The Interview - Chloé Zhao Is Yearning to Know How to Love
Episode Date: January 24, 2026The “Hamnet” director on trying to overcome her deepest fears — and open her heart.Thoughts? Email us at theinterview@nytimes.comWatch our show on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheInterviewPodcastFor ...transcripts and more, visit: nytimes.com/theinterview
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From the New York Times, this is the interview.
I'm David Markeesie.
Chloe Zhao is an anomaly.
At only 43, with just five feature films under her belt,
she's already established herself as one of cinema's most distinctive and distinguished directors.
And she's done it at a time when the movie business is increasingly averse to artistic risk and originality.
Qualities on display in all her work.
She started with independent film, including the sparsely poetic neo-Western Nomad Land,
which won Academy Awards for Best Picture and for Zhao Best Director.
She then tried her hand at an ambitious mega-budget Marvel movie, Eternals.
And her latest is last fall's heart-wrenching drama Hamnet,
an adaptation of Maggie O'Farrell's historical novel
about the death of Shakespeare's young son from the plague
and the grief his parents experienced after.
It won two Golden Globes and is up for several Academy Awards,
including Best Director.
So how has she done it?
Because as I learned firsthand,
Zhao is an enigmatic, even somewhat mystical presence in person.
Not exactly the sort of hot-shot personality we often associate with big-time Hollywood directors.
But as it turns out, Zhao isn't much interested in simple or straightforward answers.
Here's my conversation with Chloe Zhao.
Chloe, thank you for taking the time to come speak with us today.
I appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
I want to start with an award season question.
Your eyes just glazed over a little.
No, it's excitement.
Yeah, that was a look of excitement, yeah.
Like an animal in the jungle.
There's obviously a lot of award season buzz around Hamnet,
and by the time this interview comes out,
we'll know what nominations the film did or didn't get.
But right now, the thing that I'm curious about
is sort of what the whole awards rigamarole
stirs up for you because I imagine it could involve feelings like of envy or competition or it involves
salesmanship or glad-handed, which I feel like are not necessarily the kinds of feelings or ideas
that are interesting to you or come naturally to you. So how do you deal with this moment?
I love that that's almost like a form of compliment you just did. You think of me a lot more highly
then.
Maybe you like doing it.
I don't know.
But I think all those quite basic emotions,
none of us can escape it, right?
And especially artists, so many of us,
majority of us,
started telling stories because we didn't have the easiest childhood.
So when your work, right,
which is the only way that you can see connection
and validation since you're a little child
is being compared and judged.
You could go as far as feeling a rejection of that
is a rejection of who you are
and your ability to belong to a tribe
or be safe or be loved.
You could go that far.
And it does go that far to me at times.
But what I like about it,
I don't know if people know,
is that filmmaking is quite of a lonely process,
at least speaking as direct,
director, you're like a Ronan, you know, you're like a samurai.
A wandering samurai. Yeah, you're getting hired to do jobs and jobs and jobs. And then
you create this family and then you have to leave again. So a worst season, especially
if someone like me who came up from independent films and having to go festivals and
labs after laps to even get money to grants and to make my first film, I was exposed to
a lot of my fellow filmmakers
over a decade ago.
So to be paid,
to be brought together
and to see each other
and to hang out at these,
you know, events and roundtables and stuff,
it's actually really nice.
I try to ask them to let me come to their set
and just shadow people.
I think there should be a system
where directors get to be on each other's set.
Otherwise, how do we keep learning?
What do you think someone could learn from watching you work?
How to embrace chaos.
I mean, pretty much Hamnet was created that way.
For example, when Hamnet died, spoiler alert.
I don't think you can spoil this one.
It's a historical fact.
Yeah.
Someone died, someone wrote a play.
Hamnet died and on that day, Jesse and I would not talk about.
We don't really talk about the scene coming in.
She would, in the morning, she would do a lot of fever writing about her dreams,
and then she would pick some music.
