Ep 82. Riz Ahmed

Published: May 7, 2020, 7 a.m.

b'You keep up on things. You know what\\u2019s going on in arts and culture. Then inevitably, it happens. Someone who wasn\\u2019t even on your radar is suddenly everywhere, making you question not where they\\u2019ve been, but where you\\u2019ve been. Meet Riz Ahmed. By now, you probably recognize him from HBO\\u2019s The Night Of, but for years, Ahmed\\u2019s been busy making wide-ranging, significant, and accomplished work.\\n\\nIn person, he\\u2019s not some frenetic perpetual motion machine, but he does seem to function at a brisk and constant clip, creating, provoking and questioning. He approached Naz Khan, the role that\\u2019s brought him to recent wide attention, with a simple theory: \\u201cIf you see the world in a certain way, the behavior follows.\\u201d Applied to Ahmed himself, it seems an apt description of how he creates art, and with it, change.\\n\\nBorn in London to Pakistani immigrant parents, he won a scholarship to north London\\u2019s Merchant Taylors\\u2019 school, where he found himself and most Asian kids a subclass in a sea of diplomats\\u2019 kids in full prep regalia. He decided to do something about it, specifically, rigging a vote to force the school into electing its first Asian head boy. When other frustrations were expressed more overtly \\u2013 he threw a chair intended for another student through a window \\u2013 one teacher had a suggestion: \\u201cIf you can muck about on stage, you get applause for it, not a suspension.\\u201d Good idea. At Oxford University, he studied philosophy, politics and economics, and also put on the only play with two non-white leads staged during his time there. When he decided to put on a drum and bass night but didn\\u2019t have immediate takers, he printed up flyers minus the venue and kept at it until he found a club willing to fill in the blank. College confirmed something he\\u2019d sensed all along: You can make yourself an insider, but the world will send you occasional reminders that status is temporary. It\\u2019s a perspective that\\u2019s informed his work across genres, including film, TV, stage and music.\\n\\nHe did manage to work in some drama studies, and made his film debut at 23 playing a member of the real-life Tipton Three in Michael Winterbottom\\u2019s The Road to Guant\\xe1namo. He also made a three-hour debut at the Luton Airport, where he and another actor from the film were detained under the Terrorism Act by Special Branch upon returning from the Berlin Film Festival. We\\u2019re sure the Branch boys were just exercising caution; we\\u2019re also pretty sure that wouldn\\u2019t have happened to Matt and Ben.\\n\\nAhmed was nominated for his first British Independent Film Award for Shifty, and highly praised for his effortless, persuasive chemistry with other actors. His second came for Four Lions, Chris Morris\\u2019 hilarious satire on terrorism. Mira Nair, who directed him in The Reluctant Fundamentalist, recognized his unique ability to play characters that shift between worlds. "It\'s the most demanding, complicated role for a young person to carry a film on his shoulders, and to be somebody at once absolutely authentic to the Lahori universe, yet absolutely comfortable, elegant and savvy in the Wall Street universe; to spout the poetry of Faiz at one moment and ruthlessly cut out a factory in Manila the next."\\n\\nEventually American filmmakers saw his work (or at least got hold of reviews routinely peppered with words like \\u201ccharismatic\\u201d \\u201cbrilliant\\u201d and \\u201cnatural\\u201d) and wanted in. His performance opposite Jake Gyllenhal in Nightcrawler was outstanding, and in its review of Jason Bourne, RogerEbert.com wrote, \\u201cOnly Riz Ahmed makes any impact on a performance level, doing a lot with very little \\u2013 watch the way he subtly plays a successful businessman who knows the skeletons are about to fall out of his closet. There\'s a much better version of Jason Bourne that focuses on him\\u2026\\u201d This year\\u2019s been a big one for him. He\\u2019s in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, and puts a new spin on the gumshoe genre in City of Tiny Lights. He\\u2019s also working on a multi-generational Pakistani-British family story he aims to make for U.K. television.\\n\\nIf the industry (ironically) helped Ahmed\\u2019s early career with its tendency to see in stereotypes, it\\u2019s also allowed us glimpses of a depth we\\u2019d otherwise miss by occasionally looking past them. Needless to say, that goes for society as a whole, and Ahmed is not shy about voicing that opinion. But he knows that if you\\u2019re going to be an unapologetic button-pusher, you best avoid righteous self-aggrandizement and do it with some humor. And some serious rap. Under the handle Riz MC, he\\u2019s put out three albums of songs that have been critically acclaimed (and in one instance, banned) for their biting \\u2013 and bitingly funny \\u2013 take on immigration, race and other issues.\\n\\nAhmed specializes in playing, and being, an insider-outsider. If you\\u2019ve never felt like an outsider, don\\u2019t count yourself lucky; it\\u2019s a perspective that benefits us. Which is why we need this guy to keep acting, rapping, writing, and if necessary, throwing the occasional chair.'