This interview was originally broadcast on Jan. 9, 2013.
Bobby Cannavale may have acted in film and on television, but at heart, he's a theater guy. Always has been, always will be.
He plays a prominent role in the third season of HBO's Boardwalk Empire, out on DVD on Tuesday, and stars in Woody Allen's latest film, Blue Jasmine. On Broadway, he played opposite Al Pacino in David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross. He says the stage has been his calling since he was a kid growing up in Union City, N.J.
That's where he discovered the theater directory yearbook at his local library. That yearbook led him to the classics, from A Streetcar Named Desire to Death of a Salesman, and while he may not have necessarily understood what was happening when Stanley was yelling at Stella, something about the plots and characters of these plays resonated.
"I was just drawn to them," he tells Fresh Air's Dave Davies, "because in my head I heard the voices. I would act out the parts in my head. So it was the only thing I ever wanted to do, really."
From there, he acted in every production he could at the Catholic schools he attended growing up.
"I was an altar boy in an incredible monastery that was attached to a rectory," he says. "The theater of the church is the most incredible theater, and in this church, it was beyond. It was this huge monastery. It was landmarked. It's a beautiful building, and I kind of had the run of it. ... And they did like three shows a year, and I was in all of them. My first one, I was like 10 or 11. It didn't matter if there weren't any kids in the show, I was in them. Like, I was in Guys and Dolls playing a gangster when I was like 12."
Cannavale, who won a Tony last year for his role in The Motherf- - - -r with the Hat, has come a long way from the Union City public library and Catholic school. After years of working New York clubs until 5 a.m. so he could keep acting, Cannavale broke out in the 2003 indie film The Station Agent. He remembers attending Sundance that year and, almost as soon as he arrived, hearing that the movie — a labor of love for its actors and writer-director Tom McCarthy — was the buzz of the festival. With that, Cannavale's club-working days were over.
Interview Highlights
On how he came to act in Glengarry opposite Al Pacino
"Two years ago, two Tonys ago ... I was fortunate enough to be nominated for the Best Actor category, and so was Al — who I wouldn't have called Al four months ago, but now I can call him Al — and I'd never met him before, and he's my favorite actor and I'd always wanted to meet him, and I'd always wanted him to come to see a show. ... It was kind of like a little thing I'd say in my head, 'Pacino's coming tonight,' you know, whenever I'd do a play.
"And so they sat me next to him, and I just leaned over to him and I introduced myself and he said, 'I know who you are.' And I said, 'I would love it if you could come see our show.' And he said, 'I'm coming, I'm coming.' And he came [for] the last show and stayed in my dressing room for — gosh — over an hour, just talking to me. It was amazing, and when he left he said, 'We're going to do it.' And I got a phone call about three months later asking me if I'd be interested in reading and taking a look at Glengarry with Al playing The Machine and myself playing Richard Roma."
On why actors love Glengarry
"It's one of those plays that actors talk about and say, 'It's a perfect play.' And it's a perfect play because it's about, you know, seven guys who desperately want something and need something at a time when people desperately want and need things. It was written, you know, in 1982. I think it's a prescient play to do today, but let's face it, I mean, I think great plays are about people wanting things, [being] desperate for things. I think [that's] what makes great drama, and I think that's one of those things that's just always resonant. It's just what we are as a culture and in America in particular."
On how the small differences in energy can change a production nightly
"I think that is what makes it the living, breathing thing it is. We joke about it sometimes, you know. We'll get together at the curtain call. We all come out. The curtain's down, and there's the quick four-word review from everybody, you know: 'Not bad.' Last night, Johnny actually said, 'Solid B. Solid B, guys.' ... It happens. Maybe somebody's not as desperate, let's say, it throws it off. It throws it off, but not necessarily in negative ways. It just means that one guy gets eaten a little easier than he did the night before. ... I know yesterday I was late because the train took forever, so I was rushing the whole time and went out not quite prepared, and something else happened."
