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Sometimes about really big things, but most times, the little mysteries are the best.
Our lost and found is currently filled with pants. I don't know what I've never seen this happen.
This is true. Mysteries have every size each week, this American life, wherever you get your podcasts. This is Fresh Air. I'm Dave Davies. The new film Pressure takes place in the days leading up to D-Dabe during World War II, when the exact date of the invasion was as yet uncertain because it would depend on the weather.
Today, we feature our interview with Irish actor Andrew Scott. He co-stars in Pressure as Captain James Stag, the Chief Royal Air Force Meteorologist. Allied commanders are gathered in England and Stag is urging them to hold off on the invasion as he sees a storm brewing, but he's at odds with the meteorologist for Dwight Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of Allied forces who thinks the weather will be fine. His name is Irving Kirk.
Here's a clip from the film in which Andrew Scott has Captain Stag responds to the forecast Kirk has just presented to the commanders.
“That kind of quick stuff said that it's going to be safe to land in Normandy tomorrow, and so that's what you believe.”
But everything that he's just said is pure on adulterators. Horse. You can muster all the tanks and soldiers and ships that you like. You can assemble the greatest Armada that ever there was, but if you had made tomorrow, they're going to be washed away.
Because the storms that I'm talking about are real and the jet stream that's propelling them towards the Normandy coast is real and the wrath of nature is real. Andrew Scott most recently played Tom Ripley, a con man with no conscience in the Netflix series Ripley, adapted from the famous Patricia Heismeth novel. He was the famous hot priest in the award winning comedy series Fleabag torn between his vow of celibacy and his love for a woman.
Andy was Sherlock Holmes Nemesis Moriarty in the British series Sherlock opposite Benedict Cumberbatch. Scott was also a soldier in Steven Spielberg series Band of Brothers, a wise cracking lieutenant in the world where one film 1917 and a gay man who shut down his emotions in the film all of us strangers.
“Terry spoke to Andrew Scott in 2024. She asked him about his part in Fleabag.”
So you may be tired of talking about your role in Fleabag as a priest. As a priest torn between your commitment to the priesthood and your love for the man character, the woman nickname Fleabag, torn between your commitment to celibacy and your own sexual desire. And you know, it starts Phoebe Wallerbridge who also created and wrote it. And she plays a single woman who really loves sex and has had a lot of partners,
but isn't really in love until she meets you.
And your priest who performs the ceremony for Fleabag's father's second marriage.
She falls in love with you, you're drawn to her, but you're a priest. You become good friends and she started to hope that you'll leave the priesthood and be with her. I don't want to play a scene in which she's visiting you at the parish in the evening. And the scene starts inside and then moves outside. So we just did a bit of editing to edit together those two parts of the scene.
So let's hear that Phoebe Wallerbridge's Fleabag speaks first. So I make you back. Okay, great. Well, it's got some great twists too. I couldn't help it.
Just one or two little inconsistency. Okay, sure. So the world was made in seven days. And on the first day, light came. And then a few days later, the sun came.
Yeah, that's ridiculous. You believe that. It's not fact, it's poetry, it's moral code. It's for interpretation to help us work out. God's plan for us.
What's God's plan for you?
“I believe God meant for me to love people.”
And just for the way I believe I'm supposed to love people as a father. We can arrange that. A father of Mary. I'll go up to three. It's not going to happen.
To you, then. Okay, to you. Do you think I should become a Catholic? No, don't do that. I like that you believe in a meaningless existence.
And you're good for me, you make me question my faith. And?
I've never thought I was a to God.
That's Phoebe Wallabridge and my guest Andrew Scott.
That's such a great role and such a great performance.
Did you ever know a young priest as attractive as you were?
That's very kind and also impossible to answer. Yeah, no, I completely adore Phoebe. Well, wait, listen out of what the question here. We'll take out the comparison to you. So, so you don't have to worry about being humble here.
“But did you ever know a young, very attractive priest?”
No, no. The priest that I knew were not young or attractive. Right. You were raised Catholic in Dublin.
What was the role of the church in your life?
Well, I think it was a huge role. And my life growing up. The culture is based on the Catholic church. Ireland is a small country. I was at a Jesuit school.
I'm not a Protestant Catholic anymore. But certainly the culture around Catholicism is one that is very hard to dispel. And parts of it are wonderful.
