Michael Shannon Gets A Turn Playing Good Guys
Shannon's known for playing intense, menacing characters, like Agent Nelson Van Alden in ‘Boardwalk Empire.’ In two new projects, though, he plays good guys – historical figures pursuing justice and political reform. He’s President James Garfield in the new Netflix series ‘Death by Lightning.’ And he’s a prosecutor trying Nazi leaders for war crimes in the new film ‘Nuremberg.’ Shannon spoke with Dave Davies.
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Transcript
Speaker 1 This message comes from Sony Pictures Classics. How do three friends who dream big stay old friends?
Speaker 1 Merrily we roll along from Stephen Sondheim and Maria Friedman, starring Jonathan Groff, Daniel Radcliffe, and Lindsey Mendez. Only in theaters starting December 5th.
Speaker 2 This is Fresh Air. I'm Dave Davies.
Speaker 2 Our guest today, actor Michael Shannon, has appeared in nearly 100 movies and television productions, perhaps best known for playing brooding, villainous, or unhinged characters like Agent Nelson Van Alden in HBO's Boardwalk Empire.
Speaker 2 But Shannon's range is far broader, and his two latest projects find him playing real-life historical characters engaged in noble pursuits. In the film Nuremberg, he plays the U.S.
Speaker 2 Supreme Court justice who organized the International Tribunal to Try Nazi leaders for war crimes after the Second World War, serving as lead prosecutor in the ensuing trial.
Speaker 2 And in the new Netflix series, Death by Lightning, he's President James Garfield, who fought against corrupt Washington politicians for civil service reform before being assassinated only four months into office.
Speaker 2 Michael Shannon earned Oscar nominations for his performances in the films Revolutionary Road and Nocturnal Animals.
Speaker 2 He's also appeared in the films Take Shelter, Knives Out, The Shape of Water, and Man of Steel, among many others, and in the Showtime series George and Tammy.
Speaker 2 He also formed an indie rock band and has collaborated with musician Jason Narducey in performing songs from several albums of the group REM. We'll talk about that.
Speaker 2
I spoke to Michael Shannon last Thursday. Well, Michael Shannon, welcome back to Fresh Air.
It's been a while.
Speaker 3 Oh, it's my pleasure, Dave. Thanks for having me.
Speaker 2 You know, you've had a lot of roles, and as I said, in many of the better-known ones, your characters are unhinged or villainous.
Speaker 2 In these films, you play not just good guys, but, you know, real historical characters fighting battles to right wrong, strengthen democracy.
Speaker 2 Do you you think this was intentional to cast you in these roles?
Speaker 3
Oh gosh. I don't know.
So much of what has happened in my career just seems like dumb luck, you know. I don't know
Speaker 3 what got into these people's heads to look my way for these things, but I sure am grateful that they thought of me, you know. I mean, I guess typically
Speaker 3 with a project like Nuremberg, I think when people hear that I'm in Nuremberg, they assume I'm playing a Nazi. And when they hear about death by lightning, they assume I'm playing the assassin.
Speaker 3 So I guess it's nice to surprise people.
Speaker 2
All right. Well, you know, you play President James Garfield, as we mentioned, in Death by Lightning.
That's the Netflix series. He was elected in 1880.
What drew you to this project?
Speaker 3 Well, it started with Candace's book, Destiny of the Republic.
Speaker 2 Candice Millard, yeah. She's been on our show, terrific historian.
Speaker 3 And for anybody who watches the program and gets a kick out of it, I highly suggest you read the book if you haven't already,
Speaker 3 because it's very captivating
Speaker 3 and very informative and illuminating.
Speaker 3 But I find that a lot of people really don't know much about this period.
Speaker 3 It's kind of sandwiched between the Civil War and the World Wars and the Depression, you know, which are all, I guess, more inherently dramatic periods. But
Speaker 3 I think this period is really worth studying and looking at because the country seemed very lost at sea, as Garfield hints at in his address at the Republican Convention.
Speaker 3 And it's easy, I think, to feel that way now. So if you're curious about how we might
Speaker 3 get out of this quagmire we're currently in, it might behoove people to take a look at this period in our nation's history.
Speaker 2 Aaron Powell, yeah, and it's interesting because Garfield was kind of an accidental hero. I mean,
Speaker 2 he was initially going to nominate someone else for the presidency, and the convention got deadlocked, and people were so captivated by his speech, they turned to him.
Speaker 2 You know, I didn't remember anything about James Garfield. I'm sure most of us don't, but when I saw you in that suit and that big beard and
Speaker 2
that long coat and vest and bow tie, I thought, yes, that's the picture we've seen of James Garfield. Talk a little bit about physically occupying the character.
Did you grow that big beard?
Speaker 3
I literally could not grow that beard. Even if you gave me five years, it wouldn't look anything like that.
But we had
Speaker 3 such a brilliant team of hair and makeup and wardrobe.
Speaker 3 And they just, they do their magic, you know. Aaron Trevor Barrett.
Speaker 2 Did you find you're carrying yourself differently? I mean, did you feel like a president? Did people treat you with deference on the set?