On seeing The Station Agent become a hit
"We always thought it was a good movie, but I never thought it would do what it did. I was just so excited to finally do it, and we made it in 17 days over the summer in New Jersey. Just to give you perspective, the last episode of Boardwalk Empire took 18 days to shoot. And so we shot that movie for nothing and, you know, I'm wearing my own clothes. ... So there are elements of that movie that have a very true spirit about them. That makes me really happy. ... I'm really proud to be a part of that."
On the elaborate sets and costumes for Boardwalk Empire
"Everyday felt like I was coming to work in a theme park because everything around you — every stitch of clothing I wore — was handmade with vintage fabric from the time, and every prop is from its time. The lighters are very difficult to work and the cars, and, you know, they spare no expense. So it's not like you see the same car driving back and forth in the background — there's 30 cars. Packards and Model Ts. ... So it definitely makes it a very immersive experience, [and it's] easier to work when you're surrounded by it all like that."
Transcript
DAVE DAVIES, HOST:
This is FRESH AIR. I'm Dave Davies, in for Terry Gross. If you watched the last season of the HBO series "Boardwalk Empire," you probably remember the intimidating and twisted gangster Gyp Rosetti, played by my guest Bobby Cannavale. He won't be returning to the series - for reasons made clear in last year's final episode, but he leaves with an Emmy nomination for his performance. The last season of "Boardwalk Empire" comes out next week on DVD.
You can also see Cannavale in the latest Woody Allen film "Blue Jasmine" and in "Lovelace," the new film about porn star Linda Lovelace. In the 2003 film "The Station Agent," Cannavale played the chatty guy running a coffee stand. You've likely seen him in some other television roles too. He played to tough hospital administrator in the Showtime series "Nurse Jackie," a role which earned him another Emmy nomination this year. And he won an Emmy as Will's boyfriend on the NBC series "Will and Grace." Cannavale has done plenty of theater too - recently appearing opposite Al Pacino in the Broadway revival of "Glengarry Glen Ross." I spoke with him in January.
Bobby Cannavale, welcome to FRESH AIR. It's great to have you.
BOBBY CANNAVALE: Thanks, Dave.
DAVIES: Well, wanted to talk about the recent season of "Boardwalk Empire," where you played a New York gangster named Gyp Rosetti, right, short for Giuseppe.
CANNAVALE: Mm-hmm.
DAVIES: Quite a character. I mean, he had a very prominent role in the season. It will just be this season, those who've watched it will know. And I thought we would hear a clip.
This is a moment where you're meeting with the series' central character, Nucky Thompson, the Atlantic City boss. He's played by Steve Buscemi. And he is - well, your character Gyp Rosetti, is angry because Nucky Thompson has decided to sell his booze strictly to Arnold Rothstein, the New York gangster, as opposed to directly to your guy. So you, as Gyp Rosetti, responded by interrupting his shipments by taking over this little town in New Jersey, Taber Heights, so that Nucky can't get his booze through to New York. He's pretty annoyed and has come to Taber Heights, and you're sitting down at a restaurant to try and straighten things out. Let's listen.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SERIES, "BOARDWALK EMPIRE")
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Nucky, welcome to Tabor Heights. Police escort and everything.
STEVE BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) What do you want, Gyp?
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) I was thinking maybe the pot roast. How about you?
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) I didn't come up here for your vaudeville routine.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Well, Bible campaign ain't till summer. So why did you come?
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) Obviously, I offended you in some way. But since you're a man who can find an insult in a bouquet of roses, I'm not sure quite how.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Maybe it's got something to do with you jeopardizing my livelihood.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) It's a free market. I sell to whom I choose.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) To whom? Listen to you.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) I wish you'd start.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) I got customers, 20 blocks stretch of the lower West Side. They can't buy from me, they buy some place else.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) I'm not selling to Yale or Remus, either. And you don't see them acting like petulant children, right.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Right. You only sell to the Jew.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) I told you, I need to keep things simple.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Like this place, simple. Only one road in, one road out, Atlantic City to New York.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) I'll use the back roads through the Pine Barrens, Gyp.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) I don't know where the (bleep) that is, but I bet it's one hell of a slog. And if I was you, every inch of that road would stick in my craw.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) But I'm not you, Gyp. I learned a long time ago not to take things personally.
