0:00
ep we love you thunder up yeah yeah baby all right
0:07
welcome to Oklahoma City how are you feeling this weekend i'm feeling great having a good time it's absolutely amazing to have you here i mean the
0:14
energy here is so electric everybody's been really looking forward to this moment as have I uh thank you so much
0:19
for just being here and spending some time with us answering our questions my pleasure absolutely how's your weekend been so far it's been great met a lot of
0:26
great people and the fans are always great to talk to and see sign for and have some laughs with and it's the
0:32
genuine people that come out who've um so many fans here in Oklahoma have seen such a variant of various amounts of my
0:39
work that I'm always surprised you know you know someone came up to me an older gentleman said oh I started watching you
0:46
in Nash Bridges wow and uh yeah so it's it's lovely um it makes it reminds me um
0:53
that uh I' I've done a lot of work and I've been around for a long time and I'm really um in gratitude and appreciate it
1:00
no definitely and then you know we're definitely grateful for you um you put out so much amazing work and you put so
1:06
much into your craft um I have some questions prepared for you and then of course we'll open up to the audience so
1:11
I guess we can start right here uh across your career you've stepped into some intensely layered roles but before
1:16
the lines are spoken and the scenes are blocked there's a set there's a crew there's an energy what kind of creative
1:22
atmosphere do you look for or try to create when you walk onto the set what tells you that this is a space where
1:27
real artistry can happen well any space is a space where real artistry can happen it's a matter of do you relate to
1:33
the space and if you don't um then you have to uh find a way in and so when I I
1:39
come from the theater so the theater uh it it has a set and it has a certain
1:45
feeling um some theaters uh in America are ghosted so there's other entities within them um others have a long and
1:53
long very long history over a hundred years old for some of them so you feel all that vibration and um as as I always
2:01
do it i walk in and I spend time in the room it it's I just did two films in Atlanta and I walked onto a set that was
2:07
built on the sound stage and uh the the film is a film called By Any Means uh
2:12
with Mark Wahberg based on a true story takes place in the 60s so of course the room had a a certain uh antique feeling
2:20
to it and I walked in and I stood there for a minute and everyone said "Come on in." And director's over here and they
2:25
kept looking at me oddly while I'm standing there breathing and looking at
2:31
the room and feeling the room's energy because then I have to put my persona into the room so to answer your question
2:37
by the time I get to the set I've already um figured a lot of things out or had my own visual of what it may be
2:45
like what that room may have in it where I might go saying certain lines um and
2:51
so when I walk in the first time having never seen it I tried to figure out if it matched what I saw and then I put
3:00
myself in that room physically in the moment to be able to use all every element of that room uh to play into my
3:08
performance uh but that's because I'm a theater actor and that's how I prepare uh because it's not only in preparation
3:14
that I learn my lines uh then I have to think about I'll tell you a story i live in Connecticut my I have four daughters
3:20
and um they were very young at the time and I had my office in the living room um in one corner of the living room and
3:27
I was sitting there and um I was playing a lawyer so I would sit at my desk and
3:33
talk and talk and talk and my daughter came in and she said "What are you doing?" I said "I'm learning my line." She said "What are you playing?" She had
3:39
to be 10 years old and I said "I'm playing a lawyer." She said "Oh okay okay well doesn't a lawyer um like talk
3:45
to the jury and talk to the judge and get and I started laughing and I said
3:50
"I'm not there yet but I'll get there soon." So the next day she comes in and I'm standing up and I'm I'm putting the
3:57
judge there and the jury there and the and the the prosecutor there and I'm talking to all the walls and she comes
4:02
in she goes "That's better Mom."