Speaker 3
Yeah, I mean, it was a very happy set. And, you know, we shot in Budapest, Hungary.
And it was interesting because it's not their history, you know, and most of the crew was Hungarian.
Speaker 3 But they took it very seriously as if it were their own.
Speaker 3 story they were telling. But
Speaker 2 yeah,
Speaker 3 the wardrobe, you know, a lot of the vests I wear have
Speaker 3
these very stiff fronts to them. And the buttons are all studs.
So if you move too much, the studs pop out of the little holes. So it does
Speaker 3 do something to your posture.
Speaker 2 Trevor Burrus, Jr.: You're a little more like a statue than
Speaker 2 an active human. Yeah.
Speaker 3
Although it was fun. What was fun about it is the contrast between that and then you see him on his farm, and he's actually quite rugged in the beginning.
I mean, comparatively speaking, anyway.
Speaker 3 Right. So
Speaker 2 different era when a real farmer could be in Congress.
Speaker 3 Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2
Well, I want to play a clip. And to set this up, Garfield was a Republican, and the Republican Party had been the dominant party in Washington for years.
But it was a party beset by corruption.
Speaker 2 Patronage, employment, self-dealing were kind of the rule of the day. There was no such thing as civil service, which Garfield was determined to change.
Speaker 2 And the scene we're going to listen to is where Garfield had been president a short time, and his opponents within the party were blocking all of his cabinet appointments in the Senate because he refused to give these corrupt politicians the control of key federal jobs, especially the port collector in New York, because that was a big center of money and patronage.
Speaker 2 Anyway, in this scene, there's a bunch of senators and cabinet members gathered in the White House, and they're all arguing with each other because you, as Garfield, are determined to stick with this fight that they think he's never never going to win.
Speaker 2
They think he should just give in and play ball with the machine. You've been listening quietly while they argue, and then you finally erupt with a stern message.
Let's listen.
Speaker 4 Gentlemen, calm yourselves this instant,
Speaker 4 or I will expel you from this building for good.
Speaker 4 That includes you, Mr. Secretary.
Speaker 2 Now,
Speaker 4
I made a vow to end the rot in our government. Spoils, patronage, call it what you want.
It's no good.
Speaker 4 Do-nothing, siphoning taxpayer money for jobs that don't even exist.
Speaker 4 Elected officials brazenly peddling their influence at auctions.
Speaker 6 This is not how democracy endures.
Speaker 7 This is wrong.
Speaker 7 And all of us know it.
Speaker 3 This is our fight.
Speaker 3 One day, years from now,
Speaker 7 each one of us will be judged by what we do in this moment.
Speaker 3 How will they talk about us, I wonder.
Speaker 2
And that's our guest, Michael Shannon, in the new Netflix series, Death by Lightning. That's a powerful speech.
You want to talk a little about that moment.
Speaker 3 You know, it's interesting. I know we're not talking about it right now, but it draws a comparison to something that Robert Jackson says in Nuremberg when he's talking to the Pope.
Speaker 2 That's your character, right. Yeah.
Speaker 3 Yes, he he tells the Pope, you know, you validated the Nazis, and how will you be remembered?
Speaker 3 And, you know, sometimes I wonder
Speaker 3 how much people are really concerned about how they're remembered. In a sense, why would that be important? I mean, you're gone, right?
Speaker 3 But it's a shame that you have to appeal to people's ego to get them to do the right thing.
Speaker 3 It shouldn't really be ultimately because you're concerned about how you're remembered. It should be more that you're concerned about the future of the next generation and the generation that follows.
Speaker 3 But if you can bend people at their ego, then you might as well take advantage of it, I guess.
Speaker 2 So let's talk about Nuremberg.
Speaker 2 You play Robert Jackson, a Supreme Court justice, who's the lead prosecutor in this trial, trying former Nazi leaders for their crimes.
Speaker 2 You know, people of a younger generation might not be as aware of this as you and I.
Speaker 2
But he also really kind of organized the whole thing. And I thought we'd hear a clip here.
You in this clip are speaking with the Army psychiatrist who has been sent to the prison.
Speaker 2 where these captured Nazis are being held.
Speaker 2 His job is to keep them from committing suicide, for one, and then to pursue some combination of therapy and also building psychological psychological profiles to assist in the prosecution.
Speaker 2 And in this scene, this is well before the trial gets underway, you're telling the psychiatrist you want him to get information from Hermann Göring, the highest-ranking Nazi, about their defense strategy.
Speaker 2 And the psychiatrist is resisting. The psychiatrist, he's played by Rami Malik, speaks first.
Speaker 8 You want me to be a spy?
Speaker 7 I want you to do your duty for your country.
Speaker 8 No, you want me to break doctor-patient confidentiality.
Speaker 6 I think you already have, Doctor. We read every report.
Speaker 7 We need more.
Speaker 8 Why not just shoot them?
Speaker 8 That's what everybody wants.
Speaker 8 I mean, if you're just gonna cheat.
Speaker 7 It's not cheating.
Speaker 8 If you're asking me to betray my oath,
Speaker 8 why not just shoot them and be done with it?
