Sunday Sitdown with Willie Geist - Samuel L. Jackson (2019)

Episode Date: June 14, 2020

Samuel L. Jackson’s breakthrough in the cult classic Pulp Fiction came at the age of 45, after he had already lived a full life both professionally and personally. In this week’s “Sunday Sitdown...,” Willie Geist talks to the legendary actor about his prolific movie career since then and the road to becoming the most bankable star in Hollywood. (Original broadcast date: June 16, 2019) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:01 Hey guys, Willie Geist here with another episode of the Sunday Sit Down podcast. My thanks as always for clicking and listening along. My guest this week, a Hollywood legend, Samuel L. Jackson. Did you know that Sam Jackson is the man, the actor, whose movies have grossed more at the box office in total than any other actor in the history of Hollywood? Something like $15 billion around the world his movies have made. A lot of that is owed to the franchise movies he's done, Star Wars, Jurassic Park. the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but also because he's just a damn good actor, and he's been in a lot of good movies. Some of them, big budget like those, others, of course, classics, like Pulp Fiction, which at the age of 45 for Sam Jackson, this is 25 years ago in 1994, was the big breakthrough. He'd done some movies, of course, with Spike Lee before that, but it was Pulp Fiction that cemented him as a star, and by the way, about six months later, die hard with a vengeance came out and that launched him as a box office star as well. Something Bruce Willis told him would happen before it did.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Sam Jackson tells that story, as you'll hear in just a bit. Also a guy who's had, well, you know, 45 years old. There's a lot of life before that. And so he grew up in the segregated South in Chattanooga, Tennessee, came from a broken home. His grandparents raised him along with his aunt. He talks about the impact they had on his life and why he was steered into action. His latest project is Shaft. Remember he did a Shaft movie about 19 years ago. Now he's back, reviving that role, inspired, of course, by the original shaft of the 1970s, Mr. Richard Roundtree, who's appearing in this new version of the movie as well. A great conversation with a great guy. I'll paint the picture for you. We're in an empty Tribeca, New York Steakhouse, the two of us, Sam Jackson, in a blue suit and a matching blue cangle wearing white sneakers. What I'm wearing is immatuation. This is all about Sam Jackson right now on the Sunday Sit Down podcast.
Starting point is 00:02:02 Sam, thanks for doing this. Oh, my pleasure. I know how busy you are. I'm beating the bushes for this movie, getting people to see it. I don't think that's going to be a problem. I told you, I just saw it. It's funny. It has all that spirit of shaft in it from 1971, but it's been updated.
Starting point is 00:02:19 And I think there's a new generation that's about to see shaft for the first time, because your last one was almost 20 years ago. That's true. So what does that feel like to, introduce this character to some people now who's been around for the rest of us for so long. I like to think that, you know, there's an audience that knows about it kind of in the back of their minds. They just didn't know that they did because Isaac Kay's music is classic. It's kind of like when you hear that music, everybody almost knows what it is.
Starting point is 00:02:48 It's kind of like, you know what the, oh, that's a shaft pan or something. And their parents have played it somewhere. Maybe they've seen one of the other films. Maybe they didn't see mine. Maybe they did see mine. but they have a kid like Jesse that they identify with in a very real kind of way is going to help. And he's sort of the technological shaft to my analog shaft. Right. You are. Well, that's the funny thing.
Starting point is 00:03:15 Over those 20 years or even farther, almost 50 years, go back to the original, he actually hasn't changed that much through the years. You know what I mean? Well, he's... When you say he, I made specifically sure when they brought me in that Richard was that. Right, right, right. Everybody would know. That chapter is still here.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Yes, but the linear. Of course. Of course. He is the original myth maker. He's the guy who was the sex machine for all the chicks that was cool. They had the really great leather clothes and, you know, the friend for his brother man who had everybody's back. You know, he was that guy. But his spirit lives on in your character.
