Jump to content

Jeremy Strong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by FMSky (talk | contribs) at 14:50, 19 November 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Jeremy Strong
Strong in 2014
Born (1978-12-25) December 25, 1978 (age 45)
EducationYale University (BA)
OccupationActor
Years active2004–present
Spouse
Emma Wall
(m. 2016)
Children3

Jeremy Strong (born December 25, 1978) is an American actor.[1] He is best known for his role as Kendall Roy in the HBO television series Succession (2018–present), for which he has won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 2020 and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama in 2022.[2][3] Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2022.[4]

Strong started his acting career at Yale School of Drama. After briefly studying at both the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London and the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago he acted in various plays at the Williamstown Theatre Festival. His first off-Broadway performance was in John Patrick Shanley's Defiance in 2006. His Broadway debut came portraying Richard Rich, 1st Baron Rich in 2008 revival of A Man for All Seasons. That same year Strong made his film debut in Humboldt County.

Strong has since appeared in a number of acclaimed films portraying real life people such as John George Nicolay in Steven Spielberg's Lincoln (2012), Lee Harvey Oswald in Peter Landesman's Parkland (2013), James Reeb in Ava DuVernay's Selma (2014), and Jerry Rubin in Aaron Sorkin's The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020). He has also appeared in Kathryn Bigelow's Zero Dark Thirty (2012), Adam McKay's The Big Short (2015), Sorkin's Molly's Game (2017) and James Gray's Armageddon Time (2022).

Early life and education

Strong was born in Boston on Christmas Day in 1978 to Maureen and David Strong. His mother worked as a hospice nurse, and his father worked in juvenile jails.[5] He lived in a "rough neighborhood" in Jamaica Plain, a place he often regarded as "somewhere I just wanted to get out of." His family was working class. Since his parents could not afford to go on vacations outside the Boston area, they put a canoe on cinder blocks in the family's backyard; Strong and his brothers would often sit in it and pretend to take trips.[5] His father's family is Jewish.[6]

When Strong was 10, his parents moved the family to the suburb of Sudbury,[7] for better schools. Strong recalled Sudbury as "a kind of country-club town where we didn't belong to the country club." His interest in acting began there, as he became involved with a children's theater group and performing in musicals.[5]

Among his costars in the children's theater group was Chris Evans' older sister; Evans remembers being impressed by Strong's performances. Later on, Evans and Strong acted opposite each other in a high school production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.[5]

Strong particularly idolized actors Daniel Day-Lewis, Al Pacino, and Dustin Hoffman—all famous for the lengths they went to preparing for roles—putting posters of their films on his bedroom wall and avidly following news of their careers as well as reading every interview they gave. When the 1996 film version of Arthur Miller's The Crucible was filmed near Boston, starring Day-Lewis, Strong got a job on the film's greenery crew—at one point holding up a branch outside a window during the filming of a scene. Later he worked on the Amistad sound crew, holding a boom mike over Anthony Hopkins as he made a speech, and helped to edit Pacino's directorial debut, Looking for Richard.[5]

After high school, Strong applied to colleges with a letter of recommendation from DreamWorks, which had made Amistad. He was accepted at Yale University and granted a scholarship, intending to study drama.[8] On his first day in class, he found the professor's discussions of Konstantin Stanislavski and accompanying blackboard illustrations so alienating that he decided immediately to change his major to English.[5]

Strong continued to act and starred in a number of plays at Yale, all of them produced through the student-run Yale Dramatic Association, known as Dramat. The plays were all ones that Pacino had performed in, such as American Buffalo, The Indian Wants the Bronx, and Hughie. Offstage, Strong arranged a visit from Pacino that other members of Dramat state did not go well and was so extravagantly budgeted that it nearly bankrupted their organization. Despite claiming not to remember the cost overruns, Strong admitted to being a "rogue agent" in planning the event.[5]

During one summer at Yale, Strong received an internship with Hoffman's production company. He also studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London and the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago.[5]

Career

2001–2008: Early years on stage

After Yale, Strong moved to New York in 2001. He lived in a small apartment in SoHo, above a restaurant where he waited tables, among other jobs. Strong described it as a state of "gilded squalor" in the words of Francis Bacon, with little but his bed, books, and a closet with expensive clothing. When not working he persuaded local FedEx offices to give him some free envelopes in which he put headshots and recordings of himself performing monologues to personally distribute them to talent agencies. For almost a year, he got no calls for auditions. To him it felt like "being cut off from your oxygen supply". In an attempt to get representation, Strong contacted his former high school classmate Chris Evans, who had become successful after Not Another Teen Movie. Evans set up a meeting between Strong and his agent at Creative Artists Agency, who chose not to sign Strong.[5]

