Fresh Air - Will Sharpe imagines Mozart's day-to-day in 'Amadeus'

Episode Date: May 11, 2026

Sharpe played a newly rich tech bro on vacation in Italy the second season of ‘The White Lotus.’ Now he's starring as Mozart, a musical genius who struggles to "read the room" in the new STARZ lim...ited TV series ‘Amadeus.’ He spoke with Fresh Air producer Ann Marie Baldonado about studying piano, acting opposite Kieran Culkin in ‘A Real Pain,’ and feeling like an outsider as a kid. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Fresh Air. I'm Anne-Marie Baldinado, sitting in for Terry Gross, who's homesick today. Our guest is award-winning actor, writer, and director, Will Sharp. You may have first encountered him in the second season of The White Lotus, where he played Ethan, a newly wealthy tech founder whose marriage may be unraveling. For that role, he received an Emmy nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a drama. But Sharp had been noticed for his work already. He's been nominated for numerous BAFTAs, that's the UK equivalent of the Oscars and Emmys, for writing and creating shows like Flowers, a comedy about a family struggling with depression, grief, and loneliness. He received a BAFTA for acting in the BBC Netflix series, Jiri Haji.
Starting point is 00:00:51 More recently, he's appeared in Lena Dunham series Too Much, and the Oscar-winning film, a real pain. Now he stars as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in a new limited series Amadeus, adapted from the 1979 stage play. The play was also the basis of the 1984 film. It tells a fictionalized story of the rivalry between Mozart and the court composer Antonio Salieri, who's played by Paul Bettany. Salieri becomes increasingly consumed by Envy, After realizing Mozart possesses the musical brilliance Salieri desperately praised for but can never attain. Here's a scene from the beginning of the series. 25-year-old Mozart has arrived in Vienna, hoping to build his reputation by composing operas and performing for the emperor's court.
Starting point is 00:01:47 He meets Salieri at a court celebration. Salieri, a fan of Mozart's work, is shocked to find that Mozart is immature and irreverent, not a pious genius like his work would suggest. Here's Mozart, introducing himself. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Antonio Salio. The court composer? Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:10 This is incredibly fortuitous. The whole reason why I came to Vienna was to write for the imperial opera. Well, there's a process to all of that. I wouldn't go a bit tired. You must at least be able to get me one meeting with the emperor. It's a very busy man. What could be more important than this?
Starting point is 00:02:29 Than meeting you. Well, I believe he's currently drawing up plans to ensure our nation's claim on the kingdom of Bavaria. I suppose that might be taking up some of this time. Please. Just one meeting. I'll be forever in your debt, obviously. Will Sharp, welcome to fresh air. Hello, thanks for having me.
Starting point is 00:02:52 What was it about this story that made you want to be part of it? I guess there was some. Something exciting in our sort of very early conversations about the project of the possibility, because the shape of this is a sort of five-hour limited series, that there's a little bit more space perhaps to sit with Amadeus and also sit with Constanza, his wife, and kind of see it from their point of view. And I guess I was sort of interested by this idea of like apocryphally, certainly in the story of Amadeus, there's this sense that Mozart was someone for whom,
Starting point is 00:03:27 like music just fell out of the sky into his lap. But I was sort of curious to sort of try and imagine, but what does that actually look and feel like in his day-to-day life? And to try and sort of humanize that somehow. I mean, the music does come to him, but it takes a toll, like there's a burden to it. Yeah, I mean, I guess Paul and I would often sort of talk about. Paul Bettney, who played cellier. That's right, yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:54 We would often talk about the story, I guess, in trying to understand it, in kind of like grounded terms or sort of playable terms, we'd often think of it as two brothers to a common father in God. And Salieri feels neglected by God and that Mozart is getting all of the attention and is having sort of music showered upon him, in spite of him being so much less pious than Salieri, who sort of like immaculately behaved and feels like in spite of that.