Starting point is 00:03:53 Oh, his spirit lives in mind. time, I got to do mine, and we had a minute, I was able to be an angrier and kind of more aggressive shaft for the change of the century. Right. So I had more issues. And now this one, interestingly enough, was not around me. And his mom thought I was a little too dangerous, so she took him away from me, raised him in the suburbs, sent him to MIT, and now he's an FBI agent.
Starting point is 00:04:24 but he needs my help. So when he comes back, I have to kind of show him what it means to be a member of this particular family and what it means to the community in general. And they try to drag you into the 21st century, your views of the world, things like that. And a part of why I love the movie is because by the end you think there's going to be this moment where he sort of realizes his old ways and he's got to move for you with, no, right up until the closing credits in the movie. He's still shaft. Still look okay, man.
Starting point is 00:04:51 They're drawing pictures on the wall Yeah, that's right So how do you decide when When it's a good time to go back to a project like that Like something you've done before What was this the script, the director? Was it something that told you I want to do this now? I thought it was a fresh take
Starting point is 00:05:06 On what's been happening with Shaft Sheff's always been a thriller And they were like gritty crime dramas And when I was approached with it They said they wanted to make a comedy And it was like straight ahead comedy I don't think I can sign off for that. What do you want it to be?
Starting point is 00:05:23 I said, well, it needs to be an action comedy, if there's got to be anything. You can have comedy, but you have to have an element of danger that's very real. That's authentic. So when an audience is watching it, they can laugh from time to time, but also know that, oh, my God, that this is toxic and crazy. So hopefully we managed to make that, you know, mix. Oh, you did. You did. And those shootout scenes are no joke, and there are a lot of them.
Starting point is 00:05:48 There's your action. Well, yeah. Well, you know, I'm a huge fan of bullet ballets. I started watching them with John Wu. That's a good euphemism. I like that. And, you know, you mentioned Richard Roundtree. This isn't exactly a cameo. He's got, like, a good, important part at the end. He's chunky. It takes all three of us to make this thing happen. What did he tell you the first time you came back to play Shaft 19 or so years ago about the
Starting point is 00:06:16 character? What did you need to know about him? I didn't need to know anything about him. I was really more concerned when I was doing mine about when it was going to be my opportunity to be a sex machine for all the chicks. And John kept telling me, don't worry, it's going to happen. It's going to happen. When? When's it going to happen? And Richard was just laughing because as soon as they brought him on screen, they handed him two women.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And he walks in with the two of the best-looking women in the movie. Really? This is what we're doing. He's the sexy guy. I'm the angry guy. Okay, fine. Right. But, no.
Starting point is 00:06:55 But he's the quiet in the storm. You know, and all kind of stuff. It's chaos on set. Richard's just sitting on the side, smoking a cigar, chilling, waiting on him to call his name. He doesn't get involved. He doesn't. He just walks in when it's his moment.
Starting point is 00:07:11 It's smooth. There you go. So what does it feel like for you on the eve of a movie? We're like three days right now from the release as we sit here talking. You've had so many big hits. so much success. Do you still get like nerves thinking about how people are going to react? It has nothing to do with me at this point. Right. You've done your job.
Starting point is 00:07:27 It has everything to do with how the people are marketing the film. Yeah, I'm out here doing my part, but the marketing department has got to do their part. They've got to convince people that, you know, they want to see it. I see the billboards. They're kind of nice, you know, being this big old billboards with three guys and these really nice coats. It's out of my hands. I've done everything I'm supposed to do. And hopefully if people spend their money to go into the theater, they will see that I did my job. And hopefully I'm entertaining them and I'm making them happen.
Starting point is 00:07:57 I'm making them laugh. I'm making them a smile. And I make them go, you know, so I do all the things that I had to do. And hopefully wish for the best that it works out like most of the other films I've done that they're enjoyable. I like doing popcorn movies. Yeah. I have a thing about going to the movies and leaving the world that we live in and not having to think about what's on the front page. or the newspapers or who won the game that day.
Starting point is 00:08:21 Just go in, lose yourself in this world for a little while and laugh, cry, you know, have some fun and come out and say, wow, that was good. I want people smiling and having fun when they leave the movie or wake up the next day. I got some text from my friends the other day said they woke up the next day thinking about, man, I just thought about that scene in the movie. I just busted out laughing. It's like, thank you. Because that's what you want.
