Song Exploder - Key Change: Baz Luhrmann on "Time After Time."

Episode Date: March 18, 2026

My guest today is Baz Luhrmann, the award-winning director whose films include Moulin Rouge!, Strictly Ballroom, The Great Gatsby, Elvis, and Romeo + Juliet.  His newest film is  EPiC: Elvi...s Presley in Concert, a critically acclaimed documentary about Elvis that’s playing right now in theaters and in IMAX. Before becoming a massively successful film director, Baz began his showbiz career as an actor, and as a ballroom dancer, in Australia. His first film was Strictly Ballroom, which came out in 1992, and became one of the highest-grossing Australian films of all time. It was originally a play, and there’s a song in the film that was part of the story all the way back when it was first performed on stage. And that’s what Baz and I talked about for this episode.For more info, visit songexploder.net/baz-luhrmann.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to Song Exploder, where musicians take apart their songs, and piece by piece tell the story of how they were made. I'm Rishi Kesh Hirway. This is Key Change, where I talk to fascinating people about the music that change their lives. My guest is Baz Luhrman, the award-winning director whose films include Moulon Rouge, Strictly Ballroom, The Great Gatsby, Elvis, and Romeo and Juliet. His newest film is Epic, Elvis Presley in Concert, a critically acclaimed documentary about Elvis that's playing right now in theaters and in IMAX. Before becoming a massively successful film director, Baz began his showbiz career as an actor and as a ballroom dancer in Australia. His first film was Strictly Ballroom, which came out in 1992
Starting point is 00:00:44 and became one of the highest-grossing Australian films of all time. It was originally a play, and there's a song in the film that was part of the story all the way back when it was first performed on stage, and that's what Baz and I talked about for this episode. There are quite a few songs that have changed my life, but no song really changed the trajectory of my life more than time after time by Sidney Lob.
Starting point is 00:01:12 I'm so thrilled that you picked time after time because that is already a song that I associate with you because of strictly ballroom. Yeah. Well, you know what? And growing up in a tiny country town, our working class theater was competitive ballroom dancing. Do you feel like your background in ballroom dancing,
Starting point is 00:01:38 your training, you know, when you were younger, affected the way that you listened to music? Yes, is the answer. When we were very young, my dad was in the Vietnam War. When he came back from Hong Kong, he loved music, and he had this thing called a Nakai, real-to-reel tape recorder. It was the latest technology, and this was, I would have been like five or something. And it was amazing because he also had a tape,
Starting point is 00:02:04 which was kind of a sample tape of all sorts of music. And on it was classical music, Tijuana Brass, and the Beatles. And then we moved away to the country, and we were very isolated. And so that tape I just played over and over again. And I think it instilled in me a lack of prejudice about kinds of music. It was just music. I even had my own radio station. We used the Akai, and I got a record player,
Starting point is 00:02:36 and I put speakers up outside the gas station, and then I'd be like broadcasting radio M-U-B-I-L. And now let's play that crazy hit by John Farnum. One is the loneliest number. And I did that for about a week, only because I only have one record. So I've played over and over again. I had a lot of news broadcasting because read the paper, really.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Yeah. But how old were you at this point? I was probably 10. Yeah. And where was this? Where were you growing up? Aaron's Creek is lying northern New South Wales. really in giant timberland country.
Starting point is 00:03:09 We were on the side of the highway, and we were very isolated. We had a pig farm, and we also ran the local cinema. But the town itself had five houses in it, six houses. At that age, had you already started ballroom dancing? Yes, it started with me finding a flyer on the ground of a bus, and then I went to the local dance hall, which was, again, everything was an hour away. And I started doing it. And so I went with the ballroom dancing.
Starting point is 00:03:35 What was great about that was you got to dance and you went to local competitions, but you dressed up in tails. And so it was kind of fascinating because everyone was afraid like that, mate, you know, but they were dressed like they were in the 19th century. And then we were teenagers. And there was great argument between my mother and my father, a big split up. And at some point, I just ran away. So I ended up in the city.
