Jeffrey Wright finished shooting āAmerican Fictionā two Septembers ago and immediately, happily transitioned to becoming what he calls his daughter Junoās āexecutive assistant,ā helping her navigate her way through college applications and all the other stresses of a high school senior year. When she went off to school in the fall, Wright thought heād feel liberated, that heād enjoy, as he puts it, āa new phase of freedom.ā
āBut I realized that Iāve been doing the father thing for 22 years now, and I think Iām finally good at it,ā Wright says, punctuating the thought with a laugh. (He also has a son, Elijah, with ex-wife Carmen Ejogo.) āBeing a father has kind of been the primary thing Iāve been ... and now I miss it.ā He pauses, as he does often in conversation. Wright is a man who considers every word. āYeah ... I wonder whatās next.ā
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Weād just met 15 minutes ago. Being a father is how you see yourself, I ask. More than an actor?
āOh, fā yeah,ā Wright responds without hesitation.
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āSo, in a way, my life seems purposeless now,ā Wright continues. āIt certainly seems empty in multiple ways.ā
This sounds serious. And it is, though two things should also be noted up front. First, pretty much everything Wright says in his deliberate, resonant voice echoes with meaning, with contemplation, with weight. He could read the Taco Bell menu ā chalupa su-preme ā and convince you that itās a lyrical wonder.
Second: Wrightās doing OK. Really. Heās just a man given to introspection.
In the fall, Wright had time, too much time, really, to reflect. The actorsā strike prevented him from taking a job or going to the Toronto International Film Festival, where āAmerican Fictionā premiered and won the eventās audience award. Wright would have loved to be there and talk about playing Thelonious āMonkā Ellison, an author and professor, who, frustrated with his career, drunkenly cranks out āMy Pafology,ā a pandering book that fully embraces cliches about the urban Black experience. Improbably or maybe naturally ā the film lets you decide ā it becomes a bestseller. Monk, an artist, doesnāt know how to feel about its success. After all, he wrote it in a fit of pique.
So, yes, much to discuss ā only Wright couldnāt say a word. So instead he headed west from his Brooklyn home to a Malibu rental just down the coast from fried seafood destination Neptuneās Net, where he keeps his surfboards, truck and bicycle. Time to work on himself. Mind. Body. Spirit. Find some decent waves. Power through eight-mile bike rides through the hills. (āIāve got a little e-assist,ā he says of his electric ride. āI try to use it in moderation ... but it is uphill.ā) Regular workouts at a wellness center, doing Pilates, acupuncture and weight training.
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āI was trying to get back to the old ways a little bit, to the extent that thatās possible in these older times,ā Wright, says. He recently turned 58. He knows heās not going to get back to the shape he was in when he played lacrosse in high school and college. He couldnāt, even with all the training in the world. Thatās because when he was 24, Wright was playing Puck in a touring production of āA Midsummer Nightās Dream,ā and at the end of the first act, he leaped offstage and tore his ACL.
āThe loudest silent scream in the history of theater,ā Wright says.
Did you return to stage?
āLimping,ā Wright says. āBut, yeah, there was a second act to do.ā
Being āyoung and foolish,ā he never got the knee fixed until eight years later when it locked up on a backswing playing golf. Itās still not great, but being out in the ocean helps. Wright started surfing about a dozen years ago and became passionate about the sport when he moved to Los Angeles after getting cast on the HBO series āWestworldā in 2015. For the showās first two seasons, he lived in Santa Clarita. Then he moved downtown. Then to Marina del Rey. Finally he got this seasonal rental, just south of the Ventura County line. Itās his through March.
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āThe single advantage of living out here is the Pacific Ocean,ā Wright says. āItās just a magnificent creature. I could never leave it.ā
The morning after the actorsā strike ended in November, Wright opened his email and found a message from one of the āAmerican Fictionā producers. You want to come in for a meeting? When? Tomorrow morning, 10 a.m. at MGM. When Wright showed up, he was taken aback. There were two dozen people in the room brimming with energy and ideas, spitballing how to support the film. One person handed him a tentative promotional schedule. It ran through March.
āIād never had a meeting like that before in my career for any film that Iāve been a part of, and certainly not one that I was the lead in,ā Wright says.
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Really? Not with the three Bond movies, the āHunger Gamesā trilogy or the last āBatmanā reboot? Or with āWestworldā or the two movies he made with Wes Anderson?
āNope,ā he answers. āNever.ā
When Wright earned his first Oscar nomination a couple of weeks ago, that tentative schedule they gave him became permanent, including more post-screening Q&As, more career retrospectives (āitās like your life passing in front of your eyesā), more interviews like this lunch conversation weāre having, all of which inspire the kind of āintense self-reflectionā that Wright hopes might end up being a constructive exercise somewhere down the line.
After he heard he was nominated, the first person Wright called was his 94-year-old aunt, the woman who helped his late mother raise him. (Wrightās father died when he was 1.) She lived with Wright for a couple of years until Wright had a house built for her near the Chesapeake Bay, where the sisters grew up.
āI called her and asked, āDid you hear any news this morning?ā ā Wright says, smiling. He made the call because his auntās eyesight isnāt so good. āShe said, āOh, I heard. Congratulations.ā ā Pause. ā āBut you know, you should have been nominated a long time ago. You should have been nominated for āBasquiat.ā ā Wright laughs. āThatās the way she is.ā
The aunt was the first person he called, but not the first person he talked to that morning.
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āI was in my lounge/office area in Brooklyn. I actually grabbed some dumbbells that my son had in there for whatever reason,ā Wright remembers, pantomiming doing bicep curls at a furious pace. āAnd I glanced at my phone and a message pops up. āCongratulations.ā And then I looked up and saw the picture of my mom on the bookshelf.ā He smiles. āWe had an exchange.ā
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Wrightās mother, Barbara Whiting-Wright, had come up several times during our conversation. An attorney, she was the first Black woman to serve as customs law specialist for the U.S. Customs Service, where she began her legal career in 1964. She also had season tickets to Washingtonās professional football team and a record collection that included Miles Davisā āLive-Evil.ā She died four years ago from colon cancer.
āAs far as my life goes, she was a visionary,ā Wright says. āMy mom basically lined up a series of doors around me from a very early age. And they all led to someplace good.ā
āPretty tough too,ā Wright adds, making sure he painted a full picture. āShe had expectations.ā
Did you feel like you met them?
āWhen I described to a very good friend of mine how I had taken care of my mom at the end of her time, he said, āHer investment paid off,ā ā Wright says. āHe knew my mom pretty well. I think what I had described to him, what was reasonably comforting to me, was that she trusted me. And that was cool.ā
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Wright looks down. Our table has been cleared. Weāre well past the time we said weād talk, and heās had adequate introspection for the day.
āAll right, enough of this,ā he says, rising, extending his hand. Time to head home.
Too late to surf? Probably. But Wright already has one session circled on his calendar.
āIāll be out in the Pacific on the morning of the Oscars,ā he tells me. āIt calms the system.ā
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