So what were the cartoons you grew up with? Oh man, I was obsessed with Popeye the Sailor Man as a kid. I think, I don't know, six or seven Halloweens in a row I was Popeye the Sailor Man,
Starting point is 00:14:04 which, you know, is a pitch that probably would not fly now. You know, you go into the big cartoon network and go, okay, he's a sailor and his eye has been poked out and he likes to punch people. What do you think, you know? Oh, and the real thing is he eats spinach.
Starting point is 00:14:17 He eats spinach, and then he gets strong, and this enables him to punch people harder and beat them up more completely. What do you think? It was Popeye the Sailor Man, and it was a particular honor for me when SpongeBob and Pope and Popeye shared a cover of TV guide as they did a series of covers featuring the top 50 cartoon characters ever, and they had a cover drawing that was Popeye the Sam. man drawing his anchor up out of the water and it's caught on SpongeBob's underwear and he's just kind of hanging off the anchor looking at Popeye. It was a weird kind of, I don't know, like full circle cosmic moment for me. I started crying in the grocery store. That's all I'm going to say, Terry. So when you were a kid and you love Popeye, did you do the Popeye voice and that kind of Popeye mumble that he's always doing as he's walking and thinking? I love that. Yeah, that thing that Jack Mercer,
Starting point is 00:15:15 the voice of Popeye. You know, he was Popeye for 80 years or something. You know, he was incredible. And I also loved the, you know, the Looney Tunes, you know, Bugs and Daffy, of course, and, you know, Boehinkle and Rocky were huge for me. And even those early Hannah Barbera cartoons like Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hounded Top Cat, you know, they had, even when the animation was fairly limited, the voice work was really great.
Starting point is 00:15:40 And from a really early age, I was conscious. of the fact that there were grown men whose job it was to help bring these things to life. And it seemed like a really fun job to me. I had an aunt, a very, a very hep aunt who, when I was a kid, gave me a bunch of Stan Freeberg record albums, like History of the United States and all that. And they had little biographies of the voice actors on the back of the album, like, you know, Stan Freeberg, June Foray, Dawes Butler, you know, people like that. And they were amazing.
Starting point is 00:16:20 I was very aware that there was a guy named Mel Blank whose name was on every cartoon. But, you know, pre-internet, in the pre-internet world, it was kind of hard to find out about that stuff. You had to sort of feel your way around. But that only made it more kind of mysterious. You know, I like to, I don't know, I felt like there was this whole hidden world
Starting point is 00:16:41 of cartoons and movies. voice acting that needed to be uncovered by me. So did you have a sense when you were a kid that you wanted to be a voice actor? I did, yeah, I did. And by the time I was a teenager, it was firmly in place. In fact, one of my best friends from first grade on is the comedian Bobcat Goldthwaite. And we met in first grade and, you know, are still close at 42 years old or whatever. And he reminded me recently of a conversation that he and I had in high school.
Starting point is 00:17:14 like just kind of, you know, kind of walking around your hometown where there's no show business and playing this game of whose career do you want? If you could have anybody's career in show business, who would you want? And this was probably 76 or 78. And Bob reminded me of this conversation we had had where he said John Belushi and I said Mel Blank. And he said, wow, isn't that weird that you, you know, you sort of did it. You're doing, you know, you're doing the same kind of work that Mel Blank did. And I said, yeah, that is weird.
Starting point is 00:17:45 I wanted to be an astronaut, and I kind of got to go up in space a couple of times. It's cool. I don't know how Bobcat Goldthwaite still manages to have a voice because the voice that he does sounds like we'll just rip up your vocal cords. Yeah, I know. I don't either. He has vocal cords of steel. He is more than human. But, yeah, we met in first grade.
Starting point is 00:18:09 We went to the same Catholic school, but we were in separate first. grades and the first time I became aware of Bob was when the nun that taught his classroom just dragged him by the ear into the nun that taught my classroom and his nun was crying and she just threw him into the classroom and said I can't take him anymore sister you have to this goldweight boy out of it and I said wow I have to get to know this boy who can make a grown nun cry it was it was really bizarre and so him and I he was the only other kid that had an interest in that left field kind of, you know, stand up and sketch comedy. And when SCTV came on the air, it totally blew our minds.