Starting point is 00:08:47 Sticks with them. That's what you want. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I mean, you know this probably better than you'd like to know it by now, but you've had a lot of those successes where you have the title now is the actor whose movies have made more than anyone in the history of Hollywood. Yeah, for a lot of people.
Starting point is 00:09:02 It's fine. Well, yeah, it's like $15 billion worldwide. Does that number mean anything to you? Yeah, it means I did a lot of movies that people liked or a lot of people went to see the movie that I was in or I made a good choice of a franchise to stay part of. that, you know, I enjoy myself, and I'm glad that a lot of people enjoy them also. Nothing to do with you, though? Come on. You were in all those movies. It's not just the franchise. Well, I was in on, you know, Star Wars is Star Wars.
Starting point is 00:09:33 Yeah. Star Wars would have been Star Wars without me. You know, fortunately, I had an interesting part in it, and I had a great character. That was great. Jurassic Park was Jurassic Park, or would have been Jurassic Park without me saying, hold on to your butt. But, hey, I said it. People say it. It's on the T-shirt. I own it. And being part of the Marvel universe, come on. It's hard to beat that.
Starting point is 00:10:01 And to be a character that has such a dominant place in the series in terms of who he is to those superheroes, a guy without powers, who can wield so much power over those guys who do have powers. and being able to inhabit it and embody it and embrace it in a real kind of way and just love it. Those are the kind of things that I dreamed about when I was a kid of being that superhero or a superhero or somebody with Kate or somebody with some powers or somebody who could do this or the other. Being fortunate enough to be in a franchise that has those kinds of characters in it and allows me to watch myself do things that I thought I would do. when I was a kid. Even a movie like The Incredibles. In Frozen, it's awesome.
Starting point is 00:10:51 Yes, it is. Can't beat it. So I've been very fortunate. And I understand that. And I know that that number, it means something. But there are a lot of other people who are in some of those movies. They can add those same numbers to their names, too. Because as long as you're into credits, you can say that.
Starting point is 00:11:09 Right. You know, so it's not like I was driving those films. I was in some films that were driven by a popular opinion that allowed a lot of people to come and see them. And I was fortunate enough to be there. All right. Well, you made them better. How about that? I'll just give you that.
Starting point is 00:11:22 All right. You take that? You talked about Marvel Cinematic Universe. I told you before we started talking that Brie Larson and I were talking about you. And man, she talks about you, I think she called you her Yoda, this wise man that always knew the answer, always knew the right thing to do, whose instincts were so good. I was reading something Scarlett Johansson said about you along those similar lines. Is that nice to hear that people you work with, these huge stars, look up to you in such a way and so lean on you for advice? Well, it just meant I'm probably the oldest guy there and I've done more movies and everybody else.
Starting point is 00:11:57 Sure it does. I pride myself on my professionalism, being there, being present for the other actors, being present for the crew in terms of my efficiency. how I want to get the work done so that they don't have to be worked to death also. Hitting my mark, saying my line, knowing near lines, I can help them if they need it. Understanding a setup. I approach a lot of movies from an audience member standpoint of what I want to see or even films that I've watched and this situation has been in a film that I've seen and I liked it. and I can tell you how to efficiently make that happen without doing, you know, eight different setups.
Starting point is 00:12:43 Right. So I try and do stuff like that. And a lot of times people take my advice because I've been around. And, you know, I get a little cranky sometimes. Oh, do you really? Yeah. When it's not moving efficiently. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:57 And other people haven't come ready. Or when it's not fun. It's kind of like, this is the place I come to have fun. This is my, this is my workspace. This is the space that I come to create. and in order to create, you've got to be free. You've got to be open and joyous. Like, you know, a writer facing the page every day
Starting point is 00:13:15 or an artist facing a blank canvas, you know, except in my case, when I come to set, I generally seen the scene that we're going to shoot in my head already. You know, and sometimes I'll ask the director if they've seen the scene and they look at you like, uh-oh, don't be a bad day. So does a director ever feel like Sam might understand this movie better than I do? at this point? I think there are a couple who have. How do they feel about that?
