Dope interview with the two gawds.
How Denzel Washington is passing the torch on to Michael B Jordan
“It was a big highlight,”
Michael B Jordan said, then looked down shyly into his lap.
The actor was explaining what it meant to him when film critics wrote that his breakthrough performance in
Fruitvale Station, five years ago, reminded them of a young
Denzel Washington. Possibly complicating matters was the fact that Denzel Washington was sitting next to him at the table.
“When someone says you’re like your idol,” Jordan said, “It’s like: ‘Really? You see that in me?’ I’d only done that one movie. But then I started using it as motivation,” he said. “I wanted to pop up on Denzel’s radar. He’s the OG. If I could get recognition from him, I know I’m going down the right path, you know?”
Finally, Washington broke in with a booming laugh: “And here we are, Mike! Looks like it’s working out already,” he said.
In truth, it would be hard for an actor to choose a better role model than Washington. In a career spanning more than 40 years and 50 films – and kicked off by the hit TV drama
St Elsewhere – Washington, 63, has been nominated for nine Academy Awards. He won twice: for best actor as a terrifying rogue cop in
Training Day and for best supporting actor as a Union soldier in an African-American army unit in
Glory. And he was nominated for best actor Oscars in both of the past two years.
In the past decade, Washington has ruled the stage, too. He won a Tony Award for best actor in the revival of August Wilson’s
Fences in 2010, later directing and starring in an Oscar-nominated film version. He led the acclaimed revival of
A Raisin in the Sunin 2014. And today (26 April), he will open again on
Broadway in a revival of Eugene O’Neill’s play
The Iceman Cometh, a searing and (at four hours long) monumental drama about the lies we tell ourselves to get through life.
Like Washington, Jordan, 31, got his big break on television: on HBO’s
The Wire, when he was just 15. After his heartbreaking performance in
Fruitvale Station, about the last day in the life of a transit-police shooting victim, he starred in the popular
Rocky reboot
Creed. And this year, he played the villain, Erik Killmonger, in the Marvel juggernaut
Black Panther, winning perhaps the best reviews of anyone in the extremely well-reviewed cast.
Next month, he stars in
Fahrenheit 451 on HBO, a dystopian film based on the novel by Ray Bradbury. Jordan plays a “fireman,” part of a state-sanctioned brigade that hunts down readers and burns books. His company, Outlier Society Productions, is one of the film’s producers and also among the first to adopt inclusion riders, requiring diversity among cast and crew, as called for by Frances McDormand from the stage of this year’s Academy Awards.
Over a cocktail hour at the Lambs Club in Manhattan (a Diet Coke for Washington, a sauvignon blanc for Jordan), the actors traded notes about creating characters and the socially minded work that really matters to them. These are excerpts from the conversation.
Galanes: If Mike reminds people of a young Denzel, who did young Denzel remind people of?
Washington: I never saw it that way. I never even thought about movie stars. My goal was to be on Broadway, to earn $650 a week. My hero was James Earl Jones. And I came to acting green. I was taking pre-law courses, then journalism courses. Then I took an acting class and got bit by the bug. So I came down to Lincoln Centre and saw plays and stage actors.
Galanes: But all those things you did – law, journalism, acting – they’re all about getting to the bottom of a story, right?
Washington: I like that part: building a character. You start with the material that gives you clues. If you’re playing a boxer, you want to throw out punches. If you’re playing a conductor, you want to get on a train.
Galanes: And the script?
Washington: Sure, but you don’t know who the character is just by reading the script. I don’t read a script and go, “Now, I get it!” That’s just the beginning. The first thread you pull.
Jordan: The script tells you what’s going up on screen. But the biggest part, the fun part, is figuring out what happened to that character before page one of the script. What kind of food does he like? Did he get into fights going to school? That back story determines the choices you make within the confines of the script. And going through that process with the director is a big part of the collaboration. Now I’ve got notebooks and notebooks of back stories. Some directors may want you to add something or change your version. That’s when you try to find common ground.
Galanes: Is that why you’ve both worked with directors repeatedly? Mike with Ryan Coogler; Denzel with Spike Lee and Antoine Fuqua. Your common ground?
Washington (laughing): Maybe they’re the ones who called. What you’re saying is part of it, but I don’t think it’s just one way.
Jordan: Those are the roles I was lucky enough to get. Ryan and I have worked together three times, and I have a really close relationship with him. But I said no to lots of other things with other people in between. They weren’t right. Personally, I think you’re defined by what you say no to.
Washington: I say yes to everything!
Galanes: Why do I doubt that? Managing a career as big as yours must take a lot of work.
Washington: Not now. Maybe early on. Now, I just do what I want to do. And you don’t want to walk down the same road twice. I’m sure after doing
Iceman Cometh, I won’t be looking to do another play.
Jordan: For a minute.
Washington: Yeah, not for a while.
Galanes: You’re too young to remember this, Mike. But early in his career, Denzel was so beloved for playing good guys – in
Glory and
Cry Freedom – that we all freaked out when he started playing villains: in
Training Day,
American Gangster. And he was even better at bad guys! Was that about walking down different roads?
Washington: I grew up right here in New York. Trust me,
Training Day was a lot closer to who I was than a lot of the others. It wasn’t a stretch for me. And the original script was more like
Lethal Weapon. But when Antoine [Fuqua] came on board, he brought this whole LA gangster thing to it. That wasn’t even in the script. But I went with it.
Jordan: So much trickles down from the director. That’s why I try to choose the ones who make the best environments to work in, so we can maybe make something as good as
Training Day. You don’t want to go into a project with somebody who won’t be helpful to your process – or vice versa.
Galanes: I read this funny thing about you, Mike: you started choosing projects where you wouldn’t die in the end?
Jordan: It started with my mom, who’s super emotional. When I shot my death scene in
The Wire, she was on set. And the PAs kept coming to me and saying: ‘You may want to check on your mom.’ I go see her, and she’s sitting there bawling. I’m just a kid. I’m going, ‘Come on, Ma. You’re embarrassing me.’ And after
Fruitvale Station, I was like, ‘Man, this is really affecting her.’ But there was another thing, too. Look at Denzel’s career. I want people to see me win. I want audiences to see me ending up on top – not dying. I want to be the leading man.
Washington: How old are you?
Jordan: 31.
Washington: Man, I got underwear older than that.
Jordan: That was the real thought process: How do I become a leading man? I know phenomenal actors who can’t open movies overseas. How do you become the guy who can carry a film?
Washington: So, you study the game?
Jordan: You, Will Smith, Tom Cruise, Leo [DiCaprio]. You guys are my models. You’re all your own person, and you all have great qualities that make you ‘that guy’. So, how do I take what I have in me and create my version of that?
Galanes Is that why you went down the superhero route?
Jordan: Without a doubt. International markets are key for me. So, when I get a chance, I’m taking it.
The Fantastic Four wassuper important, regardless of how it turned out. [The 2015 film was a critical and commercial failure.] A million things have to go right for a movie to be successful, and actors don’t control a lot of them.
Galanes You probably made up for it with
Black Panther. Why no superheroes for you, Denzel?
Washington: Nobody asked.
Jordan: That’s crazy! Really?