Starting point is 00:18:50 And we went to see Andy Kaufman perform in Syracuse when we were. And, you know, it was cool to have another person who was into that stuff. So you knew that you weren't crazy. Because again, now, you know, a kid can get on the internet and just, you know, immediately be in touch with, you know, how many hundreds of like-minded square pegs. But, you know, it wears. that way back in the 70s. We had to find other nerds to talk to.
Starting point is 00:19:19 Ourselves. There was one... There's one really funny memory I have. You know, I was... Bob was the quintessential fat kid that was the class clown. And I was the quintessential, shy, skinny kid
Starting point is 00:19:33 who didn't have the guts to be class clown but considered himself the class clowns head writer. You know, I mean, hey, try this during math class, Bob, it'll work for you. You know? That's a good sound. Try that one. But, you know, I have a great memory of us in gym class, and they were picking teams for basketball. And, of course, Bob and I were both just hopeless at sports.
Starting point is 00:19:53 And, you know, funny as a defense mechanism, that old chestnut. And it came down there, picking teams, and everyone got picked except Bob and myself and this little girl who had a hook for a hand. And Bob and I just look at each other. And the captain of the other team says, I'll take Susie. And she walked the girl with the hook for the hand, walked over to play hoops. And Bob and I just looked at each other and just started laughing. You know, these like, you know, fourth graders just laughing our heads off at how stupid and hopeless we were. Even now, I can't explain how, you know, how perfect that moment was,
Starting point is 00:20:36 where it's just you and your other nerdy friend and the girl with the hook. And the girl with the hook goes off to play basketball. and they're going, yeah, Tom and Bob, it doesn't really matter what team they're on. They're just there to make his laugh anyway. Tom Kenny, speaking to Terry Gross in 2004. After a break, we'll continue their conversation, and we'll have two reviews. I'll review Prime Video's Man on the Run, the new Morgan Neville documentary about Paul McCartney, and film critic Justin Chang reviews Dreams, the new psychological drama starring Jessica Chastain.
Starting point is 00:21:08 I'm David Being Coulee, and this is Fresh Air. This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive in up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart, get Wise. Download the Wise app today or visit Wise.com. T's and C's apply. This message comes from NPR sponsor, SAP Concur. Atricure is a healthcare company that develops technologies to treat atrial fibrillation. Senior manager Latora Jackson shares how SAP Concur solutions help her team manage travel and meet their patient's needs. Surgery is not always a nine to five scheduling appointment. So when something does change,
Starting point is 00:21:50 very last minute, we have sales reps and employees traveling cross country to meet those doctors' immediate needs because a patient may need emergency surgery the very same day and they will be there. The efficiency and intuitiveness of the system and being able to utilize the concur platform while on the go, allows them to take care of their administrative responsibilities en route to literally a ER room. So that allows for them to continue to stay focused on our patients, but still maintain their responsibility for administrative needs. Visit concur.com to learn more. Do you remember the first voices that you started doing that made you realize that you could do it? You know, like I said, I was kind of shy up until
Starting point is 00:22:37 junior high school and it wasn't until then that I started to kind of step out and and think that maybe you know maybe I could be funny in front of more people than my handful of selected trusted friends so you know I wasn't really you know I wasn't really Waka Waka Kooky guy in class I I had this secret desire to be which makes the world of of cartoon voiceover perfect for me because you know, if you're simultaneously a little bit shy and also an annoying, irritating show-off at the same time, it's the perfect gig. Do you have a favorite theme song from all the cartoon shows?
Starting point is 00:23:21 Oh, man, I love Top Cat. I thought that Top Cat, they're a reasonable leader of the gang. You know, that was just such a cool, snappy, rat-packy. And, you know, when I was thinking about it, I realized that all those Hannah Barberic, cartoon characters that I grew up with as a kid were basically near-do-well con men. You know, Topcat lived in an alley and him and his buddies were always stealing from garbage cans and hiding from the cops, you know.
