Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
Ira Sachs, Rebecca Hall and Ben Whishaw on 'Peter Hujar's Day' | THR Studio at Park City
The Hollywood Reporter
Follow
1/31/2025
'Peter Hujar's Day' director Ira Sachs and stars Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall stop by THR's studio in Park City to talk all about their new film.
Category
✨
People
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
I think my father was working with Maurice Sendak in some capacity and many, many, many years later
00:08
I stumbled across a copy, my copy clearly, of Higgledy Piggledy Pop from when I was a child
00:14
and I opened it up thinking I should read this to my daughter and there was a drawing of a sheep
00:18
dog inside it and it said, Rebecca, I hope you enjoy this, Maurice Sendak. And then I felt very
00:27
starstruck in that moment knowing that I would have met Maurice Sendak at two years old and he
00:31
had drew like little wild things. Oh my god. Is it on your wall? Yeah, no, it's not. I mean the book is in a case.
00:44
In 1974 there was a conversation between a woman named Linda Rosencrantz and her friend,
00:50
the photographer Peter Hujar. She had an idea to write a book about artist's daily life and
00:55
she invited a number of artists over to speak to her about what they did yesterday and she
01:01
recorded those conversations and then she proceeded to lose the audiotapes of all the
01:07
conversations but this particular one she had transcribed and typed and then it
01:13
disappeared. 50 years later it was found in the Peter Hujar archive at the Morgan Library
01:19
by a young archivist and historian and it was published as a book called Peter Hujar's Day
01:25
and I read the book while I was working with Ben in Paris on passages and thought in a really like
01:34
on the last page I was like we should make this as a movie. It was as one, like that Ben and I
01:39
should make a movie of this material and we share I would say a love and interest in Peter's work
01:47
and also in queer life and queer creation in New York in the 70s and 80s which for me has been very
01:53
inspiring as I try to continue like to see what those artists did and what they did
02:00
during that time and how they did it with a certain kind of freedom and risk-taking
02:06
has been very inspiring to me. Peter had no money that we definitely know he was when he died he
02:13
was really penniless everyone was kind of horrified that he had really nothing at all
02:18
so that's obviously not good but I think there's a freedom that comes with
02:24
the situation that they were working in and a kind of radical radicality that was possible
02:31
and it's mixed I would say yeah. It's one thing I'm thinking as you talk is the nice
02:40
thing about being together is you actually learn from like as you're describing Peter I think I
02:45
need to keep this in mind for myself that not having money for creative things is positive
02:51
that it gives you actually attention and yeah that's a beautiful way to describe it. I sort
02:56
of always thought that it would be a good idea to actually you know write to a filmmaker when
03:03
you enjoy a film and say I really love that film but I often sort of chicken out of it because I'm
03:08
like oh I know that seems I don't know too much why would they want it I don't know but in this
03:12
instance I did it and I was like more than write to Iris X I'm gonna I'm gonna set up a breakfast
03:18
in New York City and did and was able to just express what a fan I was of him like he said he
03:28
did offer me a job and I was actually very disappointed I couldn't take that job because
03:31
of scheduling reasons at the time and I just wanted to sort of know him and be in his orbit
03:37
and have an opportunity to work with him so when this came up when he suggested this it was really
03:42
exciting to me for all the reasons that you said you know I live in New York I have done actually
03:47
for many many years now and I also have a fascination with that era I think a lot of
03:53
people do but there's something there is it's easy yes to romanticize it but I think there
03:59
is a good way to romanticize it in the sense that there was a sort of there was a community
04:06
and there was a sense of striving to create and stick it to the man I guess that I think is is
04:14
very different to the place that artists find themselves in now where you know that there isn't
04:20
really any counterculture in a way there is only culture which is good and bad but the sort of
04:26
sense that there's no that these that these were people who were just creating art for art's sake
04:33
and not thinking about the commerce angle or the yes they needed money desperately that they that
04:38
wasn't their sort of they weren't thinking about how to do something that could be have integrity
04:43
to them and make money or be a brand or whatever and I think for me what was interesting about the
04:50
text and what I imagined and what has sort of developed with these two is is also a story of
04:57
a friendship and I think that is really the unexpected part of the film and the part that
05:02
makes it actually seem in the present like you try to make a film that is maybe a period film
05:07
but you want that period nature to disappear and I think that's what happens because of
05:12
kind of the emotional life between these two people Bette and Rebecca and also through these
05:18
two characters Peter and Linda.
Recommended
1:03
|
Up next
Eddington Movie
Teaser Trailer
4/16/2025
5:58
'Rebuilding' Cast & Crew on Spending Time in the American West in New Film | THR Studio at Park City
The Hollywood Reporter
1/25/2025
7:19
'Love, Brooklyn' Director & Cast on Their Personal Connections to Brooklyn | THR Studio at Park City
The Hollywood Reporter
1/31/2025
11:44
Randall Park Breaks Down His Top 5 Blockbuster Movie Rentals
GQMagazine
12/2/2022
1:06
Lacey Chabert Has Your Inside Look at Hallmark’s Holiday Movie Haul Out the Holly
FanReviews
12/1/2022
11:12
Tilda Swinton on Starring in Pedro Almodóvar's First English Language Film 'The Room Next Door'
Variety
9/7/2024
4:03
The Sundays - Here's Where The Story Ends
The Sundays
11/17/2018
11:52
Aubrey Plaza Rewatches Parks & Rec, White Lotus, Ingrid Goes West & More
Vanity Fair
5/22/2023
1:51
Eddington Movie - First look
Teaser Trailer
6/19/2025
1:04
Sneak Peek at Hallmark's Holiday Movie Haul Out the Holly with Lacey Chabert
FanReviews
11/22/2022
1:12
Peter Pan & Wendy | Official 'A Little Bug' Clip - Yara Shahidi, Ever Anderson
80PoundMedia
5/5/2023
0:36
First Look at Hallmark’s Haul Out the Holly with Lacey Chabert
FanReviews
11/15/2022
18:18
'Uncut Gems' - Variety Studio TIFF
Variety
9/10/2019
1:17
Saoirse Ronan and Austin Butler to be the lead stars in Deep Cuts
Bang Showbiz
2/28/2025
1:27
Sobhita Dhulipala Foraying Into Hollywood With Actor Dev Patel's Directorial
Lehren TV
1/27/2024
0:58
Jennifer Coolidge hails Pete Davidson as ‘one of the most unpredictable people’ she’s ever met
Bang Showbiz Extra
3/1/2025
2:56
Sinners Movie Trailer
Teaser Trailer
1/28/2025
3:15
Shawn Mendes - Wonder
Shawn Mendes
10/1/2020
3:00
September 5 premiere: What Hollywood stars love about London
National World - LocalTV
2/5/2025
5:42
Hailey Gates, Alia Shawkat, & Callum Turner Talk Creation of 'Atropia' | THR Studio at Park City
The Hollywood Reporter
1/25/2025
0:44
Zazie Beetz Talks 'Wounds' Director Babak Anvari | Sundance 2019
The Hollywood Reporter
1/28/2019
0:35
Peter Pan
National World - Archive
7/15/2019
1:33
Larry David Returns to HBO With Obamas-Produced Sketch Series | THR News Video
The Hollywood Reporter
yesterday
4:03
'Love Island: Beyond the Villa' Stars Talk Reuniting One Year Later in Peacock Spinoff Series | THR News Video
The Hollywood Reporter
yesterday
1:11
Justin Bieber Drops Surprise New Album 'Swag' | THR News Video
The Hollywood Reporter
yesterday