Best Of: Guillermo Del Toro / Cameron Crowe
Also, we hear from Cameron Crowe, who wrote and directed Jerry Maguire, Say Anything and the semi-autobiographical film Almost Famous, about writing for Rolling Stone starting at age 15. His new memoir is about being a naive teen, exposed to the excesses of rock musicians.
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From WHYY in Philadelphia, this is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Sam Briger.
Today, Frankenstein. The classic story reimagined by the great filmmaker Guillaume del Toro.
Speaker 2 He saw the 1931 film when he was seven.
Speaker 3 I realized I understood my faith better through Frankenstein than through Sunday Mass.
Speaker 3 And I decided at age seven that the creature of Frankenstein was going to be my personal avatar and my personal messiah.
Speaker 2 His other films include Pan's Labyrinth and The Shape of Water.
Speaker 2 Also, we hear from Cameron Crowe, who wrote and directed Jerry Maguire, Say Anything, and the semi-autobiographical film Almost Famous, about writing for Rolling Stone starting at the age of 15.
Speaker 2 His new memoir, The Uncool, is about being a naive team exposed to the excesses of rock musicians.
Speaker 2 That's coming up on Fresh Air Weekend.
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This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Sam Brinker.
Here's Terry with our first interview.
Speaker 5 The great filmmaker Guillermo Del Toro has written and directed a new reimagining of Frankenstein.
Speaker 5 It takes inspiration from the 1931 film Frankenstein, one of the first best and most enduring horror monster films, but mostly from Mary Shelley's 1818 novel Frankenstein, which many consider to be the first science fiction book.
Speaker 5 She was only 18 when she wrote it. In Del Toro's movie, the final part of the story is told from the creature's point of view.
Speaker 5 Some of the themes of his new film echo themes that he's been obsessed with for years.
Speaker 5 Misunderstood creatures, men who behave like monsters, father-son relationships, religion, empathy, cruelty, misguided scientific experiments that take a terrible turn, and what Del Toro describes as the uneasy truce between science and religion, machine and man, and the realization that you are inescapably alone.
Speaker 5 His other movies include Pan's Labyrinth, The Shape of Water, which won four Oscars including Best Picture and Best Director, Nightmare Alley, A Reimagining of Pinocchio, filmed in stop-motion animation, and two Hellboy films.
Speaker 5 In Del Toro's Frankenstein, Oscar Isaac plays Dr. Victor Frankenstein, the surgeon who wants to create new life, a new man built out of body parts from the newly dead.
Speaker 5 The creature he creates is played by Jacob Alordi, who's best known for co-starring in Euphoria and also played Elvis Presley in the Sofia Coppola movie Priscilla.
Speaker 5 Del Toro grew up in Guadalajara, Mexico, and lives in L.A.
Speaker 5 Guillermo del Toro, welcome to Fresh Air. Congratulations on your new film, which brings together so much of your other work.
Speaker 5 And I know it's a dream come true for you to do your own version of Frankenstein. You first saw the movie, the 1931 movie, which is totally different from the book and your new movie.
Speaker 5 But that movie really had a hold on you. Tell us why it had such meaning for you.
Speaker 3 Well, it was curiously enough on a Sunday after Catholic Mass, we came back home and then we would watch horror movies on Channel 6 all day.
Speaker 3
And it was the first time I saw Frankenstein. And the moment Boris Karlov crossed the threshold, I had an epiphany.
I had a St. Paul on the road to Damascus kind of experience.
Speaker 3 I realized I understood my faith or my dogmas better through Frankenstein than through Sunday Mass. I saw the resurrection of the flesh, the Immaculate Conception, ecstasy,
Speaker 3 you know, stigmata, everything made sense. And I decided at age seven that the creature of Frankenstein was going to be my personal avatar and my personal messiah.
Speaker 3 It was a really profound transformation and it made an impression that lasted my whole life.
Speaker 5 Can you compare how you saw the story as a seven-year-old to how you see it now?
Speaker 3 Well, I saw it as a son when I saw it first, and now I see it as a father, and more poignantly, I have become my father,
Speaker 3 whilst trying to run away from the same mistakes of absence or, you know,
Speaker 3 mysterious emotions that I couldn't figure out as a kid.
Speaker 3 And I had a really profound moment to be able to reconcile this knowledge with a beautiful beautiful talk with my own kids and stop this lineage of
Speaker 3 pains. And, you know, fathers are a big shadow, particularly in Latin American families, I imagine.
Speaker 5 Aaron Powell, what's the pain you're referring to in touch with your relationship with your father?
Speaker 3 It is, my father
Speaker 3 was always a mystery and he was really funny and warm, but by turns he was also aloof and distant and had a lot of problem.
Speaker 3 Even when he came back from the kidnapping, he was taken 72 days, and I said, I'm going to get to know him real well.
Speaker 3 And our conversations never lasted more than a few minutes, you know, and he just couldn't. And
Speaker 3 I didn't understand that. And I realized that,
Speaker 3
particularly with my profession, I had a huge alibi to repeat this distance. And I fortunately cut it.
I believe on time to
Speaker 3 really change it and become a very dedicated father.
Speaker 5
You mentioned the kidnapping. He was kidnapped and held for a million-dollar ransom.
And you managed to get the money to pay the kidnappers and rescue your father. Yes.