Starting point is 00:23:47 It's like our market research shows us that children enjoy grifters. Let's make the cartoon series about them. It's like, you know, Yogi Bear is always stealing picnic baskets. It's like, you know, they were all con men and crooks. They were all, they had this Sergeant Bilko whiff of illegality about them that I was responding to for some reason. You did a lot of stand-up comedy, too. And what was your stand-up act like?
Starting point is 00:24:15 You know, boy, I wish I remembered it. It was, I guess, very kinetic, pop culture-oriented, also a lot of stories about just people I had met or seen or people in my family or, you know, it sort of lent itself, it sort of was a good stepping off point for the sketch comedy stuff like Mr. Show with Bob and David on HBO that I later did. You know, just very broad strokes, very high energy, kinetic. I would change it a lot, which, you know, club owners occasionally did not appreciate.
Starting point is 00:24:49 Your act is different than it was the first show. You got to do the same thing you did the first show. Well, I get bored. I don't want to do it. What's the point? If you can't throw some stuff against the wall and if it doesn't stick, well, those are the breaks. I don't tell you how many cases I'm in a order Get off my case
Starting point is 00:25:07 When I was growing up all the comics Like so many of the comics did impressions And they did impressions of people who They must have grown up with You know like James Cagney and Al Jolson And then contemporary politicians like JFK And Nixon were thrown in there At Sullivan
Starting point is 00:25:25 Yeah right everybody had to do at Sullivan Yeah Did you grow up with any of that And was did you ever do impressions Impressions just aren't what they used to be Very few people do impressions in their act anymore. Yeah, and especially, you know, I was doing stand-up comedy. You know, I started in 83 or so as a rank open micer.
Starting point is 00:25:45 And to us, I don't know, maybe we were like snot-nosed little wise guys, but to us, people like me and Bobcat, like the impression guys were, there was just something kind of square about it. There was just something kind of corny like, hey, here's, you know, what if Jack Nicholson was on Star Trek, you know. It was just some sort of, sort of, who cares, you know, who cares? So, impressions were really not of much interest to me. And maybe because I'm not very good at them myself, maybe it's just sour grapes, because there are voiceover guys that I work with every day that are just, have the most incredible ears and incredible radar for doing these uncanny impressions, not just of huge celebrities, but celebrities that you would think you couldn't do an
Starting point is 00:26:33 impression of. Like, you know, my friend Billy West, who's like a monster cartoon voice guy, you know, he was ran and Stimpy and a bazillion other characters, including Popeye currently. But he, you know, he'll do like a dead-on Charlie Sheen. And you go, wow, I didn't know there was enough to Charlie Sheen to do an impression of. Wow, that's really cool. And I never had that, I never had that skill. You know, my strength was always creating characters out of whole cloth and looking at a drawing or a, picture and kind of figuring out what you know what these things might sound like by the same token though a lot of my cartoon voices that i've actually been hired to do have been the results of my highly
Starting point is 00:27:15 unsuccessful and lame attempts at impressions like who you know like well i'll do an impression that's so terrible that it sounds like an original voice you know people go wow we we haven't heard that before that's very good and i'm going well i was trying to do uh you know this person or that person or sometimes they're amalgams like the series of the Powerpuff Girls has this ineffectual mayor of the town and welcome to Townsville, ladies and gentlemen, that's sort of an amalgam of my bad impressions
Starting point is 00:27:44 of Frank Morgan, the Wizard of Oz and Joe Flynn, the guy from McAil's Navy, I'm going to toss you in the brief for this, Macale. And, you know, who is the woman, Ruth Gordon, you know, in her later years and those awful movies with Clint Eastwood and an orangutan Get that monkey out of my Oreos, you know. So it's like there's three horrible, weak attempts and impressions that actually turned into an employment opportunity for me.
Starting point is 00:28:12 How did you break into voice work? You know, fortuitously, I was doing stand-up one night at the now defunct improv in Santa Monica, and there was a person from Nickelodeon and also a person from what was then Hannah Barbera in the audience. they both approached me the same night and it was a showcase and they said, geez, have you ever thought about doing animated voices for cartoons? And I said, you know, maybe every day of my life, perhaps. Where do I sign? And yeah, that was, it was great.