“I think the sort of focus on community within the Catholic church is really wonderful.”
And there's also, of course, the huge amount of corruption and abuse that happened when I was growing up. And then 90s, I remember driving to school. My father came to drive me to school in the mornings. And we would listen to the news in the morning. And you know, my very strong memory is of just a whole litany of abuse cases within the Catholic church.
Just coming out every morning. Is this sexual abuse? Sexual abuse. And not just sexual abuse, but in fidelity with the marriages. And marriages where people would be having affairs with priests. But mainly sexual abuse.
Well, you're really angry with the church. For having so many hypocrites and positions of religious power. You know, you talk about the priests who were accused of sexual abuse and, you know, infidelity and, you know, entering other people's marriages. And, you know, you're gay.
I don't know how old you are when you realize that may be all in your life. But like I said, in the Republic of Ireland, being gay was against the law until I think 1993, I think that's one of those people. Yeah. And the church condemned it. And yet, you have these priests, you know, abusing boys and having affairs with women and men, probably.
So, how did you fit all these complicated feelings into your character of the priest in Fleabag? And it's a comedic role, too, as we could hear from the scene, the scene that we played. And he's wrestling with the natural sexual desire that we have and love. Yeah, physical expressions of love, too. Yeah.
So, it's not the abstinence that I have the problem with. It's the silence around the abstinence and the way that people in position of power, silence people who want to be able to talk about that. And so, the reason that I find that character so cathartic is that, you know,
when I first started the conversation with Phoebe, I don't want to play a sort of a stereotype of somebody who is
extreme in that way. This is a human being.
“I think that's why we like that character because he does have a faith.”
I think it's a wonderful thing to be able to have romantic feelings into also have faith. And to be able to talk about the human struggle. And so I love the fact that this quite radical sexual kind of risk-a series has at its center. A real addressing for young people of what faith is because I think there's a real gap for people of my generation who have been let down by the church and feel like it's not for them to have a still space.
It's something that would be wonderful for them if they were made feel welcome. And I think that's perhaps why Phoebe, by appeal to so many people because it wasn't cynical. I think we tried to talk about religion and of course humorous way, but also in a way that isn't just too judgmental of the Catholic Church. So actually this is a person who really is struggling and is a human being. And I love the fact that he questions his faith, but constantly stays with it.
And that it's okay to question it. If your belief is deep enough, it's okay to challenge it and question it and remain committed. Yes, exactly. That's exactly what I thought to see that struggle. Like in any relationship in a marriage, you think, I'm like, this is tough, this relationship is hard.
How do I keep it going?
How do I talk about it? It's not just blind devotion the whole time in any relationship, you question it. And it's how you approach that crisis that makes us honorable and courageous. And that's a wonderful thing to be able to convey and also of course just to address.
“Did any priest give you feedback on your role in Fleabag?”
Yeah, they did actually. I have really, really positive feedback from priests. I think because they, like all of us, like to see themselves represented in a sort of fair way. And that they're not just these pious flawless people. I think most of the feedback I got was really, really wonderful.
I think you first became known in the US in Sherlock, the BBC series that played in the US as well.
With Benedict Cumberbatch, a Sherlock Holmes, a new as his nemesis, Moriarty. So I want to play a scene from season one, and this is the first scene where Sherlock Holmes and Moriarty meet face to face. And Moriarty has lured Lord Sherlock to rescue his friend Watson, who's been outfitted with an explosive vest. So Sherlock is pointing a gun at you during this entire exchange. And your character, Moriarty, speaks first.
Do you know what happens if you don't leave me alone during a lot? To you. Oh, let me guess. I got killed. Kill you.
“Oh, no. Don't be obvious. I mean, I'm going to kill you anyway someday.”
I don't want to rush with them. I'm saving it up for something special. No, no, no, no.
We don't stop praying. I'll burn you. I'll burn. I'll burn you. I've been alive being formed that I don't have one.
But we both know it's not quite true. Well, I'd better be alone. Well, it's so nice to have a proper chat. What if I just shoot you now right now? Then you could cherish the look of surprise on my face.
Because I'd be surprised to hear a lot really I would.