4:09
It's so wonderful to see how kids just have this sense of play and they can really just like let go um how much has
4:15
have your kids inspired your work i mean I know you just gave a small example now but how much of your work really comes
4:21
from the you know driving force of having to provide and and and not only be a good dad but also just like set a
4:27
positive example for them well I can only think of another story you know when I first moved to Connecticut many years ago I don't live there anymore uh
4:33
and since then I'm divorced and I'm very close to my whole family and I have four daughters just to catch you up when I
4:38
moved there uh I was playing I was doing a piece um uh called Wonderland for
4:45
Peterberg it was about a mental hospital uh and my my episode was never aired but
4:51
but I I had my first child and I was playing a guy who had six he had
4:56
multiple personality disorder he was kind of autistic on the spectrum and uh
5:01
and I've had to play six characters within this one piece and um I my first
5:08
daughter used to suck her fingers her two middle fingers and um
5:15
and I I I was very inspired by that cuz I wondered how how different is that
5:21
than sucking your thumb and most kids or at least I sucked my thumb because it fits right into the roof of your mouth
5:27
but she sucked these two middle fingers it's even hard for me to do but I started to do it because I was messing
5:32
around with her when she was young and then I started to play this character and I was figuring out all these different personalities of which there
5:39
were six and in the show I sucked these two fingers in a corner because it was
5:44
calming me as the character after a very traumatic moment um so my children I
5:50
think inspire me a lot but the world inspires me as an actor i'm an observer right i observe people right right i
5:57
love coming to Comic- Con because when you come to a Comic-Con you meet people from all walks of life all different
6:02
ages who are in wonder enchantment and joy when do you get a chance to experience that on a daily basis my
6:09
reminder is take this experience with you during the week so that you understand that it's wonderful to be
6:16
unjaded as that of a child it's wonderful to have an imagination it's
6:21
wonderful to have people recognize that imagination and it's wonderful to be seen living in that space because we we
6:28
sometimes think that to grow up and be responsible and then to show up is to always be a certain way you can be silly
6:35
you can have fun you can be inspired right that's really an important part of life that I remind myself as an adult
6:42
when all the responsibilities of my life you know start to choke me that it
6:48
really should be fun right that's the whole part of it that I think some of us
6:54
including myself leave behind and whenever I find myself leaving behind I
6:59
go back and recapture it so my kids have really inspired me in all of their great moments and all of their traumatic
7:05
moments and all of their turmoil i mean I have four daughters so there you know there's a lot of responsibility to to
7:12
any child but to four daughters I mean I feel like um the females are really
7:18
creative and they're a little bit not to discount male children or any male at
7:24
all but are a little bit ahead of the curve when it comes to um the way they communicate their artistry they're
7:31
they're just a little bit further ahead because they because they're female that's what they have they have that
7:37
kind of chemical creation within them so because I have four I'm very inspired by all of them that's amazing thank you so
7:43
much for sharing yeah you know there is a uh there's a
7:48
controlled intensity to your work uh the sense that every moment is intentional i was curious to know where does that
7:54
discipline come from i I believe it comes from the theater it it comes from because in the theater I'm
8:02
on stage for two hours and you can't stop there's no cutting of the camera and starting again if you're you're
8:07
either as one director said to me Anna Shapiro who I really love from Stephen Theater Company in Chicago you're either
8:13
on the train or off the train so you know when you have the audience in the palm of your hand and when you don't and
8:19
and you have to be aware of that um our awareness uh as human beings has
8:24
diminished not increased it's diminished because we have cell phones and we allow the phone to be aware we allow the phone
8:30
to be aware for us as opposed to being aware of of energy right so we are um
8:39
90% water 80 to 90 70 to 90 for men 90 to 100 for women and we're electrical
8:45
beings which means we feel things and so to understand that is to understand and
8:52
take our own temperature as to where we are in the current of things right we're current
9:00
and you feel that current and you can feel it if
9:05
you stay quiet for a minute you feel what's in between the words so my intensity in my characters comes from me
9:13
acknowledging that current and also I went to military school um I had one of
9:18
those strict upbringings in many ways and I feel like what I have to do in a
9:24
room full of chaos is to control the chaos and I can't control the room i can't
9:31
control anyone but myself i can only control or take responsibility for my
9:37
own attitude but I do that and in doing so in film it's about bringing the
9:44
camera to me bringing all of your attention which will eventually be on the other end of the screen to me which
9:51
means I have to be still thinking something active in my
9:58
thinking active in my heart but still in many moments for your attention to stay
10:04
with me going "What is he doing what might he be thinking what's going on?"
