Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Handling life like a boss

- BY YVONNE VILLARREAL

FO R Y E A R S , Billy Crudup wasn’t interested in the song-and-dance of the Hollywood promotion machine. So deep was his aversion to it that he tells a story, in the few interviews he’s done, about trying to negotiate his way out of doing press. ¶ It’s the sort of idealism that would make his character in “The Morning Show” smirk. Cory Ellison, the smarmy network executive Crudup has made a fan favorite on the Apple TV+ drama, is the sort of guy who will entertain altruism and assuage talent — as long as it leaves him a few moves ahead in his game of capitalist chess. ¶ And Crudup, who has made a career out of leaving a lasting impression onstage and onscreen, has come

around to playing as well.

“To me, it was counterint­uitive, because what I was trying to do was tell a story that made people assume that I was somebody else entirely — so, the more that they knew about me, the harder it was going to be for me to convince them that I was somebody else,” Crudup says. “Thinking about the opportunit­ies that I missed out on because I became such a contrarian, it’s a fair argument to say that you could think about it in a different way. What happened over the past probably 10 years or so is I’ve gotten to the middle part of my career and I have been able to be a character actor, and so I don’t feel so protective of that anymore.”

Video-chatting from his home in New York, energized and glistening after a visit to the gym, Crudup discussed how playing a media executive has given him perspectiv­e as a performer, harnessing ambition, and imagining a world in which Cory Ellison is in a room with “Succession’s” Logan Roy.

OK, I’ve read you some tweets about how much people love your portrayal of Cory Ellison. Why do you love playing him?

I couldn’t believe some of the s— that was coming out of his mouth in the pilot and I was so curious as to what [showrunner] Kerry [Ehrin] was after, that [she] imagined the human being who would feel confident and present enough in the moment — and capable to speak in paragraphs, metaphors, analogies — and to be in such a high-pressure situation with such dexterity and ease and confidence. And then my

imaginatio­n really went to some of the people that I have encountere­d in New York. There’s some eccentrics in high-leverage situations, whose primary understand­ing of the way the world works is by reading people. There’s a magnetic quality that [Cory] wields as well, which is this inscrutabi­lity about his motivation­s. And anybody who can often obfuscate their motivation­s in such a high-stakes poker game is fascinatin­g, because they’ve got to have some level of confidence and belief in themselves — that if they lose everything, they’ll be fine.

Has playing a media executive given you a different understand­ing of what they’re after as businesspe­ople versus what you’re after as a performer?

There are people in every sector of our society who are exploiting wild ambition on various scales. I probably spent most of my career avoiding people who were not on the creative side just because I didn’t understand what they do. It was gonna be too terrifying for me. But there are people in the business community that I have seen display a vivid, self-aware ambition to produce something to the best of their ability.

I had done a play offBroadwa­y, and there was a guy named Don Katz, who runs Audible, who had the idea to begin exploring the potential of theater being recorded for Audible audiences. And I remember I kind of recoiled at it. He was like, “I want you to do that show, again, at a different theater, but it’s going to be sponsored by Audible. And at the end of it, you will record it for Audible.” And I can remember thinking, “That is missing one essential element of the theater, which is that we’re communing together live — that is the crucial component of it.” And while agreeing with that, he also said, “But I hate the fact that there are people out there who have no agency to come to New York to see that kind of show; that they don’t get to experience any part of it at all.” Subsequent to that, theater shut down during the pandemic. And during that time, he told me this recently, he was able to produce 77 shows to keep actors employed. So he’s a guy who’s a big part of a big corporate monolith, delivering some of what I think are pretty rad and interestin­g, subversive ideas.

You’re obviously on different platforms, but I do wish there could be a “Succession” crossover with “The Morning Show.” I want to see how Cory would interact with a media mogul like Logan Roy.

Well, that that makes two of us. I’m trying to think of all the tools that he [Cory] would employ, because of what he would have to do, obviously, with somebody that powerful, who really wields their wealth as a sledgehamm­er. You have to discombobu­late them in some way. Logan is not somebody who is easily discombobu­lated, so Cory, as a master chessman, I’m sure would have a 13-point movement that gets him close enough to just get a smile from Logan. It would be a slow burn. [Logan’s] not somebody that you can push around.

You’ve played driven people before — people with unparallel­ed ambition to win or excel in their career. Where do your ambitions fall as a performer? What is winning or being the best for you?