And just a teensy big disappointed. And of course, you wouldn't be able to cherish it for very long. The channel to hear a lot of sounds. Catch you later. No, you won't.
So you play you play more you already big and smarty sinister and funny. What was your audition like? My audition wasn't incredibly fun. Just the day before. I knew that there were auditioning people to play more you already.
And their original idea was that this character would appear almost like just an image. And it would say something like hello, surelock. And that would be the end of the series. But then when they realized that lots of actors coming into audition just saying hello, surelock doesn't give them much of an idea of the actor's range.
You know, for future series if they cast this actor. So they quickly wrote Steven Moth at the right or quickly wrote that scene, which eventually appeared as the scene we've just listened to. As an audition scene for actors to read in the audition. And they sent it maybe, I don't know, like the night before the audition.
And I thought, why this is really fun. And I was aware that I didn't look like a villain at the time. I'd quite a sort of, you know, boyish face and stuff. And so I took great pleasure in frightening them. And I knew in the audition that they were amused.
So that they were scared.
“Were you able to tap into a place in yourself that you thought could scare people?”
Yeah, yeah, I was. I feel like one of the things that I feel quite fortunate about is that I feel quite near my emotions. You know, I feel that stood me in good stead as an actor. I feel like it's enormously, I don't know, it feels healthy to me to be able to to access that part of you, but not really do any harm, you know.
Yeah, it's funny thing isn't it to be an actor? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I want to move on to Hamlet. You got an Olivier award, I think, right, for the portrayal?
No, I might have, yeah, I might have.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
How am I supposed to know if you don't know?
I don't know. How am I supposed to know? You don't know. Well, anyways, you were claimed. Yeah, yeah, people liked it. Yeah, yeah.
So you've spoken about how you wanted to make the language understandable. So often especially for Americans who, sometimes have to work hard just to grasp a British accent. When spoken quickly or spoken with a regional British accent. And of course, so much of the language is, so much of the language in Shakespeare is language that we no longer use. It's our kayak.
But you really wanted to make every word understandable.
So I went on YouTube to see if I could find anything. And I found you doing part of the to be or not to be solidically, which is, of course, the most famous part. And it was so interesting because Hamlet is really thinking through, like, should I live or should I end my life? I don't know.
“And what's the worst thing that can happen if I die, what would that be like?”
And, of course, he's using very elevated poetic language to say all of that. But you say it, like, really slowly, there are so many, like, long pauses in between, for instance, to be long pauses or not to be. And on the one hand, I thought, like, wow, that's a lot of pauses. And on the other hand, I felt like, well, every word is ringing out. And I'm kind of hearing things I hadn't heard before.
So, can you describe your thoughts about those pauses and why you took them and where you took them? I suppose to think about the pauses. Is that he's thinking? Am I going to live or am I going to die? And we're seeing that live and, you know, your job is to not play the famous speech. Your job is to just, that speech wasn't written to be famous, which is written to be authentic.
And this is somebody who's thinking, am I going to do this? Or am I not going to do this? And nobody's watching him. So why wouldn't he take his time? You know, a lot of the languages are cake, but a lot of words that we still use today were invented by Shakespeare. So I have this real passion about Shakespeare without it shouldn't be kidnapped by academics.
It's something that's very actable for young actors. If you really examine it and you're not intimidated and you're not told that this isn't for you, then actually it should be really, really accessible. And you may not understand every single word, but in the same way you may not understand or get every word in a rap song. You understand that there's a music quality to it.
“The feeling that you have to get and that that could be wetty or it could be contemplative or it could be whatever it is.”
And it's incredibly actable. And also how much is incredibly funny. And so it was just like with all things, it's just to be able to ignore the famousness of the play. In fact, we had a thing in rehearsal called the famous play buzzer. Where are you like, are we just doing this just because everybody knows this is what you would do?
And how much father appears to him as a ghost at the beginning of the story? And we don't know. We should unlearn the fact that we don't know that that character could be in that character only appears fleasingly. But we know that probably because we know the play so well. That actually that's he just appears to him and then he sort of he goes for the majority of the play. But for 16 year old who's watching it, they don't know that this character isn't going to be by his side for the rest of the rest of the rest of the show.