And so as soon as I get to set, I will just put the music on repeat.
So the whole set sort of got harmonized to the vibration she wants to be vibrating in.
and other than a conversation about which setup we want to do,
we're just going in there and do it.
And so when she light out that very natural scream of grief,
that was now something that was planned from me nor her.
But I do believe it didn't just come from her.
It came from the collective, the village.
And when that happens, I can feel it.
And it's the most exciting thing for me as a,
director because I go, there's no way any of us could have thought of that. And because that is
truth happening in the moment. And I will bottle that up and I will defend it in the edit and I'll
make sure it goes into the world. You know, it's so interesting to hear you talk about the
practicalities of directing for you. Because, you know, often when I've heard other directors talk or
read about other directors, there's recurring images or tropes of how a director behaves that are,
You know, it's like, I want to say, it's Francis Ford Coppola who said this, I could be wrong, but he compared being a director to like being a ringmaster of a circus that's inventing itself every day.
Or sometimes you hear directors compared with generals or something like that.
And these are all sort of very, to my mind, kind of like alpha, aggressive macho metaphors for the job of directing on the day.
That's great too.
But it's so not what you're describing.
And I just wonder if you could talk a little bit about how you hand.
the necessary leadership aspects of being a director and making a movie.
You know, I like thinking about myth.
If you think about in myth and in archetypes, what are the types that can lead traditionally?
Yes, you have a general, but you also have a priestess.
Both can evoke the desire for people to get excited to follow the,
vision. Doesn't mean that the example you give of what Francis, you know, said that he is that,
then I'm this. Both of these two archetypes within ourselves. So there is a general inside of me,
but there's also a pristice inside of me. It just depends on the scene. It depends on the film.
And some filmmakers have a bit more pristice energy in them than general, but both can leave.
and both are needed.
If you only have the priestess, it's total chaos.
Black hole.
If you only have the general, it's total order and just one beam of light and nothing else.
But I like to be in those two extreme polarities.
I suppose to constantly kind of have my hands and everything, controlling everything,
but also not fully controlling everything.
No, I like to be total surrender and then total control.
I have kind of a historically inclined question for you.
Okay.
So in Shakespeare's time, the time period in which Hamnet is set, the death of a child was a much more common occurrence than it is now, at least in rich Western countries.
And I assume that as a result of that, people just had a different perspective on what it meant to lose a child or different feelings or expectations.
expectations. And I'm just curious how you thought about that with your film and if you think
it's possible to recreate older emotional perspectives. That's a really good question. I think about
that all the time. Maggie said that she doesn't believe it's possible that the grief is any less.
Maggie O'Farrell, the author. The author, yeah. She said that to me from the same.
start. And I tend to agree with her because even though things are so different, our biology hasn't
changed. And the design that we have to want to protect a child would not change. However,
the stories we attach to that pain, which is suffering, might be different because they also
have a different relationship with the unseen back then. Right? You know, I recently trained
to be a death dula. Really? In the UK, I just finished level one training, foundational training,
and then one of the training sessions, we had to research indigenous cultures from around the
world, how they deal with death and dying both today and also in the past. And you can see that
the grief of losing a loved one doesn't change, right? However, the societal understanding of what death
is and the space it gives to grief and the ceremonies and how it's embedded in the culture has
shifted so much and the medicalization of death, right? And also in the modern world,
when death is no longer seen as a natural part of life, because now it's about seeing
alive as long as we can, there's almost some kind of shame around death because it's weak
or something or it shouldn't happen. So there's so much of that starting being attached to death
and dying that actually cause suffering that's not natural to the human condition. So I think
that's different. I want to rip up all my questions and ask you more about wanting to be a death duo.
We have another session in a few days. Why are you interested? Why are you interested?
in becoming a death dula?
Because I have been terrified of death my whole life.
I still am so afraid.
And because I've been so afraid,
I haven't been able to live fully.