Starting point is 00:04:00 And then I started joining the local theatre group and acting. and then I actually got into amateur theater. I was just basically not turning up at school. And I auditioned for night at the National Institute of Dramatic Art. I mean, Cape Blanchet went there, Mel Gibson went there. It's our national drama. I didn't get in. And I was devastated.
Starting point is 00:04:20 I thought, hang on, this is not meant to happen. I'm meant to get in. I did reconnect with my mom. And my mom was like, look, shouldn't you think about, you know, you dance really well? What about choreography or something like that, you know? Anyway, the best like I ever had in my life was, I came home from graduation day, and the phone rang and this guy rings me and says, listen, we want you to be in this movie, opposite Judy Davis, one of the great actors of the world.
Starting point is 00:04:45 And we're only paying you $2,000 a week, which was a fortune to me. So I went, yep, I'll do that. And I moved out and I did the movie in a four-man theater company. And then I had an opera company because I loved music. I did another movie. I was in a war film. And I tried to get into NIDA. Eventually, I became so well known
Starting point is 00:05:06 that actually NIDA said, look, you're a terrible auditioner. Which is why I don't audition actors. I do workshops because I really realized how the process of auditioning is so, can really disarm you. So they said, look, turn up and you'll get in. So I turned up, I got in.
Starting point is 00:05:24 And why we were there, one of the programs was devising. Devising is where actors get together, and they come up with an idea. You don't do a written play. No one actually writes the play. I was never very good at sitting down and just staring at the page. I do now, but I still find it kind of traumatizing, which is why I like to write with people, but I can sit there and write.
Starting point is 00:05:50 But what I came up with is sort of, okay, the play was 40 minutes. So we had an idea, I had the idea about the Greek myth. Was there a Greek myth in particular that you were thinking of? I spliced together both triumph over oppression, which is a primary Greek ideal, and with the ugly duckling myth, actually. And the ugly duckling myth or fairy tale is misunderstood. It's not that you sort of take off your glasses and become a dream of. A swan's egg is accidentally put amidst a whole lot of eggs by ducks. And so when this duck is born, everyone that goes, gee, you're weird. You're different. The duck.
Starting point is 00:06:29 doesn't really know that they're actually born a swan. And that is about self-revelation, revealing who you really are and growing on that road as opposed to imposing or having opposed upon you who the world wants you to be. So I spliced them together. Then we did a thing called the hot chair. So I got every actor to sit in a chair and we could ask them any questions about their life. It was kind of a bit psychologically intense. And that would get a sense of what was really meaningful to them. And we realized in doing that, we were all very, very subconsciously
Starting point is 00:07:05 oppressed about the Cold War. So we thought of using the triumph over-oppression myth about this idea that the older generation were telling you, there's only one way to cha-cha-cha-char, and you've got to stick by the rules. And, you know, they were running the world, and we couldn't do anything. And so by splicing the two myths together,
Starting point is 00:07:25 I sort of came up with a rough structure, and then this idea of setting it in the world of Boreham dancing, where you had this oppressive guy called Barry V and the Federation, and the Federation decided the rules. But there was a young dancer, and he was a champion. But he started to make up his own rules, his own dances, his own steps, and he suddenly got shut down because people were loving his creativity. And the outside girl, she had been watching him thinking, he's amazing.
Starting point is 00:07:56 but no one liked her, she was terrible. And so secretly at Nye, they're creating their own choreography to go to the competition, pretty simple plot. And there was a kind of moment where the kind of champion lead character, Scott Aistings, everyone wants to dance with him. But he was breaking the rules by doing his own creativity.