Starting point is 00:28:47 I really felt like, you know, once I did the first couple of them, the first one or two were extremely terrifying. And then I felt like I had just found this suit that fit me so well. It was like, wow, this is what I was looking for. You know, this feels even much better and writer to me than stand-up does. It was a blast. What is the most devious thing you have ever done with your voice? Oh, boy.
Starting point is 00:29:17 That is very weird. Well, I have to say, occasionally parents who are maybe a little pushy will, will voice their kid on you and just say, this is Mr. Kenny. He does SpongeBob. Do SpongeBob. Do SpongeBob for Timmy, Mr. Kenny.
Starting point is 00:29:35 Do SpongeBob. Do SpongeBob. Do SpongeBob. And then you do the voice and the kid just, you know, they're two years old so they don't understand why this man with three-day stubble
Starting point is 00:29:45 is yamoring SpongeBob in their face. It's terrifying for them. So that's kind of unwittingly evil on my part. But I sort of get horn swagled into it. But I just know that that kid is going to be on a psychiatrist's couch somewhere down the line.
Starting point is 00:29:59 So tell me again, when the sponge man yelled in your face. And that's made you cry? But it's weird. And then there's another school of kid who finds out what you do and just comes up with this sense of demanding entitlement and starts poking you and going, talk SpongeBob, talk SpongeBob, talk SpongeBob. It's weird.
Starting point is 00:30:24 And then you just say, all right, I'll talk SpongeBob. Why don't you go to your parents? and as then to teach you some manners. Do you ever get recognized by your voice since you don't really use your real voice in your work? No, actually this is a character that I'm doing right now. This is really hard for me to do right now. No, my real voice is kind of just uninteresting and vanilla
Starting point is 00:30:53 and, you know, nasal, you know, Syracuse accent. You know, if I didn't, if I wasn't able to twist it into, into various, various shapes, you know, I'd be working in a store. Like, I see guys like James Earl Jones, and they've got the voice. They've got that voice and it's what they do. And it's, you know, it's a gold mine. It's, you know, if, if I say Darth Vader's lines, it doesn't have the same, it doesn't have the same cachet. Hey, I find your lack of faith disturbing. Okay.
Starting point is 00:31:26 I must have those plans. But, you know, so, you know, like the guy that does the trailer show, In a world where a man's voice goes down at the end of every sentence. It's like, wow, that guy really talks like that. I run into that guy. That really is his voice. And he really does do the thing where he goes down, then. Like in promos, you listen to promos and you realize that it's all about the word then.
Starting point is 00:31:51 You know, on a very special CSI Toledo, then on Buffy. Then on a very special pretty people in their 20s, Cellulite is discovered on Sarah. Have you really met that guy? I have, yeah, yeah, man. He gets a lot of work. He's the guy. I mean, it's him.
Starting point is 00:32:12 You walk around and you go, wow. Yes, I'm ready for my car now. It's like, I love it. You know, like I can make fun of that, but I can't really do it. Oh, you just did it? And you have to be able to reference the word masterpiece in illimitable, ways, you know, it's been called a small masterpiece.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Critics are calling it some kind of a masterpiece. It's being hailed as a masterpiece. It's like, wow, if everything's a masterpiece, that makes everything sort of generic. If it's all a masterpiece, it's all, yeah. Well, Tom Kinney has just been great talking with you. Thank you so much. And thank you very much, Terry. What force was that?
Starting point is 00:32:52 That was my Mr. Haney, uh, Hillbilly voice from Green Acres. I don't know. No, I think that was I did interviews all day-to-day, voice. That's Flem. That's Mr. Flem, my new character that I'm working on. Tom Kenney, speaking to Terry Gross in 2004. The SpongeBob movie, Search for SquarePants, is now streaming on Paramount Plus. Coming up, I review Prime Video's Man on the Run, the new Morgan Neville documentary about Paul McCartney. This is Fresh Air.