(as Gyp Rosetti) Everyone's a person, though, right? So how else could they take it?
(as Nucky Thompson) In the interest of honoring what was once a fruitful business relationship, let's set the table over again. You'll be my guest in Atlantic City tonight. I'll send you home tomorrow with a full month's supply. You'll keep your head above water in New York and leave these nice people alone.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Stay a lot healthier that way. What happens after a month?
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) I don't consider that my problem.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Square enough deal.
BUSCEMI: (as Nucky Thompson) Then this is where you shake my hand.
DAVIES: And that's our guest Bobby Cannavale with actor Steve Buscemi in the recent season of "Boardwalk Empire" on HBO. This is such a great character you have, here.
CANNAVALE: Thanks. A very logical thinker Gyp, right? There's some logic in there. It made sense. He's right.
DAVIES: Right.
(LAUGHTER)
CANNAVALE: What else is it going to be, if it's not personal?
DAVIES: Right. Up to a point. But he is also, like, kind of - well, I don't know if I would say psychotic. But he opens the series - I mean, and I think the first time we see him; he beats a man to death with a tire iron because of some casual insult.
CANNAVALE: Right. Right.
DAVIES: And you also make this guy funny and likable. How did you approach building this character?
CANNAVALE: Thanks. Well, you know, first of all, I appreciated and understood where it's set, what the milieu is. We're set in the underworld, here. And this guy works for the mob, the mafia at a time when it was a very powerful thing in New York. He's got to do what he's got to do to stay on top. He wants to be remembered and he wants to be feared.
And that's a pretty good business to go into if what you want out of life is to be respected and feared. You know, I thought of him as somebody who attacks that part of it with relish. Where it comes from psychologically he's really well-built in the portrayal of him as a person who's far away from home, as a person who always had ambition, as a person who is not respected in his own home and has always felt like he doesn't get the credit he deserves.
And so, you know, the killing aside, that kind of a character I - is attractive to me because it's somebody who, again, desperately wants something. Then you add the physicality that they've written of him committing murder as much as he does. You know, given the milieu, again, of what the series is about and where it's set, it's very exciting to play a role like that. I've never gotten a chance to play a part like that.
DAVIES: Right. And as the series develops, we learned that your guy has some very kinky sexual preferences.
CANNAVALE: Right.
DAVIES: How does that - was there a backstory in your head for this guy, I mean, that accounts for something like that?
CANNAVALE: You know, yeah, you know, I mean, I'm always hesitant to talk about exactly what it is, because it's not anything that you can really - you know, all we have really is the words and the end product, the film itself. And I will just tell you that, you know, I did a lot of research about what that particular sexual peccadillo is and what psychologists think it's about, and then I sort of go from there and make up my own thing.
DAVIES: Right. Well, just so we're not coy about it for the audience, I mean, what we're talking about is the fact that he likes to be choked when he's in an intimate relationship with a woman.
CANNAVALE: Right.
DAVIES: And did that inform your performance in scenes which had nothing to do with sex in, you know, in his confrontations with other people and his expressions of violence?
CANNAVALE: Oh, sure. Oh, sure. Yeah. I mean, look. I think Gyp's the kind of guy who needs to feel physically stimulated all the time, and so he does that by making a joke that scares somebody that doesn't know it's a joke. He does it by exerting, being the loudest person in the room when he wants to be. He does it by cracking jokes in the brothel. He does it by talking seductively to Gillian and - in one breath, and then putting - laying the hammer down on her in the next.
I think for him, it's a power issue and a control issue, and I think he gets physical sensation out of that. So that would - it's sort of an indirect lead-in to why he enjoys sex that way. I think he gets physical stimulation from murdering people. He does it himself, you know. He's usually the guy doing it. And so, you know, whatever the psychosis behind that is is, you know, what I think it is.