I haven't been able to love with my heart open
because I'm so scared of losing love,
which is a form of death.
So when you're in your form,
40s, which is great, by the way,
midlife crisis is the best thing that can happen to you.
Because what it does is you're on your way to a rebirth.
You can't run from this feeling.
Your body is changing and you can feel death.
And I, because I'm so scared of it,
I have no choice but to start to develop a healthier relationship with it.
Or I'm not going to make it.
The second half of life would be too hard.
So it's a way of facing your feelings.
fear. It's a way of understanding because making Hamid help me understand that I just know there is
another way. I just have a feeling that whoever designed this have decided that you will be born
and then die. You will love deeply, but then lose love. It's almost like a cosmic joke. We're
the only one in nature that have a problem with that process. Yeah.
we must be designed to know how to die.
It shouldn't be this terrifying that I can't even live.
That must be not the intention.
It's not this terrifying to everyone.
I hope not.
But I do know that a lot of the issues we have in the world
comes from ultimately that deep fear of death.
Are you afraid of your own non-existence?
Are you afraid of the pain of death?
I think it's impermanence.
Yeah.
You know, the impermanence.
So in Hamlet,
right?
Yeah. There's a line that goes, all living things must die, passing through nature to eternity.
If in your life, eternity doesn't exist, right? Because you didn't grow up with spirituality or
relation. So the eternity part is out. You also lost your connection with nature, even your own
body, your own body wisdom. Then passing through nature part of that sentence is gone,
all you have left is all living things must die.
That's no fun, you know?
And that's like, wait, well, then what's the point?
You know, so you sort of separate it from the oneness.
But for me, I feel separated often from that oneness.
And that illusion of separation makes me afraid to connect,
makes me afraid to create freely or even just live in the way I want to live.
you alluded to a midlife crisis.
Is that something you're currently experiencing?
I'm kind of at the...
So if it's four seasons, I'm at the end of winter, beginning of spring.
And I'm coming back up.
So actually, a better metaphor, I like metaphor, speaking a metaphor, because it makes more sense to me.
In the chrysalis period, I have passed the...
deepest part of the decomposing from the caterpillar.
Let's put it that way, which was extremely uncomfortable about a year and a half of just sitting
there, having every part of who you used to be grinded down.
When you tell me, what did that look like for you?
It looks like getting out of bed is hard, you know, being interested in anything,
just getting through the day because everything that I used to use to distract myself
or everything that I thought is what I want.
in life and everything will be fine if I get them, or everything that I thought is who I was
no longer is.
So I'm sort of at the end of that.
And Hamne, by the way, was what saved me in many ways to have that film during that time.
And you said you struggled to connect with people, struggled to feel love.
That's very sad.
You have no struggle?
I mean, I have tons of struggles in my life.
But when you talk about not feeling,
are you talking about having problems with feeling love in relationships,
with your family?
I just want to know more about what you mean about that.
If you're terrified of being abandoned,
right, cast out the tribe,
then you don't make an effort to belong
or truly love from a place of vulnerability.
and trust, right?
And that's really sad
because I don't think we're designed
to be alone, to do it alone.
We're designed as like, like, like,
like, like, pack people and tribe.
But to be cast out of your tribe,
it's the most painful thing you can experience
or to be abandoned by people that, you know,
that you love and that love you.
doesn't even mean intentionally.
Yeah.
You know, some day could die.
Can I take a stab at something?
You tell me...
Yeah, I can discern.
And all my publicists can come in and throw a bottle at you, one or the other.
You know, when you talk about being cast out of your tribe or...
I'm discerning.
What do you mean?
I know what you're going to say.
I'm going to ask about family stuff.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
You grew up in China and then moved to the United States when you were, you were going to the United States,
when you were 14?
No, actually I moved to the UK.
UK first.
Yeah.
Was there some sort of familial separation there that's related to the casting out you're talking about?