Speaker 5 And that's my understanding is that's why you moved to the U.S. because of death threats.
Speaker 3 Yeah, well, it was the constant threat and the PTSD, et cetera. But a lot of the moments that happened during that kidnapping are actually obliquely reflected in the film.
Speaker 3 I tried to make it an autobiography of the soul for me.
Speaker 5 Trevor Burrus, Jr.: There's three parts of the movie: there's the introduction,
Speaker 5 then there's the story told pretty much from Dr. Frankenstein's point of view, and then the final part is told from the creature's point of view.
Speaker 5 I really wanted to read Mary Shelley's novel, which I've never read before speaking to you again,
Speaker 5 and I wasn't able to find the time to do it.
Speaker 5 I did, however, read your introduction to, like, I think it's a 2021 anecdoted version of your novel.
Speaker 5 But, anyways, in Mary Shelley's original telling of the story, is there a chapter that's from the creature's point of view, or is that just something you wanted to do?
Speaker 3 No, no, no.
Speaker 3
There are so many things that are in the novel. You know, that is one of them.
When the creature meets Victor in the frozen north, he says, Well, this is what happened to me.
Speaker 3 And he proceeds to tell him his itinerary of degradation and
Speaker 3 humanization and learning learning the language with
Speaker 3
the family of the hermit. You know, all of that is in the novel, but it's been rarely articulated.
And I found that
Speaker 3 hinging the movie in the middle was structurally the best way to make the audience almost get a jolt and say, oh, I've never seen this before.
Speaker 3 Even if it's been dramatized briefly in other versions, this is the one that tracks the creature in a distinct chapter. It starts in the frozen north and is very discreet in color.
Speaker 3 Then you have childhood and
Speaker 3 young age of Victor, which is
Speaker 3 idealized and very heightened visually by the fact that Victor is telling the story. And then the fairy tale, like
Speaker 5
I'm glad you said fairy tale. Yeah.
Because that seems to me like the part from Dr. Frankenstein's point of view
Speaker 5
has elements of like horror film and monster film. But the second part, it's set in the woods.
It's like a fairy tale.
Speaker 3 In a little cabin.
Speaker 5 Yeah, and
Speaker 5 the old blind man, it's kind of a very fairy tale, benevolent character. There are spirits in the woods.
Speaker 3 I mean, he's guided, the creature is guided by all sorts of animals into understanding the world.
Speaker 5 Yeah, and the
Speaker 5 blind old hermit thinks that because he can't see, he doesn't see the monster that other people see. And in fact, he thinks the creature is the spirit of the woods.
Speaker 1 Yes,
Speaker 3
that was very important to me that the three chapters were very distinct in style and very distinct in energy. The camera work is very different.
The color palette is very different.
Speaker 3 And I think that I would say, having seen most every version of
Speaker 3 Frankenstein on film,
Speaker 3 this is very unique.
Speaker 3 The scale of the movie, both being epic and intimate, is very unique. But the fairytale breadth of it all and the parable, it feels like a parable of the prodigal father, I'd say, jokingly.
Speaker 5 Are you trying to interpret Frankenstein?
Speaker 5 People always call the monster Frankenstein. Yeah.
Speaker 3 That's a mistake that can be
Speaker 1 from a play. Yeah.
Speaker 5 So are you trying to compare the creature
Speaker 5 in Frankenstein to Jesus?
Speaker 3
I think so. I mean, I think the parallels are very, very curious.
I triangulate the creature with Jesus and Pinocchio.
Speaker 5 Yeah, in your version of Pinocchio, and I don't know if this is in other stories or in the original fairy tale, Geppetto, who creates
Speaker 5 the puppet Pinocchio, also has built or carved, I should say, a huge depiction of
Speaker 5 Jesus being crucified and for the church.
Speaker 3 Yeah, no, that's completely original to
Speaker 3 me that the myths are very related.
Speaker 3 The two biggest mysteries in the Bible for me growing up, and I am a lapsed Catholic, but the two mysteries were the book of Job, in which man questions God, why do bad things happen to good people?
Speaker 3 And the answer basically of God is why not?
Speaker 5 It's very comforting the way you put it.
Speaker 3 Well, that's the way God put it. He says, who are you to question my wisdom? You were not there when I created the world, basically.
Speaker 5 When we talked a few years ago, you mentioned that your grandmother, who was very Catholic,
Speaker 5 exercised you. Not exercised, but as in an exorcism.
Speaker 5 She exorcised you twice.
Speaker 3 Yeah, with the holy water, yeah.
Speaker 5 Did you feel like people saw you as unholy and a sacrilege in the same way that people see the creature in Frankenstein? Yeah, in Scranton.
Speaker 5 And even Pinocchio, when Pinocchio was kind of rowdy in church, because he's never been there before, he doesn't understand what church is, the people in the church call him unholy and a sacrilege.
Speaker 1 Well, you know,
Speaker 3 I'm very used to not fitting.
Speaker 3 I'm always looking through the window into the world, you know, a little bit with a set of thoughts and a set of principles and ideas that don't necessarily conform.
Speaker 3 So my grandmother was in great pain that I would draw monsters all day. I would talk about the Bible, asking questions that were maybe too poignant.
Speaker 3
But we loved each other. And that is salient in my movies.
No matter how different we were, we can love each other. And that is, again, in Frankenstein.