So you have to unlearn what you already know about the famousness of the play. In the same way you have to unlearn all the stuff that you know by Tom Ripley or James Moriard. Or anything that, you know, you know, when you're re-interpreting a famous, a famous story. So I find all that really interesting and all the stuff about Hamlet to me is fascinating because people say he's a dark prince and he's wearing, you know, the inky black cloak and blah blah blah.
But actually this is just a guy, which are you know, very much understand. At the moment, which is a guy who's in mourning, his father has died very, very recently. So the question is that you don't drown that character in just oh, he's just a dark depressing guy.
Where was his likeness? And so I feel like you always have to go towards the lightness when you're dealing with tragedy.
And a little bit like flea bag, then when you're dealing with comedy, you to look for the soul.
“And that's what I think the great art or certainly the art that I am interested in, you know, has a bit of both.”
Because that's the way we are as human beings, you know, we like a bit of both. We laugh on the saddest day of our life and we cry, you know, in the middle of a brunch when we don't think we're going to. It's always, it's always within us, all the time, the potential to go in either direction.
Andrew Scott, I want to thank you so much for talking with us.
And you know, your face changes from role to role, can you pass unrecognized on the street?
I can, yeah, yeah, I can. Sometimes.
“Right, sometimes, yeah, do you use any kind of disguise or?”
I think it depends, I'm very lucky. I can, I can walk the streets pretty, pretty, pretty easily, you know. Yeah, we'll see how long that lasts. I think we've been saying that for a while, so hopefully I'll, hopefully I'll, I'll be able to duck and dive into the future. Thank you so much for being with us. Thank you so much for having me.
Andrew Scott, speaking with Terry Gross, recorded in 2024, he stars in the new film Pressure. After a break, we'll remember artist and writer Marjan Satrapi, who died last week,
and Justin Chang will review Steven Spielberg's new film Disclosure Day.
I'm Dave Davies, and this is Fresh Air. This message comes from wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies, with only a few simple taps.
“Be smart, get wise, download the wise app today or visit wise.com.”
Please and seize apply. Every episode of it's been a minute, NPR is what's happening in culture podcast. Starts by asking three questions. Who? How? Why now?
If the culture's asking it, we're talking about it. At NPR, we stand for your right to be curious, and indulge your cultural curiosity. Follow its been a minute wherever you get your podcasts. And we'll break down the zeitgeistie topics that are filling your feed. Marjan Satrapi, the Iranian French author and artist of the groundbreaking graphic novel series, Persepolis,
died last week at the age of 56. No official cause was given, but the Guardian reported that relative said she died of a broken heart after the death of her husband last year. Satrapi's semi-autobiographical Persepolis novel, drawn in flat black and white, introduced readers to life inside Iran around the Islamic Revolution and the Iran Iraq War.
It was a world unknown to many readers outside the country. Published first in French, it became an international phenomenon. The novel was adapted into a 2007 film, which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Satrapi was born in 1969, 10 years before the Islamic Revolution. Her family was prosperous, educated, and westernized.
Her parents protested against the shop and later the Islamic regime. And uncle was jailed and executed. As we'll hear Satrapi had a rebellious spirit, and when she was 14, her parents sent her to Austria to attend school,
because they were afraid she would get into trouble with the Revolutionary Guard.
Four years later, depressed and missing her home country, Satrapi returned to Iran, where she earned a degree in graphic arts. She eventually returned to Austria and then moved to Paris. She became a French citizen in 2006. Marjan Satrapi spoke to Terry Gross in 2003 when Persepolis was published in English.
Marjan was 10 years old when the Islamic government made it mandatory for women and girls to wear the veil. One of the images that you've drawn for your new book describes what it was like after all the girls and women had to wear the veil. And in the illustration, one of the kids is strangling another girl with her chadour and saying, "Execution in the name of freedom." Another girl is putting the chadour over her head and saying, "Oh, I'm the monster of darkness." And another girl is saying, "It's too hot out."
So, did you play with a chadour like that and you know, strangle friends with it? I pretend it was a costume and act like kids do.
“It's not because they push you to do something or you have to do it because the situation in Iran is that if you didn't wear that on your head, you couldn't go to school.”