DAVIES: Well, whatever it is, it's convincing. I wouldn't want to run into your guy. This is a real period piece. You know, we broadcast out of Philadelphia, which is not far from Atlantic City, so I've been there. And one of the things I like about the show is the careful reconstruction of Atlantic City in the 1920s and...
CANNAVALE: Yeah.
DAVIES: ...everything from the clothes to the boardwalk. Is that something that you connect with...
CANNAVALE: Man, with this show in particular, the production values in this show are unbelievable, and every day felt like I was coming to work in a theme park because everything around you, every stitch of clothing I wore was handmade with vintage fabric from the time and all - you know, every prop is from its time, the lighters that are very difficult to work and the cars. And, you know, they spare no expense, so it's not like you see the same car driving back and forth in the background. There's 30 cars, Packards and Model-Ts, and everybody's dressed in the period. And so it definitely makes it a very immersive experience, easier to work when you're surrounded by it all like that. And I think that pops really, really nicely in the final product.
DAVIES: Bobby Cannavale played gangster Gyp Rosetti in the last season of "Boardwalk Empire," which comes out next week on DVD.
Let's hear a clip. In this scene, he's assembled residents of the small New Jersey town his crew toke over to run a bootlegging operation.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "BOARDWALK EMPIRE")
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. First things out the way, thank you for coming, those of you who were curious and those who were maybe escorted here. My name is Mr. Rosetti. My associates and me have taken an interest in your town and are going to be here for a while. So we thought it only neighborly to introduce ourselves.
(as Gyp Rosetti) In return for your hospitality and any inconvenience this may cause, we're offering a monthly giveback. Tell them how much we're offering.
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: (as character) A double-C a piece.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) In English.
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: (as character) Two hundred dollars a month.
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Which is a pretty square deal for keeping your mouth shut, wouldn't you say, Sheriff Ramsey? He's a good man, your sheriff, and he's going to keep on sheriff-ing, same as you all are going to keep doing whatever it is you do. Barbers cut hair, cooks cook, librarians keep checking out books, because it's very important to read.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: (as character) What happens when Bible camp opens?
CANNAVALE: (as Gyp Rosetti) Bible camp's cancelled. And I'm not really doing questions and answers right now, dear.
DAVIES: That's a clip from last season's "Boardwalk Empire." We'll hear more of my conversation with Bobby Cannavale after this break. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR. Let's get back to our interview with actor Bobby Cannavale. He's co-starring in the new Woody Allen film "Blue Jasmine" and he played the gangster Gyp Rosetti in the last season of HBO's "Boardwalk Empire." When I spoke with him last year, he was also appearing in the Broadway revival of "Glengarry Glen Ross," which also starred Al Pacino.
"Glengarry Glen Ross," of course, is the David Mamet play about real estate salesmen in Chicago, you know, desperately competing for sales. Tell us a little about building the Ricky Roma character that you played.
CANNAVALE: Well, you know, it's one of those plays that actors talk about and say it's a perfect play. And it's a perfect play because it's about, you know, seven guys who desperately want something and need something in a time when people desperately want and need things.
It was written, you know, in 1982. I think it's a prescient play to do today. But let's face it, I mean, it's - I think great plays are about people wanting things and desperate for things. I think it's what makes great drama, and I think that's one of those things that's just always resonant. It's just what we are as a culture, and in America in particular.
So he sets it in a very specific place, as you said, this small real estate office, a little shabby real estate office in Chicago, in the world of sales and in the world before the Internet, by the way, where something like cold-calling - which Al's character Shelley describes as, you know, walking up to the door, I don't even know their name. I'm selling them something they don't even want.
So it was a skill to sell something and put on a front and acting, in a sense. And so it makes the play very active. For Ricky, you know, he's on top, and desperate to stay on top.