Starting point is 00:04:22 He's not getting what he needs from God. He's not getting the attention he needs. Whereas Amadeus, I think, feels really, really run ragged and kind of like a vessel for God's music, sure, but at what cost? What did you do to prepare for this role? Did you learn about the historic figure, even if the story of Mozart and Salieri was always a reimagining? So, I mean, the main preparation, I guess, was learning to play the piano pieces. Yes, which you did.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Which I did, yeah. And that was like six, seven months of piano lessons. and just drilling specifically the pieces on camera. And then also, I guess, preparing for the conducting scenes where we try to come up with a kind of hybrid language where in the day it would have been very metronomic, quite unexpressive. And obviously now we're used to seeing, you know, slightly more freeform seeming, very expressive conducting. And so we tried to find a language that blended the two,
Starting point is 00:05:23 I think because so much of what is expressed in the show for my character in particular, you know, he's not very good at communicating with words. So a lot of a timeless story or what is going on, you know, within him is expressed through the big musical set pieces. So there was that kind of practical preparation, which I actually found quite helpful
Starting point is 00:05:42 because it was a way of meditating on the character without sort of getting in my head. It was like something very specific and mechanical to practice. And you find yourself thinking about the story but not overthinking. almost like a kind of meditative practice or something. And then I did find that listening to Mozart's music
Starting point is 00:05:59 was an incredibly helpful way of just kind of sinking into it. And it's not like a resource that you normally have. And even just thinking about the sheer range of this music, but also of his, seemingly of his personality, where he's just very light and funny and playful at one end and super grand and dark and operatic at the other and trying to marry all of that into one person. And Farron just kind of, you know, if I had an hour free, walking around Budapest with that in my ears was quite helpful too.
Starting point is 00:06:29 There's part of the series when Mozart is composing the opera, the marriage of Figaro. He's kind of estranged from his wife, Constanza. He's left Vienna to try to write. And he's with his collaborator in a pub. I'm making it sound kind of modern, but he's speaking to a woman in a pub. Yeah. And it's a woman he just met. And he plays some of the music he has for her.
Starting point is 00:06:53 And the woman asks if he's writing the opera for his wife. And Mozart says, yes. And then the woman says, couldn't you just talk to her? And Mozart says, this is how I talk. And I was wondering about that idea, that idea that someone can't talk or express themselves in life. And instead, they express themselves or express what they really feel through their music, through a work of art and trying to say what they can't say. And I was just wondering what you thought about that part of Mozart's struggle. I felt like it became a really important piece of it for me.
Starting point is 00:07:27 And actually that line, I think, just came out in the rehearsing of the scene or as we shot. Trying to sort of get to the bottom, I think, of who he was and what his predicament was, I guess. And it more and more felt like, you know, enjoyable. Like he doesn't know how to read a room. There's a lot written kind of speculatively about neurodiversity. and I tried not to sort of be too literal about that or to retro-diagnose him, but definitely wanted to play him as slightly other.
Starting point is 00:07:55 And he doesn't understand social norms or can't understand why people are offended if he said something that he's like, well, I think that's true, so what's the problem? So he's just kind of like things that are simple to everyone else he can't do and he can't communicate successfully in a kind of ordinary normal way.
Starting point is 00:08:14 But through his music, he's expressing a lot of what he isn't able to say day to day. And so I guess that's why those sequences felt quite important in terms of understanding him as a character and also understanding his story. In this series, we meet Mozart when he's around 25 years old. And it occurred to me that you got your first BAFTA nomination for your first film Black Pond when you were around that age. What were you feeling at that age about like that acclaim or did you feel pressure? Or maybe you didn't. I mean, maybe you were kind of brazen like the 25-year-old Mozart we heard at the beginning of this piece.
Starting point is 00:08:52 I definitely feel like in your early sort of endeavors, there's like an innocence that is kind of hard to recapture. You know, maybe you gain some wisdom in exchange. But even on Flowers, which was kind of my first proper grown-up commission, you know, by Channel 4, there was definitely a sense of kind of like you didn't know what could go wrong or what was in your way and so there's like a real purity to how you approach it and I feel like you know in in the best moments you maybe managed to recapture
Starting point is 00:09:30 a sort of an echo of that but I don't think it's a place you could never go back to you know so there's definitely something really exhilarating and pure I think about those early early endeavors for any artist. That's like unguarded. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:47 And so you're not even, I suppose, it's your question more specifically, you're not even thinking about what the acclaim might be or what the end result is. That's just like a happy surprise if it happens. And it definitely was a complete shock.
Starting point is 00:10:00 Yeah. I want to ask you about the series, The White Lotus. You starred in season two, the one that takes place in Italy, and you play Ethan Spiller, who just got super rich as a tech bro, and he's spending his vacation with his wife Harper,
Starting point is 00:10:18 played by Aubrey Plaza, and his college friend and his friend's wife. I want to play a scene from the show. It's near the beginning. Hear Your Character and Aubrey Plaza's character have been spending time with this other couple. It's clear that Harper doesn't like them, but she says she's trying to make nice.
Starting point is 00:10:36 They're talking in bed in their hotel room. Thanks for making more of an effort. I mean, yeah, they kind of live in a bubble, but they're fun, right? They don't vote, Ethan. I know, what the f***? They don't read the news. They don't read. It's like, what do they even talk about?