10:09
Especially with some of the intense characters that I play yeah and um you know just to mirror what you just said
10:15
about you know us being so device- driven especially nowadays in society one of the things that I'm always constantly doing with my son is telling
10:22
him you know cuz he's always like "What what am I going to do now what game am I going to watch now what show am I going to watch now?" I'm like "Puppy just sit
10:28
with your thoughts it's it's healthy just sit with your thoughts you'll just be be just fine." And you are a master
10:34
of the pause the glance the breath between lines i was curious how do you approach silence as a performance tool
10:41
and what lives in those quiet moments between dialogue what lives in those quiet moments is spirit my spirit or the
10:47
character spirit i try to allow myself as an actor what I am and what I call myself as a channel i'm a channel for
10:54
the writer's words uh and I'm I am trusted to bring um those words to life
11:00
verbally but acting is not just with words it's also a physical experience
11:06
and so what I do is allow that to live and it lives within that pause within
11:12
that space it is not an easy place to
11:18
trust but when you trust it you leave room for mindfulness that is your higher
11:26
self because I hear voices okay you could say I'm schizophrenic i'm crazy all those things my kids already do but
11:33
my girls tell me "Papa you are extra." Yeah I know i got a lot of extra
11:39
stuff going on but there's the mind and the voice inside when you meet someone you look at them you certain
11:45
determinations come up in your brain right from what they're wearing to what they say and you take that in but how
11:53
often do you honor what that says or discount it for me it's a constant
11:58
effort not to judge anyone you know I mean at all and so you take you know
12:03
your temperature as to what you're feeling and what's happening and so for me in my acting I allow that to live
12:09
because that space is really really the interesting part of what life really is
12:15
do you feel like your theater background helped you master that because in theater it's so big and out and you're
12:20
selling out to the audience whereas in acting you have to be small and live in this small space and again like I said
12:26
you're a master of those moments do you think theater really helped you it helped me be disciplined but it also
12:32
helped me i'm very large in my personality and that becomes from being on Broadway and being in rooms like this
12:38
where you have to get your point across to the back row so everything has to be exaggerated film taught me to take that
12:45
exaggeration and shrink it and to make it more intense and to make it more real and when I remind myself when the
12:51
camera's on I remind myself it's not even as big as my life is because I always ask "What lens are you on?" And
13:00
they tell me "I'm on a 30 i'm on a 20 i'm seeing the whole world okay so that
13:05
I can be big and then they could be right here and then that large s of my
13:10
personality has to come down because it would blow the screen away and you have to allow it to be commensurate with how
13:17
you're being shot um you've played iconic villains rebels leaders but
13:23
beyond the characters there's an artist who brings them to life what do you know now about yourself as a performer that
13:28
you didn't know 10 20 years ago and what's still evolving i I I love to learn and and to me it's
13:36
it's really important to always be in that space of wonder you know I love what I do and I'm blessed to love what I
13:43
do because there's always a curiosity behind my work in terms of my research for characters I play in terms for how I
13:50
play them um because I believe what I do is very specific because our world is moving so fast television moves faster
13:57
than film we shoot six pages a day in television we shoot one page a day in film and because uh our attention spans
14:04
are in a different place crewwise um that I feel like I have to be right
14:10
on it to be able to deliver it because there's less time given to it and so um
14:19
it's changed me quite a bit it what's changed the most is from theater to film
14:25
is the the definition of my performance i've become more refined and I I feel
14:32
like I have so much more to give and I'm still not there uh I'm a lot of things are said about me but if I believe those
14:40
things I fear that I might stop doing what I do the best and what I do the
14:46
best is to refine every performance I have and make it very special and and I
14:52
think um to to realize that it's not the
14:58
end result it's the journey that's what I really love it's going through all the
15:03
ways to get to the character to where the character needs to be not forgetting
15:09
that that character is a part of me as well like I I believe you should take the rest and leave the best but I
15:15
believe that they we want to see you right we want to see a part of what of
15:21
who you are we like you so if you throw all that away and you completely disappear maybe you leave the character
15:29
devoid of some personality that we would want to see awesome thank you so much i have one final question and we're going
15:34
to open up to the audience you know some actors chase visibility uh you've built
15:39
legacy uh do you think about the long game when you choose a role and what do you hope for your body of work says
15:46
about you as an artist you there's so many things packed into