DAVIES: And there are a lot of really intense exchanges here, some profane, you know, angry arguments that occur. And I wondered, since you do this, you know, night after night with the same crew, if the energy is sometimes different. You get something different from an actor, and it feels different, and you respond differently.
CANNAVALE: Sure. Oh, sure. You know, I think that is what makes it the living, breathing thing it is. And, you know, we joke about it sometimes, you know, like we'll get together at the curtain call. We all come out, the curtain's down, and there's the quick, four-word review from everybody, you know: not bad.
Last night, Johnny said - Johnny C. actually said: Solid B. Solid B, guys. And, you know, it happens. Maybe somebody's not as desperate, let's say. It throws off the - it throws it off. It throws it off, but not necessarily in negative ways.
You know, it just means that maybe one guy gets eaten a little easier than he did the night before. But we're definitely there to devour each other. It's just - sure, it's different levels. I guess, you know, people bring different things in with them. I know yesterday, I was late because the train took forever, and so I was rushing the whole time and went out not quite prepared, and something else happened.
But it's ethereal. I can't really describe it. We talk about it, you know, actors talk about in theater in terms of degrees, you know, when you have a bad show. Really, if you're been working the show and you've rehearsed the show, we're talking about degrees that the audience won't notice, but you sure feel it. Those are the nights, you know, you opt to walk home rather than get in the car...
DAVIES: Right.
CANNAVALE: ...to think about it for a couple hours.
(LAUGHTER)
DAVIES: You have an interesting background. You grew up North Jersey, right?
CANNAVALE: I grew up right across the river here in Union City, New Jersey, which is next to Hoboken, as a reference - so right across the Lincoln Tunnel.
DAVIES: And your dad was Italian-American, your mom Cuban-American, right? And they split when you were pretty young, and...
CANNAVALE: My mom's Cuban, born in Cuba. Yeah.
DAVIES: And then you lived in Puerto Rico for a time, and then Florida. Is that right?
CANNAVALE: Yeah. I grew up in New Jersey, and then lived for two years in Puerto Rico when my mom remarried. And we lived in Puerto Rico for two years when I was about seven - six, seven. And then came back to New Jersey, and then moved for Florida my freshman year of high school. And then I came back to New Jersey my senior year of high school and moved into the city a couple years later.
DAVIES: Were you always a performer as a kid, a cutup?
CANNAVALE: A hundred percent. Yeah, I was that kid that everybody, like, always said he's so creative, because I was always playacting and I had a very vivid imagination. And I started reading at a very young age. I was obsessed with reading. And I started reading plays at a really young age. I just was drawn to them.
There was a great library in my neighborhood on 15th Street in Union City. That's how I remember reading "A Streetcar Named Desire" and reading all those plays, "Death of a Salesman," and not really understanding them, but reading them. And I was just drawn to them, because in my head, I heard the voices. I would do - I would act out the parts in my head.
DAVIES: You said you read a lot of plays at the library as a kid. Did you see theater?
CANNAVALE: Oh, sure, yeah. And I was in plays. You know, I went to Catholic school, and so I was - I wasn't allowed to do much outside of school and church. Luckily, they intertwined all the things that I kind of enjoyed. There was a theater company. There was a chorus, and I was an altar boy in an incredible monastery.
The theater of the church is the most incredible theater, and in this church, it was beyond. It was this huge monastery. It's landmarked. It's a beautiful building. And I kind of had the run of it. And they did, like, three shows a year, and I was in all of them.
My first one, I was, like, 10 or 11. It didn't matter if there weren't any kids in the show, I was in them. Like, I was in "Guys and Dolls," playing a gangster when I was, like, 12. Then, you know, I was in "The Music Man" and "Flowers for Algernon" and "Man of La Mancha."
DAVIES: Looking back at those early days, I mean, you must have thought you were pretty good at this, or you wouldn't have sought it. Looking back on it, do you think you were?
CANNAVALE: I don't know. I guess, like, you know, when you're young, you know, there's a certain amount of naïveté you have, which, you know, I don't knock naïveté, to be honest, because I'm 42 years old and I still have - I mean, I've really had some great experiences. But I think I've always been optimistic about making a living in this business.