Speaker 3 There's Frankenstein in all my movies, from Kronos all the way to Pinocchio. Every single movie, I hesitate to think of one that doesn't have elements of it.
Speaker 2
We're listening to Terry Gross's interview with Guillermo del Toro. He wrote and directed the new film Frankenstein.
We'll hear more of their conversation after a break.
Speaker 2 I'm Sam Brigger, and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
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Speaker 5 You could say in some ways that
Speaker 5 the creature in Frankenstein is like artificial intelligence because he's created by man but then lives on its own and can destroy men if,
Speaker 5 you know, without even understanding quite what he's doing.
Speaker 5 So what are your thoughts about AI and did that kind of inform the movie in any way?
Speaker 3
It did and it didn't. It didn't in the sense that my concern is not artificial intelligence, but natural stupidity.
I think that's what drives most of the the
Speaker 3 world's worst teachers.
Speaker 3 But I did want it to have the arrogance of Victor be similar in some ways to the tech bros.
Speaker 3 He's kind of blind,
Speaker 3 creating
Speaker 3 something without considering the consequences. And I think
Speaker 3 we have to take a pause and consider where we're going.
Speaker 3 If you have to teach an AI to think in ones and zeros,
Speaker 3 you know, oh my God, I would love for a generation to get raising kids right one time, one time.
Speaker 3 In the entire history of mankind, there hasn't been a single generation that was raised right all across the globe. And I think that's our biggest failure in a way, you know.
Speaker 3
Ones and zeros don't get the alchemy. that you get with emotion and experience.
You get the information, but you don't get the alchemy of emotion, spirituality, and feeling.
Speaker 3 I'm not saying it's impossible to replicate, but we have it readily available with the next generation of children.
Speaker 3 And that's why the painful thing that Jacob Eloti and Victor enact is a father-and-son relationship that is very relatable in the film, very relatable, and very moving by the end.
Speaker 5 Did you take advantage of any AI in making Frankenstein?
Speaker 3 AI, particularly generative AI,
Speaker 3 I am not interested, nor will I ever be interested. I'm 61 and I hope to be able to remain uninterested in using it at all until I croak.
Speaker 1 I really don't.
Speaker 3 The other day, somebody wrote me an email and said, what is your stance on AI? And my answer was very short. I said, I'd rather die.
Speaker 5 Oh,
Speaker 5 those are strong words.
Speaker 3 Yeah, not for me. I'm Mexican.
Speaker 3 But I think, Terry, that
Speaker 3 even when a human sings a song that has already been recorded six, seven times,
Speaker 3 they're filtering their experience, their life. I often think of
Speaker 3 Johnny Cash singing Hurt,
Speaker 3 the Trend Reznor song, and making it entirely his own, or Joe Cocker singing The Beatles.
Speaker 3
That's not aversion. That's not remixing.
That is filtering through alchemical pain and experience a work of art into making it your own.
Speaker 5
The creature in Frankenstein is endowed with eternal life in your film. Cursed.
Cursed. Well, that's what I was going to ask you.
What do you think about, you know, his eternal life is hell.
Speaker 5
The creature is alone, and he wants to end his tormented life, but he can't. There's no one in the world who's like him, and Dr.
Frankenstein refuses to make a companion for him.
Speaker 5 And the creature says, there was only one remedy for pain, death, and you took that away from me too.
Speaker 5
After the creature survived something that other people assume would have killed him, he says, there was silence and then merciless life. I felt lonelier than ever.
So when you think of eternal life,
Speaker 5 do you think that that's torment?
Speaker 3 Oh, I do. I'm a huge fan of death.
Speaker 3 I'm a groupie for death.
Speaker 3
I think it's the metronome of our existence. And without rhythm, there is no melody.
You know,
Speaker 3 it is the metronome of death that makes us value the compass of the beautiful music.
Speaker 3 I'm going to say this comes when my father was taken, every day was torment.
Speaker 3 And I
Speaker 3
used to see the sun rising and resent it. And I said, the sun doesn't care about my pain.
But then eventually I realized it was my pain that I didn't care about the sun.
Speaker 3 And that I needed to change that, that I needed to accept it. I needed to understand that
Speaker 3 the rhythm of the cosmos is different than that of my little heart, you know.
Speaker 5 You mentioned the fear of death every day that your father was held hostage, kidnapped for ransom.
Speaker 5 Of course, you'd be worried about death then. I mean, it was the threat of death hanging over him, and his life was in your hands to save.
Speaker 5 Putting that aside, as major as that is, did you have a fear of death growing up and as a young man?
Speaker 3 Yes, Yes, as a young man, my grandmother and I
Speaker 3
had a very precarious sense of death and life. My grandmother would say goodnight to me every day and say, let us pray that I'm here tomorrow.
And
Speaker 3 that is pretty intense for a four or five-year-old to hear. And I would spend, sometimes I would sleep at the foot of her bed and I would be listening in the dark for her breathing.
Speaker 3 And if the breathing ceased even for two seconds, I would be jolted and take a look to see if she was okay.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 that stayed with me for many decades.
Speaker 3
I don't fear it anymore. I don't fear that anymore.
I feel losing people, yes, but me, I'm not afraid of dying, I hope. You know, really, Terry, all these...
