‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’
Supporting actor nominee
First time doing this in a role: “Growing up in a traditional Chinese-value culture family, I was raised to internalize a lot of my emotions. When I got this role, the only way I could do it justice to [the character of] Waymond was to open up. I spent a long time with myself, persuading myself to let out feelings that I’d locked up for many, many years. I’ve experienced enough ups and downs in life; it was just a matter of convincing myself to put all those feelings into this character. When I was younger, I didn’t have the courage to do that.”
Snapshot moment: “When we made ‘Temple of Doom,’ everybody stayed at the same hotel in Sri Lanka. We’d shoot during the day and then come back and hang out by the swimming pool. That’s when Harrison Ford found out I didn’t know how to swim. He said, ‘Ke, come on, get in the water, I will teach you.’ And to this day, the reason I know how to swim is because of him.”
Advice: “Learn to love auditions. For the entire pandemic, I was auditioning left and right. I was frustrated: ‘Oh, my god, everything that happened when I was much younger is happening again.’ My wife was worried about me so she said, ‘Don’t think of it as an audition. Think of it as an opportunity to perform.’ So my advice would be to love the audition process. And don’t give up. I had to wait decades, but one day that opportunity will come knocking on your door, and when it does, you have to be ready to pour your heart and soul into it.”