Speaker 7 After the last Great War, we made Germany crawl.
Speaker 7 We humiliated them, made them pay reparations they couldn't afford.
Speaker 7 We made them hate us so much that in less than two decades, they went from a broken nation to near-world conquerors.
Speaker 7 We have to do this right, because if we don't,
Speaker 7 if 15 years from now they come back even stronger,
Speaker 7 I don't know if we can beat them a third time.
Speaker 7 If we just shoot these men, we make them martyrs.
Speaker 2 I'm not gonna allow them that.
Speaker 7 There will be no statues of them,
Speaker 7 no songs of praise.
Speaker 7 I'm gonna put Herman Goering on the stand
Speaker 7 and I'm gonna make him tell the world what he did
Speaker 7 so that it can never happen again.
Speaker 7 Hmm.
Speaker 9 You brought me here because of Gurry.
Speaker 3 No.
Speaker 2 I brought you here
Speaker 6 to show you that before the bullets were fired,
Speaker 7 before tens of millions of men died,
Speaker 6 all of this started with laws.
Speaker 7 This war ends in a courtroom.
Speaker 2 And that's our guest, Michael Shannon, with Rami Malik in the new film Nuremberg.
Speaker 2 Give us your sense of your character here, Robert Jackson, the Supreme Court justice on this historic mission, how you got into his head.
Speaker 3 You know, I was able to do
Speaker 3 some research that was helpful, a lot of reading.
Speaker 3 In addition to his work on the Nuremberg trials, I mean, throughout his career, he was a part of so many momentous decisions in the court's history.
Speaker 3 But I feel like he's a pretty plain-dealing, straight-shooting kind of guy.
Speaker 3 And what was really fascinating to me was just how extraordinarily difficult it was for him to do something that seemed very logical and necessary.
Speaker 3 how much opposition he met at every step of the way. How many people said, you know,
Speaker 3 you shouldn't do this, or this isn't how we should handle this situation, or let's just shoot him, which was the prevailing sentiment among a lot of the people in power in America at the time.
Speaker 2 Yeah, we just finished a dreadful catastrophic war, yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 3 And then now here he is, you know, talking to this very well-meaning at the time
Speaker 3
doctor, and still just meeting so much obstruction. And it goes all the way throughout the story.
And I think you finally actually,
Speaker 3 in the showdown with Goering, see him really start to lose it a little bit.
Speaker 2 Just say, why is this so difficult?
Speaker 3 It's so obvious what's happened.
Speaker 3
It seems to be so obvious what the outcome should be. Why am I having such a hard time doing this? But I'm so glad.
that he insisted on it.
Speaker 3 You know, it was the first time in our civilization's history that there was an international tribunal, I believe.
Speaker 3 And it was an important precedent that he established.
Speaker 3 I wish that it was being honored more fervently nowadays.
Speaker 2 Right, but there really weren't these international laws before that.
Speaker 2
Oh, no, a lot of people do. They were improvising a lot of it in a lot of ways.
Yeah.
Speaker 3 Yeah. I mean, the the charges themselves were, I believe, it was the first time that anybody had been charged with, you know, crimes against against humanity.
Speaker 3 I don't think that it was a term that existed prior to this trial.
Speaker 2 The climactic moment in the film is in the courtroom at Nuremberg, which had been reconstructed, I gather, carefully to really be historically accurate.
Speaker 2 And you, as the prosecutor, have this long exchange with Herman Göring, who is played by Russell Crowe, who just does an amazing job of it, I will say.
Speaker 2 I read something interesting in the production notes. Scenes like this would often be shot in pieces.
Speaker 2 One character makes a dramatic speech or asks a tough question, and then the reaction and response might be shot later with, you know, and then it all gets pieced together.
Speaker 2 In this case, as I understand it, four cameras were set up to capture everybody, and it was shot in one long, continuous take, you know, which is closer to a real-life courtroom exchange.
Speaker 2 I wonder how that affected, you know, the dynamics, the feel of it.
Speaker 3 Yeah, Russell and I had met the weekend before we were set to shoot shoot that scene just to go through it. And
Speaker 3 we both agreed that it would be our preference to do the entire scene without breaking it up.
Speaker 3 They had scheduled it, I believe, for three days of shooting because typically on a film set you would not attempt to shoot that many pages in one day.
Speaker 3 It was around about, I think, a 20-page scene.
Speaker 3 And we both agreed that to break the scene up into acts, if you would, over the course of three days would deflate the momentum and the tension of the scene. And I just always am a big fan of
Speaker 3 getting lost in a scene if and when I can.
Speaker 3 A lot of times for me, the most difficult scenes are actually the very short scenes because sometimes it takes a minute to get your bearings, you know.
Speaker 3 And I I like to get to a place where I just forget that there's a camera or anybody's filming it and it's just something
Speaker 3 happening.
Speaker 3 And so it was actually an opportunity that I relished.
Speaker 3 Some people, I think, would say, oh, you must have been so anxious about having to do so much in that fashion. But it was kind of the opposite.
Speaker 3 I think I would have been more anxious had we kept it the way they had scheduled it. Aaron Powell.