Starting point is 00:11:01 Is that what happens when you're rich for too long, your brain just atrophies? I mean, they seem happy. No way. It's a front. It's good to have, you know, diverse friends, I guess. Yeah, I think we're their diverse friends. They're white-passing diverse friends. Yeah, you're right.
Starting point is 00:11:26 That's a scene from The White Lotus. I like this scene because it reminds me that part of what's happening with this couple is that they're newly rich and they're kind of uncomfortable with the opulence around them and this super privileged white couple that they're spending all this time with. You know, the story of these couples then become a lot about, marriage and trust and infidelity. But it's, you know, part of it is the fact that they both feel like outsiders. For sure.
Starting point is 00:11:52 And I guess there was something interesting about playing someone who part of the inner conflict maybe was that he's sort of worried that he's becoming the thing that he hates or the thing that he's judged is he sort of morphing into that maybe. and it's impossible not to be aware, I guess, of like, of my ethnicity in the playing of it also. Not that it's super loud in the mix, but, you know, just I guess I had an awareness of how he might feel as an Asian-American man in that context, if that makes sense. Now, you're a director and creator of television shows yourself, and you've said that you have this privilege of working, with other directors and creators who are really focused and really retain control of their projects, directors like Mike White. You said that he's a model for you about how to keep control of a show's voice while also giving audiences what they want.
Starting point is 00:12:58 What do you mean by that? Yeah, I think Mike is just so precise in his tone and in his writing and how he kind of anything that he's, you know, he's the author of. It feels very deliberate. And that is something that I admire and something that I respect. But also he's managed to make a show that feels elevated and kind of true to him as a creator, but has reached a really wide audience, you know, like the White Lotus is hugely watched. And that also is something that I admire.
Starting point is 00:13:36 I want to ask you about this series too much. created by Lena Dunham. It's loosely based on Lena Dunham's experience moving from New York to London and meeting her husband, Louis Felber, who also co-created the series and writes the music for the show. Megan Stalter plays the New Yorker moving to London after a breakup, and she meets your character, Felix, who's a musician and recovering addict. The characters meet cute and they fall in love, but their relationship isn't easy. How would you describe your character, Felix? Felix, I guess, like, he just seemed like somebody who, on the surface of it is quite, maybe seems cool or open, but actually quite quickly you realize he's a bit of a nerd. And also there's a lot going on that he doesn't want you to see. and a lot of the series, what I love about it is
Starting point is 00:14:42 it's kind of about how your previous experiences and in relationships can get in the way of your present day one and how can you get beyond the baggage that you carry with you and each of those characters do have baggage and are contending with it. I want to play a clip from too much. In this scene, Megan Stalter's character, Jess and Felix are running to get to a while.
Starting point is 00:15:08 wedding in the countryside. Felix is someone who grew up very posh, went to boarding school until his family lost their money and he has to leave because they couldn't pay for school anymore. But he's still friends with a lot of the rich people he met as a kid, but he doesn't feel comfortable with them. Here's the scene where they're running to get to the church. For you sure my outfit's okay. I'm only been inside of a church once in a business to donate blood. I feel like I should be wearing a hat or something. Do you even have a hat? Like a beanie, of course.
Starting point is 00:15:41 Okay, listen, you probably haven't seen me like this before, but I actually feel pretty, like, weird. Like, I kind of feel a bit fizzy. You know what I mean? Like kind of tight, like white noisy. You're nervous. Yeah, maybe. You look like you want to pass out.
Starting point is 00:15:55 Like, like, these aren't really my people, okay? Well, why don't we just go home? I could eat cheese toasties or something. I don't know. I feel sort of weirdly loyal to the groom because he was the only boy in my year who didn't call me Felix Ramin. It's like a racist nickname.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Yes, a racist nickname. I'm not saying we can't be ourselves. I'm just saying like, I don't know. You know what I'm saying, right? Just sort of not our full selves. Yes, over and out. I agree with you, Mr. Felix. That's seen from the Netflix show too much.
Starting point is 00:16:25 Lena Dunham said that she loved having you on set, not only because of your acting, but because you're also a writer, a show creator, and director. And she said that you, You contributed a lot to the character, Felix, including the bit in that scene that the kids at the school called him Felix Raman. Can you talk about collaborating with Lena Dunham on this show and on your character? I mean, I think that's very generous of her to say,
Starting point is 00:16:51 but she's sort of the agent of all of it, really. But I did feel very listened to. And I guess it did feel like we were always working together to find who he was, even from like our very first cup of tea to talk about it, you know, in London. And she definitely would, she has this like incredibly fast story brain and is able to retain information and encounters in a very sort of like formidable way. And sometimes we'd have like a very offhand conversation about a scene or an episode that was coming up. And then I'd see rewrites that seemed to kind of work that conversation into it. But yeah, with the Felix Remen thing,
Starting point is 00:17:28 he, his name was Felix Remen in the show. And I think I just was like, there is absolutely no way if his name was Felix Remen and he's half Japanese and he went to that kind of school that he wouldn't be called Felix Raman. There's just absolutely no way that he wouldn't be called Felix Raman. Now, in too much, your father is played by Stephen Fry, the British actor, writer and comedian. And he's someone who got his start at Cambridge University in the Comedy Troop Footlights. He was in the group in the 80s with people like Hugh Lorry and Emma Thompson. and you went to Cambridge University and joined Footlights. What did Stephen Fry mean to you as a kid?
