How Lakeith Stanfield Soared to the Heights of Hollywood – AnOther Magazine

Posted: September 17, 2023 at 11:47 am

September 15, 2023

Lead ImageShirt in cotton and wings in brass (both worn throughout) by LOEWE. Band trousers in wool (worn throughout) by WALES BONNERPhotography by Joshua Woods, Styling by Ellie Grace Cumming

Thisprojectis taken from the Autumn/Winter 2023 issue of AnOther Magazine and wasrealised before the SAG-AFTRA strike was announced:

Its two hours past call time andLaKeith Stanfieldstill hasnt shown up for the cover shoot. His absence has engendered a slightly anxious mood on set. Walkie-talkies crackle. The crew paces back and forth under the hot sun. Rattlesnakes forage in the dry chaparral. Everyone seems a little on edgeand, geographically speaking, they are. From 2,000 feet aboveMalibu, perched at the summit of the dry hill-scape, the sky out over the city blends seamlessly with the Pacific Ocean, to the point where its difficult to tell one from the other in the vast expanse of blue. There is the sense that youve arrived at the worlds outer limit or at least the end of California. It doesnt seem irrational to wonder if, by now, Stanfield has grown tired of the weathering demands of celebrity: the endless procession of reporters, the fans interrupting dinners withweed offerings or impressions of his characters, the ambient expectation that he should always be available to entertain.

The truth is that Stanfield hasnt been outside the publics sphere of attention since he found his way into it ten years ago, as a 21-year-old off-the-radar newcomer from San Bernardino,California, who didnt own a cell phone and had been most recently employed at a weed grow house. His first role wasthat of an emotionally volatile kid about to age out of a grouphome for at-risk teens, in a thesis film-turned-small budgetfeature calledShort Term 12. Theories abound that the movieis charmed; its lead actors Rami Malek and Brie Larson are big names now. But it was Stanfield, playing Marcus, who left the most lasting impression. He dissolves into his characters;sometimes it seems more like hes transcribing his own moods than reciting lines. The wounded sensitivity he brought to therole was so internalised that, when Marcus burst into tears after shaving his head and finding no scars left over from his mothers abuse, Larson had to excuse myself from the scene and cry. The breakdown hadnt been in the script.

Back at the motorhome at the base of the hill, Stanfield is dressed as himself, in a pale green knitted polo, black jeans, a black baseball cap and socked feet slipped into Birkenstocks. Thick, arcane symbols are tattooed along his hands and arms like doodles scrawled into a high school notebook. Hes stretched out on a couch that lines the back wall, his posture easy and relaxed. Its hard to say whether the four hours of shooting under the hot California sun has drained his sociability, because there is a perpetual air of almost monastic tranquillity about him, a natural orientation that could easily be misattributed to the composure of perma-friedness. He denies my offer of Reeses Pieces in favour of a transparent container filled with large slices of dried mango, which he picks at while we talk. Poisoning yourself makes you do things you dont want to, he says in response to a question about spirituality, which sounds more like the reasoning behind his sobriety. You start to become the things you ingest, so you want to stay away from things that can damage your body.

Stanfield is currently on double-promotion duty for films that could not seem more distinct (this interview took place before Sag-Aftra announced strikes on 14 July 2023): a Disney remake of 2003s The Haunted Mansion, in which he plays an expert hired to evacuate ghosts from a decrepit property, and Jeymes Samuels enigmatic The Book of Clarence, which is due out in January. What is known about the latter is as follows: (1) it takes place in 29 AD Jerusalem, but was filmed in Matera, the same southern Italian town where Pasolini shot The Gospel According to St Matthew; (2) Stanfield plays the titular cult leader, who is looking to capitalise on the rise of celebrity and influence the Messiah for his own personal gain; and (3) camels shit so frequently and profusely that there were workers whose sole job on set was to clean up after them. Peace to all the gods that allow these people to be so great at what they do, Stanfield says. But, like, bless them. I know thats a stinky job.