Speaker 2 You know, why Why don't we just listen to a moment of this, you and Russell Crowe as Hermann Göring, in this trial at Nuremberg?
Speaker 5 For the record, is there any doubt in your mind that Adolf Hitler is dead?
Speaker 10 I have no doubt.
Speaker 5 So you are aware that this makes you the only living man who can expound to us the true purposes of the Nazi Party and the inner workings of its leadership?
Speaker 10 I am perfectly aware of this, sir.
Speaker 5 Your party, from the very beginning, intended to overthrow the Weinmar Republic.
Speaker 9 That was our firm intention.
Speaker 5 What the hell? And upon coming to power, you immediately abolished parliamentary government in Germany?
Speaker 10 We found it to be no longer necessary.
Speaker 5 Is that because you believe people are not capable of self-government?
Speaker 10 We were elected by the people and given a mandate for change.
Speaker 10 The systems that had previously existed had brought Germany to the verge of ruin.
Speaker 10 The old President Roosevelt said there are certain peoples in Europe who have forsaken democracy, not because they did not wish for it,
Speaker 10 but because democracy had brought forth men who were too weak.
Speaker 2 And that's our guest Michael Shannon and Russell Crowe in the film Nuremberg.
Speaker 2 I understand that this film was shot in Budapest, as was the Netflix series, Death by Lightning. And you had a big crowd of extras who were the audience in the film.
Speaker 2 I heard that after you'd finished a take, they burst into applause. Is this true?
Speaker 3 They did. They also did that
Speaker 3 when I gave my opening statement. to the tribunal.
Speaker 3 Yeah, you know, Hungary is a country that really went through a lot over the course of the 20th century between
Speaker 3 Nazi invasion and also communist
Speaker 3 regime.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 I think a lot of the people that were extras in that scene, if not directly been affected by it, had had a member of their family or
Speaker 3 previous generation affected by it. And so even if their English wasn't fluent, just to be in that room and to have an opportunity to hear these words and to see these actions, I think was
Speaker 3 very meaningful to them.
Speaker 2 Let's take another break here, then we'll continue our conversation. We are speaking with Michael Shannon.
Speaker 2 He stars as President James Garfield in the new Netflix series Death by Lightning, and he plays a prosecutor trying Nazi leaders for war crimes in the new film Nuremberg.
Speaker 2 We'll talk more about his life and career after this short break. I'm Dave Davies, and this is Fresh Air.
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Speaker 2
In 2008, you were in the film Revolutionary Road with director Sam Mendes. I have a clip I thought we'd listen to here.
This is a story where Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet play a suburban couple.
Speaker 2 I guess it's the 50s, early 60s, and kind of in this conventional suburban life, they have friends in an older couple who are played by Kathy Bates and Richard Easton.
Speaker 2 And this older couple have a troubled son who's in a psychiatric hospital. That's you.
Speaker 2 And in this scene, we're going to hear, they brought him out of the hospital for an afternoon to come and visit this lovely couple.
Speaker 2 And everybody's in the living room and we're serving sandwiches and it's the 50s so everybody's smoking.
Speaker 2 And you kind of take over the conversation and we'll hear Kathy Bates, who plays your mom briefly first. Let's listen.
Speaker 11 This egg salad is delicious, April. You must tell me how you fix it.
Speaker 5 You a lawyer, Frank?
Speaker 2
No. No, I'm not.
I could use a lawyer.
Speaker 5 John, let's not get started again about the lawyer.
Speaker 9 Pop, couldn't you just sit there and eat your wonderful egg salad and quit horning in?
Speaker 5 See, I've got a good many questions to ask, and I'm willing to pay for the answers.
Speaker 5 Now, I don't need to be told that a man who goes after his mother with a coffee table is putting himself in a weak position legally.
Speaker 7 That's obvious.
Speaker 11 John, come have a look out this fabulous picture window.
Speaker 5 If he hits her with it and kills her, that's a criminal case.
Speaker 11 Oh, look, the sun is coming out.
Speaker 5 If all he does is break the coffee table and give her a certain amount of aggravation and she decides to go to court over it, that's a civil case.
Speaker 11 Maybe we'll have a rainbow.
Speaker 5 John, come have a look.
Speaker 5 How about doing everybody a favor? How about shutting up?
Speaker 8 Settle down now.
Speaker 2
Maybe I can look into it. Recommend someone.
What do you say? Hmm?
Speaker 5 So,
Speaker 5 what do you do, Frank?
Speaker 5 I uh I work at Knox Business Machines, actually.
Speaker 5
You design the machines? Nope. Make them, sell them, repair them? No.
All these questions, I help sell them, I guess.
Speaker 5 I work in the office.
Speaker 6 Actually, it's uh well, it's sort of a stupid job, really.
Speaker 5 There's nothing interesting about it at all.
Speaker 3 What do you do it for, then?
Speaker 5 Maybe Frank doesn't like being questioned like that.
Speaker 8 Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Speaker 2 I know.
Speaker 5 It's none of my business.
Speaker 2 And besides, I know the answer.