And if you were a grown-up and you didn't have that on your head, you would have gone to jail. It was not the choice of people that was like that. So, of course, we didn't believe in it and as soon as we could take it off or play with it or make it really ridiculous, we did it. And this thing was really an obligation and in no way that was the choice of Iranian people. During the Iran Iraq War, Iran was bombed by Iraq, your neighborhood was bombed.
In fact, a house on your block was hit. One of your good friends was killed. You say in your book that you were really changed by that and it made you fearless. Why didn't it make you fearless? When you see that your friend who is 13 years old, she can die, then you say, "I can die also." I mean, of course, you know, when you come back to where you are and you see that, you know, people that you have known, they are gone.
Of course, you have very bad conscience also to say why you should have survi...
You know, if I this moment, you know, when the bomb exploded is a question of a, I don't know, the tenths of a second or the tenths of inch is nothing really.
“So it could be my house. I could have died. So after that, you know, I think I accepted that I was already dead.”
So from the moment that you know, your death doesn't matter anymore to you, then you are not scared, you know. All these people that they died in my country to defend the country, to defend the freedom justices in the war, whatever. I don't know in what sense my blood would be a little bit more red than theirs, you know. My life doesn't work more than theirs, so I'm not scared. So when you stop being scared, what are some of the things you started doing that you were too afraid to do before?
“Well, you know, I just came out and I always say what I think after that I never swallowed my words, I never hide myself.”
I always thought what I think and, you know, it doesn't matter anymore, you know, it doesn't matter.
So if you know people they don't agree, if they agree, you know, all this hypocrisy of hiding the thing to please to everyone and you know, you know, just want to save my skin and everything, I did another way to save my skin was that I left my country in 1994 definitely, but until the time I was there, until the time that I could speak and it had an effect, I spoke and I still knew that. That was the effect of that. When you stop being afraid where the rules you started working at school, did you talk back to teachers, did you refuse to pray when they asked you to?
Oh, yes, I even heated the director of the school, you know, because she wanted to take my, I had a little bracelet, a gold my mother gave me and she wanted to take it and you know, they were just robbing things from us that was stealing and I, and I say I don't give it and she wanted to take it by force and I beat her, beat her. Is what your, your, your face? Oh, no, no, I just, you know, I just pushed her away and, well, she was like, you know, this whip started, so she followed down and, you know, I didn't push this hard neither, but she followed down and that was a crisis and they threw me out of the school and it was a whole story to find another school and everything, but you know, I don't regret it one second if I had to do it again, I would have pushed her even harder, you know, all,
I should just ask, at something, all these directors of the school during this year that I was in the school, they gave the student to the guardian of the revolution and many kids between the age of 14 and 18 they had been killed in the prisons because of these directors that gave the children, so you know, probably I would have beat her much harder than what I did. Who are the guardians of the revolution? Well, you know, you had the army, you had the police and then you had another style that was this guy who were dressed like Rangers and they had big beard and they, you know, they were here to make order.
And, you know, they were the Lord themselves, you know, they would stop you because they feel like stopping good and then you that your scarf was not right or your spooked too loud or why is it for people gathered together in the street that was a time in my country in '81 and '82 that you know, people that have been shoot down in the street because they have making, they made a literal demonstration, you know. They had very, very, very much change. I'm not talking about of Iran of today that it, I hope that there won't be any confusion, but at the very beginning of the revolution it was like that.
Now at the same time that you were re-belling against the authority figures in your life, like your teachers who represented the Iranian Revolution, you were also rebelling against your, your parents. Oh, well, that was the age, you know. That was the age I was like 12 years, 12 years, 12, 14 years old and you know, I had to confirm myself because I was getting tall and you know, I was realizing that I was human being myself and you know, I was not anymore just the child of my parents, so yes. Yes, you were rebelling against your mother's dictatorship. What was she strict about?
Well, you know, because my mother, she was a real dictator and she still is, you know, from the second that the school, for example, they closed.
“She was convinced and I thank her so much today. She was convinced that the only way for me to get out of this whole mess was to be very well educated. So, you know, the school finished every day at tour clock.”
Every day she came to pick me up at tour clock with three days per week. I had French courses between two and eight, so that was three days. Then one day per week, I had some German courses because I was going to go to Austria.
Then I had one day of karate courses, even two days and then the only day of ...
I had to sit and do my homework until 11. So, and every, my whole family was saying to my mother, but you are mad, you're going to kill this child.