Speaker 3 great questions, you know, when they get resolved, right when the lights flutter and you are no longer
Speaker 3 a director or a general or a pope, right? When you become just you and the lights are flickering out, that's when you realize what you did or didn't do in your life. And
Speaker 3 that's the most momentous thing anyone can experience. And you can go with great agitation or great peace.
Speaker 5 We were talking earlier about the book of Job.
Speaker 3 Yes.
Speaker 5 You asked your cast to read the book of Job.
Speaker 1 Yes, and the Tao.
Speaker 5 What did you want them to take from it?
Speaker 3 Because ultimately, that's the plea of the creature too. The plea of the creature is why? You know, why do this thing happen to me? And the answer comes at the end.
Speaker 3
The final image of the film is what tells you what we can do. I mean, acceptance is so profound.
You know, we are building a culture in which we have the idea of what things should be.
Speaker 3 And when they don't happen, you can feel frustrated, rebel against them. But at the end of the day, they are what they are.
Speaker 3 Martis Corsesi tackled the same sort of question in the Irishman, and the answer is very, very beautiful. He says, it is what it is.
Speaker 3
That's the book of Job. It is what it is.
The Tao says, all pain comes from desire, which is absolutely true. You want more awards, you want more money, you find yourself in pain.
Speaker 3 I do, you know, but if you don't, if you don't want more, there's a zero that gives you peace. And the same with life.
Speaker 5 So you found feeling insignificant
Speaker 1 liberating.
Speaker 3 Liberating,
Speaker 3 which
Speaker 3 can happen with reviews.
Speaker 1 Do you read them?
Speaker 1 Not anymore.
Speaker 3
Not anymore. I'm 61.
I don't. But I did.
I did. Oh, my God.
When I was younger, I would read every single one until I found the one that would never leave my brain.
Speaker 3 I remember a few that are really well phrased.
Speaker 5 Do you want to quote one?
Speaker 3 Well, Jay Hoverman of The Village Voice wrote a great,
Speaker 3 he put down Blade 2 beautifully. He said, the only thing remotely scary about Blade 2 is that it's done by the same man that did Devil's Backbone, which is beautiful.
Speaker 5 Guillimo Dotora, it's been such a pleasure talking with you. Thank you so much for coming back to the show.
Speaker 3 Always a pleasure, and thank you for the wisdom and the careful guiding of this lengthy interview, which I adored every second of.
Speaker 5
I really appreciate you saying that. I love talking with you.
Same here.
Speaker 2 Guillermo Del Toro wrote and directed the new film Frankenstein. Now let's hear Terry's recent interview with another seasoned director, Cameron Crowe.
Speaker 5 My guest Cameron Crow is known for writing the screenplay for Fast Times at Ridgemount High and writing and directing Say Anything, Jerry Maguire, Vanilla Sky, and Almost Famous, for which he won an Oscar for Best Screenplay.
Speaker 5 It's the story of a 15-year-old who, in 1973, manages to become a rock critic and somehow get backstage interviews with important musicians.
Speaker 5 By the age of 16, he's published in Rolling Stone and even writes a cover story. As improbable as that may sound, it's based on Crowe's own life as a teenage music writer.
Speaker 5 His new memoir, The Uncool, is about that period of his life and more, including his adventures and misadventures, writing about musicians like Greg Allman, Chris Christofferson, Jimmy Page, and David Bowie.
Speaker 5 He also writes about what life was like in his family when he was growing up and how reluctant his parents were to allow him to go on the road with musicians before he'd even graduated high school.
Speaker 5 Let's start with a clip from early on in Almost Famous.
Speaker 5 The Cameron Crow character, William, is about 11, listening to an argument between his mother, played by Frances McDormand, and his older sister, played by Zoe Deschanel. The mother speaks first.
Speaker 6
You've been kissing. No, I haven't.
Yes, you have. No, I haven't.
Yes, you have. I can tell.
Speaker 6 You can't tell. Not only can I tell, I know who it is.
Speaker 1 It's Daryl.
Speaker 6 What you got under your coat?
Speaker 6
It's unfair that we can't listen to our music. It's because it is about drugs and promiscuous sex.
Simon and Garfunkel is poetry. Yes, it's poetry.
It is a poetry of drugs and promiscuous sex.
Speaker 6 Honey, they're on putt.
Speaker 6 First it was butter, then it was sugar and white flour, bacon, eggs, bologna, rock and roll, motorcycles.
Speaker 6 Then it was celebrating Christmas on a day in September when you knew it wouldn't be commercialized. What else are you going to ban? Honey, you want to rebel against knowledge.
Speaker 6 I'm trying to give you the cliff notes on how to live life in this world. We're like nobody else I know.
Speaker 5
Cameron Crowe, welcome back to Fresh Air. It's a pleasure to talk with you again.
Thanks, Terry.
Speaker 5 Was your mother at all like the Frances McDorman character and how unusual she was and how opposed to rock and roll, even Simon Garfunkel, who she probably hadn't even heard yet?
Speaker 1 Well, first of all, hearing that clip, it's uncanny how much Frances McDorman is my mother. I mean, the dialogue was straight out of our family and our home.
Speaker 5 But somehow...
Speaker 5 I'm just going to interrupt by saying your mother died, I think it was last year.
Speaker 1 She died in 2019.
Speaker 5
2019. Yeah, I know.
September 11th.