Starting point is 00:33:22 Support for Fresh Air comes from W. H.Y.Y. presenting The Pulse, a weekly podcast about health and science. Each episode is full of great stories and big ideas, fueled by curiosity and wonder. Can you learn to listen to your intuition? What should electric cars sound like? Why can it be so hard to get an accurate diagnosis? How do Fungi communicate? Check out The Pulse, available where you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:33:47 This message comes from MS Now. On their new podcast, MS Now presents Clock It. Washington power players Simone Sanders Townsend and Eugene Daniels discuss how the latest political news and the catchiest cultural moments converge. Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts. This week on the NPR Politics Podcast, the CBS Stephen Colbert dust up is part of a pattern. Corporations are changing to avoid angering President Trump and his administration. It's really the first time I can remember so many of these organizations have bent because of their own business interests. This week on the NPR Politics Podcast.
Starting point is 00:34:26 Listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. Today on Prime Video, the new documentary Man on the Run makes its streaming premiere. It's about Sir Paul McCartney, but it's not about his years with the Beatles. Instead, it's about his first years without them. Yes, there have been plenty of Beatles-related documentaries in the past decade or so, and yes, I've reviewed most of them. But in my defense, the Beatles are a great sense. subject, musically, and biographically. And the best filmmakers are drawn to them.
Starting point is 00:34:59 Peter Jackson gave us the Get Back documentary miniseries and the latest installment of the Beatles anthology. Ron Howard directed eight days a week about the group's touring years. Martin Scorsese directed Living in the Material World, his two-part biography of George Harrison. All of them were terrific, and all of them were made by Oscar-winning directors. Documentary filmmaker Morgan Neville, who won an Oscar for his film about backup singers 20 feet from stardom, has joined that club. He's already directed outstanding biographies of everyone from Johnny Cash and Anthony Bourdain to Steve Martin and Fred Rogers. And now, Prime Video is premiering his latest documentary, Man on the Run, about former Beatle Paul McCartney. And the word former is key here.
Starting point is 00:35:50 While brief artful montages encapsulate the frenzy and impact of Beatlemania, Man on the Run is focused on the decade immediately afterward, the 1970s. Specifically, it spans the period from when McCartney left the Beatles to when his former bandmate, John Lennon, was shot and killed. Neville conducted many lengthy new interviews with McCartney, but uses only the sound. Virtually all the footage in Man on the Run is vintage, so there are no white-haired rock stars in sight. But because McCartney is an executive producer
Starting point is 00:36:25 and has provided a stunning amount of previously unseen private footage, there's lots of fresh stuff to see here. The danger of McCartney having such input, though, is of man on the run becoming too sanitized as a personal biography. But it's not. The decade covered includes McCartney announcing the breakup of the Beatles, his very public musical feud with Lenin, the formation of McCartney's post-Beedles band Wings,
Starting point is 00:36:53 even the Paul is Dead rumor. And in these new interviews, McCartney seems to be speaking honestly, not only about what happened, but how he felt about it all. On the Beatles' breakup, for example, it was McCartney who announced it publicly, but it was Lenin who already had left the group.
Starting point is 00:37:10 John had come in one day and said he was leaving the Beatles. He said it's kind of a. Exciting. It's like telling someone you want a divorce. But I was thinking, what do I do now? Because it's been my whole life, really. You know, I'd had growing up, going to school, and then becoming the Beatles. It's a puzzle I had to kind of unravel. Paul's reaction at age 27 was to retreat with his wife, photographer Linda Eastman and family, to a remote property he owned in Scotland. In a vintage interview, she recalls his out-of-the-blue suggestion. He said, I've got this farm, I know you won't like it.
Starting point is 00:37:58 But it was so beautiful up there. Way at the end of nowhere. Civilization dropped away. It was quite a relief. Man on the run does rely on other voices and perspectives to defend some of McCartney's infamous actions during this period. John Lennon's son, Sean, for example, excuses Paul's stunned, understated reaction to John's death. When asked by reporters, Paul called it a real drag, as having been in shock. And John himself, in an interview filmed years after the Beatles' breakup, admits that Paul was right in hating and suing the manager that John had done.
Starting point is 00:38:43 brought in to handle the group. At the time, John and Paul even attacked one another in song. And in a new interview, Paul is very open about how much that stung. The only thing you did was yesterday was apparently our client's suggestion. But the back on my mind I was thinking. But all I ever did was yesterday, let it be, long one he wrote, Hello to Rigby. Later Madonna.