Speaker 5 You want to play house, you got to have a job. You want to play a very nice house, very sweet house, then you've got to have a job you don't like.
Speaker 9 Anyone comes along and says, what do you do it for?
Speaker 2 He's probably on a four-hour pass from the state funny farm.
Speaker 3 All agreed?
Speaker 2 That's our guest, Michael Shannon, hijacking a nice, pleasant conversation in the film Revolutionary Road.
Speaker 2 That's quite a cast you were with as a young actor. I mean, what do you remember about that experience?
Speaker 3
It was just one of the most sublime situations you could hope for. I mean, in addition to the cast, you've got Sam Mendez directing.
You've got the astonishing Roger Deakins photographing everything.
Speaker 3 Fortunately, for me, in that instance, I was playing someone who really didn't give a rat's butt about anything, so it was okay to
Speaker 3 let go. I frankly think the hardest part in that story are the parts that Leo and Kate are playing because they don't get to just say whatever comes into their head.
Speaker 3 They're trying to hold on to something.
Speaker 3 And my poor fellow, John, is not trying to hold on to anything.
Speaker 2 You were only in two scenes in this movie, I think, and you got an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Did that change things? Did that open doors?
Speaker 3 Well, I definitely think it kind of paved the way towards Boardwalk Empire.
Speaker 3
It's hard to say. I mean, a lot of it's speculation.
You know, I don't know what goes through people's heads.
Speaker 3 Because I feel like John Gibbons and Nelson and Alden are
Speaker 2 very
Speaker 3
different people. But I do know that I got that meeting with Terrence Winter and Mr.
Scorsese not long after that nomination.
Speaker 2
And that led to Boardwalk Empire. Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. You know, Boardwalk Empire was a long project for you, you know, over, I guess, five seasons, over four years or something like that.
Speaker 2 And you play this FBI agent, Nelson Van Alden, who,
Speaker 2 well, boy, he goes through quite a journey into some dark, dark places. Did you know where that character was going as it was coming in?
Speaker 3
Yeah, sure. So first of all, just for the record, Nelson was not in the FBI.
He was in the Treasury. Right, right.
Speaker 2
It was revenuers back then. Yeah, coalition.
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 But
Speaker 3
no, I didn't know. You know, I went in for the meeting with Terrence Winter and Mr.
Scorsese, and
Speaker 3 it was presented to me that he was kind of the
Speaker 3 avenging angel of the whole thing, that he was a stand-up fellow, very devout, religious individual.
Speaker 3 They didn't indicate the fall from grace so much.
Speaker 3 But it was about as broad of a story arc as you can hope for.
Speaker 3 I always kind of secretly wished that there would have been more of a Phoenix rising from the ashes kind of quality to the whole thing, but he kind of never really was able to redeem himself.
Speaker 3 But, you know, it sure seemed to tickle people, and that's something that you can be proud of, I guess. But
Speaker 3 I was very sad for him.
Speaker 2 You know, that's really when I first really became aware of you as an actor, is that
Speaker 2 it is a pretty dark role did you find that people recognized you more and casting directors were calling more and
Speaker 3 well when you're on a TV show it's a whole different ballgame than doing films because you really become a part of people's routine
Speaker 3 and people develop very strong
Speaker 3 feelings about you know the number of times uh people said you know would come up and say oh I just hate you I just hate you I'm like well you you actually don't even know who I am.
Speaker 3 But they get very personally involved.
Speaker 2 Aaron Powell, Jr.: Did it typecast you anyway as a guy who's mentally unhinged?
Speaker 3 I don't know.
Speaker 3 I have this annoying proclivity to see all the characters I play as distinct and unique individuals. Now, some of them, there may be a propensity for darkness or being troubled or whatnot,
Speaker 3 but they're all very different different to me, you know, even like
Speaker 3 like I said earlier, the difference between John Givings and Nelson Van Alden is pretty astronomical for me.
Speaker 2 But uh Givings is the guy in Revolutionary Road. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 Or the difference between Nelson Van Alden and Richard Kuklinski from The Iceman is very different.
Speaker 3
What's similar is it's me. That's the similarity, is it's always me.
It's always my body and my face and my you know, and I guess, uh, you know,
Speaker 3 I'm a big fella and I got this giant head and it's not too difficult for me to seem intimidating, I suppose.
Speaker 3 But it couldn't be further from what I'm actually like.
Speaker 2 Right, right.
Speaker 2
You know, it's funny. I got a call from my son this morning, who is grown and has kids, and he said, oh, today's your interview with Michael Shannon.
Did you see all of the 1,200 films he made?
Speaker 2
Not all, but a lot of them. I don't know.
When you look back at all the career, this career you have, what do you think? Is it amazing to you?
Speaker 3 I'm always reminded of something
Speaker 3 that I believe is attributed to Bob Dylan. This notion that what he's done in the past isn't terribly compelling to him on a day-to-day basis.
Speaker 3 He's not sitting around listening to blonde on blonde and saying, boy, I really crushed it.
Speaker 3 He's thinking about what he's doing now.
Speaker 3 And I kind of look at it that way, too.