Starting point is 00:13:42 They're okay with it. Well, I make their job easier. You know, I mean, I'll come in and they'll start talking about a setup, and I'm going, you don't really need to do that. All you need to do is this and this. You move the story alarm because you've got to get to this next thing. This is talking about that, so don't waste a whole bunch of time doing it. Turns out we should have your name on the director title as well on half these movies.
Starting point is 00:14:05 Too much work, because then I've got to go somewhere and say, in the room and watch them cut the movie every day. I got to talk to some people about music. And I can do three more movies by then. And you will. Your uncles can be working on your grip on your T-shot, too. There's a lot of stuff you'd rather be doing than that. I'm curious, Sam, just how this acting thing started for you,
Starting point is 00:14:25 going back as a kid in Chattanooga with your grandparents and your aunt. Who was the first person who told you acting as something worth trying? It's something to do. How did you find this? Nobody told me that. You found it yourself? Well, I kind of figured that out, but what happened actually was my aunt Edna, who lived in the house with us, was a fourth grade teacher who was also a performing arts teacher. She taught dance classes and all this other stuff.
Starting point is 00:14:55 So when they did pageants, plays or any other thing, she never had enough boards. I lived in the house with her. So she just put me in stuff. Before I was even in school, she was just making me do it. stuff. And I learned earlier on the appreciation for the, oh my gosh, like that. Right. And the, I mean, you're so cute. So you learned that. And that was probably where the seed was planted. Yeah. Thought about it over the years of how I got here. And when she left, I still did plays to the point that other teachers would say, well, you can't be in every play. You have to let someone
Starting point is 00:15:34 else try it. I'm like, nobody else is here. So either I'm going to be in or I'm not. So I felt it. And when I got to college or where I got to high school, I kind of let that go and I was in the band. So that was my performance outlet. And by the time I got to college and I took a public speaking class and the guy teaching the class offered us extra credit to do three penny opera because he didn't have enough guys that auditioned. So I did it and I found myself like, this is the place I want to be. This is the one place that I found that makes me want to get up in the morning and go to class.
Starting point is 00:16:11 The other classes were tedious and required. So that was the place I wanted to be. The theater turned out to be that spot that I was anxious to get to every day. It sounds like from reading and listening to other interviews you've done that you were an outgoing young man, like that you'd go with your grandfather to work and start chatting people up around the office. Were you that kind of kid? Very outgoing, happy? Um, yeah. Um, I didn't talk a lot because I stuttered.
Starting point is 00:16:38 So I would kind of mask it or try to mask the fact that I stuttered by not talking as much as, you know, most of the kids because I try to talk too fast and I can, right? That was caught up in that. But, um, when I was with my grandfather at his job, he was always telling me lead those men alone. And, you know, they would talk to me and I talked back to him. You know, I'd love. I'd look at the stuff that they were doing, the real estate papers on the desk. And, you know, they were old redneck guys that referred to my grandfather as boy or Ed. You know, he called him Mr. Whatever. And just watching that dynamic and being around them and listening to what he said about that dynamic
Starting point is 00:17:23 after we, you know, left there and who those people were and what they did. Interesting kind of place to be, you know. I was talking about Chattanooga yesterday with somebody. Yeah, this East Tennessee, 1950s, 60s, and all that comes with that. All that comes with that, yeah. Segregation, the signs. Yeah. You know, where you can't go, where you can't go.
Starting point is 00:17:47 Totally black education. Yeah. All the teachers I had taught my mom and their brothers. So they understood what the expectation was in my house of me getting out and going somewhere. So it never occurred to me that I was going to live and die in Chattanooga, Tennessee. when I was growing up. You were getting out. Well, according to what I read, saw on television or imagined in the movies, yeah, I was out of it. I was going to get on a pirate ship and go hang out with Earl Flynn.