Starting point is 00:39:17 John. Tell me. Let you sleep. How do I sleep at night? Well, actually quite well. That same refreshing honesty extends to other key moments. The formation of his group wings and recruiting Linda as its first charter member. His jail time in Japan for bringing pot into that country. Even the time Lauren Michaels, on Saturday Night Live,
Starting point is 00:39:43 jokingly offered the Beatles a ridiculously successful. small check if they would reunite on his show. Now here it is, as you can see, a check made out to you, The Beatles, for $3,000. All you have to do is sing three Beatle tunes. She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's $1,000 right there. Me and Linda were over to John's apartment, and the Dakota. He said, oh, this is a big show over here, Saturday Night Live. In my book, The Beatles are the best thing that ever happened music. It goes even deeper than that. You're not just a musical group, you're a part of us. We grew up with you. We got kind of excited. We just go down and we show up. Hey! But it was like, why? You know, I mean, it'd be great for them. Would it be great for us? We've come full
Starting point is 00:40:39 circle and now we're off on another journey. So we just decided to just have another cup of tea and forget the whole idea. Man on the run is more about the man, than it is about his creative process. But his music runs all through the documentary, and it all adds up to an impressive, inspirational second act. Coming up, Justin Chang reviews Dreams, starring Jessica Chastain. This is Fresh Air. This week on sources and methods, President Trump,
Starting point is 00:41:32 on the brink of striking Iran, what would that look like? And what could go wrong? One retired general told me, the Iranians have more missiles than we have interceptors. Listen for more this week on NPR's National Security podcast, sources and methods on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. This week on Consider This, President Trump says that he's thinking about a possible strike on Iran. In Congress, Senator Tim Kane of Virginia is moving to ensure that President Trump cannot do that alone. Succeed or fail, we shouldn't be at war without a vote.
Starting point is 00:42:07 and so members of Congress should be held accountable. Listen for more on Consider This on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. In the psychological drama Dreams, Jessica Chastain plays a San Francisco philanthropist whose foundation supports a dance academy in Mexico City. The movie, which also stars the Mexican actor and ballet dancer Isaac Hernandez, is the latest from the writer and director
Starting point is 00:42:33 Michel Franco, who previously worked with Chastain in the 2020. film Memory. Dreams opens in select theaters this week, and our film critic Justin Chang has this review. The first thing you see in the new movie Dreams from the Mexican filmmaker Michel Franco is a freight truck parked in the middle of nowhere. Inside the truck are several migrants who are making the perilous journey from Mexico to the U.S. Franco is vague on specifics. He observes and implies more than he explains. One of the migrants, is a young man named Fernando, played by Isaac Hernandez.
Starting point is 00:43:12 And he quickly separates himself from the others and makes his way towards San Francisco. There's determination as well as exhaustion in Fernando's stride, almost as if he knows exactly where he's going. He does. Fernando heads to a swanky apartment, the home of a philanthropist named Jennifer McCarthy,
Starting point is 00:43:33 played by Jessica Chastain. Jennifer is surprised to see him, but they're clear. not strangers, they immediately fall into bed in the first of the movie's many explicit sex scenes. The backstory comes together gradually. Fernando studied at a Mexico City Dance Academy that receives funding from Jennifer's Arts Foundation. Their torrid affair began some time ago during one of Jennifer's many trips to Mexico. Now Fernando has entered the U.S. illegally to be with her, and he's determined to stay, and perhaps even launch his dance career.
Starting point is 00:44:07 Dreams first screened at the Berlin International Film Festival last February, less than a month into the second Trump presidency. Although there are references to ICE, and the looming threat that Fernando could be arrested and deported, immigration provides the context rather than the subject of the movie. What interests Franco the most is the ever-shifting balance of power between Fernando, an undocumented immigrant trying to make ends meet as a bartender, and Jennifer, a privileged older white woman who travels by private jet.
Starting point is 00:44:42 It's a dynamic as complicated as it is toxic. Fernando needs Jennifer's support, but only up to a point. He's a talented enough dancer to make inroads with a prestigious San Francisco ballet company. Jennifer's desire for Fernando verges on an obsession, but one that she indulges only on her terms. Things were so much more convenient for her, when she could see Fernando down in Mexico, away from the prying eyes and sharp judgments
Starting point is 00:45:10 of her family members and colleagues. In this scene, the two are at a restaurant, where Fernando strikes up a conversation in Spanish with their waiter. I'm going to start with a goat cheese salad. He's actually asking if you want something to drink. Oh, sorry. I'm fine. Didn't mean to interrupt your conversation. I forget I'm here.