Starting point is 00:08:18 The whole thing was a metaphor, really, for creativity. And then the sort of bespeckled outsider girl, she was the sort of wallflower. I think we used to call it Jenny Wallflower actually. She's watching him and it's very much
Starting point is 00:08:32 you know the alpha male is teaching the wallflower girl how to be great. I was thinking what would the musical construct
Starting point is 00:08:42 be? And I needed this kind of song I didn't have any money but I went to I guess somewhere where you went and bought a cheap cassette player in those days
Starting point is 00:08:52 it was cassette players and I was there and the radio was on and this brand new single dropped as I was having this thought while I was buying a cassette player you know and it was this new punkish girl dropped this song called time after time and it came on you know you ding do do do do do do do do sometimes think of you time after time I went that's it that's the song I didn't even know No, it was Sydney lawpher at the time. So I rushed, got that cassette, went back to the rehearsal room,
Starting point is 00:09:30 played it, everyone went like, this is it. The moment when time after time appears, how far along into the devising had you gotten? We were in the middle of actually building it, and I didn't have a middle. So I brought the song in, and I went, why don't we use the song to do like a film montage, but let's do it as a piece of theatre?
Starting point is 00:09:49 Yeah. And we choreographed the middle sequence to that. So a very simple Brechtian device, where you're doing one scene, because it was an open black gloss floor, you just spin on the chorus, and that meant time passed on, and they were suddenly dancing better. So they sort of did it, and she wasn't it good, and then they'd spin, and time passed.
Starting point is 00:10:09 It was very brechti in the way we did it. In the song, there's a chachap beat. There's a sort of time, but in the middle eights, the rest of the cast got together as a group, and they would move in a sort of military formation across the stage and they'd stop in their heads and go like, I haven't seen Scott A friend lately, where have they been? What's going on?
Starting point is 00:10:34 And it was kind of a gossip Greek chorus system. Meanwhile, our lovers were dancing left and right of this moving group in military formation where their heads were flicking and turning as if they were creating the sense that time was passing and they were gossiping about what strange things were happening to Scott Aistings, you know? And that Fran girl, that Fran girl hasn't been seen around. Yeah. Well, the music of time after time had to fit the idea of them doing this sort of dancing montage.
Starting point is 00:11:04 Was it easy to imagine that song, which is kind of, you know, like a slower ballad as the score essentially for this moment of them? I know nothing about ballroom dancing. And I wasn't sure. Yes, because actually, if you look at the rhythm of it, it actually is in cha-cha-ta-ton. And that sequence was cha-cha. But the interesting thing about the ballroom dancing chacha is that it also works on the same four-four rhythm if you halve the time as a rumba.
Starting point is 00:11:32 Right? So you could dance both a rumba to it and a chacha. So we were dancing a slow ch-cha that then converted into a rumba. But then it had this double-time rhythm. So the moment I heard it, I just went like, that's it. And it was then about constructing this sequence that gave you a montage, time-passing feeling, him teaching her, and a sense of gossip because they were changing.
Starting point is 00:11:58 Yeah. And it was kind of just one of those epiphany moments, a bit like how I discovered the fish tank idea in Romeo and Juliet by being in a nightclub in Miami where I was riding at. I went to the bathroom and I came out and I'm washing my hands and there's a beautiful fish tank above the wee wash hands. And I looked through and there was a girl coming ahead. and I went, that's it, you know?
Starting point is 00:12:22 Like, things aren't born perfectly. And when you work with others, and I'm a serial collaborator, you shape up, you feel, you work off each other. Did you feel like the lyrics connected to this theme of creativity that's in the story of Strictly-Buller? Yes, yes, it was almost as it was written for us. That's how accurate it seemed. And in a way, when you're devising,
Starting point is 00:12:49 play. The funny thing is everyone in theatre or film, creativity, fundamentally, when it's collaborative, all that sort of highly strung egoy stuff falls away. And in the act of creating you are there for each other and you're there to support, to catch, to be there. And you lift each other up because you're serving something higher. And that is the story and the audience. My conversation with Baz Luhrman continues after this. I have a new album of my own coming out on April 24th. It's been about 15 years since I last put out a full length, and this is the first one that'll be out under my own name, Rishikesh Her Way.
Starting point is 00:13:36 I started making Song Exploder when I was feeling lost in my own music career. And then for over a decade, I've gotten to have these incredible conversations about the process of making music, talking to other artists, and it made me completely rethink my relationship to music and my way of writing songs.