Starting point is 00:18:14 Swing from ship to ship with a dagger in my mouth and sword in my hand. Well, you came pretty close to it. I got a lightsaber. I'm good. Yeah, right. You got your version of that. It's sword. Well, one of the places you sailed away to was New York City in the 70s, right, to become an actor, a theater actor. Right. What were those early years as a struggling actor like when you were running around town with people like Denzel and Wesley Snipes and young guys trying to make it? Delightful.
Starting point is 00:18:41 You know, that was a huge legion of us that were out here in the streets and doing plays all over town. We worked at Henry Street, Frank Silvera Writers' Workshop, a Negro Ensemble Company, the public theater. You know, everybody was in something. Joe had a black Hispanic Shakespeare company at the time, so a lot of people working there. My wife got here. She immediately became a color girl. She was in the national company of color girls. They were touring all over the place.
Starting point is 00:19:11 So there was a lot of people working, and we were doing stuff. And we went to the same auditions. So we would meet each other at auditions. Where are you going next? Oh, yeah, I got that audition. We walked together and do that. But the artistic community was nurturing and very vibrant. And the fact that we could tangibly see, you know, it's like when we were doing soldiers
Starting point is 00:19:35 play and Denzel left and started doing St. Elsewhere. And then he ended up doing carbon copy and became a movie star. And I was, okay, so Denzel's gone. And I was doing Mother Courage. I was Morgan's understudy. Boom, Morgan was gone. He was doing Street Smart. And then, you know, Fish Lees, and then Alphrey Lees and Robert Christian Lees.
Starting point is 00:19:55 So you know you're in the right place. it's just your time hadn't happened yet. Right. So being around that and being in it and learning the craft of acting, that by the time I was in the throes of my addiction, I was still doing huge surprise winning plays. I mean, I was at Yale doing piano lesson. I was the first boy Willie in the piano lesson,
Starting point is 00:20:20 first wolf in two trains running. So I was doing August Wilson plays with Lloyd Richards and learning those lessons. So by the time I was caught up in the throes of that, I had also lost sight of this because I was so happy with what I was doing in the theater in terms of the kind of work, what I was exploring through those characters, listening to the audience every night and the appreciation of what they did, pleasing somebody like Lloyd Richards and, you know, August in terms of the characters that I'd created to be in their production. that when this happened, I had just kind of, oh, what? Oh, really? All right, fine. But I was doing a movie for Spike every year.
Starting point is 00:21:09 So it was like going to Spike Summer Camp. Right. We would do, you know, do the right thing, school days. Jungle fever. No, Moe Better Blues. Right. And then Jungle fever. Right.
Starting point is 00:21:21 So when Jungle fever happened, or when Spike called me about Jungle Fever, I was in rehab. So he was telling me, yeah, I want you to play like the Marvin Gay character, you know, he's a drug addict, blah, blah, blah. And I'm like, okay, well, I've done the research, so I'm ready. So by the time I came out of rehab and they were starting to shoot and the drug counselors were telling me I shouldn't do movies because I was playing a crack addict. You're going to have pipes. You're going to have lighters. They're going to be triggers. Next thing you know, you're going to relapse.
Starting point is 00:21:52 And I was like, if for no other reason, I will not relapse because I never want to. see any of you ever again. So they were foremost in my mind. So by the time I got to set to start to work, I approached the craft service table, the security guys who were through to Islam from the nation of Islam were running me away from the table because they thought I was like a neighborhood crackhead. Is that right? I didn't need makeup.
Starting point is 00:22:18 I was already there. So by the time that happened and the film came out, I used to have this running joke with my agent where I would call her every day and go Hollywood call and she'd go no but you have an auditioned and so I called her one day I had run into spite they were going to Cannes with jungle fever and I was like oh so we're going to can and he's like no just to stars
Starting point is 00:22:41 it's like really okay fine and I went on with my life and they go along and I call my agent and said you know Hollywood call the day she said matter of fact they did It seems as though they created some award for you at the Cannes Film Festival for Jungle Fever. And I don't know what? They don't give supporting actor awards. No, they created one for you. Like, oh, okay, fine.