When I was in acting school, there were people from all over the country, different walks of life, and some really extraordin­ary talents. I was not one of them. I had a real interest in it, and a kind of open curiosity and a lot of energy. But in terms of a refined instrument capable of transformi­ng into wildly different characters in different contexts, I don’t know.

When we got out of school, based upon the way that I looked, purely, I was getting opportunit­ies. And I can remember having a conversati­on with an agent that made it crystal clear. You do these things called showings, where it was the graduating class of Yale, which that year included Paul Giamatti, and the graduating class of NYU. And so there’s about 40 of us in total that do scenes for casting directors and agents in New York City in one location; after that, they essentiall­y post on the board which agents or managers or producers want to talk to you. And I went to one meeting with an agent who was quite articulate and had already begun to build a

PLAYING

a slick network executive on “The Morning Show” has earned Billy Crudup a supporting actor Emmy. following of really interestin­g actors — actors that I liked. And she spoke for a good 45 minutes about my talent. And at the end of it, she said, “Well, I just can’t wait to see you in something.” She actually hadn’t been at the showings. She got the news from her assistant that I was a potential, and right then I knew, “Oh, crap. I’ve got to be cautious about how I enter this business, because there are people who are going to be trying to leverage something about me that is not the thing.”

It ignited a desire to be a part of the most ambitious thing I was being offered, and sometimes that meant playing supporting parts. I did a production of two plays, “Waiting for Godot” and “No Man’s Land.” It didn’t matter that there were going to be people in Hollywood who thought that I quit acting.

Like its debut season, “The Morning Show” had to pivot this season to address current realities. It’s taking on a range of topics —

#MeToo, the pandemic, the streaming wars — which has resulted in some wild turns. What did you think as you got the scripts? Did you worry, “Are people going to buy this?”

I figured one of the conceits of this show in and of itself is that it is taking enormous risks from the beginning with very high-profile figures, studying a very highprofil­e environmen­t, and thinking extravagan­tly in terms of plot and character developmen­t. You wouldn’t have a Cory if it wasn’t a show that thought like that.

To me, there’s a correlatio­n between that and how we’re all managing our days. We have to pick our battles day in, day out. There’s so many different ways in which we are being forced to exercise our own personal agency and author our ideology. Whether it can work, narrativel­y or not, I definitely take the coward’s way out and defer to the writers.

“The Morning Show” is only your second TV series after 2017’s “Gypsy” on Netflix. But straight out of school, you did get a taste of pilot season, right? What about that experience made you stay away for so long?

My whole training was predicated on seeing text, being able to navigate that text, understand­ing the totality of that story, and imagining that I had some part in that story. So when somebody sends you a pitch about the arc of a story over 24 episodes, immediatel­y my mind was thinking, “But what’s the dialogue? Because if I don’t know how the character talks, or I don’t understand what they’re going to say, how can I commit to doing the story? I don’t know if I’ll be useful for you.”

And in order just to audition, you have to do something called a test deal, which I had never heard of before. I remember I was standing on the corner of 57th and Seventh Avenue at a pay phone talking to my agent. And he said, “So they’re going to need an eight-year commitment.” And I’m standing there going, “What are you talking about, man? I thought this was exciting that I got a call back. I can’t plan my next eight years right now.” And he was trying to explain, “You know, most people are very excited about the opportunit­y of working.” And the fact of that matter is there must have been some part of Cory in me at that moment, where I thought, “You know what, I don’t care if this doesn’t play out to being a financiall­y lucrative career for me, I would much rather scrap my way through an interestin­g career than buy into something that I don’t really understand right now.”

If I spent the time before that being a child actor, and I understood television in a different way, that’s a different conversati­on. But to me, I didn’t understand it at all.

You have an enviable list of credits: “Almost Famous,” “Sleepers,” “Without Limits,” “Big Fish.” Do any stand out as a turning point in how you navigated your career?

Recently, an interestin­g turning point is the understand­ing — that profound and obvious understand­ing — that I am past the middle of my life; that I am well into the middle of my life. That I have a different kind of agency as a middle-aged man than I did as a younger man in terms of playing characters of depth and complexity. The grays in my hair, the lines on my face — they’re earned, and I can exploit them as an actor in the same way that one can exploit your youth.

 ?? Jesse Dittmar For The Times ??
Jesse Dittmar For The Times

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