Starting point is 00:13:52 and this album is the product of all of that. It features contributions from some of my favorite artists, including some folks that you may have heard on this podcast, like Iron and Wine, Kevin Morby, Vagabon, Fenlily, and the producer Phil Wine Rope. I'm going to be on tour playing in cities across the U.S. starting in April, and I'm trying to bring the spirit of the podcast with me. So every show that I'm playing will begin with a conversation about the album
Starting point is 00:14:17 with a different amazing guest moderator in each city, like Adam Scott, Samin Nasrat, Jason Manzukas, Josh Molina, Minjin Lee, Ken Jennings, John Roderick, Austin Cleon, and more. They're all going to be my conversation partners on stage, and then I'll play with my band. The album is called In the Last Hour of Light, and the first couple songs are out now. You can listen to the music and get tickets for the shows on my website, rishikash.co. Or just go to songexploder.net slash live. That's Song Exploder. dot net slash live. Thanks.
Starting point is 00:14:53 So then about a year later, I had my own theatre company. It was a very high profile position. I was the artistic director. So I brought back Strictor ballroom and a lovely man came and saw it. Ted Albert, what a beautiful man. He said, I'm starting a film company. I would like to get the rights to your play to make it into a film. I said, no, I'm going to direct it.
Starting point is 00:15:31 And he looked at him and he went, okay. And he said, I'm going to finance it. it, we suddenly got the financing, and then, tragically, he died. And the film was over. But his wife stepped in and said, no, my husband knows talent, I'm going to back you. We shoot the movie, we play the movie, the one distributive that has the movie. He sees it and says it's the worst movie I've ever seen in you've ruined Pat Bishop's career. I go up the coast, I shave off my long black curly hair, well, half of it.
Starting point is 00:16:00 Get a phone call from a guy in a trailer park, and he says, my name is beer. I am the director of the Ken Film Festival. I've seen your ballroom dancing. And I'd like to offer you a 12 o'clock screening. Boom, boom, boom. We end up going. We screen it. And as this sort of crowd squashed in around me,
Starting point is 00:16:19 I always remember the security guy grabs me by the arm. He says, Monsieur, from this day on, life would never be the same again. And he was right. So did time after time stay in all those different versions as you took it from NIDA onward? Was it always in the... The record,
Starting point is 00:16:35 was, but as soon as I did the film, we recorded a new cover of it where the lead actress Tyra Marie sang it with this kind of local pop star. What prompted that? What made you decide to not just use the original? I thought that there was a bit of a twist because they were distributed through Sony. It was a music rights issue. Might have been, but Ted Albert actually owned a record company, Albert Music, including ACDC. So they had enough muscle. They cut some sort of deal because ACDs is so huge. Once it was decided that this new version of time after time was going to be made, since you'd already shot the film,
Starting point is 00:17:14 did it have to be as close to the original Cindy Lopper version as possible? Or did you have ideas for how you might want it to be different? In the recorded version, I wanted it to be a duet. So you have a boy and a girl sing it. Because it is about a relationship and the fundamental relationship although it's built-in creativity, is if you fall, I will catch you,
Starting point is 00:17:39 I will be waiting. I'll be there. Time after time. How did you discover that Tara could sing well enough to record the song? Tara was in my ensemble company. She was a very outstanding young actor. And so we had to do various things.
Starting point is 00:18:08 So I knew she could sing. And actually, we went through the audition process, who should play the lead in Strictly Ballroom. And I'd have to say Craig Pierce, who's my bestie and, you know, we wrote the screenplay together. And anyway, they fell in love. Craig and Tara fell in love. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:26 Oh. They're children. So he was very much, look, why didn't we try and convince them that Tara should play the role? And we got Tara crack at it and I said, look, I really think she is the best at it. I really think she is the best. So she got the role. Well, I was wondering about the significance of you having had the
Starting point is 00:18:47 experience with auditioning and then setting this crucial moment of the film, this moment where she finally gets to dance with Scott for the first time. With this song, the pressure of the audition is built into the story. I was wondering if you felt like you were consciously putting that part of yourself into the plot. I'm not sure it's even just auditioning. I think it's bigger than that. I think it's about creativity and a fundamental understanding. that I just can't do it the way that it's been prescribed as a system and a process. So I couldn't get into drama school like everybody else by turning up and doing a bit of Beckett. I had to get in by creating so much other energy.