You know, I worked in nightclubs for years, and I would go and do plays for nothing. You know, I'd go on a call for a showcase off-off-Broadway and get it. So I was getting a lot of parts. So, sure, I had confidence that I could do this, but, you know, I wasn't starving.
Because I was - I'd do the play, and I'd go to work at 11:30 and work till 5 a.m. at a nightclub, and then sleep all day in grandma's house, and then come back in and do the play, you know. So I would do whatever I had to do, and it just seemed natural and normal. I never thought I have to think about doing something else.
DAVIES: And you got a TV role, and that led to a role on a TV show called "Third Watch." I confess, I'm not familiar with this. But I know you played a paramedic. You were being paid well. I mean, you were now a successful, working actor in New York.
CANNAVALE: Yep. Yep.
DAVIES: And I don't know if this is true, but I read that...
CANNAVALE: With a baby.
DAVIES: Oh, yeah.
CANNAVALE: With a baby. So it was important.
DAVIES: By then you'd had your son, right.
CANNAVALE: Yeah. Yeah.
DAVIES: Right. Jake, right?
CANNAVALE: Yeah.
DAVIES: And I'd read that you felt confined, and you asked them to write you out of the role, to have your character killed off. Is this true?
CANNAVALE: Yeah. Well, it's kind of true. I mean, yes it's true, but what I went in for was to ask them if my character was going to have anything interesting to do. It is true that I literally went from, you know, having a great night behind the bar, $200, to making television money, and I had never even been on television.
I was so happy to get that job that I really wanted to keep the job. And then I just realized that I'd kind of acted myself into a corner. You know, it's a big ensemble. There was, like, nine of us. And so everybody has to be a certain thing, you know, on a show like that.
And so I really couldn't really grow much, and, you know, a lot of that was my fault. And so when it seemed like it wasn't doing much but smiling a lot and hitting on the same girl for two years in a row, I asked them if there would be anything changing. And John Wells was great and kind and he said I don't think so. Do you want to be written out?
And I said sure, I would. And he said I will send you out big, which he did, and it was a really great story arc to act. And then he took care of me very, very well in many other ways and was just a gentleman about it. And to this day, I appreciate what he did for me, because after that, I really did try to do as many different things as I could.
I did "Oz" right after that. I did "Ally McBeal." And then I went and did "The Station Agent." I did "Kingpin," and I got - it really opened me up to be able to do many other things.
DAVIES: My guest is actor Bobby Cannavale. We'll be back to conclude our conversation in just a minute. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR. Let's return to my conversation with actor Bobby Cannavale. Well, let's talk about "The Station Agent." This was the film in 2003, directed by Tom McCarthy, got a lot of critical acclaim and a lot of critics awards. It's about a - I mean, I guess the central character is this man, a solitary train buff who is a dwarf.
He's played by Peter Dinklage. He inherits an abandoned train station in a kind of a quiet corner of New Jersey, and he decides to just move into the place. Patricia Clarkson is an artist who's depressed about the loss of her son. And then you're a guy, Joe Oramas, I think is the name, who has this little vending truck nearby.
CANNAVALE: A hot dog truck, a coffee truck, yeah.
DAVIES: Right, that your dad runs, and he's sick, so you're running it. You love people. You're dying for company. And I want to play a scene here where you're trying to make friends with Fin, played by Peter Dinklage. And he's walking by, and you try to engage him. Let's listen.
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "THE STATION AGENT")
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Hey, Fin, bro, you live here?
PETER DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) Yes.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Wow. We're neighbors. Nice. Hey, what happened to you?
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) Nothing.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Listen, you want to go down to the mill and grab a beer later?
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) No, thanks.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) What, you don't drink?
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) I do.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Oh, you just don't want to have a drink with me?
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) I don't like bars very much.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Oh. Hey, well, how about I go get a six, and we can have it right here?