Starting point is 00:23:06 So do I have to go? No. But they do want to see you in Hollywood for this movie and you got a meeting with these people. Oh, wow. So I get that job and I go and Spike's getting ready to shoot Malcolm X. and these people hire me to do white sands, and they offer me more money than I made probably in the last 10 years. And Spike calls about Malcolm X,
Starting point is 00:23:32 I'm going to do this movie now. I'm sorry. And we kind of fall out behind that. But that's when, you know, things started to click over. Because while I was doing white sands, I ended up going back to L.A. to interview with Harrison Ford for Patriot games. Right. They were doing, this was the first time I'd ever heard of cast approval.
Starting point is 00:23:56 Harrison had cast approval. So because I was going to be this guy who was with him all the time, and they wanted to see what kind of relationship I would have with him or if I ate with a knife and fork or whatever. It was crazy. So I went to Hollywood to do that, and while I was there, I started talking to him about this friend of mine, he'd done a film with Bill Nunn.
Starting point is 00:24:14 Bill Nunn was my college roommate. And I was going to get you and a friend of mine, Billy did this movie together, and that was it. I was in. I was locked. So I did White Sands. Then I did Patriot Games. I got like a three-pictor deal at Morgan Creek, and that never worked out.
Starting point is 00:24:31 And then another three-picts deal at Paramount somewhere else, but that didn't work out. It's really amazing how jaded you get, how quickly you get jaded. Right, right. It's insane. You know, you go from getting, you know, 40, 50 grand to do six weeks of work. and then somebody tells you, yeah, well, this next movie we want you to do, it's going to be 10 weeks, but we've only got like 150 grand. 10 weeks and no 150 grand?
Starting point is 00:24:58 I hadn't heard my name on 150 grand the same sentence ever. But, you know, it happens really quick. Right. And he's crazy. And he finally go, snap out of it. Yeah, right. Take that money. So is it fair to say, Sam, that jungle fever was like the big leap for you in terms of like,
Starting point is 00:25:12 okay, Hollywood accepts me now. They've created a ward it can for me. I don't know if they accepted me because, interesting. They liked you, though. Interestingly enough, a lot of people really thought, it's like my aunt had this friend. And I was staying in her house and she had just seen Jungle Fever. Her friend was there. She'd just seen Jungle Fever.
Starting point is 00:25:33 She was telling my aunt about the movie and about this crackhead that Spike Lee had found him to do his movie. But, you know, the movie's over now. So he's back on the streets. He's homeless and smoking crack. And I came out of the back of the house. Like, hi. And she's like, oh, my God, it's him. I was like, yes, it's my nephew, Sam.
Starting point is 00:25:52 He's not back on the street. That's incredible. Yeah, so why did I say that? Well, we were just saying that. Oh, because that was the transition. Yeah. All right. So, yes, that happened.
Starting point is 00:26:02 And I was doing, by the time I got diehardt was when Pope Fiction was getting ready to come out. Yeah. So we're shooting Diehard when Pope Fiction starts to get some buzz here and there. So Bruce and I go to Cannes and Pulp Fixion wins. And everybody, you know, like all up in the air of Bruce is like, yeah, the movie's good, but this movie's going to change your life. It's like, really? It's like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:31 Believe me, when this movie comes out, your life will never be the same. And he was right. Because when Die Hard came out, it was the highest grocery movie worldwide that year. And it turned me into an international figure. Now, as popular as Pulp Fiction was, they still couldn't show that movie in the U.K. and a bunch of other countries because of whatever the restrictions on. Right. So when die hard happened, I became an international figure.
Starting point is 00:26:57 It was like the first time I got to go to Asia and walk around, and I was asking the guy, so who are the popular black actors in Asian? You know, well, Asians generally know, no, they know Will Smith, Eddie Murphy, and who do you tell me? Denzel. I was like, really? He's like, yeah, that's pretty much it. So why are these people whispering and smiling when I walk by them and pointing at me? He was like, oh, I guess that'll change.