Speaker 1 Born on the 4th of July and passed away on September 11th, two days before Almost Famous the Musical opened in San Diego. So it was a dramatic exit from the earth, from my mom.
Speaker 5 Yeah, so I didn't mean to interrupt, except I just wanted to express my condolences.
Speaker 1
Thank you so much. She was a huge character and completely inspiring.
But listening to that clip, it just made me appreciate how sometimes real life is the best writer.
Speaker 1 And it was just lodged in my head forever as this classic thing that happened where my mom made us believe that she could tell if you've been kissing.
Speaker 1 And of course, it was a stunt to get the truth out of us, or my sister in that case. But just hilarious how life kind of puts in front of you the best stuff to write about.
Speaker 5 With a mother who was so controlling in terms of like food and vehicles and not even listening to rock and roll, which is kind of banned in your house. You had to sneak it in.
Speaker 5 How did you manage to get away at the age of 15 and start going on the road with bands so that you can write cover stories about them? Aaron Ross Barrett.
Speaker 1 She was, you know, all about as a teacher and a counselor who had many great counseles who loved her so much. She always respected intellectualism.
Speaker 1 If I could somehow pin it to intellectual success, I had a way in. So to go on the road with Led Zeppelin at 15, I had to really sell Led Zeppelin to her as like music that's based on Tolkien.
Speaker 1 This is like lofty material that's like good for the soul. Ultimately, I think she said, because we loved the interviewer Dick Cavett in our family, go and take this journey, put on your magic shoes.
Speaker 1 Call me every night and don't take drugs. And that was my ticket out.
Speaker 5
Don't take drugs is like the refrain of the movie. Like your mother's always calling.
And anytime you call her, it's like, don't take drugs.
Speaker 1 Because it was about brain cells. It was about brain cells.
Speaker 5 Oh, or you had to stay smart. Yeah.
Speaker 5 Did you end up taking drugs? I'm sure you offered them all the time.
Speaker 1 I was offered drugs for sure. And I learned early on, Terry, that like the best response is no.
Speaker 1 Because the person offering you the drugs generally then says, smart kid, more for me. And
Speaker 1 that made me,
Speaker 1
I don't know, it made people know that I wasn't there to join the band, party with the band. I was there with a notebook full of questions based on loving music.
And that really swung the door open.
Speaker 5 Was the writer aspect of being a music writer what your mother approved of? Because that is a more intellectual pursuit.
Speaker 1 Exactly.
Speaker 1 And it was true, you know, I really felt like the best of the music that we loved that did sneak into our family had its roots in wonderful writing. For example, Joni Mitchell.
Speaker 1
Simon and Garfunkel, there was something about the song Mrs. Robinson that rubbed my mom the wrong way.
And I think it was the way they said
Speaker 1
totally. You got it.
She thought it was sneering. And she did.
She pulled out the Bookend's album cover and showed us the pupils of Paul Simon and promised us that he was high or pot.
Speaker 1 And the funny thing is when the movie came out with that scene in it, I think it was on CNN, somebody was interviewing Paul Simon and they said, you know, what about this movie Almost Famous, holding up the Bookends album cover, you know, Francis McDorman saying, they're on pot.
Speaker 1 He's like, we were.
Speaker 5 I don't think she's right. I think she's also right of being like a sneering song about middle-aged women.
Speaker 1 Absolutely. So she saw clearly,
Speaker 1
and it was inevitable, I think, that music was going to come in, you know, underneath the door or through the window. Somehow, the power of rock was going to find my sister and me.
And it did.
Speaker 1 To this day, that's our favorite language with each other, sharing music and the things that happen when music kind of takes over and transports you and gives you that feeling that you really can't get any other place.
Speaker 5 The first concerts you went to, including a Bob Dylan concert very early in his career, you went to with your mother. Yeah.
Speaker 5 That could be a very wonderful or a very embarrassing experience with both both mother and child being uncomfortable. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 5 Their child doesn't want to be seen as needing to be escorted by a parent, and the parent feels like 100 years old compared to all the kids that are there.
Speaker 5 What were those experiences like for you? I was just knowing that she hated rock and roll.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1 Well, Bob Dylan, you know, we were pretty young, and he was appearing at a gymnasium at the college near where we lived in Riverside, California. And
Speaker 1 she had read something about this young protest singer that had something to say.
Speaker 1 And so she came to us and said, let's go see this protest singer and brought a blanket for us to sit on the floor of the gymnasium.
Speaker 1 And we did see Bob Dylan in 1964, like right after he had written Times They Are a Change in. And he was kind of a Charlie Chaplin type figure, I remember.
Speaker 1
Like he just kind of like was a little jaunty and these loose-fitting jeans, and he was funny and serious at the same time. And that affected us for sure.
But real rock
Speaker 1 was banned for the longest time because it was, as she said, a vehicle for sex and drugs. And, you know, sometimes it really was.
Speaker 1 But I was able to go to another concert, which was Eric Clapton, Derek and the Dominoes, with her.
Speaker 1 And it was so electrifying that even she kind of understood what the power of rock sometimes could be. And after somebody sitting next to her offered her cocaine, which was,
Speaker 1 you know, striking to see,
Speaker 1
but she, you know, politely turned it down and everything. But when the concert was over, we were walking out and she said, you know what, your music is better than mine.