I always wanted to be the centre of attention LaKeith Stanfield

Stanfield previously worked with Samuel on 2021s The Harder They Fall, a high-octane, orgiastic bloodbath of a film that everyone called revisionist because it inserted Black people into the western epic tradition never mind that the whole master narrative of John Wayne types as the heroes of the Old West is itself a romantic construct. Samuels film instead took up a playful, winking disinterest in the trappings of historical accuracy. He laundered the real stories of 19th-century Black cowboys through his Blaxploitation-conscious sensibility, and metaphorically killed Tarantino when he shot the first white person who fixed their mouth to say the n-word. He intentionally undermined the time period with an anachronistic soundtrack, smuggling Jay-Z, Lauryn Hill and Barrington Levy into the 1870s. Jeymes just knows how to create these special environments that are unlike any other film sets youve ever been on, he says of the director. You go on his sets and there are these giant speakers playing music, and everybodys dancing and its like a party. Its all these Black people, and were all having organic fun. And so, when we get on screen, that transition is seamless. The fun you see is real.

It seems like hes having a blast in The Harder They Fall. In a cast of otherwise serious, quick-tempered characters, Stanfields interpretation of Cherokee Bill (whose infamous last words before he was hanged were, I came here to die, not make a speech) is calm, reluctant, humorous. He doesnt want to use violence. Hes an outlaw with a bountiful kill record who seems bored by his lack of competition, an arrogant, western One-Punch Man with a haunted stare and perfect comic timing. Its often Stanfields comic instincts his eccentricity, his unsettled physicality, his nonchalant delivery of utterly absurd lines that make him a reliable scene-stealer, alternately magnetic and memorable even among an ensemble cast of seasoned performers. That In Living Color and Saturday Night Live were his favourite programmes growing up tracks. Consider, for example, an unscripted moment from Atlanta, when his character, Darius, is cleaning his gun and lovingly refers to it (him?) as Daddy. You call your gun Daddy? says Paper Boi, hilariously played by Brian Tyree Henry. Thats weird, man. They go back and forth like this, bantering over the sexual implications of the word before Darius pauses, then suggests, softly: You not gonna see this, but your assumed perversion of the word Daddy? I think thats stemming from the fear of mortality, man. What?

Stanfield had odd dreams while he was away filming Clarence in Matera, dreams where he was trapped in a stone dimension not unlike the dark, yawning grottos scooped out of the calcareous rock all over the prehistoric city. He describes feeling isolated while he was there, a condition exacerbated by personal issues he alludes to but does not elaborate on. Sometimes youll get these roles and theyll mirror you, or youll mirror them, and it feels like youre literally going through the same thing, he says. I was going through some hard stuff while I was filming, and I would often ask myself, like, What would Clarence do? It was really strange. Ive never really done that with a character. Whether or not a cult leader would make for a trustworthy spiritual guide remains inconclusive.

Stanfield was raised in Riverside, near San Bernardino, and later in Victorville, out in the Mojave Desert. He came of age in a barren landscape known mostly as a set piece for Lethal Weapon and Kill Bill: Volume II, but also for the nickname it was graced with by the people who live there: Victimville. The seventh top employer when Stanfield lived there was the Victorville Federal Correctional Complex, a dark mass of grey watchtowers, double electric fences and squat concrete buildings spread out over 1.2 million square feet of the Mojave.

Its unclear whether the nickname Victimville was intended to reference the 4,000 inmates housed in those prisons or to describe the culture of violence and poverty in the region. Stanfield occasionally got into trouble while living there, got in fist fights over girls or stole sandwiches and bottles of beer and got Tasered for smoking weed and learnt the hard way or so he told Complex magazine in 2016 that you cant really outrun a helicopter. But on the whole, his life in Victorville was far less violent than it had been in Riverside, where he sometimes witnessed his mothers boyfriend beating her up. And so he decided that it was a kind of haven. It was sleepy. Not much to do.