Speaker 3 But it can give you a little bit of vertigo if you actually look back at
Speaker 3 everything and think, oh my God, I was a part of all of that.
Speaker 3 It makes you a little dizzy, for real. But it's also the past, you know,
Speaker 3 and I'm always thinking, well, what can I do now that would be worth a darn, you know,
Speaker 3
and keep pushing myself. And I still feel like I have so much to learn.
There's so much not just about acting, but but about life and the world.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 3 I guess the thing I'm most grateful for in my career is is how much I've learned about the world
Speaker 3 through acting.
Speaker 3 And when I look at these projects that I have now, Nuremberg and Death by Lightning, I learned so much. I would have never known anything about Robert Jackson had I not done Nurenberg.
Speaker 3 And I probably wouldn't have known anything about President Garfield had I not done Death by Lightning. So I just want to keep discovering and learning.
Speaker 2
You played a contract killer in the film The Iceman. It's based on a real guy.
And Ray Liota was also in the film.
Speaker 2
He's done a lot of mob films. He's quite a tough character in a lot of them.
What was that experience like?
Speaker 3
Oh, gosh. I mean, that was a thrill.
You know, I'm as big a fan of Goodfellows as anybody.
Speaker 3 And also the movie
Speaker 3 Something Wild, the Jonathan Demi film. I remember seeing him in that and thinking, that's the scariest demon being I've ever seen in my life.
Speaker 3 And he had those beautiful blue eye, those ice water eyes, you know, just very powerful eyes.
Speaker 3 I was a little weak in the knees, I suppose, but I got over it.
Speaker 2 Was Ray Liotta a scary guy in any way?
Speaker 3 Well, I mean, the issue was, is that I had to be scarier.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 3 And there's a scene in the movie, if you see it, where
Speaker 3
he points a gun at my face, and I'm completely expressionless. Like, okay, go ahead.
And it spooks him out so much that he...
Speaker 2 He leaves me alone.
Speaker 3 And I think I actually managed to spook him out for real.
Speaker 2 Not many people have done that, I imagine. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2
We're going to take another break here. Let me reintroduce you.
We are speaking with Michael Shannon.
Speaker 2 He stars as President James Garfield in the new Netflix series Death by Lightning, and he plays a prosecutor trying Nazi leaders for war crimes in the new film Nuremberg.
Speaker 2 We'll be back after a short break. This is fresh air.
Speaker 1 This message comes from Charles Schwab. When it comes to managing your wealth, Schwab gives you more choices, like full-service wealth management and advice when you need it.
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You can also invest on your own and trade on Thinkorswim. Visit Schwab.com to learn more.
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Speaker 1 Interior Designer and CIDQ President Siavash Madani describes the rigor of NCIDQ certification.
Speaker 12 An NCIDQ certified interior designer must complete a minimum of six years of specialized education and work experience.
Speaker 12 Being NCIDQ certified means that you've proven your knowledge and skills and are recognized as a qualified interior design professional.
Speaker 1 Learn more at cidq.org slash npr.
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Speaker 9 The IRC helps refugees whose lives are disrupted by conflict and disaster, supporting recovery efforts and responding within 72 hours of crisis. Donate today by visiting rescue.org slash rebuild.
Speaker 2 This is Fresh Air, and we're speaking with actor Michael Shannon. He has a busy acting career, but he's also revived his long-standing interest in music.
Speaker 2 For several years, he and musician friend Jason Narducei have assembled a band and toured, performing covers of whole albums by several artists, focusing in particular on REM.
Speaker 2 Here's Shannon and Narducei performing the REM song Driver 8 on the Tonight Show. Michael Shannon is the lead singer.
Speaker 2 The walls are filled up stone by stone.
Speaker 2 The fields divided one by one.
Speaker 2 And the train ductor says take a break, drive away
Speaker 2 Drive a rate, take a break We've been on this ship too long
Speaker 2 And the train ductor says take a break, drive away
Speaker 2 Drive away,
Speaker 2 take a break
Speaker 2 We can reach our destination
Speaker 2 But still a ways away
Speaker 2 But still a ways away. A sun tree house on the outskirts of the park.
Speaker 2
The power lines have floated somewhere. And that is our guest, actor Michael Shannon, singing driver 8 with a band including Jason Narducey.
That band sounds tight, I gotta say.
Speaker 2 Do you think that music has informed or affected your acting in any way? You know, rhythm, pace, any of that?
Speaker 3 Oh, definitely. Yes, they're very interwoven.
Speaker 3 Particularly when I'm doing theater,
Speaker 3 I rely on music to inspire me and to give me energy to perform.
Speaker 3 A lot of times I listen to music
Speaker 3 on my way to the theater before the show.
Speaker 3 I mean, I have so many albums on my phone that I'm constantly having to delete things because I'm running out of storage in my memory.
Speaker 3 But I just, I like to have as much music as close to me as possible at all times.
Speaker 2
Yeah. Yeah.
REM is aware of you're doing this. And I think some of the band members showed up at a performance once and and went on stage with you, right?
Speaker 3 I mean, uh, they've all yeah, when we when we play in Athens, Georgia, uh, we've done two tours so far.
