The video above was produced by IndieWireâs Creative Producer Leonardo Adrian Garcia.
One of the things people donât tell you when you venture into culture writing is just how difficult it can be to interview actors. Writers spend their entire lives communicating their thoughts with strangers and directors love nothing more than an opportunity to detail how each element of a project fell into place under their oversight. But actors are different. Their preparations are varied and often ephemeral. Some will suggest that their work largely boils down to, âI pretended to be the person I was supposed to beâ and others will shout out the team of experts they worked with to perfect their performance. There are no wrong answers and brilliance can spring from anywhere, no matter a personâs process.
That doesnât always make for a great interview, of course.
But occasionally youâll come across a performer so studious, so careful, and so insightful that listening to them speak about their acting choices feels as though youâve passed through that hazy realm that separates actors from the rest of us, allowing insight into the meticulous choices that translate into something otherworldly.
Thuso Mbedu is such a performer and in a recent interview with IndieWire, the star of Amazon Prime Videoâs âThe Underground Railroadâ created a window for fans to peer through to better understand her transcendent portrayal of Cora, a young woman on a harrowing journey away from the only life sheâs ever known.
What makes that same interview so special, however, is the fact that itâs done alongside her 11-year-old co-star Chase W. Dillon, whose presence ensures that no conversation goes too dark, gets too dire, or drowns in self-seriousness. In the series, Dillon plays Homer, the righthand man to Ridgeway (Joel Edgerton) whose sole focus is to capture and return Cora to the plantation she escaped. But in reality, Mbedu and Dillon reflect each otherâs positive energy and obvious affection, creating a bright and slightly silly space to safely discuss topics that are anything but.
Itâs this sense of chemistry and care that contributes so much to what creator and showrunner Barry Jenkins accomplishes in his adaptation of Colson Whiteheadâs Pulitzer Prize-winning novel âThe Underground Railroad.â Mbedu and Dillon admitted as much when recalling their time spent on set.
Director Barry Jenkins and Thuso Mbedu on the set of âThe Underground Railroadâ
Cr. Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon Prime Video
âBeing on set, Barry was just there to help people,â Dillon said. âHe got a counselor on set and personally, for me, he came up to me and you know, talked things out with me. And weâd both talk things out about the scenes that we were doing, how weâre going to do it. And so he made me feel safe on set. He made me feel safe away from everything. He made other people feel safe as well.â
âThe truth is, Barry is very good with his words,â Mbedu said in addition. âHe knows how to articulate his vision without imposing or feeling like heâs dictating. He can break it down in a way where he still gives you space to play and make your own offer, but guiding you into a place that it makes sense to the story. So I think having conversations with Chase, and with me with Joel, he had a great way of communicating with us so that weâre comfortable in exploring this world.â
Under Jenkinsâ watchful eye and alongside Edgerton, the pair became a sort of found family on set, with real comfort and security, the better to safely traverse material that could easily grow overwhelming.
âMore than anything, what shaped the dynamic of our relationship with Joel was the fact that from the very beginning, he made himself available to me, he told me that if he could be of support for me in any capacity, whether it was on-set or off-screen, because obviously, heâs been in the industry much longer,â Mbedu said. âThis was my very first international job and heâs lived and seen things that I havenât. And he made me feel safe with him saying that if I felt like there was something that I really wanted to say, but I didnât feel comfortable voicing, he would be my mouthpiece.â
âAnd so I knew that I could trust myself to play and find moments with him. I never felt like a newbie or a rookie in his presence. We were all equal,â she said. âI was there to learn. He was also there to learn. And he will say time and time again that he also learned from Chase, you know? And so itâs nice to be in an environment like that.â
Chase W. Dillon and Joel Edgerton in âThe Underground Railroadâ
Kyle Kaplan / Amazon Studios
âI found him as my big brother. And we just had an on and off set chemistry. It went into our characters, Homer and Ridgeway is, well, our chemistry,â Dillon said. âAnd we would always just plan something. We always found a way to hang out with each other any way that we could. We had parties at our house. We had bowling alley parties, we had the whole works together.â
This is the environment in which Mbedu brought Coraâs journey to life, but for all of the friendships and frivolity, the protections and proactive decision-making, there is still a toll to be paid for traversing the psychological interior of a character whose entire life is earmarked with violent trauma and horror.