I can't really go into it, but I will answer it the best I can,
is that it is an investigation I have been doing in the last four years of where
is that come from, you know, and I think it's a lot older than, I feel like even in this life,
I really do. You know, you started by asking me about a worse season, right? It feels like a long time
ago. But it's relevant because what is this fear of failing? Yeah. What is this fear when my film,
you know, gets rejected by the critics? What is this feeling if the box is. It's not. The
box office is terrible. You know, what if I lose every, you know what? I look around at an award show,
right? And I look at the tables. And then when the winners announce, and I look at the faces of the
people who didn't win. And I try to feel like, what are they feeling? Yeah. And at best,
it's like, that person must have had an easier childhood. At worst, it's like, I don't belong.
They reject me. I might as well just die.
Do you think people sitting around the tables at award shows are having that feeling?
I think there's a few probably, and probably more than that.
Yeah.
Because then, you know, what if work is your sense of belonging?
You know, what if you feel like you don't belong anywhere but with your family?
And then what if your family is gone?
Yeah.
It makes me realize any kind of belonging has a risk of being cast out.
And then you have to ask this, you know, people might rather have to.
when I say this, but that kind of home, the one that cannot be taken away, is the one within
and is the one that you connect with the divine, with this great mystery that you have different,
different culture of different word for it. And if you do a US scale ceremony or plant medicine,
you feel that, that whenness. And you have no fear in those moments, right? That's why, you know,
Warriors would take medicine before they go into.
Have you done ayahuasca ceremonies?
No comment.
No, I have not done ayahuasca ceremony.
I have experienced facilitated plant medicine healing journeys by my therapist.
And I've experienced that kind of oneness that when all the stuff goes away, you really do feel like you're one with everything and truly no fear, you know.
And so to answer your question about did it happen when I left China to go to school, you know, or did it happen when a film of my didn't work out?
Did it happen when?
Yeah.
I'm trying to locate the source of the feeling you're talking about.
And that is, I tried that for many, many years because we have to understand why.
Yeah.
Right?
We must know because that's how we feel safe.
we must understand why this thing happened.
But I sort of got to a point where I realized that even the need to understand where it came from
is a form of control and it's a form of fear.
And I let that go a little bit and now it's more about can I sit in that.
And maybe that is the great paradox of what it means to be human.
you know, it is to constantly hold that attention of to be or not to be, to love or to be abandoned.
This is a long way for me to avoid your question.
Because I think this could be interpreted very simplistically if I were to try to pinpoint one moment in my life that this made me.
And I think we try to look at trauma that way.
Yeah.
Because once you pinpoint it, then you can fix it.
But it's not like that.
Sorry, I'm not giving you all you.
That's okay.
It's also just thinking, when he brought up the to be or not to be it,
the stupid thought of my head was like, oh, that William Shakespeare really had some good ideas.
That guy, dude, that guy, I have to say, I really.
Underrated.
Underrated.
Shakespeare.
I used to think, oh, you know, he just, right, you know.
But then I think he is actually like a jurid, you know, I think.
I really do.
I think he's tapped into the unseen.
Because the symbolism, the archetype that he creates,
it's been used in depth psychology.
You know, it's so mirroring all the great myth around the world.
You go, he must be on something.
Or maybe there were mushrooms growing in Strathford.
I mean, so.
I mean, so.
I got to say, some of his plays, you think he must.
beyond something.
I didn't say that, by the way.
I did not.
Shakespeare's not going to have a problem.
To suggest William Shakespeare
Talk Mushroom.
The director of Hempner did not say that.
But maybe.
But maybe.
So the question I want to end on
for this part of the conversation is,
you know, there was a German sociologist
named Max Weber.
No.
It's like the late 19th century, earlier 20th century,
and he had this idea that the modern world has become disenchanted
that because of science and rationality,
that we've lost a sense of enchantment about the world
that people who lived in a pre-modern time,
it was just their birthright was to have a sense of enchantment about the world.