“I'm not saying nobody can die from reading or learning. So, this child is not going to die and we are in a hectic situation.”
And if tomorrow she has to leave the country, she has to know everything. The more languages she knows, the more she knows how to even to defend herself, bodily self-defense. If she knows how to draw, whatever I give her, that's a new chance for her to be able to do something outside of this country. And she was right because, you know, I learned, you know, not to be lazy, probably, and to work hard after that. When it became easier, a few years after the revolution, for people to leave the country, for visits, your parents took a short trip to Turkey and they won by themselves.
So, just like the parents went and you stayed behind.
And they brought you back gifts and the gifts they brought you were the kind of Western things, pop culture things that you couldn't possibly have gotten in Iran. They got you a denim jacket, they got you an Iron Maiden poster. And they had to smuggle it in. They had to figure out creative ways of smuggling this stuff into Iran. What did it mean to you to have that? Oh, I was the coolest person in the whole school. Imagine I had the big poster of Iron Maiden and a large poster of Q1, nobody had such a thing.
I was the only one, and of course, you know, I was inviting my friends coming home watching my poster and being jealous at me.
I was very, very happy to have those. Though, you know, afterwards, everybody had a friend who was in Germany or somewhere else, and they were folding the posters into a letter and sending it to their friend. But I had big posters. Another one they had smaller posters. So, it was something. But again, you know, my book is also to show that you know, that's not because you're Iranian that you're listening to revolutionaries song against the West the whole day, that you know, the pop culture belongs to everyone.
It's not because you're Iranian that you don't know who is Iron Maiden or who is Kim Weil or, you know, I mean, the culture in general belongs to everyone. There is no frontier, you know, your Edgar Allen Pope belongs as much to, it belongs to me, as much as my poet, her face in Iran belongs to you. That is the heritage of all the human beings.
“Now that you're older yourself, looking back, do you think that your parents were wonderful or crazy to have almost risk their lives to smuggle in the Iron Maiden poster in the denim jacket?”
I mean, if they were discovered, not only would it have been confiscated, they probably would have been seriously punished. Well, I think that my parents, they were wonderfully crazy, that is both of them. They were wonderful and they were crazy, but they wanted so much to make me happy. And well, they didn't really risk their life. I mean, probably they would have, you know, they would have, you know, they don't know. Take my father passport for a month, and, you know, just finish with the poster and these things, you know, it was not really a life risking, but it was a risk anyway.
But yeah, but then I was happy for one year, and I think that it worked that for them, of course. Iranian French artist and writer Marjan Satrapi speaking with Terry Gross in 2003, her graphic novel Persepolis about growing up in Iran became an international phenomenon. We'll hear more after a break. This is fresh air. On Consider This, NPR's afternoon news podcast, we cover everything for politics, to the economy, to the world, but every story starts with a question. And NPR, we stand for your right to be curious to make sense of the biggest story of the day and what it means for you.
Follow Consider This, wherever you get your podcasts. When you were 14, your parents sent you to a school in Austria. Why did they want you to leave the country and why did they choose Austria as the place for you to go?
“Well, you know, I was too much outspoken. I was just, you know, talking all the time and you should know that in this year, they really stopped no matter who.”
In the Iranian prison, you had kids of 15 years or 16 years old, 14 years old. You had all the ages and the skid they could be executed. And then it was bombed every day and you know, when my parents, they had just one child.
You know, they were always so, I don't know, I mean, my mother always said, y...
the parents that they keep their kids close to them. They're just egoistic and the real love is also always to give enough possibility to your kid to go.
And that was the reasons they sent me abroad. And while Austria, because Austria and they give very easily the visa and my mother's best friend was in Austria. And, you know, the life was not so expensive and that was a very good first school in Austria.
“That's why that's why I went to Austria.”
Did you feel like your parents were rejecting you by sending you away? Did you understand why they wanted to send you away? Oh, yes. At this time, I understood it very well. But then when I went to Austria and I was so misjudged because, you know, now I am the axis of evil. But in these years, in the very early '80s, you know, I was so many myself. You know, all that you really, they were so much misjudged, you know, by this.