15:52
that when I was a younger actor sure i mean I think um I think even when I was coming up I mean everyone wants to be
15:59
famous what is that about you know that visibility um I I think it's it's a
16:04
human trait we want to be seen we want to be acknowledged and rightfully so as we should be uh will we be acknowledged
16:12
for what we really love is the question will we will we be disappointed if that
16:19
that visibility that stardom doesn't come or will we be happy doing what we
16:25
love to do the gift is in doing and that should be enough but um sometimes it it
16:32
uh for some of us it's not enough uh I I never think about legacy when I'm doing a part i just played a historical
16:39
character Vernon Damer no one knows who he is he um he was a mentor to Megar
16:44
Evers and he was killed by the Klux Clan he was a farmer who had the richest man
16:50
in Hattisburg Tennessee and he owned a farm a sawmill and a store and and they
16:55
they put a pole tax on blacks being able to vote and so so because they didn't
17:01
want them to vote and they knew that black people didn't have the money and so he stood up and he said "Whoever ever
17:06
can't pay their pole tax I'll pay it for them because we have to get black people to vote." 1963 3 days later he was dead
17:14
right so um and I I mention this story because of of course because no one I
17:21
didn't know who Vernon was and probably many people in the room don't but I didn't think about the legacy of me
17:27
connected to him while I was doing the part because I'm honestly want to be in truth what is the truth do you ask
17:34
yourself that from day to day what is your truth it so you know the question is are you happy right that's where you
17:41
start are you fulfilling what you were put here to fulfill not that it's an obligation but it's your destiny and if
17:48
you're not looking for your destiny it's going to look for you it's going to find you and your destiny is what you love to
17:54
do it's that connection with something palpable passionate and strong that connects you to everyone else so then
18:01
there's no visibility cuz it does there's no highest there's no lowest just because I'm seen more than you
18:07
doesn't mean I'm better than you right it just means I found a connection for something in my life that makes a
18:13
difference for me not for you not for my mother not for my father not for my priest but for me and that's what you
18:20
have to find what connects you to the fabric of humanity you as a human being
18:25
what is your gift what are you supposed to be doing that's a question you just ask yourself and the answer may not come
18:32
right now it may come in a few days it may reveal itself to you over a period
18:37
of time but that is what you should be chasing because that is what's going to make you happy not just in this moment
18:45
but in every moment for the rest of your life so my advice is that when you
18:50
connect to that universal feeling that
18:57
current that energy that you will find exactly what propels you to stay
19:06
grounded within this communication and connection not only in the world but
19:12
from human being to human being right that's where the juice
19:18
is and that will allow you then to be seen exactly how you should be seen i
19:26
get the other the other is just superficial the depth of sharing and
19:32
being really seen means that I see your light i see your love i see your
19:39
grace that's what life's about
19:44
[Applause] thank you thank you i know there are many people who need to hear that it's
19:51
such a positive message and an important message that people don't necessarily hear every day or just don't have the
19:57
courage to even think about themselves um I would love to sit here and talk to you all day long i have Thank you this
20:04
is amazing but you know what we have some questions here from our audience please line up and I promise we'll get as many as we can in the time allotted i
20:11
apologize but I will be the bad guy and cut the line off when necessary so hi Stephan up what's your name and what's your question john um first of all um
20:19
John Carter I'd like to say that goatee you had the genie of a ball it was a good look i didn't even recognize you
20:25
thank you so much there's my f one of my favorite roles um I once upon a time
20:30
used a lot of green screen work for you have you ever done anything with that
20:36
amount of green screen and what was that like it was really fun to do um I I've done a few things on green screen now
20:41
since then that was one of my early green screen works and when I was Sydney the Mira it was just a small green
20:47
screen but a lot of what I did with Lana um and as as uh the genie was on a huge
20:54
in a huge green screen room um since then of course I've done Far Cry um I I've done a bunch of other things as
21:00
well mandalorian was a big volume room um I enjoy it but it's it's a lot of
21:05
work in terms of allowing you to see the mirror of what's going on in the world through my eyes i always got to see more
21:12
of Sydney because you know the last we saw was when um the Snow Queen let him out and that was it so unfortunately you
21:18
know we didn't get to see a lot more of him after that but I was hoping we would i was too but the show went the way it
21:24
did and and they didn't need Sydney around anymore but who knows maybe in the supposed reboot hope so thank you so
21:31
much for your question all right hello she's a pro at this already hi hi what's