Starting point is 00:27:26 They know who you are. It's like, yeah, I think so. So things started to change at that point, but Bruce was right. That hard changed the whole dynamic of everything. And is the story true, Sam, that you actually auditioned for Reservoir Dogs for Tarantino, didn't get the part, but he liked you enough that when Pulp Fiction was kind of picking up steam, he called you for that off that audition? No?
Starting point is 00:27:48 But I actually went in to audition. And I read with Quentin and Lawrence Bender, the producer, not knowing who they were. I just knew they were really terrible actors. And I left there thinking, I didn't get this job. They suck. And I didn't. But I went to Sundance for some reason that year. I was at Sundance.
Starting point is 00:28:07 And I went to the first greeting of Reservoir Dogs. And after it was over, I went up to Quentin to tell them how much I liked it. and realized, oh, you're that dude. And he's like, yeah, how's you like the guy who got your part? I'm like, what? You remember me? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm writing something right now for you.
Starting point is 00:28:24 I was like, oh, okay. Wow. And sure enough, I went off, and two weeks later, I got the Pope Fiction script. I was in West Virginia shooting a PBS film and the script came. And I thought, oh, he was right. So that was 25 years ago. The anniversary of the release is coming up this fall, 25 years.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Can was... That would make it 26 or so then. Right. Because it was a year or so prior to that. Right. When you had that meeting. So the film came out 25 years ago. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:54 And just as a practical matter to your life, what did that mean? When Pulp Fiction came out, how did your life change? With the combination, I guess, of Die Hard, of people knowing you... Well, Die Hard, Die Hard, didn't come out until almost a year after Pulitzer. Right. But that time... Because we were shooting it at that time. Right.
Starting point is 00:29:13 But I became like this, like, you know, cult figure. Because interestingly enough, when we went to Cannes, I was the one person that people peripherally knew. They weren't sure if I was that guy from Junglefield, even though I was the only, you know, I had my hand and footprints there for some reason. Somehow that happened. I don't even know how that happened. I don't even know if they're mine. They may be somebody else. But there's a block with my name on it.
Starting point is 00:29:44 I don't remember doing it. But going to Cannes and everybody knew everybody in the cast kind of except me. Yeah. So by the time the film won the award and then we came back and they started that Academy campaign, there was so much going on around that that I was kind of brand new to and didn't understand. And so when the manipulation of the nominations were happening, I was like, well, wait a minute. they didn't want to put me and John in the same category because they said we would cancel each other out.
Starting point is 00:30:20 So I'm like, well, who's the lead actor and who's not? Right. So I got put in supporting and John got put in lead. And I'm like, well, okay, he's in a movie more than I am. I thought in my head. So that's how it works. And I'll go in this other category, I guess. And that was a lot of talk about, oh, my God,
Starting point is 00:30:42 you were amazing in the movie and da-da-da-da. You're going to win. But, you know, Martin's been nominated a lot of times. You're going to be around for a long time. What the hell is that made? They're setting me up for something. And sure enough, you know, I would go to all these things. I went to the Golden Globes.
Starting point is 00:31:02 I went to whatever else there was. Martin didn't win, but that was another actor who won. What was the actor's name who died that year? Hispanic actor. Who that was? He was a great actor, too. Well, he did a lot of theater, but he was winning most of the awards. And then by the time we got to the Academy Award and they said,
Starting point is 00:31:28 Martin Landau, Ed Wood, I was kind of like, what? I think I cursed. I think I might be one of the few people in that little box that said, shh. I think me and my wife left. Did you? We're out. We're done.
Starting point is 00:31:45 Yeah, we're done. Do awards mean a lot to you or anything to you, Sam? Would it be nice to have one of those trophies on the shelf? I guess so. I'd rather have a green jacket. A lot more people would remember who won the green jacket than who won the Academy Award last year. I mean, if I said who won Best Actor last year, you'd have to stop and think. Yeah, you're right.