Speaker 3 And uh when we go to Athens, they they all make a point of coming to that show, which is really sweet and special and mind-blowing. And
Speaker 3 there have been other shows where
Speaker 3 one of them might make an appearance, depending on where we are in the country. But yeah,
Speaker 3 they're definitely interested in it,
Speaker 3 and they've been unbelievably gracious about the whole thing.
Speaker 2 So what's next for you?
Speaker 3 Oh, goodness. Well, we are going to do yet another REM tour.
Speaker 3 These tours have been commemorating the 40th anniversary of particular albums. So the first one was for Murmur, REM's first full-length album.
Speaker 3 And the second one we did was the 40th anniversary of Fables of the Reconstruction. So now we are going to go back out on the road with the 40th anniversary of an album called Life's Rich Pageant.
Speaker 3
And that tour is in February and March. In terms of my actual day job, I'm not quite sure what I'm doing next.
I did shoot a film earlier this year called Mr.
Speaker 3 Irrelevant, which is a football movie in which I play the coach Bill Parcels.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 3 And that will be coming out, I assume, sometime next year. But other than that, I don't have anything
Speaker 3 in the can, the proverbial can.
Speaker 3 So it'll be, it's as much a mystery to me as anybody else right now.
Speaker 2 Michael Shannon, thank you so much for speaking with us again.
Speaker 3 Thanks for having me, Dave.
Speaker 2 Michael Shannon is a two-time Academy Award nominee.
Speaker 2 He stars as President James Garfield in the new Netflix series Death by Lightning, and he plays a prosecutor trying Nazi leaders for war crimes in the new film Nuremberg. Coming up, David B.
Speaker 2 Cooley reviews a revived and expanded TV documentary series about the Beatles on Disney Plus. This is Fresh Air.
Speaker 1 This message comes from Vital Farms, who works with small American farms to bring you pasture-raised eggs. Farmer Tanner Pace shares a moment that brings him a sense of purpose.
Speaker 13 I think that when the barn doors open and the hens run to the paddocks, you can truly see what a happy hen really is. I love pasture-raised eggs because you can see the work.
Speaker 13 and the pride that the farmers have and have put into these eggs.
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Speaker 1 Interior Designer and CIDQ President Siavash Madani describes his fundamentals of interior design.
Speaker 12
I think interior design is about responsibility. It's not just the way a space looks or the way a space photographs.
To me, better design means functional, safe, accessible, and inclusive design.
Speaker 1 Learn more at cidq.org/slash slash npr
Speaker 2 In 1995, ABC presented an eight-part documentary series called The Beatles Anthology, telling the history of the band and its music in the first and only fully authorized TV biography.
Speaker 2 The only one that is, until now.
Speaker 2 Thirty years later, the Beatles Anthology is back, with the sound and images restored and with a brand new ninth episode added at the end.
Speaker 2 Disney Plus is presenting the newly refurbished series beginning tonight, with three episodes unveiled nightly. Our TV critic David Biancoole has this review.
Speaker 14 When the Beatles released the original The Beatles anthology in 1995, it was a next-generation British invasion, attacking on two fronts at the same time. On the one hand, there was the music.
Speaker 14 Three box set anthology collections released on CD by Apple Records, full of studio outtakes and alternate versions. And on TV, there was the eight-hour The Beatles anthology documentary on ABC.
Speaker 14 It was shown across the globe and later released on home video. That was in 1995, 25 years after the Beatles had broken up.
Speaker 14 That documentary extended their legend and their impact for several more decades. It told the story of the group via performance, film, and TV clips, and lots and lots of interviews.
Speaker 14 John Lennon, who had been shot and killed 15 years earlier, was represented in vintage interview clips. So were the other Beatles.
Speaker 14 But for the 1995 documentary, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr also sat still for new interviews, separately and together.
Speaker 14 So when it comes to the key moment when John meets Paul and invites him to join his group, the Quarrymen, the documentary recounts it by having Paul, in 1995, playing on guitar and singing the song he sang for John as a sort of audition when they met.
Speaker 14 Then John, in an old interview, is heard picking up the story. It's told the same way in the new The Beatles anthology 2025 as in the original,
Speaker 14 only with crisper video and audio.
Speaker 16
I was the singer and the leader. Well, I made the decision whether to have him in the group or not.
Was it better to have a guy who was better than the people I had in,
Speaker 16 obviously,
Speaker 15 or not?
Speaker 16 And that decision was to let Paul in to make the group stronger. And I turned around to him right then on First Meet and said, do you want to join the group? And I think he said yes the next day.
Speaker 14 Peter Jackson and his team, who turned out take footage from the 1970 Let It Be documentary into his superb multi-part Get Back Beatles miniseries for Disney Plus, did some of the restoration work here.
Speaker 14 So did engineer Jeff Emmerich and music producer Giles Martin, the son of Beatles producer George Martin. Their combined efforts make all the music sound so much better.
Speaker 14 For the audio release of this new Beatles anthology 2025, they've issued a brand new fourth CD set of recordings. The remastering on all four volumes is a quantum leap forward.