21:38
your name my name is Hannah and I have a
21:43
a question so what is your favorite kind of food
21:51
wow what's my favorite kind of food well right now I'm eating high protein lowfat
21:56
because I'm training for my action film but I really like this Ayurvedic dish
22:01
called kiteri it's like Indian baby food um it is um mung beans that are cooked
22:08
down into like a soup one of my favorite foods thank you you're welcome thank you
22:13
Hannah all right hi what's your name what's your question landon hi Landon i
22:18
was at your uh area yesterday and I've been thinking about a question to ask
22:23
you here and I have it on my phone so let me pull it up really quickly okay okay so out of all of like the villains
22:30
you have done across like movie shows uh which role has crossed that threshold
22:37
that made you feel like they were the worst
22:43
i've played a lot of nefarious people but I have to um say that Gustavo Fring changed me
22:51
forever you're welcome thanks man all right hi what's your name hi my name is Nicole and uh first I want to say that I
22:59
really resonate with what you were saying earlier on the stage just before the questioning that's amazing that you're talking to people about that kind
23:05
of stuff i think it's really important um but my question is my favorite documentary of all time is Unagnowledged
23:12
and you narrated that and I just wanted to ask you like if you enjoyed doing that and and like what your view is on
23:18
that whole topic well I I really did enjoy it i'm I'm not a conspiracy theorist as much as Steven is uh he's
23:25
gone on to do many documentaries and he's very prolific um um I love that one
23:30
because I feel like uh there's a lot of information we don't have and he's exposing that or allowing um us uh to
23:37
question uh some of some of what we don't know and I think if we if we're
23:43
not interested in knowing things we don't know then we lose our curiosity so I really love doing it and I love him a
23:48
lot thank you so much you're welcome all right hi step on up what's your name my name is Isaac and uh my question is so
23:55
you had a long uh decorated career been a part of many fandoms was there a particular fandom that you joined that
24:01
you were really excited about or a fandom that you haven't joined yet that you would be interested in i have some more fandoms to go thank you so much for
24:07
asking that question um look I I really loved it when John Fabro called me and asked me to be a part of Mandalorian and
24:13
when he called I'm like Mandalorian he said "Yeah I want you to play a moth." I said "A moth
24:20
she said "No a moth." I said "What the hell is a moth?" I was really pretty ignorant
24:26
about it and then I of course educated myself um and he said "Uh look I don't
24:31
have a lot of money to pay you but um I'd love for you to do it." And I said "Okay." He said "Maybe I can pay you in
24:38
the second or third season is there anything you want that I can do for you?" And I said "I have to have a cape." And and he said "Done deal."
24:46
Little did I know that you know who the character was and I figured it all out but I was very excited about that and and equally as excited about joining the
24:53
MCU um that's been a really wonderful thing to be in thank you very much in the future I
25:01
hope so there's space for me in my heart to do it um I'd like to get him to a place where you can see some of his
25:06
powers that would be a fantastic thing but all and it's a great thank you to all of the fans who you know teased the
25:13
fact that I could be Professor X and all that that's how all of that happened um
25:18
and so I'm hoping that can continue and I'll have more work with the MCCU with Sidewinder and maybe beyond
25:25
[Applause] hello adam uh so my question is through
25:31
your career has there been a character that you portrayed so well and for so long that you started getting the calls
25:36
that uh the the writers wanted that portrayal
25:41
continually in their different series different movie and how do you prevent that from happening so you have that wide bread i I think it would be it
25:49
started with Gustavo Fring uh you know people would call and they you know I I would um find out that the script they
25:56
wanted a Gustavo Fring like character and I would say why i would talk to them
26:02
i mean it was what Far Cry called me you know they called me and I said I I I I met with them and I quickly deduced that
26:10
they kind of wanted a kind of a Gustavo Fring and I said "No I don't want to do that." I said you know I know this guy
26:16
is a dictator but he has many other qualities than that are different that differentiate him from Gustavo and they
26:22
heard me and and we figured it out uh you say no you know or you say yes i
26:28
think when you say yes it becomes a trap because you wind up doing that forever and when you say no you leave room for
26:33
something new to come along you're welcome great question thank you so much hi my name is Daniel um one aspect of
26:40
the movie do the right thing that is so impactful is that we see the main conflict from all sides spike Lee even says on the director's commentary that
26:46
your character bugging out and s both have good points on who belongs on his wall of fame my question is uh playing a
26:53
character so central to the conflict of the movie and as a black Italian yourself was there any additional
26:58
perspective you could bring to the movie or did it influence your character at all oh yeah there was there was a great