Wow. And that was my mom.
Speaker 1
She used a truth-teller. So that was her truth.
And that was another moment where the door swung open a little wider.
Speaker 2 We're listening to Terry's interview with Cameron Crowe.
Speaker 4 His new memoir, The Uncool, is based on the same period of his life as his film, Almost famous which he wrote and directed we'll hear more of their conversation after a break this is fresh air weekend this message comes from dignity memorial and memphis funeral home one of their nationwide providers funeral director mike perry and retired football coach bill muir share their experience working together to create a celebration of life for bill's wife barbara we as the funeral directors will only have one time to to do this and to get it right.
Speaker 1 Even like the little small details, that stuff matters to the families that we deal with.
Speaker 1 They may not remember all the words that are shared, but they're always going to remember how you made them feel. So those details are very important because it can capture the family's heart.
Speaker 1 I can't tell you exactly how much time he spent with me asking me any number of questions about my wife. and our relationship.
Speaker 1 Actually, I felt like he was my best friend by the time we were done.
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Speaker 5 When you were 15 writing about bands, the bands were older than you were.
Speaker 5
But looking back now, they were probably mostly in their 20s. I know.
Which is really young.
Speaker 1 Really young.
Speaker 5 So, what's your take on some of those musicians now, thinking of them as young people and not as older people?
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1
Well, I thought they were, you know, seasoned adults at the time. And you're right.
They were 22, for example.
Speaker 1 And being 15, you know, the distance between 15 and 22 is enormous. It's like a generation.
Speaker 1 But really, we were all kind of young together, and rock was young. There wasn't video assists and all the bells and whistles and dancers and stuff.
Speaker 1 It was really just a naked stage and people playing songs. The power of the songs was the power of the concert.
Speaker 1 And what I thought as a young guy led into some of these dressing rooms to glimpse how bands prepared for a show or how they struggled to figure out
Speaker 1 who was right in an argument about how to play a song.
Speaker 1 I started to see a dynamic that was so human that it was kind of beyond what I'd been able to see as a high school student, for example, when my mom had skipped me two grades and later three.
Speaker 1 I didn't have a lot of friends, but somehow.
Speaker 5 Because you were much younger than your fellow students, your classmates.
Speaker 1 But then, you know, somebody like Chris Christofferson deigns to give me an interview and tries to sneak me into a bar where I'm underage.
Speaker 1 And then when we get caught, he says, well, I'll sit out here in this big red leatherette chair and I'll do my interview with you as fans and people stream by. He treated me like an adult.
Speaker 1 and talked to me about the power of movies and music and all this stuff that ended up speaking to me so strongly later.
Speaker 1 But as a young guy, you're kind of in this position where, you know, this person is allowing me to ask them whatever I want to about music that I love.
Speaker 1 It was a blissful time, and I still love writing about it.
Speaker 5 So, how did you manage to convince anybody that at the age of 15, still in high school, that you were worthy of being taken seriously, that your opinions were informed enough and deep enough, went deep enough to be a spokesperson for whether this album was good or not,
Speaker 5 to be worthy of talking to a band.
Speaker 1 I'm just laughing because so much of it was just where I lived. We lived in San Diego, and San Diego is not a primary market.
Speaker 1
San Diego usually happens at the end of a tour after a band or an artist has been in, you know, San Francisco, LA, New York, big reviews. They had to worry about San Diego.
It's like it's surfers.
Speaker 1 So
Speaker 1 they would just be partying early for the end of their tour a lot of times.
Speaker 1 And so here's a kid that comes to the door with a notebook full of questions based on the music that nobody was really asking them about in the hands of an older journalist. Here's some guy.
Speaker 1
with an orange bag full of cassettes like ready to talk to you about your album Aqualung. You know, they're like, get that kid in here.
Come on, we're bored.
Speaker 1 Let him ask us those questions. And so many of the bands were just nice to me because they were bored in San Diego.
Speaker 1 And I got to tell you, going back and listening to a lot of those interviews, because I kept everything,
Speaker 1
they really talked to me. They really opened up.
And that informed the life I was lucky enough to have later as a writer and a director in movies because I knew how people spoke.
Speaker 1 I transcribed all my interviews myself. So I knew that people don't talk elegantly, but they can pour their heart out in half sentences.
Speaker 1 So it was really one big magic carpet ride of learning about people.
Speaker 1 And it started early. I'm a lucky guy.
Speaker 5
So Philip Seymour Hoffman plays Lester Bangs in Almost Famous. And I want to play a scene.
where he gives you some very interesting advice. But first, I want to explain who Lester Bangs is.
Speaker 5 I mean, he was a really eccentric guy and such strong feelings
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5
unwavering in his confidence, in his opinions about what was great and what was garbage. Oh, yeah.
And he pretty much became a cult figure, you know, and died young.
Speaker 5 Sadly, yes. Yeah.
Speaker 5 So when you start writing for Cream, he gives you some advice. So this is a scene between Patrick Fugett, who plays your surrogate in the film, and Philip Seymour Hoffman, who plays Lester Bangs.
Speaker 5 Bangs.
Speaker 7 Once you go to LA,
Speaker 7 you're going to have friends like crazy, but they're going to be fake friends. You know, they're going to try to corrupt you.
Speaker 7 You know, and you got an honest face, and they're going to tell you everything.