Right.
Ah.
Ah, yeah.
Or, you know, you might, one might have felt that spirits were present
or ghosts were present.
But my hunch is that you do experience enchantment.
Is that true?
And also how might one cultivate a sense of enchantment?
Beautiful question.
Really?
I have deep feelings about that question.
And it is a passion I have now to sort of search
for bringing back some tools of cultivating
that enchantment for everyone.
Everyone should have access to that,
not just people who are artists
or people who went to school to study.
And I do have to,
Plato and Aristotle did great things,
but I do have some problems with them as well.
I think they talk.
Hot take.
I think, I feel, right,
again, I know very little.
I won't claim I know,
but my instinct makes me feel that there were students of great mystics.
And then for whatever reason,
they seem to be leaving out of the mystery part out of a lot of their teachings.
Instead, they did keep it for themselves, you know,
but the bedrock of Western civilization became about rationality and reason.
as opposed to the mystery.
So I feel because of that,
suddenly only certain people have access to the divine,
to the unseen, to the underworld.
However, you want to name this realm
where great messages comes from.
You shouldn't have to pay money
to feel you're connected to some kind of bigger thing
because a pop star is the only person
who has that connection with the divine.
Actually, you yourself, waking up in the morning,
has those tools to feel that kind of aliveness and enchantment.
So then creativity, imagination,
and this access to something beyond
became something that only if you have certain skills
to learn in a school,
do you have access to.
Yeah.
And so as a result,
there's a spiritual hangar in modern life.
Doesn't matter how.
We have so much more.
And yet there's a deep loneliness and soul level of anger and emptiness that I have felt in my life and still struggling with.
And I think it's because we forgot that we have that ability.
Chloe, thank you so much for talking with me today.
I really enjoyed it.
I did too.
Thank you.
After the break, I talked to Chloe again.
and she tells me about the surprising way she coped with uncertainty when she was growing up.
I would spend hours and hours and hours and hours playing Sims so that I could control these virtue of characters.
Hello, David?
Hi, Chloe. I've been looking forward to speaking with you again, so thank you for making the time.
Of course.
I felt like our first conversation kind of was really the energy kept accumulating.
We got deeper and deeper the longer we went, and now it's been a little while since we spoke,
it might be a little difficult to get right back into it.
Well, when we're on set, if that happens, we take a minute and we drop in physically.
How do you drop in physically?
How do you drop in physically?
Yeah, what do you do?
Okay, so put your hand in front of you like this.
Yeah, it doesn't have to, you don't have to lift it all the way up.
And then just like move towards this slowly and stop when you can feel the other hand.
Move my hand close together.
Yeah, and just very slowly.
And then at some point you're going to feel the energy of the other hand.
Like there's a ball in there.
Do you feel it?
Sure.
Yeah, exactly. It's right there. Close your eyes. Yeah. And then can you like, light that energy between your hand just grow a little bit? You're going to feel that your palm getting warmer. Like you're forming a ball. Yeah. Like dragon ball Z, you know. You're about to fire.
All right. All right. You open your eyes.
All right. Let's just do it. Let's just do it. We're ready. We're ready. So I just want to ask one more question about your adolescence or your form of years.
Sure. And now I know the director, Terrence Malick, was important for you or is important for you. Yeah. And I have a distinct memory of being 16 years old and seeing Terence Malick's thin red line and then Wes Anderson's Rushmore.
maybe within the same week when they came out in the theaters back then.
And it was a totally mind-blowing week of movie going for me,
both because I didn't really understand that movies could do what those two movies did,
and also because I felt like something about both those two films in different ways,
they showed me something that I already understood about myself,
but hadn't quite really been able to articulate for myself
or scene depicted in a film.
And as a result, I think it really, both those films, I can say, kind of changed, in some ways, changed who I was at the time and maybe still now.
And I want to know if you have any similar experiences with film, where you saw films and then after seeing them understood yourself better.