But you know, I was escaping something and people, they were judging me. But by the thing that I escaped myself and it was so hard. And you know, when you are 14, 15, 16, you don't have any friends. And you know, you don't have your parents and everybody judge you and everything. So I just got completely with my country. I just wanted so badly, you know, to assimilate the Western culture
“that, you know, I've just forgot who I was myself.”
And I went back to everyone because of this reason because I was just to finish too tired for that. And that is just much afterwards that I understood that to assimilate another culture. First of all, I have to assume my own culture and to assume who I am myself. And then I can open myself to the other ones. And that's made me go back and at this time I was kind of angry to my parents.
You know, because I thought that it was a rejection. But it didn't last very long ago. You return to Iran when you were 18. And turning to go to college there. Did you stay that long?
Oh, yes, I stayed for six years in your one five and a half years. Like that I made the master in visual communication. You know, I got married. I divorced. I worked. I did all sorts of things. And that is only after that that I came back in 1994 to France. But this year that I had in Iran, first of all, I was so happy to be in Iran.
And I can tell you, I never partied as much as I did there.
Because since there, you know, party was forbidden and everything was forbidden. With the students, we were just together almost every night making a party every night. Because first of all, it was forbidden.
“And then we lived in such a repressive society that the only way to have a balance in our personal life was to have a big freedom in our personal life.”
Where did you hold the secret parties and what were the parties like? Or like the parties that you have here with more sophisticated people because, you know, again, you know, whatever is forbidden, you make it even even more. For example, you know, now United State for example is forbidden to smoke as smoke three times as much as I do in France, where I have the direct to smoke. So that's the nature of the human being. So it was holding the apartments, for example, in my apartment and everybody came and you had this Rolling Stone music and you had the purple and you had.
I don't know, whatever you can imagine, you know, from I don't know, whatever. And well, we were drinking alcohol and dancing and shouting and all of that. But at the same time, we were risking to be arrested and we had been arrested one billion times. I mean, how many times haven't I been arrested because of the fact that I was in a mixed party with my friends. And then they came and, you know, they stopped us and we were one night in the jail and the day after the Paris day had to come.
They had to pay, we had to sign the papers saying that we will never start to make party again, but we did it.
Life continues. Well, I want to thank you so much for talking with us. Thank you very much. Marjan Satrapi, speaking with Terry Gross, recorded in 2003. Satrapi died last week. She was 56.
Coming up, Justin Chang reviews Steven Spielberg's new science fiction thriller Disclosure Day. This is fresh air. Millions of people in the US get their flu shot each year, but a new scientific innovation could turn that routine into a one shot stop. A universal flu vaccine, which would protect not only again. And seasonal influenza, but also will prevent pandemic influenza.
Learn about the revolution in fighting the flu on shortwave.
Listen in the MPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
“Nearly 50 years after making close encounters of the third kind, Steven Spielberg returns to Alien Territory and his new sci-fi thriller Disclosure Day.”
The film, which opens everywhere in theaters today, stars Emily Blanton, Josh O'Connor, as two strangers trying to expose a US conspiracy to cover up the existence of extraterrestrial life. Disclosure Day also features Colin Firth and Coleman Domingo. Our film critic Justin Chang has this review. Earlier this year, former President Obama made waves in an interview.
When he said that he believed Aliens were real, though he hadn't seen any evidence of them during his time in office. President Trump accused Obama of revealing classified information, but then said that he would direct government agencies to release a number of images,
showing alien and extraterrestrial activity.
The Pentagon rolled out those photos last month, but they were largely deemed fuzzy and inconclusive. All this might sound like free publicity for Steven Spielberg's new thriller Disclosure Day,
“which is about a massive US conspiracy to hide the fact that Aliens have been visiting Earth for decades.”
If anything, though, the movie's pleasures feel more retro than timely. It harks back to Spielberg's greatest alien-themed hits, like close encounters of the third kind, ET, and War of the Worlds. But it also feels like a throwback to the 90s and early 2000s. The era of conspiracy-minded sci-fi series like the X-files,
and M. Knight Shyamalon's eerie crop circle thriller "Science." Disclosure Day stars Joshua Conner as Daniel Kelner, a cyber security expert who decides to blow the whistle on his employer, Ward X.