Speaker 7 But you cannot make friends with the rock stars.
Speaker 7 If you're going to be a true journalist, you know, a rock journalist,
Speaker 7 first you'll never get paid much.
Speaker 7 But you will get free records from the record company.
Speaker 7 Nothing Nothing about you that is controversial, man.
Speaker 7
God, it's going to get ugly, man. They're going to buy you drinks.
You're going to meet girls. They're going to try to fly you places for free, offer you drugs.
And I know it sounds great.
Speaker 7 These people are not your friends.
Speaker 7 You know, these are people who want you to write sanctimonious stories about the genius of rock stars, and they will ruin rock and roll and strangle everything we love about it. Right?
Speaker 7 And then it just becomes an industry of cool.
Speaker 7 I mean, I'm telling you, you're coming along in a very dangerous time for rock and roll. That's why I think you should just turn around, go back, you know, and be a lawyer or something.
Speaker 7 I can tell from your face that you won't.
Speaker 7 I can give you 35 bucks. Give me a thousand words on Black Sabbath.
Speaker 1 An assignment.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 7 Hey.
Speaker 7 You have to make your reputation on being
Speaker 7 honest
Speaker 7 and
Speaker 1 unmerciful.
Speaker 5 Unmerciful. Honest and unmerciful.
Speaker 5 And I think that was true of Lester Bangs.
Speaker 1 Absolutely.
Speaker 5 Were you capable of being unmerciful?
Speaker 1 Intermittently.
Speaker 1 When I listen to that, it takes me right back to when I first met him. He said almost exactly those words.
Speaker 1 And can you imagine being 15 or 16 and somebody enters your life who speaks that kind of truth with that kind of passion and treats you like an equal?
Speaker 5
Yeah, and unmerciful isn't something you usually strive to be in your life. Yeah.
But as a critic, you have to be honest, and sometimes that means unmerciful.
Speaker 5 But that's still a harsh word to use for a 15-year-old who's starting in a very harsh business.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1
Well, let me give you the context. His stance when I met him that day was, it's over.
You know, it's gone. That passion, that thing, that flame that is true rock, true music, it's over.
Speaker 1
They've taken it over. So I was like a straggler to something that was like a flying saucer and had left to him.
So he's telling me, it's over, but here you are.
Speaker 1 And just watch out because they'll try and corrupt you too. And I'm warning you right now because they already ruined rock.
Speaker 1 It was like a lot of information, but his thing about unmerciful was you got to fight back. You have to fight back in the homogenization of something that is important to you.
Speaker 1
And that's why he used that strong word. And he was sometimes not unmerciful.
Sometimes he was very kind. He was kind to me, for example.
But he was a politician for the soul of rock. And to me,
Speaker 1 he was legend instantly for that and many other reasons.
Speaker 5 Lester Bangs also warned you about not making friends with musicians or publicists. You probably really wanted to be the musician's friends,
Speaker 5 but did you try not to be? Like, how did that work out for you?
Speaker 1 Well,
Speaker 1 I think
Speaker 1 generally I was able to witness people that would come through a tour or backstage and you could tell the people that were there to like party and act like they're a rock star too and that person would leave the room and you'd hear how they were talked about by the bands and you just go wow okay well i get it you know i i don't play an instrument so i'm not going to be in a band or try to be in in this band but
Speaker 1 generally i thought like um
Speaker 1
Be the guy that's there to document it. And when you're done, go home.
Don't stay out or try and, you know, hang out in the hotel rooms. Go back to your room and transcribe the interview.
Speaker 1 I remember something, Terry, that happened early on. I was on the road with the Allman Brothers Band, and
Speaker 1
I loved the Allman Brothers Band. And they were staying at the Continental Hyatt House in Los Angeles.
And I was covering them for Rolling Stone.
Speaker 1 And after their show at the forum, they all came back to this kind of communal room to party and jam. And so there's Greg Allman playing, you know, this blues song, come in my kitchen.
Speaker 1
And I'm just loving it. He's like eight feet away.
And there's some people singing and there's another guy playing guitar over there. And there was a guitar right next to me.
Speaker 1
And, you know, I only knew two chords, but I picked up the guitar and I started to strum. And I was thinking, this is cool, man.
I am like jamming with the Allman Brothers band.
Speaker 1 And it was like
Speaker 1 hands appeared kind of behind me and lifted the guitar out of my hands, hands almost like a hand from heaven is just coming to like relinquish the guitar from my grasp and I just felt like oh that's cool I'm in heaven and there goes the guitar now so it's like don't jam with the Almond Brothers band particularly when you only know two chords I thought that was the most gentle way to teach me a lesson early on
Speaker 5 You followed David Bowie around off and on for a year and a half
Speaker 5 and wrote a piece. You know, was it a cover story?
Speaker 1
Yeah, it was a cover story in Rolling Stone. It was also the Playboy interview.
And I did some other stories for like Cream and some other publications.
Speaker 1 It was, it was a David Bowie factory I had going for a while because he wasn't talking to anybody else. Life puts you at a crossroads and you go one way and it turns into 18 months with David Bowie.
Speaker 1
I had no assignment. He said to me, hold up a mirror to me.
I want to see what you show me. So like spend some time around me, ask me anything you want.
Speaker 1 I want to see the mirror that you hold up. And that's what I did.