What was it when you said you feel like it made you understand what the things that you couldn't quite?
Yeah.
By what was it?
With a thin red line, there was a, you've seen that movie, right?
Yeah, of course.
Sorry.
So it's Terrence Malick World War II.
The simplest way of describing it would be Terrence Malick's World War II drama.
I think it's one of the greatest war films ever made.
But despite being a war film or maybe because of being a war film, the thing that touched me so deeply was that there was a mysticism in that movie and a transcendental feeling about the natural world.
and a transcendent visual poetry to that film
that I hadn't seen in a movie before that,
that I just felt connected with so deeply.
And then with Rushmore,
there was a combination of alienation
and open-heartedness
that I certainly had been feeling back then.
Yeah.
And then, again, just to see it represented so beautifully,
like I said, felt like it made me understand something about myself.
Oh, that's really beautiful.
I think it was
One Carways happy together
A beautiful movie
Yeah
And of course
Terrans Malik's Tree of Life
and the New World
But happy together
It was when I was younger
And
What you describe
Your experience
I mean that is the reason
Why we have art
And storytelling
It's not trying to teach us
Something that we don't know
It's trying to
to help us remember who we are, to bring us back to the source. So for me, that film made me
realize that this deeply uncomfortable tension I feel in my body, this yearning that sometimes
feels like it's just going to consume me, it is actually this loneliness, this isolation,
that film captured, on the other side of it is actually my deep, deep yearning for connection
and for relatedness and for love and that there's nothing wrong with it.
And that film is full of mystery.
So is the thin right line.
And that's why when we're going through our greatest heartbreak and most difficult time,
we don't look for facts.
We look for poetry because it allows us.
to stay in the mystery.
I have to tell you a quick little anecdote about Tree of Life.
That's the one that has the flashbacks to like the time of dinosaurs, right?
Yeah.
I remember seeing that movie at the BAM theaters in Brooklyn, the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
And there was an older couple sitting beside me who I'm sure bought a ticket for that movie
because they thought it was just a Brad Pitt movie.
You didn't really understand what they were getting into.
And they were sort of muttering to each other the whole.
whole time. And then there's one scene in that film where like a predator dinosaur puts its foot
on the chest of a smaller dinosaur. Yes. But then lets the smaller dinosaur go. And you're just,
because he was already dying. Already dying. It's like the dinosaur has, you know,
shown an act of mercy. It's like a pretty wild, wild film. And the lady beside me just says,
Morris, what is this movie? Got up and walked out of them.
Oh, that's such a big moment that's thing for me.
Yeah.
Because he is suggesting that grace is the natural state of the universe.
And that's what Terry believes in.
I've seen that film.
I don't know how many times.
As many times I've seen Happy Together.
Yeah, I have never met him.
Terence Mallee.
Never spoken to him.
Mm-hmm.
But on January 1st this year, I got a phone call from a...
unknown number, well, a number I don't recognize. I thought it was the dog workers I was
interviewing. I said, hello, and then I hear this very soft voice and goes, hello, this is Terrence.
Oh, no. I was thinking, Terence, which Terrence? For the first 30 seconds, I was still wondering if
it was actually him as he's talking about Hamnet. Oh, what are he saying?
to you. I can't share that.
Give me the gist.
Because Terrence Malick, you know, famously,
he doesn't give interviews. I mean,
as far as the media is concerned,
is reclusive. Yeah, it was surreal.
But I won't share what he said,
but I can share with you.
This is something that
go back to the right line.
I said to him that
I feel
that I come from
a lineage that is
found, not necessarily.
like I'm still trying to get back to the lineage of storytellers from my own culture,
from the Chinese culture. I'm slowly working my way there. But I didn't have access to that,
just life circumstances. You know, I came to the West. And I was, even as a storyteller,
wasn't sure what's my lineage. And so his films allowed me to become a part of a lineage.
I feel that I come from his lineage.