The boredom forced his imagination. I always wanted to be the centre of attention, Stanfield says. He was the designated entertainer of the family, the one who would stage sock puppet shows and feign accents at gatherings, who would slip into his aunts church wigs and then dance around the living room, pretending to be someone else. His bedroom walls were papered with sketches, poems and symbols, and there was a makeshift recording booth made from egg cartons. He watched Love Jones, Menace II Society, Boyz n the Hood, Brown Sugar then wandered the flat desert plains and allowed his mind to compose its own characters, with their own specific micro-dramas. I was completely apathetic towards school, he says, and he flunked nearly every class except for drama. When he was 15, he started googling any terms he could think of related to acting and signed up to whatever materialised online and sent off his information to random email addresses in the hopes of landing an audition.

I think there has just been a fire lit under me ever since the opportunity to be a performer first arrived in front of me. And I havent looked back. I have to take advantage of every opportunity I get so that I can continue to do this work. So Im always going to throw everything at it. My ambition hasnt waned LaKeith Stanfield

The first response he got wasnt for a part in a play or film, but for a slot at a school called the John Casablancas Modeling & Career Center, which was founded by the same man who launched Elite Models and cost $5,000 to attend sessions for. Eventually he landed the Short Term 12 role and though Destin Daniel Crettons short premiered in 2009 at Sundance and won a jury award, nothing really came after that. Stanfields inbox stayed empty and nobody came knocking at his door. He moved to Sacramento to develop a relationship with his father and worked as a lawn mower, a door-to-door salesman for AT&T and a weed salesman at a grow house. The day he was fired from the AT&T job for childhood run-ins with the law he checked his inbox and found five consecutive emails from Cretton, who said he was adapting the short into a feature and was hoping Stanfield would audition to reprise his role. (He was the only cast member carried over from the short and ended up with a best supporting actor nomination at 2014s Independent Spirit Awards, as well as a nod from the Satellite Awards for a rap song he wrote with the director.)

In 2014 alone, the year after Short Term 12 came out, Stanfield appeared in Selma and The Purge: Anarchy, two big-budget studio movies that were smashes at the box office. The following year, he had credits in seven films. He released experimental rap songs as part of a band and, on his own, appeared in music videos for Run the Jewels and Jay-Z, danced drunk at a party, as if he was the only one in the room, and was hired on the spot to play Darius in Atlanta. He had all of two scenes in Get Out and nobody forgot them. He worked, and worked some more, and somehow managed to eke out a place for himself in Hollywood that doesnt require a series of bargains and compromises, which gives him the latitude to play an unusual set of characters who reflect the expansiveness he sees in his own humanity. When I ask him why he works so often, what might happen if he finally decides to be still on top of Clarence and Haunted Mansion, hes also starring in a new Apple TV+ series called The Changeling he pauses.

I think there has just been a fire lit under me ever since the opportunity to be a performer first arrived in front of me, he says. And I havent looked back. I have to take advantage of every opportunity I get so that I can continue to do this work. So Im always going to throw everything at it. My ambition hasnt waned. He has always understood that the line between having and not having is tenuous.

Its really hard, maybe even impossible to maintain a perfect centre all the time, Stanfield says. Ive just finished telling him a story about my aunt, a stage actress known as the first lady of Jamaican theatre, who would sometimes, in my mothers words, bring her characters home with her. How she would come home attended by a shroud of misery, moving through the house as though behind a veil of cellophane. It seems to resonate. Stanfield makes himself blank when accommodating a new character, and then excavates from his own old wounds and past experiences to fill out the psychic space. The goal is to achieve a state where one is not performing so much as being. His characters become portals through which he can explore the inner lives of other people and also a mirror within which he can more clearly evaluate himself. If youre paying attention, and if youre lucky enough to come across a role that was written well, youll typically learn something about yourself or a version of life you havent had, he says. And those can be positive lessons. Or not. It doesnt always feel good.