Speaker 14 Listen to John Lennon on Free as a Bird, and his voice no longer sounds distant and tinny. It sounds like John Lennon right there in the studio with the other Beatles.
Speaker 14 It's the next best thing to
Speaker 14 be
Speaker 14 free
Speaker 14 So the new audio release definitely is worth it. Is the new TV documentary? Absolutely.
Speaker 14 There's something about the Beatles and the way they approach things that makes their output seem fresh no matter how many years have passed.
Speaker 14 The music certainly is that way, but so is this documentary.
Speaker 14 The first eight hours of the Beatles anthology seem vibrant and exciting and not at all dated, even though it's the same content as before, only shinier.
Speaker 14 And the final hour, full of cutting-room floor gems, is a treat. In the original documentary, you saw and heard only one complete song from the Beatles on their first Ed Sullivan show appearance.
Speaker 14 In this new hour of the Beatles Anthology 2025, you get another, along with plenty of studio outtakes.
Speaker 14 And there's a lot of fascinating footage of Paul, George, and Ringo reuniting to record new Beatle tracks in the 90s, based on old demo recordings from John, along with a juicy origin story told by George of how the musical reunion came to be.
Speaker 14 It's a story that wasn't told in the 1995 documentary.
Speaker 16 My recollection, now, this again, you'll probably have three or four different versions of this, but Jeff Lynn and myself,
Speaker 16 we had this band called the Traveling Wilburys.
Speaker 16 And we had Roy Orbison in it. I'm so
Speaker 16 And then Roy Orbison died.
Speaker 16 Nobody can replace Roy as Roy, but maybe we should have some other person.
Speaker 16 And then we thought of Elvis and somebody had talked to the Elvis Estate and they loved the idea of Elvis being in the Wilburys.
Speaker 16 The idea was that we put Elvis onto a multi-track machine and then we redo the entire backing, change the chords, change the tune, whatever, and even the lyrics. And we'll then all sing this song.
Speaker 16 And then when it comes to the chorus, we bring up the other fader and there's Elvis singing the chorus. We never did it because, I don't know, at that point I thought it seemed a bit too gimmicky.
Speaker 16 But I was talking to Yoko and telling her this idea. And she said, oh, I think I've got a tape of John.
Speaker 14 Jeff Lynn ended up producing those new Beatle tracks.
Speaker 14 And you can see him working here with George, Paul, and Ringo, and you witness the same sort of genial vibes that were on view in Jackson's Get Back.
Speaker 14 These were men who, despite all the fame and fights and complicated lives, clearly loved one another.
Speaker 14 The Beatles anthology 2025 ends with the three of them at George's Friar Park Estate lounging on the grass.
Speaker 14 George is playing a ukulele, he and Paul are singing, and Ringo is slapping his legs in time. Instead of brand new interviews with Paul and Ringo, the documentary ends there.
Speaker 14 But it's a moment that feels not only fresh and natural, but unabashedly tender and sweet.
Speaker 15 perfection Vodio no,
Speaker 15 I repeat
Speaker 15 Don't you think she's kind of sweet
Speaker 15 Now I see very confidentially Ain't she sweet
Speaker 15 Ain't she sweet
Speaker 15 Ain't
Speaker 15 she
Speaker 12 Sweet, let's go
Speaker 2 TV critic David Biancoule is writing a book about the visual artistry of the Beatles. He reviewed the Beatles anthology, premiering tonight on Disney Plus.
Speaker 2 On Tomorrow's Show, a filmed version of the 2023 Broadway revival of Stephen Sondheim's musical Merrily We Roll Along, starring Daniel Radcliffe and Jonathan Groff, opens in movie theaters December 5th.
Speaker 2
It won four Tonys. We'll feature Terry's interview with Groff and the show's director Maria Friedman and hear tracks from the revival's great cast recording.
I hope you can join us.
Speaker 2
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Speaker 2 Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shorrock, Anne-Marie Baldonado, Lauren Krenzold, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Challener, and Anna Bauman.
Speaker 2
Our digital media producer is Molly Seavinesper. Our consulting visual producer producer is Hope Wilson.
Susan Yakundi directed today's show. For Terry Gross and Tonya Mosley, I'm Dave Davy.
Speaker 1 This message comes from Vital Farms, who works with small American farms to bring you paste-raised eggs. Farmer Tanner Pace shares a moment that brings him a sense of purpose.
Speaker 13 I think that when the barn doors open and the hens run to the paddocks, you can truly see what a happy hen really is.
Speaker 13 I love pasteur-raised eggs because you can see the work and the pride that the farmers have and have put into these eggs.
Speaker 1 To learn more about how Vital Farms farmers care for their hens, visit vitalfarms.com.
Speaker 9 Support for this podcast and the following message come from Humana. Employees are the heartbeat of your business.
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That's why Humana offers dental, vision, life, and disability benefits designed to help protect them. Award-winning service, expansive networks, and modern benefits.
That's the power of human care.
Speaker 9 To learn more about Humana's plans for companies of all sizes and benefits budgets, visit humana.com/slash employer.