The following summer, Strong got a spot in the summer company at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in western Massachusetts. Strong continued to work offstage in theater and film. In 2003, his position as an assistant at an independent film production company led to him turning down Williamstown that summer to serve as Day-Lewis's personal assistant on The Ballad of Jack and Rose, released two years later. He drove up from Massachusetts in his father's car with Day-Lewis's prop mandolin for the film strapped firmly in the passenger seat. On set he was so devoted to attending to Day-Lewis, who lived apart from his family during the shoot, that crew members nicknamed him "Cletus", after the Simpsons character, for his focus on menial tasks. Strong has stated that at the end of the shoot, Day-Lewis wrote him a note "that contains many of what have become my most deeply held precepts and beliefs about this work". He has chosen to keep the contents of the note personal out of respect for Day-Lewis.[5]

Strong returned to Williamstown in 2004, when he was cast with Jessica Chastain, Chris Messina, and Michelle Williams in The Cherry Orchard. He became friends with all three actors, and for intermittent periods in the late 2000s lived in the basement of Williams' townhouse in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Boerum Hill when he could not afford to live anywhere else.[5] During the mid-2000s he worked as a typist for playwright Wendy Wasserstein, typing up her manuscripts. At night he performed the role of an alcoholic Irishman in a one-man Conor McPherson play in a small Midtown bar. After Wasserstein discovered how much time Strong was spending observing her building's Irish doorman for the part, she considered writing a play based on Strong and the doorman but was unable to proceed with it before her death in 2006.[5]

By that time, Strong had begun getting off-Broadway roles. He took part in Marine weapons training at Camp Lejeune to prepare for his role as a marine in John Patrick Shanley's Defiance and immersed himself in early 17th-century Dutch philosophy to play a young Baruch Spinoza in David Ives's New Jerusalem in 2008. Also in 2008, Strong was asked to understudy with six hours' notice for an actor who had a family emergency; by the next night, he had memorized all the character's lines. He received favorable notice for this performance, and was finally able to sign with an agent.[5]

2009–present: Film and Succession

Later in 2008, Strong made his Broadway debut in A Man for All Seasons.[8] He was chosen as the 2008/2009 Leonore Annenberg Fellow by Lincoln Center Theater, and nominated for the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Lead Actor twice within a three-year period.[9][10] Strong's Defiance role helped secure his first film role in Humboldt County.[7] He has subsequently appeared in films such as Lincoln alongside Day-Lewis as Lincoln's secretary John George Nicolay, Zero Dark Thirty, Selma, and The Trial of the Chicago 7. He has also appeared in Guy Ritchie's The Gentlemen, a film that he did not want to discuss on the record with The New Yorker.[5]

Strong was set to play a leading role in a major film for the first time in Kathryn Bigelow's Detroit as a soldier and practiced his marksmanship in preparation, but was fired from the film after the first day of shooting since, according to Bigelow, "the character wasn’t working in the story". Strong later persuaded her to give him another part in the film.[5]

Strong's role in the Adam McKay film The Big Short led McKay to offer him a part in the HBO series Succession.[7] He was initially interested in playing Roman Roy, the family's wisecracking youngest son, but after the part was given to Kieran Culkin, Strong auditioned for the part of the middle son, Kendall Roy. Strong's performance in the role has received universal acclaim from critics, and won him a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 2020.[5]

In November 2021, it was reported that Strong was to star in and produce The Best of Us, about the 9/11 first responders.[11]

Acting philosophy and technique

Like his idols Daniel Day-Lewis and Dustin Hoffman, Strong prepares intensely for his roles, often to replicate some aspect of the character whether or not it is prominent in his portrayal. He has stated that, "I think you have to go through whatever the ordeal is that the character has to go through." For The Judge, where he played the main character's autistic younger brother, he spent time with an autistic man, as Hoffman had for Rain Man, and requested personalized props for the character that were not mentioned in the script. "All I know is, he crosses the Rubicon," stated Robert Downey Jr., his costar in The Judge.[5] In preparation for his Succession audition for Kendall Roy, he read Michael Wolff's biography of media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his family, which mentions that Murdoch's son James is known for lacing his shoes very tightly; Strong thus did the same for the audition, believing that it expressed the character's "inner tensile strength."[5]

Strong's devotion to his craft has occasionally led to personal injury. In the first season of Succession, Kendall had to run a considerable distance to be present at an important corporate board meeting after his limousine gets stuck in traffic. Because Strong wanted to be genuinely sweaty and breathless in every take, he ran as fast and far as he could in Tom Ford dress shoes and fractured his foot. Two seasons later, he jumped off a 5-foot-high (1.5 m) platform, wearing Gucci shoes while filming "Too Much Birthday",[12] impacting his tibia and femur and requiring a leg brace. The take was ultimately not used.