During filming, Mbedu would speak to her friends, whether in person or on video calls who would, if she was acting unlike herself, ask her, âWhat is the root of your emotion right now?â She would reflect and often times find herself realizing, âOkay, thatâs more Cora than Thuso,â and force herself to recenter.
But how? How does a person compartmentalize such an intense character and, moreover, how does a person begin to differentiate that character from themselves enough to allow for such compartmentalization?
When I ask this of Mbedu, her answer is shocking, not because of its content, but because of the painstaking detail with which sheâs able to explain.
The actress said that she first had to break Cora down and, consequently, develop her psychologically, emotionally, vocally and physically, to the extent that those developments could be reflected by her physicality at any point on Coraâs journey.
âThe Underground Railroadâ
Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon
For example: âEpisode 1, sheâs on a plantation, her body is physically bent over cotton most of the day. So sheâs a little bit hunched over. In Episode 2, sheâs in Griffin, where sheâs being taught to stand up straight, to be a particular way. So she is intentionally sitting higher than what sheâs used to, but it doesnât come easily for her because sheâs bent over for most of her life.
âWe get to Episode 3, sheâs in an attic. Sheâs confined to a small space, what does that look like? So again, sheâs hunched over, but itâs different to being hunched over cotton in an open field. We get to Episodes 5 and 6, sheâs shackled to her hands or shackled to her feet, so sheâs literally doubled over as sheâs moving.â
But physicality is just one element in a performance. Mbedu revisited the process repeatedly, including for Coraâs voice.
âLike we did with the physical journey, going from Episode 1, Iâm tracking that in Georgia. Sheâs isolated from her community. They speak ill of her. And so when she does say something, what does she sound like to a community that she feels like she has to defend herself from, but also a community where she hardly ever talks. So her English is a bit fragmented and broken. Because again, sheâs trying to keep herself hidden. So sheâs not practicing this English they speak.
âEpisode 2, Griffin again, they are being taught and when she speaks English incorrectly, they correct her. How does that differ from Episode 1?
âEpisode 3, we get there, she has to keep quiet. If you do not keep quiet, you die. They speak in whispers. So what does that do for her vocal journey? Or the dialogue that she has? Anything that she sees is mostly happening in her mind, so what does that sound like when she is allowed to whisper to Grace?â
Mbedu can, and does, go on and, in all honesty, her recounting her decision-making process is almost as mesmerizing as her performance as Cora itself, particularly when you recall a detail that the actress mentions only in passing early in her recollections.
Thuso Mbedu in âThe Underground Railroadâ
Kyle Kaplan/Amazon Studios
The things that Mbedu does, her impeccable calculation of where Cora is and why at any given moment is impressive, yes, but all the more so when you realize that âThe Underground Railroadâ was filmed out of sequence. Mbedu didnât determine Coraâs reality in each episode and see it through from start to finish. She found those realities and moved between them, from scene to scene, from day to day, slipping back and forth on an emotional journey that only she can see, held in check only by an astrolabe built around one womanâs movement through space and time.
To call it overwhelming would be a gross understatement and pondering the magnitude of Mbeduâs performance could easily have derailed the interview, but for Dillonâs easy exuberance; his pure enthusiasm for anything and everything is a testament to his acting skills, as evidenced by his solemn, thoughtful performance in the series.
Through him, I see how âThe Underground Railroadâ was hewn. Through painstaking care and craft, respect for the stories being told, as well as an unflinching commitment to protecting the stories of the storytellers. Enveloping the creators with love and joy and release, to allow them to better delineate between the characters theyâre embodying and the lives theyâre living.
âWeâre like, besties,â Dillon said. âI see her as my big sister. And itâs funny, because on set acting together, Barry would always see us hugging and talking. And then he would be like, âHey, yâall stop hugging over there!'â
âI was actually going through like a couple of pictures on mine, like last week, and I realized how Chase and I were almost always together or, like, joined at the hip in between scenes. It was either he was with Joel or it was all three of us together. But we were really connected like that.â
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