Speaker 1 I'm not sure he appreciated totally the mirror that I held up to him, but he did know that it was an accurate portrait of what he was going through in those 18 months, which are kind of referred to as a lost weekend.
Speaker 1 when he was living untethered in Los Angeles and not sure if he was going to become a movie actor for a while.
Speaker 1 He fired his manager and he was just kind of learning what was going to be next and trying to reinvent. And he was playing around with this character called the Thin White Duke.
Speaker 1
And one day he put 12 pages of an autobiography in my hand and signed it and said, I wanted you to have this. And it was called The Return of the Thin White Duke.
He never finished it. It's 12 pages.
Speaker 1 It's
Speaker 1
striking. And this was the time David Boy was trying to figure out what was coming next.
And I was lucky enough to be around, and I asked him all kinds of stuff, and he was
Speaker 1 both warm and engaging, steely and brilliant, and
Speaker 1 lost.
Speaker 5 Well, you know, that kind of fits in a way with the fact that he had so many characters that he embodied.
Speaker 5 And when he said to you, I want to see the mirror you hold up, do you think he didn't really know who he was in some ways?
Speaker 1 He, it's so funny that you asked that. I asked him at one point, because his real name was David Jones, right? So I asked him at one point,
Speaker 1 am I meeting David Jones or am I meeting David Bowie, the creation? And he said, you're meeting David Jones, who's aggressively throwing David Bowie at you.
Speaker 1 Oh, wow. I know, I know, I know.
Speaker 1 He even, I asked him at one point, I was like, how do you think you're going to die? Do you think you'll die on stage?
Speaker 1 Because Ziggy Stardust, one of his characters, I think, was based on somebody who had died on stage.
Speaker 1 And he said, no, no, no, I don't think that's going to happen to me.
Speaker 1 I think my, I'm paraphrasing a little bit, but he said, I think my death will be an event, something that I manage and produce and make my own statement. And that is exactly what happened.
Speaker 5 Remind us how he died.
Speaker 1
Well, he died of cancer at a young age, and he knew he was dying. He didn't tell anybody except a small group of collaborators.
And he did this album, Blackstar, which is
Speaker 1 his statement about the death that was coming.
Speaker 1 And it's profound, and it's managed, and it is an opportunity that he did not throw away. And he also said in one of the songs, you know, I can't give you everything.
Speaker 1 So he kept a lot for himself. I think he found a life where he was in love and living in New York and he loved his family.
Speaker 1 And the mirror that I held up to him, Terry, was a glimpse of a time when he almost died and wasn't looking after himself and involved in drugs.
Speaker 1 And too many of his friends, he said, were drug dealers. And he's lucky that he made it out alive.
Speaker 5 One of the things that you portray in the movie Almost Famous
Speaker 5 is the teenage girls and young women who followed the bands and partied with them afterwards and went to their hotel rooms afterwards.
Speaker 5
And people would call them groupies, but the leader of the group of girls in Almost Famous says, we're not groupies. We love the music.
That's why we're here. We're band aides, A-I-D-E-S.
Speaker 5
And, you know, we're here to help the band. because we love their music.
The name of the character in the movie, the leader of of these girls, is Penny Lane. That's what she was known by.
Speaker 5 It wasn't her real name. In your memoir, she's also using the name Penny Lane, but her real name is Penny Trimble.
Speaker 5 In the movie, she's a main character played by Kate Hudson. In your memoir, she gets a paragraph in which you
Speaker 5
talk about her importance in the band world or the groupie world and her importance to you. But that's it.
Are you trying to protect her privacy by not saying more?
Speaker 1 A little bit.
Speaker 1 I've talked about Penny quite a bit.
Speaker 1 Penny Trumbull is an open book.
Speaker 1 She always said at the time when she got older she wanted to use whatever money she'd saved to put together an old folks home for old rock stars up in Oregon, which she did with a little bit of the money that she made, which wasn't that much,
Speaker 1
to be able to use her story in the movie. So she loved music and behaved exactly that way.
I was pretty young at the time. And so for Penny and the Flying Garter girls, who was like her clan,
Speaker 1
you know, who would fail at not getting emotionally involved with the bands. Her thing was like, watch out.
They all would fall for some of the guys and get their hearts broken, whatever.
Speaker 1 But Penny Trumbull was one of the ones that really opened up to me and told me what it was like emotionally to follow a band and to crave that experience of being in an empty arena after you'd seen the show that meant so much to you and you could still feel the spirits in the air of that empty arena.
Speaker 1 That's my favorite scene in Almost Famous when Kate Hudson is dancing in the
Speaker 1 garden of trash left behind where Stillwater has played. And that's what I was left with, not trying to protect them.
Speaker 1 I think, you know, I've written about it and you get the emotional carnage that can happen. That's an almost famous.
Speaker 1 But I always felt that Penny Trumbull was an open book and was a friend as well as kind of a
Speaker 1 flamboyant figure who was true to her word. She loved music.
Speaker 5 Cameron Crowe, it's really been a pleasure. Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 Thank you. Really enjoyed this.
Speaker 2 Cameron Crowe's new memoir is called The Uncool. He spoke with Terry Gross.
Speaker 2
Fresh Air Weekend is produced by Teresa Madam. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
For Terry Gross and Tanya Mosley, I'm Sam Briggers.
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