Starting point is 00:18:11 I mean, he was definitely, you know, like a huge comedy icon and was, you know, whether it be Fry and Laurie the Skech Show or Blackadder, you know, was somebody I really enjoyed watching as a kid. And maybe in some way would have been, you know, one of the reasons why I thought, oh, maybe if I'm at, this university being a part of this comedy group could be a fun thing to do. But he's also just like, he's just an incredible polymath. How prolific he is in how many different fields and how thoughtfully he talks about so many
Starting point is 00:18:48 different subjects. I think he's kind of like just an extraordinary figure. He's just an extraordinary figure. And yet, you know, on set so sort of just humble and, you know, just like another person in the cast and kind of mucking in in the rehearsals. knows his line, very professional. So,
Starting point is 00:19:06 yeah, I was hugely excited to work with Stephen and to have met him. You also have this great scene that we couldn't use because there's too much cursing in it
Starting point is 00:19:15 with Richard E. Grant playing Megan Stalter's character's boss, but turns out his daughter had dated you back in boarding school, but he's drunk and he realizes it's you and it's this funny kind of play between the two of you.
Starting point is 00:19:31 Yeah, I mean, that was a lot of fun. I mean, I loved a film, you know, with Nail and I growing up and the way that kind of, I suppose, was hilarious, but also had like an emotional aspect. I think I watched it at quite formative age around the time. You know, I remember like watching With Nail and I, watching Harold and Maud and being there, you know, Hal Ashby's films and all those kinds of movies that seem to blend different feelings and tones. And so to work with him similarly was like a kind of pinch me. But also to get to just have a really sloppy, messy fight with him.
Starting point is 00:20:05 He is actually quite strong. Yes. He grabbed your leg at one point. Yeah. And doesn't seem to like that. Yeah. My guest is actor, writer, and director Will Sharp. He stars in the new limited series, Amadeus.
Starting point is 00:20:19 The series originally aired in the UK and is now available on stars. More after a break. This is Fresh Air. This is Fresh Air. I'm Anne Marie Baldinado, back with award. winning actor, writer, and director Will Sharp. He stars in the new limited series, Amadeus. His other films and series include A Real Pain, The White Lotus, Too Much, Jiri Haji, the Electric Life of Louis Wayne, and Flowers. Now, you were born in England, and then your family
Starting point is 00:20:52 moved to Japan for your early childhood before then moving back to England. Could you describe what your childhood neighborhood was like when you were living those early years in Japan? I mean, very urban compared to like suburban Surrey where we moved to in England. I mean, I remember like the sound of the cicadas in the summer. And I don't know, a lot of it is quite hour old for me, like the sound of train stations in Tokyo or like near my grandma's house. You just turned 100 last week. You know, there's like a chime that goes off at kind of 5 p.m. every evening. And a lot of it weirdly, I've not had this thought before, maybe it's because
Starting point is 00:21:37 I'm doing a radio show. So my brain is in like listening. The sound is so important. Yeah, but it does feel like a lot of it. It's quite, yeah, hour off. But there's definitely like, I'd often talk about like a kind of layer of nostalgia that I feel like is unavailable to me in England, where I can sort of reminisce up to a point, but there's like a sort of plane of memory. or feeling or something that is left in Japan and that I would only get when I've been, when I've gone back to Japan. And it's a weird thing where,
Starting point is 00:22:13 I think, you know, people who have lived in different countries or who are mixed race, you do sometimes end up with this feeling that you're not really sure where your home is or how to identify. And so, you know, if I go back to Japan, I can speak the language, but kind of in a very wobbly way,
Starting point is 00:22:31 where I sound a bit like a 10-year-old still and I sort of feel like a very guizian you know Western version of a Japanese person I feel like a sort of foreigner I suppose and in the same way in England because I look Japanese I've always felt a little bit like a yeah like an outsider trying to kind of learn
Starting point is 00:22:51 how people communicate in England which can be sort of quite complicated at the best of times I read that when you were a kid you were already into sketch comedy and you would stay up late and watch sketch shows. Was this when you were in Japan? What were you watching?