Strong seldom rehearses, saying he wants "every scene to feel like I'm encountering a bear in the woods", an approach he admits may not be popular with his costars. On The Trial of the Chicago 7, Strong asked to be sprayed with real tear gas. Director Aaron Sorkin stated, “I don’t like saying no to Jeremy ... But there were two hundred people in that scene and another seventy on the crew, so I declined to spray them with poison gas.”[5]

On Succession, Strong intentionally deepened his alienation from the rest of the cast by timing his visits to the makeup trailer so that he is the only one there at the time. His costar Kieran Culkin has described Strong as being in "a bubble" before shoots: "It's hard for me to actually describe his process, because I don't really see it."[5] Culkin has also stated that Strong's methods are not intrusive to his own process.[13] Another costar, Matthew Macfadyen, has described Strong's techniques as "not the main event ... That’s not to say that’s wrong. That’s just not useful."[14] Brian Cox, who portrays Strong's father on the show, has expressed his concerns that Strong's intense approach to acting may lead to early burnout. However, he went on to say that the result of Strong's approach "is always extraordinary and excellent."[15]

Such techniques are often referred to as method acting, but Strong prefers the term "identity diffusion" since he does not draw on his own life experience. "If I have any method at all, it is simply this: to clear away anything—anything—that is not the character and the circumstances of the scene ... And usually that means clearing away almost everything around and inside you, so that you can be a more complete vessel for the work at hand." He quoted jazz pianist Keith Jarrett to further explain his approach to acting: "I connect every music-making experience I have, including every day here in the studio, with a great power, and if I do not surrender to it nothing happens."[5]

Strong admits the intensity he brings to his work might cause him problems with his work-life balance, and has stated, "I don't know if I even believe in balance ... I believe in extremity." This is a claim that his wife, a psychiatrist, disagrees with: "He does a really good job of maintaining what he’s doing but also creating a space for the family and a normal life."[5]

Personal life

In 2016, Strong married Emma Wall, a Danish psychiatrist; they had met four years earlier at a party in New York during Hurricane Sandy.[5] They have three daughters, born in April 2018, November 2019, and September 2021.[7][16][17][18][19] They reside in New York and have a home in Copenhagen,[19][20] as well as a vacation home on the Danish coast in Tisvilde.[5]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2008 Humboldt County Peter
The Happening Private Auster
2009 The Messenger Return soldier
Kill Daddy Good Night Bruce
Contact High Carlos
2010 The Romantics Pete
Yes Man Short film
2011 Love Is Like Life But Longer Blind man Short film
2012 Lincoln John George Nicolay
Robot & Frank Jake
Please, Alfonso Alfonso Short film
See Girl Run Brandon
Zero Dark Thirty Thomas
2013 Parkland Lee Harvey Oswald
2014 The Judge Dale Palmer
Time Out of Mind Jack
Selma James Reeb
2015 Black Mass Josh Bond
The Big Short Vinny Daniel
2017 Detroit Attorney Lang
Molly's Game Dean Keith
2019 Serenity Reid Miller
The Gentlemen Matthew Berger
2020 The Trial of the Chicago 7 Jerry Rubin
2022 Armageddon Time Irving
2023 Maestro John Gruen Filming
Key
Denotes works that have not yet been released

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2011–2013 The Good Wife Matt Becker 5 episodes
2013 Mob City Mike Hendry 4 episodes
2016 Masters of Sex Art Dreesen 9 episodes
2018–present Succession Kendall Roy 29 episodes
TBA The Best of Us TBA