You know, even though he never told me as a student or I didn't give him a choice, I told him.
But it is very significant as a storyteller because you feel like you belong somewhere.
It's also nicer to say I come from his lineage rather than I rip him off with all those shots of wind gently blowing through natural landscape.
yesterday funny you said that. I said, there's a fine line between what I just said. And I pretty much
copied a lot of yours. He says, oh, no, no, I have no shame around that. In Eternals,
the sequence of the creation of the universe was very humbly inspired by the sequence of
life. You will see exact shots.
There's something I want you to try and help me understand a little bit more about you.
You know, you talk about your desire for connection, but then you also described yourself as someone who has never been able to give love fully.
And I wonder, is it that you're able to express that side of you through your work, but not so much in life?
Like, neither your work nor you seems like they're evidence of someone who has a problem with connection.
Oh, you can't judge book by his cover.
No.
Well, thank you.
That's really kind, by the way.
But, you know, you make the work that you aspire to be.
Right?
And if you see in Hamlet, Well, couldn't express his grief, but he could write a play about it.
and then create such an intimate environment for people to grieve together.
But he himself may be hoping through the act of doing that, he himself could grieve.
And to give him that moment at the end of the film is the grace I'm giving to myself.
Say, hey, you worked pretty hard too.
So maybe hopefully your work can give it back to you the vulnerability that's required to love.
fully, to be loved fully. Also, I can see in your eyes the desire to figure out, like,
out of care for me as a human being, to figure out a definition so that we can make things
better, you know, like it's a meaning, I guess what I'm trying to say is,
unfortunately, I've learned, and I hate that discovery so much. I really, I really,
better resist it every day, is that we're just sort of wandering between the two extreme,
which is to be able to like really be in the moment and feel and then to love without fear.
And then total just like annihilation, just wanted to completely disappear into the end of the
world where no one can find me and I start over and I never have to worry about.
any of this, I find myself just ping ponging between the two. And I used to think something's
wrong with that. But at the end of the mid-life crisis, I feel like I came to the conclusion
at this moment, that's actually the natural state to be in. We've just never been taught
how to write this wave. Can I say, you know, I, because I like talking about this kind of stuff,
I feel like I have a sense of what you're talking about,
but I could also very easily imagine somebody listening to what you're saying
and thinking, what the hell is she talking about?
Well, okay, fine.
The easier version is that the easier version to digest is, you know, in nature,
everything moves.
And that's really scary because we want to hold down to something.
Listen, I'll give you another fun little adolescent story since that stuff seemed to be interesting
to people is that I was so afraid of change and the cycle and movement and being present to them.
I was so obsessed with Sims playing Sims so that I would spend hours and hours and hours and
playing Sims so that I could control these virtue of characters.
And even within Sims, I couldn't just let things be.
I would tap on it so that they would fall in love and then where they will have this job.
I would just control everything with such extreme to regulate myself.
Gosh, I played Sims for so long, years of my life.
I'd like to ask a little more about the work that you're doing as a death.
Dula, which you had mentioned before.
Training.
Training.
I have now started doing that work.
So you're just learning about it?
Yeah, I finished.
I completed the foundational course.
And then the next stage would be the diploma.
And then doing that stage, I believe I could practice, but with a mentor.
Have you ever been with someone at the moment of death?
Yes.
Have you?
I have, yeah.
Well, I can't tell you in general.
of what that is, because from what I learned in training, that every experience is different.
But the biggest thing I learned, both in that experience and also in the training, is that it's a solitary experience.
They say, oh, we'll die along.
It is true.
Even when you're surrounded by loved ones, it is a very internal solitary experience.
experience, just like birth as you're going through the birth canal. And when you see that it is a
very individual journey, there's a solace to that. You know, it made me realize I don't have to
accumulate and try to make life decisions so that I won't die alone because it's so scary to die
alone is not true. I know that for a fact, but I don't try, I'm not telling that to anyone out.