Starting point is 00:23:08 I mean, various shows that I feel like probably have not aged well. But like... Benny Hill? Not quite that, but maybe they're sort of equipped. Like there were lots of different sketch shows like downtown, drifters, tunnels was another one.
Starting point is 00:23:25 So these are British shows? No, these are Japanese shows. Oh, Japanese shows. Like really silly, silly, silly, silly. Comedy. shows and almost built into it was like can you make each other break and that was part of the fun was wondering which comedian was going to start laughing and then also sometimes some really low-key sort of situational sketches where it might be about a boy whose parents are divorced and makes friends with a lizard in a park but they're both played by just grown men so there's like a man
Starting point is 00:23:54 sat on a bench and he's just sort of talking to this lizard about his parents divorce and really the only funny thing about it is that somebody is wearing a bright green lizard costume. But yeah, I mean, I did enjoy that. And I remember really loving the feeling of just being made to laugh hysterically. And you moved back to England. How old were you at that point? Was it hard to adjust back? I was eight.
Starting point is 00:24:21 Yes, it was. It was. I think probably more than I realized at the time, because like I say, a lot of what I write seems to sort of reflect back on that in some way. you know and yeah definitely was an adjustment and I definitely felt yeah like somebody trying to learn how to fit in and trying to learn yeah like new ways of communicating and I've said this before as well but I've weirdly because I enjoyed creative writing exercises and had by that age maybe started to feel like oh if there's like a poetry homework assignment And I seemed to get good feedback on that.
Starting point is 00:25:00 I sort of had found a confidence in writing. And so I felt like weirdly there was something quite empowering about being able to write the language, feeling sort of like I could write it well and was confident writing it. And that was a way of almost like grounding myself in the country a little bit, even if I felt like socially I didn't quite know how to communicate. Was writing kind of your first love? Like, is that the thing that you thought you were going to do? I don't know if I ever felt like it was possible to pursue it as a vocation
Starting point is 00:25:34 because my parents do not come from creative backgrounds and was never really anywhere near that world. You know, my dad was really into books and I could tell that I enjoyed it. I didn't really have a sense that acting or comedy was a thing until quite a bit later, I think, at school in my teens, maybe. And I think I remember having some sort of version of a conversation with my mom where I was like, I don't really understand the big deal with acting.
Starting point is 00:26:00 Like, isn't it just sort of pretending? And she was like, we'll do it then. And I was like, okay. So when do you think you really decided that it was going to be acting or being in entertainment, that that was what you wanted to do? Was it when you're in high school and boarding school or was it when you got to college at Cambridge? I think at school I really didn't have a sense that it was possible. and, you know, had an interest in it and, you know, wrote a play and some sort of slightly embarrassingly Rushmore-esque kind of moments.
Starting point is 00:26:36 But, like, maybe towards the end of university, you would see some people going on to doing it as a, as professionally, and that made it feel like maybe it's possible. I mean, maybe, to be honest with you, probably when Tom Kingsley and I, we made a short film. He was working as a runner at an advertising agency, and I was playing a junior doctor in a soap, in a sort of continuing medical drama.
Starting point is 00:27:07 So this was after you had both graduated from Cambridge and you were kind of collaborators. Yeah, we worked together at university, and we made a short film together, went to Japan, he borrowed a prosumer camera from his advertising agency. I had two weeks off this soap. And we sort of made a short film together. And then his boss watched it and was like, oh, that's great.
Starting point is 00:27:28 What if I gave you 50 grand to make a feature film? And we, of course, were like, oh, my God, that's so much money. Could we ever do it? And had sort of been given permission to imagine that it was possible to do that. And so I went off and wrote the script and we started trying to figure out how we could do it 50 grand. Then his boss came back from a sabbatical and basically just said, I've changed my mind. Why would I give you 50 grand? That's insane.
Starting point is 00:27:51 But by then we were so in mode and had sort of pictured it that we had the momentum and so we started trying to raise the money ourselves, you know, writing to people we'd work for, friends, parents that we knew were wealthy and all of that, and managed to raise 20 grand and made that feature film just in sort of complete innocence. And then after that I think were considered to be sort of legit filmmakers. And I feel like probably until we had done this. that maybe there was like a precariousness or at least like a fragility in sort of like would you feel slightly fraudulent identifying as someone who's doing that, you know, for a job.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Going back to your time at university, you tried out for footlights, the comedy troupe at Cambridge and you eventually became president. But what were some of your early sketches like? Oh, man. I think it was quite a range. I tried to find some. They do not exist. No, you wouldn't find them on the internet. I'm trying to remember. I feel like there was one where it was like a bunch of crayons and I played the white crayon who was annoyed that no one was using him. I think I did a song about like something to do with the Smiths,
Starting point is 00:29:08 some kind of Morrisy parody. I think it was just making fun of his lyrics. I feel like it was something like something about bicycle that has a basket and I ask it, are you a basket? I can't remember something like that. Well, let's take a short break and then we'll talk some more. My guess is actor, writer, and director Will Sharp. He stars in the new limited series, Amadeus.