27:03
amount I could bring to the movie because I'm I am that exact mixture my father's from Naples Italy my mother's
27:09
from Alabama i'm a black Italian uh and so for me it was ironic to to be put in
27:14
that role to learn something at that time Spike was so anti-white it was unbelievable and you know I'm standing
27:21
right in the middle of that fire he would say to me "John Carlo John Carlo if there's a there's a race war what
27:27
side you going to be on?" He would start laughing like I'm controlling my life you know and and like "Answer me answer
27:34
me answer me." And I would say I'd be on the side of humanity ah you know so I I brought a lot to that
27:42
character because I I love my Italian side and honor that i go to Italy every year but I also love um where I stand as
27:49
a black man in America which is you know an interesting space to be in that if unless you're in that skin you don't
27:56
know just like I don't know what it's like to be in one of my daughter's skins you don't know until you live it but
28:01
then you have to either choose to represent it or choose to help people
28:06
help yourself and other people to go grow through that right because many people who are um prejudiced against uh
28:14
become angry you're angry you're treated a certain way and when you can greet anger with love and you can you can
28:22
transmute that energy within yourself so when I finally dropped being an angry black man my life changed my characters
28:29
changed my humanity changed i wasn't buying into the label that people would put on me and but that's personal work
28:36
that you have to do to change your life thank you you're welcome
28:42
hello uh my name is Henson i was wondering if you'd like to return as Moff Gideon to do like a prequel to the
28:49
story during the prime of the Empire when the Emperor was still reigning uh
28:55
thank you so much Hans for your question i love Moff Gideon i think he has um such depth and has some place to go
29:01
within that universe uh and I'm hoping that maybe I know the film is coming out
29:06
i'm not in it don't get excited um but I know I'm so sorry but um I'm hoping that
29:12
there'll be more room for Moff Gideon to return and come back to life uh after all I love the characters that I play
29:19
who die you don't see them die um um but I I love that world and I certainly
29:24
loved working with John Fabro and Dave Fona so I would be back you're welcome
29:30
hi what's your name i have a small question for you did you
29:35
prefer filming a Breaking Bad or Better Call wow dakota you put me on the
29:41
line you know and and not to not answer your question but I love filming of any kind uh there's always something that
29:48
you feel about the first time and so and I always acknowledge that Breaking Bad was a first and it was really developing
29:55
that character and finding that space in between the words was my way of
30:01
acknowledging the great writing actors come in and they go I want to change this line and that line and that's their
30:07
way of contributing i didn't have um the ego that said I could write it better than Vince when it fit in my mouth I
30:14
would say it and most often it fit in my mouth if I could get my mannerisms to um
30:19
join and to meet those words it was the space that allowed me to honor the words
30:28
even more so a first is a first and I love it very much better Call Salt was
30:33
different because it's a more personal story that has equally the amount of edge but it's it really is a different
30:40
story and it's an introduction to Gus and it takes place before Breaking Bad so I would have to say you know Breaking
30:47
Bad would have a point above Saul for me because it was a first uh but as a continuation of the character and to see
30:54
some vulnerability in this character in Saul was a favorite of mine thank you
31:00
Dakota nice and high up what's your name hi my
31:05
name is Megan um can you hear me okay sorry i sure can okay um I'm a really
31:11
big fan of murder we want the audience to hear you so take one step up to the mic and speak right to it you can pull
31:16
it down a little bit pull it down okay uh well my name's Megan i'm a really big fan of uh murder mysteries and so the
31:22
resonance was amazing um how did you feel about your character AB Winter and
31:28
when you first found out that that was the course it was going to take like how it was going to unfold i I really love
31:35
The Residence it's on Netflix for those of you who don't know it's a really great murder mystery knives out in the
31:40
White House um Usuzo Adubo plays the detective and I play AB Winter the chief
31:45
White House usher i knew nothing about a White House usher and so um one thing
31:50
for me as an actor I get to learn about many people at many different VOCs that I would not know about or learn about
31:57
and uh I loved I stepped into the show late took over for the late Andre Brower who was a friend of mine it was a big
32:03
decision to make to go and do it because I loved Andre so much he was in the middle of shooting and he passed away
32:08
and so it was a great honor for me to continue his legacy and mine by doing this but I learned so much about the
32:13
protocol of the White House so it was interesting to me um I loved how it turned out because um I don't want to
32:21
give it away for people who haven't seen it but given the circumstance that AB is in when we meet him in the very
32:27
beginning uh you still get a chance to see how he got there and uh and so it