Starting point is 00:45:38 Forget I'm here. Why? Well, you can speak English. I think you should know a little Spanish way now, no? After all the time, you spend in Mexico, having a Mexican boyfriend. A little, senorita. Sorry. For a favor.
Starting point is 00:45:56 Chastain also starred in Franco's previous film, Memory, playing a sexual abuse survivor, drawn into a relationship with a man with early-onset dementia, played by Peter Sarsgaard. The setup was tortured, but the actors were good enough to make you believe it. In a way, Dreams plays like a cruel B-side to memories more optimistic romance, and Chastain, so sympathetic in the earlier film, here swaps virtue for outright villainy. She's long been one of our most fearless actors, and she gives herself over, chillingly, to the role of Jennifer, a monstrous manipulator and exploiter of someone she claims to love.
Starting point is 00:46:39 Franco's films, including the class uprising thriller New Order, do not exactly overflow with the milk of human kindness. He's often struck his critics, myself included, as something of a junior league Michael Hanukkah, hurling contempt at his characters, especially the rich ones, from a cold clinical distance. With dreams, an ironic title, if ever there was one, he's in predictably cynical terrain. Here he targets the racism and hypocrisy of liberal do-gooders like Jennifer, and his point as is inarguable as his methods are obvious. This is the kind of movie where Jennifer's Smarmy Brother, well-played by Rupert Friend,
Starting point is 00:47:22 will make crass comments about Mexicans, utterly oblivious to the Latina cleaner, quietly tidying up the office around him. I rolled my eyes at that scene, recoiling, not for the first time, from Franco's posture of smug superiority. But not all of dreams is so easy to shake off. After a season of high-minded movies about the redemptive power of art, there's something bracing about Franco's ruthlessly unsentimental view of the ecosystem in which artists and their benefactors operate. Not even Fernando's extraordinary talent is ultimately enough to make his sense. dreams come true. Isaac Hernandez is a principal dancer at the American Ballet Theater, and the
Starting point is 00:48:07 film's most pleasurable scenes are those in which we see Fernando dancing, fleeting moments of beauty in a film with a relentlessly ugly vision of the world. Justin Chang is a film critic for the New Yorker. He reviewed the new film Dreams. On Monday's show, Jesse Buckley, the star of Hamnet, for which she's nominated for an Oscar and has already won a Golden Globe. She launched her career on a British TV singing competition with judges Andrew Lloyd Weber and director Cameron McIntosh. We'll hear what that sounded like. Hope you can 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. You can subscribe to our YouTube channel at YouTube.com slash This is Fresh Air. We're rolling out new videos with in-studio guests,
Starting point is 00:49:12 behind-the-scenes shorts and iconic interviews from the archive. Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger. Our senior producer today is Roberta Sherrock. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham, with additional engineering support by Joyce Lieberman and Julian Hertzfeld. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne Marie Baldenado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Chaliner, Susan Yucundi,
Starting point is 00:49:42 Anna Bauman and Nico Gonzalez-Wisler. Our digital media producer is Molly C.B. Nestor. For Terry Gross and Tanya Mosley, I'm David B. Inc. Is there an acquaintance in your life that you'd love to turn into an actual friend? And have you thought about saying, hey, we should hang out sometime? Maybe think again. The more specific you are, the more likely it is that you're actually going to get together. You know, pull out your calendar, pick a time, pick a thing to do together. and actually follow through.
Starting point is 00:50:13 Listen to the Life Kit podcast in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. Get in loser. We're taking a trip under the sea to a junkyard. I've done cobra helicopters. We've seen old washer machines. Does a second trip boat count. This junk helped create one of the world's largest artificial reefs
Starting point is 00:50:32 and a new home for many marine animals. But how did our trash become another fish's treasure? Find out on shortwave. Listen in the NPR app. or wherever you got your podcasts.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.