Starting point is 00:29:32 The series originally aired in the UK and is now available on stars. More after a break. This is Fresh Air. This is Fresh Air. I'm Anne-Marie Baldinado, back with award-winning actor, writer, and director, Will Sharp. He stars in the new limited series, Amadeus. His other films and series include A Real Pain, The White Lotus, Too Much, Jiri Haji, The Electric Life of Louis Wayne, and Flowers.
Starting point is 00:30:02 I want to ask you about the 20-24 film A Real Pain. Jesse Eisenberg wrote, directed, and starred in the film. It's about two cousins who used to be close but aren't anymore. They're played by Jesse Eisenberg and Karen Culkin, who won an Oscar for his role in the film. and to try to connect the cousins go to Poland on a Holocaust history tour to honor their late grandmother and to visit the house that she had to flee. You play James, the tour guide, who isn't Jewish but is a historian of Jewish history. I think when your character makes his first appearance in the film, it took me a moment to realize that it was you.
Starting point is 00:30:44 When you're starting conversations with Jesse Eisenberg, why did he reach out to you about this role? And why were you drawn to it? I mean, I was drawn to it simply because I thought the script was sort of immaculate. I thought I was so clear what the tone was he was trying to strike and the kind of line he was trying to walk. I thought it was very precisely drawn and I understood what he was trying to say, even though it was something quite nuanced. And was a fan of his and from the first meeting with him felt like a creative excitement from talking with him. And so I just wanted to be a part of that. And it really felt like, you know, a small indie film when we were making it.
Starting point is 00:31:29 And obviously I believed in it creatively, but I had no sense of like that it would go all the way to the Oscars. Now, I read that you were very specific about what accent you wanted to use for James. And then you had tried a few different ways of playing him. What were you trying to get out with this character and the British accent that you ended up going with? Well, so I mean, from the very early conversations, Jesse was really clear, didn't want James to be obnoxious in any way. Everything he does and says is so well-meaning. He genuinely is passionate about this history
Starting point is 00:32:02 and just wants to kind of make for a good trip for everyone and to, you know, educate them where he can. And he was written as a kind of like fairly like down the line, Oxbridge grad. And then we did the read-through, I think the day before, we started filming. And something about it, I was like, I feel like it's somehow coming out more condescending than it should on the page.
Starting point is 00:32:27 And I wondered if it was to do with the accent. And so that evening, I started trying it out in a northern sort of, you know, like Sheffield's softer kind of voice. And I was thinking of this presenter, Brian Cox in the UK, different to the succession actor, who he sort of does shows about the universe and space. very infectious enthusiasm. And so I was sending Jesse voice notes of James with that voice. And he immediately seemed excited about it.
Starting point is 00:32:59 And was like, let's do that. I think that really works. And he also, I think he liked, you know, with the film being about what it is and that immediately there's like a sort of specificity to James where if he comes from that part of the world, because he has that accent, but he looks like how I look like. Immediately there's like a hinterland that you're curious about. of, you know, how did your family end up in that town?
Starting point is 00:33:20 And so from that point on, it felt like, yeah, he'd just sort of clicked. I want to play a scene from a real pain. The group has been on the trip for a while and is traveling between Holocaust sites via train. And the group is traveling first class. Kieran Culkin's character, Benji, he's a big personality. And at times questions the tour, questions his cousin, questions you as their guide. and here Benji is uncomfortable traveling in the comfort in comfort on the train, thinking about what his ancestors had to endure.
Starting point is 00:33:54 Benji, played by Karen Culkin, speaks first. 80 years ago, we would have been herded into the backs of these things like cattle. Okay. Benji, I don't think anybody here wants to hear that right now. Okay, why not? Why doesn't anyone want to hear it? Because it's depressing. It's okay.
Starting point is 00:34:09 You're raising an interesting sensitivity here. It does sometimes come up on these tours. You're staying in fancy hotels, eating posh food, And at the same time, you're looking back at the horrors of your family history. It can conjure up confusing feelings of discomfort and discordance and, dare I say, even a kind of guilt. You know, comparing your own life. I don't feel guilt. No, nor should you, Mark.