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) No, thanks.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Well, what are you going to do?
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) I'm, uh, I'm going for a walk.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) Oh, cool. Well, you mind if I come along, man? I mean, I need the exercise. I'm turning into a fat (beep) out here.
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) I usually go alone.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) I'm a good walker, bro.
DINKLAGE: (as Finbar McBride) I prefer to go alone.
CANNAVALE: (as Joe Oramas) OK. All right. Hey, maybe next time, all right? You know where to find me.
DAVIES: And that's our guest Bobby Cannavale with Peter Dinklage in the film "The Station Agent." You know, one critic said that your character lacked the ability to be rejected.
CANNAVALE: Wow, it was really nice to hear that. You know, that's a really special, special, special experience, that movie, because it was - you know, it was so long in the making, like four years, for this four or five years of...
DAVIES: Now, you and Tom McCarthy, the director and writer, were old friends, right?
CANNAVALE: Tom McCarthy and I met acting in a play of Lanford Wilson's, a new play of his. We met acting in it about five years before we made that movie. And then Tommy wrote a play called "The Killing Act," in which Peter Dinklage was in, and then he just started writing this thing for us. And Patty we knew, and so it was like readings, doing readings. It was always us. It was always Patty and Pete and myself.
DAVIES: Patricia Clarkson, yeah. So you would just get together, and he would say, hey, I've written this scene, let's try it?
CANNAVALE: Yeah, and I've got some pages, and, you know - you know, it wasn't like scene-by-scene. Like, he'd written a draft, and then there was another draft, and, you know, things changed along the way. And then we'd do, like, a little public reading just for a few friends that he trusted. And it just was, you know, a classic tale of a script going through many options that it could have had.
Tommy could have made that movie with other people in it, let's say, but he just didn't want to. He wanted to make it the way he wanted to make it, with us. And we made it in 17 days over the summer in New Jersey. Just to give you perspective, the last episode of "Boardwalk Empire" took 18 days to shoot.
So we shot that movie for nothing. So are there are elements of that movie that are very true - have a very true spirit about them.
DAVIES: You've kind of made your own path in the business, and I've read that you still don't have a publicist. This is true?
CANNAVALE: Yeah.
DAVIES: So how do you - you just function on your own. Or, I mean, you have an agent, of course, but...
CANNAVALE: What do you mean function, though? I mean, I function fine.
DAVIES: I don't know what I mean.
CANNAVALE: See, I walked here. I walked to the studio. I didn't need people - you know, they sent a car and I just canceled it and walked. You know, like, you can run your own life. Look, I'm not George Clooney. I'm not like - I don't have - I would think that, like, a publicist for me wouldn't be to get my name put in places. It would be to, like, stop, get people to stop, you know, bothering me.
You know, that would be a good reason to have a publicist and, you know, do the things that I want to do, like I wanted to come on FRESH AIR. I listen to FRESH AIR. I love it. I went on Joe Franklin yesterday because it's Joe Franklin, for God sakes. He's 92 years old, you know, he wants to have me on the show, I'm going to go. But I know what I want to do and what I don't want to do.
And I feel like that about the material that I choose. Now, I know I'm lucky, too. I get to choose things. Not as much as some people and maybe not as much as somebody who wants to be a movie star would think. But in my world, the theater, the little projects that I do, workshops, it makes me happy to do the things that I really want to do.
And so for me - that's just for me. For my taste. I don't know what a publicist would - where I would put them in my life.
DAVIES: And you don't want to move to Hollywood and become a movie star?
CANNAVALE: I don't want to move to Hollywood. No. I want to stay in New York.
DAVIES: Well, Bobby Cannavale, thanks so much for speaking with us.
CANNAVALE: Thanks, Dave. Thanks for having me.
DAVIES: Bobby Cannavale earned an Emmy nomination for his performance on HBO's "Boardwalk Empire" last season. Those episodes are now coming out on DVD. You can also see him in Woody Allen's new film "Blue Jasmine." Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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