32:33
was a great great gig for me and I hope that many people in the audience would be drawn to go and see it netflix from
32:39
your own living room hey what's up what's your name hia my name is Tim and my question for you
32:46
would be well you've of course mentioned that you don't like the idea of limiting yourself to one specific kind of role or
32:53
character that you always want to broaden your horizons and so whether that means uh just stepping out of your
33:00
comfort zone to try something new and challenge yourself to something you've never done before or experimenting with
33:05
some a different way of performing or environment you're performing in or even just having a character in mind that you
33:11
would love to portray what is the kind of performance you would love to give if you had the opportunity to do so well
33:18
I'd like to play a philosopher i'd like to play a poet um I played Miguelagarin
33:24
in um in a in a movie um that he was a East Village poet um who uh hung out
33:32
with playwrights uh uh Miguel Pinto was a playwright and also a heroin addict
33:38
but he wrote plays most of his life and um Miguel Agarin um was a guy who tried
33:43
to keep him straight and keep him on the straight and narrow but I'd love to play a guy named Pushkin who is a a mixed
33:49
race Russian poet musician um playwright uh intellectual uh yeah I I I feel like
33:56
yeah we can as actors we can play the same thing over and over again and sometimes that allows us look you know
34:02
you want to be comfortable you want to feel like you're safe you want to feel secure for those of us who have children
34:07
and a family you want to do something that allows that security to feel like it's long and everlasting but we're
34:13
living in um in a world where everything changes nothing we're living in in
34:19
impermanence so we get attached to wanting to feel comfortable isn't it weird we're human so we want to feel safe and safe is good but also secure is
34:26
good but there is no security there is nothing comfortable um we we are living in a space and time where things are we
34:34
have to live and evolve in an awkward and uncomfortable situation and that's
34:39
okay if we allow it to be okay so for me as an actor to play different kinds of characters means I'm more creative i'm
34:46
doing things that are out of my comfort zone and that's the only way to move ahead is when you're out of your do am I
34:52
doing it right can I do it right can I fulfill this is this a challenge it allows you to be on your P's and Q's and
34:58
to grow and expand awesome thank you question oh we
35:04
have time for a few more questions here hi Jake jake my name is Jake hey Jake uh first of all I love you in Far Cry thank
35:10
you for doing that uh it's a lot of fun to play that and then my question goes back to Taps uh what did that experience
35:18
do for your career as a pivot point was it one or how how did you what'd you come out from Taps well I call it Taps
35:24
East East West we had me and Evan Handler two New York actors um met all
35:29
the LA actors you know uh uh Tom Cruz uh uh Sean Penn Timothy Hutton all LA bound
35:38
uh who had grown up in in that world of Hollywood uh I love that film harold Becker directed it it was my first major
35:45
feature film for a major studio and it gave me a bird's eye view into how it's done but it also allowed me to meet um
35:51
for the third well that was the first time two times afterwards I met George C scott a master of what he does who was
35:57
really just completely consumed by doing his four-page monologue and did it perfectly every time every time he said
36:03
a certain word within that monologue he touched his hat he touched his his his heart whatever he had it down it taught
36:10
me that acting is more than just speaking words it's embodying motion right it's embodying physicality and and
36:17
he was a master at it so there's so many things I learned from that movie but one was how to be a quick study with my
36:24
words and to repeat what I was doing either the same or the same but
36:30
different every time thank you very much you're welcome all right hi Stefan what's your name
36:36
my name is Aiden Kelly aiden
36:41
uh but I love how you're so positive you're
36:47
so uh inspiring but I wanted to know who is
36:53
your favorite person to act with you know I've love that you've come
36:58
to me three times during this con and you're so um you're so poised and you're
37:04
so um polite and you're so present and I really have enjoyed my interactions with
37:11
you so I want to say thank you for that uh I I love watching actors who command
37:17
the screen um much like I've always wanted to sydney Poier was one who had a
37:22
very big presence yeah um who I eventually got a chance to meet uh one of my favorite actors to work with um
37:28
today is Brian Cranston um he really is a master actor who gives me his attention uh when I play opposite him um
37:36
I've really enjoyed working with him as well and uh and there are many many many more i I always like actors who lose
37:43
themselves in a character but who are willing to do what you've done all weekend you look me right in the eye you
37:49
speak your mind you take your time and you connect and I love that about you thank you
37:56
[Applause] hey what's your name what's your question hello I'm Nicholas and so I
38:03
have a question of course uh so out of all the characters you play
38:11
what was your favorite scene that you had to act i have to say um right away it comes to me right away it's it's Box