Starting point is 00:34:30 Why would I feel guilt? No, I'm not saying that you have to feel guilt. Well, because our lives are so pampered and privileged. Like, we completely cut ourselves off from anyone else's true pain. That's a scene from a real pain. And in that scene, we also heard Jesse Eisenberg, Jennifer Gray. and Daniel Oreske. That's just one of the scenes
Starting point is 00:34:49 where Kieran Culkin's character questions the tour and questions what this group is doing. What was it like filming those scenes with Kieran Kalkin? I would think it's very heightened. Yeah, you know, he's an electric performer and it was kind of fun.
Starting point is 00:35:05 And like, I remember on that scene, Jesse, as he always did, came in with a very specific plan about how to shoot it and where everyone would be and how it was going to be choreographed. because, you know, we're on a train, so the options are limited. And Kieran was like, hang on a minute, why would I stand there?
Starting point is 00:35:22 Or let's rehearse it. Let's see what happens. And so even before we'd started rolling in a kind of metadramatic way, they'd fallen into the same dynamic as the characters. And Jesse would, of course, like, very wryly be like, well, this is perfect because you have no respect for me as a director, nor does the character have any respect for me. So this is going to work great.
Starting point is 00:35:40 And it did work great. And it really did feel like because we were traveling through these places. it felt like we really were at this little unit going on this journey. And it's just exciting to act opposite here. And some of my favorite scenes were, you know, getting to go head to head with Benji. And you sort of know he's always going to bring it and it's always going to work. But then he's also very playful and kind of doesn't mind pushing the edges of it, which I think sometimes makes four really unexpected choices that can lead to, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:12 interesting things happening on camera. And so you have to kind of react a different way each time. Yeah, a little bit, but that's fun. And it suited the character for him to have that energy. One of the things I find so moving about a real pain is the way it explores generational trauma, like what the characters in that scene we just heard, your character calls guilt, the guilt that some descendants of Holocaust survivors can carry. It's almost that feeling of how can I complain about my own life,
Starting point is 00:36:43 how can I struggle with depression or unhappiness when my relatives lived through one of the most horrific tragedies in history? I'm wondering if that, you know, what you thought about that idea of that guilt and that kind of unresolved pain. Well, I guess that's sort of central to the movie, you know, is that idea of like if you hold your own pain or, you know, grievances in modern, the relatively comfortable seeming modern modern days. against like the sheer scale of that historic trauma. Can you compute it almost? And there was something about, you know, we visited a real concentration camp, my darnick in the filming of the movie,
Starting point is 00:37:28 and it was my first time in a concentration camp. And I really respected how Jesse chose to shoot those scenes, you know, very simply just putting a camera up, and then we just pass through and observe the space. And if you've not been to, a place like that is hard to sort of put into words it's like sort of looking into an abyss or something you can't fathom how sort of humanity could be capable of such atrocities and when you're sort of holding any sort of like personal struggle up against the scale of that historic trauma is kind of like what does that
Starting point is 00:38:06 how do you get your head around that I suppose well will sharp thank you so much for joining us Thank you for having me. It was a pleasure. Will Sharp stars in the new limited series Amadeus, which is available on stars. Coming up, David B. and Cooley reviews a new gardening show hosted by comedian Zach Galfanacus. This is Fresh Air. This is Fresh Air. On Earth Day, Netflix launched a six-part series called This Is a Gardening Show. It's hosted by Zach Galfanacus, the comedic act.
Starting point is 00:38:43 best known for the hangover films, the TV series Baskets, and his own acerbic talk show between two ferns. Our TV critic, David B. and Cooley, says that while this series is just as funny and delightful as you might expect, it's also surprisingly informative and even serious. Here's his review. This is a food gardening show with your host, Zatch Gaspapadaski. You don't expect Zach Galafenakis to take himself seriously in his new net. flick series, and for the most part, he doesn't. This is a gardening show is loaded with botched takes, toss away asides, and truly terrible jokes, even knock-knock jokes. He clearly
Starting point is 00:39:25 has fun, and so do his guests. One segment in each episode has him interviewing kids at a grade school, acting like Art Linkletter used to in his very old radio and TV shows. The questions typically revolve around gardening, fruits, and vegetables, but invariably, very much. veer off into uncharted conversational territory. The host proved his ad-lib prowess as an interviewer on his Between Two Ferns show, but the object there was to make his guests intentionally uncomfortable. On this show, whether he's talking to farmers, horticultural experts, or little kids, Galafenakis himself always ends up being the butt of the joke.