Stanfield doesnt call it method, but his immersion can still be destabilising. Anecdotes that could pass for mythology proliferate around his craft, his intensity, his dedication to the role; Hollywood loves a martyr, the high drama of suffering transmuted into art. For his scene in Selma when Jimmie Lee Jackson is beaten and shot to death by state troopers, Stanfield ran laps around the set so he would lose consciousness as the cameras started rolling, his eyes fluttering shut and his body shutting down. In Short Term 12, when his character whacks another boy with a wiffle-ball bat, the rage felt so real to Stanfield that he actually struck the other kid, whose father ran out to chastise him with a reminder that hes supposed to be acting. And after wrapping Uncut Gems, Adam Sandler told its co-director Josh Safdie that the only other actor hed ever seen get that deeply into character was Dustin Hoffman, who infamously antagonised Meryl Streep on the set of Kramer vs Kramer by slapping her across the face and taunting her with remarks about her recently dead boyfriend.

Of all the roles hes played, something about Stanfields performance in Judas and the Black Messiah is outstanding moving, sends shivers down the spine. He plays William ONeal, the FBI informant who infiltrated the Black Panther Party in the late 1960s and provided the floor plan of Fred Hamptons apartment that facilitated his assassination. For his part, ONeal is a haunted, tragic figure; even after drugging Hampton the night before his murder, he begged the family to let him be a pallbearer at the funeral. Stanfield plays it all with a simmering neuroticism, every movement animated by an uncertain twitchiness, every spell of laughter reaching for a hysterical pitch. In the moments when the room is dense with fraternity and affection, we see him quietly tortured by the scale of his own betrayal, his posture suddenly resigned, his eyes tearful and dark, the weight of this double consciousness seizing his faculties. The only documents that Stanfield had to consult were court transcripts and a PBS documentary from 1990 called Eyes on the Prize II, in which ONeals delusions are on uncomfortable display: he claims that at least nobody can call him an armchair revolutionary because he was actually part of the struggle. He killed himself the night the documentary aired, ran out onto Chicagos Eisenhower Expressway and had his body crushed by traffic.

Youre playing with your psyche, as an actor. Thats something that is sensitive. And if youre a performer, chances are youre sensitive, like me. So you have to be careful about some of the places you go. I learnt that the hard way LaKeith Stanfield

Stanfield was haunted by the part. He had panic attacks on set that sent him scurrying out of trailers and into the open air. Alopecia that had been in remission returned, inexplicably. His hands would shake, then go numb. He couldnt straighten out the ethics of bringing sensitivity and understanding to a man who had acted with such murderous self-interest, whose entire system of morality seemed at odds with Stanfields own. And a scene when he drugs Hampton, which didnt make it to the final cut, felt somehow real to him. His body couldnt differentiate between the role and the reality something his co-star Dominique Fishback had warned him of. I didnt know what was going on at the time, but I guess I was putting myself under a lot of stress, he says. There arent really too many apparatuses in place to help artists deal with the aftermath after putting their all into these things. So you have to take the responsibility upon yourself to try to figure out what that means. And since Im not super-religious, I had to find a way to help me in those moments.

He ended up in therapy, which has since become a spiritual parachute that keeps him from going too far. You have to be aware of how the things that youre downloading affect you, Stanfield says, because you can sometimes go to places that, if you arent careful, can be hard to navigate and come back from. Youre playing with your psyche, as an actor. Thats something that is sensitive. And if youre a performer, chances are youre sensitive, like me. So you have to be careful about some of the places you go. I learnt that the hard way.