That's a powerful agency operating outside the boundaries of the government,
that for decades has suppressed evidence of alien visits to Earth. Daniel has stolen video footage of these creatures,
“and he feels duty-bound to disclose it to the public,”
and to expose the sinister Ward X for having captured, detained, and even tortured its share of aliens. Meanwhile, in Kansas City, Missouri, something strange happens when a TV meteorologist named Margaret Fairchild, played by Emily Blunt, tries to deliver her morning weather report.
She freezes up on the air, and begins making strange guttural clicking noises. Speaking, what appears to be a kind of alien language. Good morning, Kansas City. Let's take a look at today. Let's, let's, today is, today, today's. Here we go.
Around this time, Margaret also finds that she can read the minds of the people around her. A gift that comes in handy once she too goes on the run, with Ward X agents in pursuit. Although Margaret and Daniel don't know each other, they share a mysterious connection. Noah Scanlan, the head of Ward X, played by an unusually terrifying Colin Firth, is determined to stop them before they can make contact.
One of Scanlan's deadliest weapons is a form of mind-control technology that he uses to try to get Daniel's girlfriend, Jane, played by a very good Eve Houston, to betray him. Whatever aliens might be capable of doing to us, the movie suggests, we have far more to fear from some of our fellow humans. The mind-control bit is one of the movie's cleverest sequences,
a scene in which Margaret stages in almost Houdini level escape is another. At 79, Spielberg is still the nimble filmmaker who delights in treating cinema as a magic trick. He's also as skilled with actors as ever. Firth injects a palpable sense of anguish into the role of the movie's big villain, and Josh O'Connor brings in every man like ability to his truth-telling tech whiz.
But the most dazzlingly inventive work comes from Emily Blunt. Often a tough, sardonic screen presence, as in the devil wears brought a two, she gets to flex her proven action in comedy muscles in a more earnest emotional register. Like Richard Dreyfus' obsessed alien seeker in close encounters, Margaret is the kind of madly eccentric character Spielberg instinctively gravitates toward.
Someone who has little idea where she's headed, but is convinced, rightly, that the truth really is out there. There are other memorable characters too.
Coleman Domingo gives a warm turn as a fellow whistleblower,
who steers the operation from afar.
“And Elizabeth Marvel delivers a fine performance as a Catholic nun,”
who in one of the film's more thoughtful sides claims that the existence of aliens doesn't threaten her belief in God. If anything she says, it affirms that God, like the universe he created, is far bigger and more complex than humans like to acknowledge. That's a profoundly beautiful idea, though I wish disclosure day itself,
or a more complex movie.
Spielberg storytelling is often described as overly sentimental, which isn't always fair.
His previous work, the semi-autobiographical the Fablements, was one of the most genuinely moving films of his career.
“But sentimentality does ultimately overwhelm disclosure day,”
especially in the big finale, when the movie strains to bring its characters, and indeed all of humanity together. Having shown us some of the terrible things powerful people are capable of, Spielberg makes a third act-learned toward catharsis. As though desperate to suggest, we aren't beyond redemption as a species.
Like the existence of alien life, our sensual goodness is easy enough to believe in, but a lot harder to prove. Justin Chang is a film critic for the New Yorker. He reviewed Steven Spielberg's new film Disclosure Day.
“On Monday's show, author Eddie Glod on America at 250.”
We talk about his new book, America USA. And the story he says this country keeps telling itself, from Frederick Douglas in 1876 to this 250th year, and what we choose to forget. I hope you can join us.
To keep up with what's on the show, and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air. And you can subscribe to our YouTube channel at youtube.com/this is Fresh Air. We're rolling out new videos with in-studio guests behind the scenes shorts, and iconic interviews from the archive.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Briger, our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham, with additional engineering support from Joyce Lieberman, Julian Hertzfeld, and Diana Martinez. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Filis Meyers,
and Marie Baldenado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thayah Challenger, Susan Yekundi, and Abalman and Nico Gonzalez-Wisler. Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nesper, for Terry Gross and Tonya Mosley.
I'm Dave Davies. This week on the NPR Politics podcast,
Republicans in Congress pass $70 billion
in funding for immigration enforcement, $38 billion to ice alone. That represents a massive increase with little oversight attached to how the money is spent. We unpack how the move limits the power of Congress,
and what it could mean for the midterms. This week on the NPR Politics podcast.