Starting point is 00:40:06 Here he is chatting with a series of kids as he tours their school garden. Somehow, the conversational topics shift from ghost peppers to the movie School of Rock. These are ghost peppers? Are they haunted? No. Well, then why do they call them ghost peppers? Because they're really hot. The most ghosts aren't known for being hot.
Starting point is 00:40:28 If you could be anything in the world that you wanted to be, what would you be? I want to be a vet. You don't mean a veteran. You mean a veterinarian? Yeah. Yeah. Probably someone who is. works in a show.
Starting point is 00:40:41 Works in a show? Yeah. Oh, like show business stuff. Yeah, like, have you ever seen School Walk? Who's that with? Jack Black. Never heard of that guy. He's one of my favorite actors.
Starting point is 00:40:53 Good for him. No, my first favorite is Ryan Reynolds. Ryan Reynolds. It'd be nice to meet an actor one day. Yeah. It would be nice to meet Ryan Reynolds and Jack Black. Yeah. You ever heard of this guy, Zach Galafidakis?
Starting point is 00:41:06 Yeah. What do you think of that guy? It's not my favorite. Hmm. The six episodes in this first season, I'm hoping there will be more, are devoted to apples, tomatoes, foraging, root vegetables, corn, and compost. Zach, who lives in British Columbia, has been gardening for some 25 years. This is a gardening show was filmed on Vancouver Island,
Starting point is 00:41:30 and every farmer he visits is a true character. Especially Murray, who's been growing corn for about half a century, and easily handles any question thrown at. him, even when Zach brings up the phenomenon of crop circles. Anybody ever come in here try to do a crop circle? No. And he did it with a center point in a rope and make a crop circle. You don't think they're aliens.
Starting point is 00:41:52 No. They're just drunk kids doing it. No, old people with a piece of board. You've probably seen it on TV. What do you mean old people by that? Well, like our age. Our age? Well, you look 70-ish.
Starting point is 00:42:05 In the same episode on corn, an actual food archaeologist is brought in. And while you're likely to learn something, it's always with a smile. Food is one of the topics that I study in archaeology. And we began to find corn in an ancient village site that we were working at in Chiapas, Mexico. We took samples of that carbonized corn and sent it to a radiocarbon laboratory. How old was it? Over 3,000 years old. Older than Murray.
Starting point is 00:42:39 The director of this as a gardening show is Brooke Linder, who also proved his skill at mixing different topics and comic tones in the live Netflix talk show Everybody's Live with John Mullaney. These gardening shows rely on a basket of tricks. They use time-lapse photography to capture both growth and decay.
Starting point is 00:42:59 They use the segments with kids for pure comedy. Galafanacus also visits different farms, and farmers to sample their wares, and every time he bites into an heirloom tomato or a home-grown carrot, he pronounces it the best one he's ever tasted. And I don't think he's kidding. In the course of these compact 15 to 16-minute episodes, he learns how to graft apple trees, make richer compost, and generally how to self-sustain. The future is agrarian, he says in every episode, and not as a punchline. And he points out how happy the Canadian farmers all seem to be, even Murray, as well as how much tastier the locally grown fruits and vegetables are.
Starting point is 00:43:42 In several spots watching this as a gardening show, I became nostalgic for a past I'd almost forgotten. When I was a little kid, my uncle Tom had a farm-sized backyard where he grew cherries and tomatoes and harvested seeds from his hottest peppers each year to keep growing even hotter ones. He also could walk through the nearby forests and confidently forage many types of wild mushrooms, leaving the poisonous ones behind. I also remember a corn farm in Ohio where on harvest day the farm would set up boiling cauldrons in the fields and invite the public. You could go there, pick ears right off the stocks, shuck and boil them on the spot, and eat what I still remember was the best corn I ever had. Zach Aliphonacus in his new series,
Starting point is 00:44:30 spreads that kind of joy for eating as well as gardening. But he issues a dire warning, too, that if we don't return to our roots, the roots in our own gardens, our future may end up being a lot more bleak. That's a bitter pill to swallow. But This Is a Gardening Show serves it up persuasively and deliciously. David B. and Cooley reviewed This is a Gardening Show. Tomorrow on Fresh Air, tech writer Joanna Stern.
Starting point is 00:44:59 she spent a year relying on AI to do everything in her life that AI could do for her, like diagnosing her mammogram, responding to messages, folding her t-shirts, and serving as a boyfriend. She'll tell us what she learned about AI's current capabilities. I 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. Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Starting point is 00:45:39 Our engineer today is Adam Stanishefsky. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Chaloner, Susan Yukundi, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez Whistler. Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nessberg. to Shurrock directs the show. For Terry Gross and Tanya Mosley, I'm Anne-Marie Baldinado.

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