LaKeith Stanfield is Showing Hollywood How to be Weird. Or is the Greatest Weird Actor of Our Generation. LaKeithStanfield is Reframing Black masculinity, Redefining Blackmasculinity, Revolutionising Black masculinity or anyway, hes doing something that involves Blackness, weirdness, masculinity and Hollywood. The way critics write abouthow Stanfield fits into the tapestry of Hollywoods leading men tends to focus on the perceived strangeness of the parts he chooses, how hes presenting a contemporary vision of Black manhood that (some) people arent accustomed to seeing. The idea, however myopic, is that our Black movie stars are always possessed of an impenetrable cool, an easy-going charisma shared by Denzel Washington, Morgan Freeman,Samuel L Jackson, Sidney Poitier. Stanfield gravitates towards characters who could scarcely be described as cool. His men are offbeat, tense, unsure. Anxiety is common. And its clear he identifies with them in some capacity. Its why he picks them.

But he doesnt recognise himself in that sociological way that critics write about him. Probably its annoying to have a bunch of journalists, often white, repeatedly call you weird. Theres a way that people tend to conflate Stanfield with his roles, assuming theres no significant distance between LaKeith Stanfield the person and, for example, Darius the character. This seems at least partially merited. Much of what Darius says on Atlanta, like the gun thing, is improvised. And, like Darius, Stanfield prefers a freewheeling conversation style involving unbroken eye contact and the occasional meditative, slightly off-kilter digression. After five series of the show, Darius is the part people most associate him with. Its been a long run with theAtlantaboys, and Im so grateful to have been part of that, he says, noting theyve wrapped filming on the final season. It was cool to play this character who sticks with so many people, someone they resonate with and who feels like a real person to them. So many people run up to me acting real goofy because they think Im Darius.

It could also be that he doesnt seem to take fame particularly seriously. There was a time when he was suspended from Twitter for impersonating other celebrities, from Offset, MoNique and Jack Black to Cardi B and Donald Trump. In 2018, having already acted in enough films to be considered famous, he posted his real phone number online. He showed up to interviews on his press tour forDeath Noteas his eccentric detective character, L, crouching in chairs andsaying things to reporters like, Shoes have soles. Humans havespirits. He has crashed awards ceremonies with acceptance speeches for TV shows he never worked on, worn a Kamala Harris-inspired wig on a livestream just after the vice-presidential debate, randomly pulled out accents to confuse reporters at press junkets.

Im wondering how one reconciles a profound desire for attention with the concomitant need for privacy. Stanfield says hes still working it out, how to be in the movies and the magazines while keeping whats sacred to him sacred. It still baffles him the way people project certain moral and politicalresponsibilities onto actors and musicians, how whatever theysay is taken as gospel. It seems to me hes been finding different ways to describe fame as unnatural or unhealthy, but he argues that celebrity isnt necessarily a bad thing. When his publicists file into the motorhome, right on schedule, wevebeen caught in an exchange about fame and religion, Stanfieldon a digression about the cult of attention.

I think people tend to value who theythinkhave value, and people who are popular seem to have that because everyones paying attention to them, he says. But placing all your faith in the human wouldnt be the wise thing to do. Sometimes I think theres too much importance placed on celebrity, and people think celebrities cant make mistakes or cant be wrong. Which is weird. Especially when anyone can be famous now, for doing anything at all.

Grooming: Sian Richards using concealer and skincare by SIAN RICHARDS LONDON and Bed Head by TIGI. Make-up: Frankie Boyd at Streeters using DANESSA MYRICKS BEAUTY. Set design: Patience Harding at New School. Photographic assistants: Bummy Koepenick, Todd Weaver and Cory Hackbarth. Styling assistants: Bella Kavanagh, Raphael Del Bono, Elliot Soriano and Gemma Valdes Joffroy. Make-up assistant: Megumi Asai. Set-design assistants: James Beyer, Mia Brito and Bradford Schroeder. Research: Daniel Obaweya. Printing: Sarah England. Production: Connect the Dots. Post-production: Ink

This story features in the Autumn/Winter 2023 issue of AnOther Magazine, which is on sale now. Order here.

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How Lakeith Stanfield Soared to the Heights of Hollywood - AnOther Magazine

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