You know, everyone has their own journey to get to the,
but I do not want to spend my life preparing for my death.
You know, I want to live.
And if that decision led to me being completely on my own
in the moment of death,
I know that will make a difference for me
in those last moment than being surrounded by accomplishment,
security, loved ones.
It's still going to be an individual experience,
my experience.
That's also my experience.
I was with my mom when she died.
And my mom, it was interesting because I was there with a couple other close family members
there as well.
And my mom wanted us to all be there.
And just knowing the type of person who my mom was, I would have thought that she
wanted us to all maybe have our arms around her or something like that.
But it was so clear, sorry, it was so clear just in the few moments before it happened that she went somewhere on her own, you know.
So I also have witnessed the same sort of thing that you witnessed.
Wow.
How special it is that you were there to be with her in that moment.
Yeah.
I mean, I certainly don't see life the same way after that.
Of course, exactly.
You learn some things.
Exactly.
How do I segue out of that?
Let me find, oh, accomplishment.
That's what I was going to talk about.
That thing.
Earlier when we spoke, and it was mostly in the context of Hollywood awards and things
like that.
You touched on things like fear of rejection or wanting validation from peers, and it was
interesting for me to hear you talk about those feelings, because purely from the
outside, you're a...
Oscar-winning director seemingly in the prime of her career,
and even you have those kinds of difficult feelings
that arise from your professional life.
And I just wonder, is there any relationship for you
between professional success and personal satisfaction?
Ideally, ideally, your sense of self-worth is now defined
by how many awards you win
or how much money your film makes.
Ideally.
Or, you know, what the critics say about your film?
Ideally.
But as we have been talking about, the paradox,
but I'm trying to learn to be more human.
You know, because the reality is
you're going to be sort of dancing between the two.
It's like a wave, right?
And then that can happen in one day.
night when you go to a worst show. My goodness, it's the ups and downs that are going.
But imagine if you could go to those things and actually enjoy like a surfer every part of the wave.
And you actually like, can you have pleasure in losing and being criticized and failing?
I have been investigating that because I refuse because I know, I know now.
43 years old, 50% of the time is going to be that other side. 50% side is going to be great.
The other 50% is going to be shit. And I want to find pleasure and joy and all in the shit, too.
So I'm working on that.
How is it going for you learning to enjoy the shit?
I had a lot of shit, you know, in my life. And so I don't call it shit.
How it like the compost. It's the same thing. But you know, it's not something you can just say it.
You have to learn the tools. Plenty people are trying to figure this shit out because plenty
people come to terms with like, okay, half of my life is going to be in the compost and I want to learn how to compost.
I don't want to numb myself or buy a new bag or take on a job I don't want, you know,
or fall in love with somebody
like I don't actually love
just so that I could avoid
the feeling of sitting in the compost
or the chrysalis.
I want to learn how to do it
so I make good life decisions for myself.
Chloe, I think I've asked you everything I want to ask.
Thank you very much for taking all the time
to speak with me. I appreciate it.
Thank you for being very graceful and open.
That's Chloe Zhao.
Her movie Hamnet is in theater.
now. To watch this interview, and many others, you can subscribe to our YouTube channel at
YouTube.com slash ad symbol The Interview Podcast. This conversation was produced by Seth Kelly.
It was edited by Annabel Bacon, mixing by Sonia Herrerao. Original music by Dan Powell,
Leah Shaw-Damron, and Marion Lazano. Photography by Devin Yalkin. The rest of the team is Priya
Matthew, Wyatt Orm, Paola Newdorf, Andrew Carpinski, Joe Bill Munoz, Amy Marino, and Brooke
Minters. Our executive producer is Alison Benedict. Next week, Lulu talks with the Jesuit priest
Father James Martin about his new boss, Pope Leo. Look, his mission is to preach the gospel,
and if the gospel has political implications, so be it. I'm David Marquesi, and this is the interview
from The New York Times.