Starting point is 00:19:37 And that's the same with the way I make movies or tell stories. I wish I was a shooter. I'd make a lot more movies, a lot quicker. I'd probably be a lot wealthier. I mean, I'm not poor. I'm not without a few biscuits, but I've always had to define my own process, my own way. And that leads to my own way of telling stories and whether you like it or not. And, you know, I've always accepted that what comes with that is that you're not going to be embraced by the larger, I guess, system or process that I'm always going to have to be.
Starting point is 00:20:13 I'm more your friend. I'm a bit of you, Scott, but I'm your friend. as well. I always put a bit of, I don't consciously do it, but I think that I don't know why people point out, you know, you do tell the same story over and over again. The funny thing is, you can pretty much cast any of my movies with the same cast. There's always a sort of kindly grandmother and there's always a sort of, you know, rather florid overlord, whether it's Barry Fife or Ziedler or it's the Colonel Tom Parker. There's some patterns in there. Yeah. Artists are consciously or pretty much subconsciously,
Starting point is 00:20:47 self-medicating us against something that's marked them deeply in childhood. I, of course, I knew the Cindy Lopper version, but in my house in the 90s, the version of time after time that we listened to was the version from Strickley Ballroom. Really? Yeah, my sister, it was one of my sister's first CDs. I'm amazed by that because, you know what,
Starting point is 00:21:10 the film did well. Miramax ultimately bought the film. I mean, the film ultimately did very well around the world. Amazing in England. number one in the UK. But then Sony really didn't push the soundtrack. I was really disappointed. We did the cover.
Starting point is 00:21:25 I always remember they did this nasty little thing in the cassettes where they just took the album cover and stuck it on the cassette with blue. And that's when I decided to get very involved in everything with my music. Yeah. I just went like this. I'm going to be involved in day one, packaging, marketing, everything. And we've never stopped. I'm amazed that you had the soundtrack.
Starting point is 00:21:47 Yeah, my sister saw Strictly Ballroom. She was in high school in Massachusetts. She came home, she saw it with her friend. I think I was too young to see it, you know, or something. I just didn't go to the movies that much at that age. But she came home. She loved it. She bought the soundtrack.
Starting point is 00:22:03 And my first experience with the movie before I ever saw it was just listening to the soundtrack. Was this like in 92? That's amazing. And it went to number one and it was a hit. And it became the kind of soundtrack. track of Strictor ballroom. And I guess the thing about that track is that, I mean, that's 40 years ago or something. But the point about the song is that every now and then in life I'll be somewhere.
Starting point is 00:22:31 And I'll just hear it at a distance. And it's just thematically, if you fall, I will catch you, I will be waiting time after time. And it's always given me a sense of, you know, somehow it's a little touchstone, a little safety net that's just out there is a piece of music. Thank you so much. Cut, as we'd like to say. Baz Luhrman's new movie, Epic, Elvis Presley in concert,
Starting point is 00:23:00 is in theaters now. Visit songexploder.net slash keychange for more key change episodes and for a playlist with all the music that's been discussed on this show. This episode was produced by me, Craig Ely, and Mary Dolan with production assistants from Tiger Biscop. Song Exploder is a proud member of Radiotopia from PRX
Starting point is 00:23:26 and network of independent, listener-supported, artist-owned podcasts. You can learn more about our shows at Radiotopia.fm. And if you'd like to hear more from me, you can subscribe to my newsletter. You can find a link to it on the Song Exploder website. You can also get a Song Exploder t-shirt at songexploder.net slash shirt. I'm Rishi-Kesh Hurway. Thanks for listening. Radiotopia.

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