Starting point is 00:32:06 But I got Tiger like that. Yeah, right. So you get it. Bang. So there you have it. Yeah. Stick around to hear more from Samuel L. Jackson on the Sunday Sitdown podcast, including what's next for the legendary actor.
Starting point is 00:32:19 Welcome back to the Sunday Sit Down podcast. Now more of my conversation with Samuel L. Jackson. What's the secret, Sam, to you, your long marriage, obviously having a great wife helps, in Hollywood, and to be in it for so long. It's not just in Hollywood. But I mean, people view celebrity marriages. It's more difficult.
Starting point is 00:32:39 Why? I don't know. Marriage just fall apart all over the place. Marriage fall apart in the projects and suburbs. It doesn't matter where you are. Doctors have the same problems. Lawyers have the same problems. People go, well, you know, you have more access to beautiful women.
Starting point is 00:32:52 Really? You know, I don't think so. It's whatever it is, or the temptations are greater. No, temptations aren't greater. Same thing. I go to grocery store and see the same people you see in traffic. You know, so it's not that. It's the commitment to that other person and what that means to you
Starting point is 00:33:10 in terms of your shared history. and I guess being mature enough at a certain point to say to yourself, how would that other person feel if I gave into this desire? Okay, it's a passing thing. It's not something, you know, feelings ain't facts for what they used to say to me in rehab, you know, just a feeling. Take a deep breath, it'll go by, you know, or play the whole tape in your head of, what do you think's going to happen after you do that?
Starting point is 00:33:42 you do that. Marriage changes the dynamic of how we perceive ourselves because we have to start thinking of someone else. The selfishness of who you are has to be subjugated in a very interesting kind of way, especially when you have kids also. That becomes a whole other kind of dynamic. But what kind of person do I want to present to the kid? what kind of family unit do we want to look like.
Starting point is 00:34:15 And both of us are products of like broken homes. So we understand what it means or the value in our heads of having two people there that have a unified front of sorts that gets destroyed from time to time. Sometimes you know you're wrong, right? But being able to show what a family is and to create something that's going to last in that little person that watches how you and that other person react to each other and treat each other and define what love, compassion, and responsibility is. So there are days when you say you're sorry and you're not because that's just being, sure. That's what you do. And like my wife says, you have to have a certain amount of amnesia. I know what you mean. You let the amnesia sit and, you know, settle with it. And sometimes,
Starting point is 00:35:27 I mean, you just swallow it. And you become a strong unit for it. You become a better human being. You learn how to do something or or or to accept something about another person that you wouldn't accept in other people. Or there's a specific, a special person that deserves that kind of respect, that kind of understanding and that kind of tolerance that makes you a better person in the end and makes you a strong family unit because of it. It sounds like there's some element for you of wanting to create something for your daughter that you didn't have growing up with your mom writing the wrongs of the past in some ways yeah well I can't write the wrongs of the past but doing it better yeah yeah write my own story yeah so what's next for you
Starting point is 00:36:18 Sam because you're a busy man you got a lot of projects is there something out there now is there something out there that you haven't done because you've been in every kind of movie not really I keep thinking about going back to the theater though just because my wife was in to play for the last year. She's been doing to play for a year. So I've been in and out of here and going to shows and, you know, kind of thinking about it. Maybe not being on location so much as I have been and kind of being in one place and doing eight shows a week and hearing the live audience and smell the grease paint.
Starting point is 00:36:53 Do that. I kind of want that for a minute. It might be a nice deep breath for you. Yeah. Right. I'm thinking about it. Yeah. And I like to go back on vacation, so.
Starting point is 00:37:01 He screwed that up this year. We'll see. Sam, thanks for the time, man. Great talking to you. Not a problem. My big thanks to the great Samuel L. Jackson for that conversation. You can catch his new movie Shaff in theaters now. And my thanks as always to all of you for tuning in this week to hear more of the full-length conversations with all my guests.
Starting point is 00:37:22 Make sure you click subscribe so you never miss an episode. And don't forget to tune into Sunday today every weekend on NBC. I'm Willie Geist. We'll see you right back here next week on the Sunday Sit Down podcast.

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