38:17
Cutter from Breaking Bad uh and it exemplifies much of what I've been saying here uh and you asked me what
38:24
have I learned in a question um three questions before we started the Q&A um
38:30
you know actors love to act i've learned that if you leave me to my own devices I'm going to act and I'm going to keep
38:35
going and I'm going to keep talking forever we love to hear ourselves speak and all that it's just the truth i think
38:41
it's the truth about anyone because it allows us um to feel our own essence as
38:46
a vibratory mirror for ourselves i've learned as I've become more mature to feel your essence as a vibratory um
38:54
relevant uh essence for me right to listen more and so um Box Cutter is
39:00
special to me because for the first 10 minutes of that episode uh I said nothing at all there were no words and
39:08
to me that's how we really communicate we use our eyes we use we feel our we
39:14
use our ears we feel we use our hearts and and so for the first 10 minutes of that episode I said nothing uh until I
39:23
go back up those stairs have changed back from my big fish outfit have done the dirty deed and I say "Get back to
39:31
work." And that's it and it was very very powerful to to know that your
39:36
physical action your physical body speaks volumes your eyes speak volumes
39:41
it can it can allow someone to feel comfortable relaxed afraid um love all
39:48
of those things um you can share um without any words whatsoever and so we
39:54
know that about each other and so just know that that's a viable and very powerful way to communicate so that had
39:59
to be my favorite um episode of any television show ever [Applause]
40:05
though and I do apologize to everybody in line but this will be our last question if you didn't get a chance to
40:10
ask please go visit him down at his table hey what's up what's your name and what's your question my name is Micah
40:16
and on the topic of connection when you embody a character for so long and you
40:21
get like their mannerisms and like their speech and down do those characters ever leave you as an actor that's so funny
40:28
before I came here it was the Four Seasons in Los Angeles and I got a massage and I went to an energy healer and she touched me and she said "Oh what
40:36
was the name of the character you just played that you just finished playing?" And I said "Huh the character that you
40:42
just played and you finished last week?" I said "Vernon Damer." and she was touching my feet and she said Vern and
40:48
Damer are still here we have to get him down to the bus
40:53
stop um I I I it's the truth um all of
40:58
my characters stay with me whether you know it or not as human beings every emot every interaction you have is
41:04
imprinted somewhere inside you especially and specifically traumatic ones right and so those that trauma has
41:11
to go someplace there's a great book out called The Body Keeps the
41:16
Score and it talks about how any traumatic words you've heard things
41:22
you've seen interactions that you've had i grew up in the age of corporal punishment i was hit i was hit by my
41:29
parents all of that is imprinted within me same thing with my acting roles right i can drop it and especially the ones
41:35
that are very my favorite or that I've had to go to a very deep place for they live within me and so I have to wash
41:42
that out of me so I'm not living that dayto-day especially with characters lately like Moth Gideon and Gustavo
41:48
Fring where people actually every day call me
41:54
Gus and I'm immediately like I I'm I'm I'm there i'm like "Okay leave me alone
41:59
get away from me i'll kill you i'll kill you no I don't have any math." Or maybe I do pay
42:06
me a lot of money you know what I mean it's it's like an idiot you know i mean I've been
42:12
in an airport and and someone goes "This is the way." And I and I go "You have something I
42:18
want." Someone goes "Oh oh my god Stan Edgar." Like you have any compound B i'm
42:23
going "You are not a god you are simply a bad product." I mean you know it's
42:29
it's like so yes um the I mean I first of all I've been blessed to get all of
42:35
the best lines of any actor in history like the lines that I have for every
42:41
character I've played in the last 5 years are they resound they're really strong and they're really powerful so I
42:47
look it as a blessing um I'm happy to develop more of me because somewhere inside of me me is fighting with all
42:54
these different characters i So look we all want to be seen right i want to be
43:00
seen you've seen me as all of these different characters but now I want to
43:05
be able to I'm brave enough courageous enough mature enough to want you to see
43:10
who I am because there's something inside of me that understands that
43:15
besides the work I do I have a contribution and it's to show you my
43:21
heart and my soul i'm not perfect no one is i'm perfect in my imperfection right
43:26
that's perfect imperfection is perfect so when you feel like you're not enough
43:32
tell yourself that you are because I love each and everyone for who you are and I want you to love me for who I am
43:40
as well thank you so much thank you all for watching you've been
43:45
amazing and John thank you so much for sharing your time with us sharing your wisdom being such a positive light and
43:51
sharing some of your energy with us we can't wait to wait to see some more of you in the future one more time big round of applause