Theater

Year Production Role Venue
2004 Haroun and the Sea of Stories Mr. Sengupta / Khattam-Shud / Walrus Williamstown Theatre Festival
2005 Defiance P.F.C. Evan Davis Hallie Flanagan Davis Powerhouse Theater
2006 Manhattan Theatre Club
Frank's Home William Playwrights Horizons
2007 New Jerusalem Baruch de Spinoza Classic Stage Company
2008 A Man for All Seasons Master Richard Rich American Airlines Theatre
2009 Our House Merv Playwrights Horizons
2010 The Coward Lucidus Culling The Duke on 42nd Street
2011 The Hallway Trilogy Lucas Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
2012 A Month in the Country Mikhail Alexandrovitch Rakitin Williamstown Theatre Festival
The Great God Pan Jamie Playwrights Horizons

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Work Result
2008 Lucille Lortel Awards Outstanding Lead Actor New Jerusalem Nominated
2011 The Coward Nominated
2015 Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture The Big Short Nominated
2016 Palm Springs International Film Festival Ensemble Cast Award Won
2020 Critics' Choice Awards Best Actor in a Drama Series Succession Won
Satellite Awards Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film Won
Television Critics Association Awards Individual Achievement in Drama Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Won
2021 Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture The Trial of the Chicago 7 Won
2022 Golden Globe Awards Best Actor - Television Series Drama Succession Won
Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series Nominated
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series Won
Television Critics Association Awards Individual Achievement in Drama Nominated [21]
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Nominated [22]

References

  1. ^ "Jeremy Strong goes from 'Humboldt' to 'Seasons'". New York Daily News. Retrieved October 11, 2016.
  2. ^ "72nd Emmy Awards Complete Nomination List" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  3. ^ "Golden Globes 2022: Full List of Nominees and Winners". Us Weekly. January 10, 2022. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
  4. ^ "Jeremy Strong Is on the 2022 TIME 100 List". Time. May 23, 2022. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Schulman, Michael (December 5, 2021). "On "Succession," Jeremy Strong Doesn't Get the Joke". The New Yorker. Vol. 97, no. 41. pp. 50–57. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  6. ^ https://www.wsjm.com/2022/11/02/anne-hathaway-and-jeremy-strong-talk-their-new-film-armageddon-time/
  7. ^ a b c d McGovern, Kyle (August 8, 2019). "For Succession's Jeremy Strong, Acting Isn't About Having Fun". GQ. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  8. ^ a b Rochlin, Margy (December 23, 2015). "Jeremy Strong of 'The Big Short,' Acting and Chewing Gum at the Same Time". The New York Times. Retrieved February 12, 2016.
  9. ^ "2008 Nominees — The Lucille Lortel Awards". Lucille Lortel Awards. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  10. ^ "2011 Nominees — The Lucille Lortel Awards". Lucille Lortel Awards. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  11. ^ White, Peter (November 9, 2021). "Jeremy Strong To Star In & Produce 9/11 Responders Drama From Tobias Lindholm & Sister As Part Of First-Look Deal With 'A War' Director". Deadline. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  12. ^ "'Succession' cast reveals all about shooting Kendall's bonkers birthday party". Entertainment Weekly.
  13. ^ "Transcript of Episode 1150 - Kieran ..." Happy Scribe. Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  14. ^ "Matthew Macfadyen and Succession's Tom Wambsgans Have Nothing in Common". Vanity Fair. May 19, 2022. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
  15. ^ Parker, Ryan (December 9, 2021). "Brian Cox Concerned 'Succession' Son Jeremy Strong's Intense Method Acting Could Lead to Early Burnout". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
  16. ^ Mulkerrins, Jane (August 3, 2019). "Who wants to be a billionaire? Succession star Jeremy Strong on playing the ultimate anti-hero". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  17. ^ Nicholson, Rebecca (December 24, 2019). "'They're damaged': Succession's Jeremy Strong on sibling hell – and that cringey rap". The Guardian. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  18. ^ Renard, David (August 5, 2018). "'Succession' Finale: Jeremy Strong on Kendall's Struggles and What Comes Next". The New York Times. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  19. ^ a b Freeman, Hadley (October 2, 2021). "'His rage, his pain, his shame, they're all mine': Jeremy Strong on playing Succession's Kendall Roy". The Guardian. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  20. ^ Bjerge, Rikke (February 29, 2020). "Hollywood-stjerne har bosat sig i Danmark: 'Det er kommet til at føles som mit hjem'". DR (in Danish). Retrieved May 27, 2020.
  21. ^ Hailu, Selome (August 6, 2022). "'Abbott Elementary' Tops 2022 TCA Awards". Variety. Retrieved August 6, 2022.
  22. ^ Schneider, Michael; Moreau, Jordan (July 12, 2022). "Emmys 2022: The Complete Nominations List". Variety. Retrieved July 12, 2022.