logo
‘Emotions? They're no big thing, man!' Jeff Bridges on satisfaction, silver linings – and his secret life in music

‘Emotions? They're no big thing, man!' Jeff Bridges on satisfaction, silver linings – and his secret life in music

The Guardian21-03-2025

A rainy day in Santa Barbara, and Jeff Bridges sits in his garage, wondering where his favourite spectacles have got to. We are in the middle of a rangy conversation on a video call, meandering our way from Bob Dylan to the anthropomorphism of bees, via Crazy Heart, Cutter's Way and The Big Lebowski. There are sidetracks and double-backs and loose threads. Intermittently, an unseen assistant hands the actor pairs of glasses seemingly identical to the ones he is already wearing. Bridges, in a soft brown cardigan, inspects each pair and dismisses them. 'Where was I?' he asks.
The garage here serves as Bridges' jam space and ceramics workshop. He has drums set up for his grandson, and a picture of Captain Beefheart on the wall. Since December, when his FX series The Old Man was cancelled, the 75-year-old has been spending more of his days here. 'Now I've got some time for letting some other things bubble up and I'm really happy about that,' he says. 'A lot of music, some more art stuff.'
Bridges is good at finding the silver lining. Mention the recent loss of his Malibu home in the Los Angeles fires, for instance, and he is sanguine. 'We've lost five homes to fires, earthquakes, floods. We're waiting for the locusts,' he says. His 2020 diagnosis and subsequent treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma – or, in Bridges words, 'some real health issues' – is mentioned only in passing, as the catalyst for him to release more music: 'Hey,' he reasons, 'if you've got some stuff that you want to share, now's the time, man!' I tell him how despite it all he seems remarkably chipper, and he smiles. 'Absolutely,' he says. 'I'm happy.'
The primary focus of our conversation today is intended to be Slow Magic, a collection of Bridges songs lost for close to 50 years and now due to be released on Record Store Day. The way the release came about, he says, 'is so mysterious and wonderful to me. Shall I give you a little history?' He launches into a story that involves the musicians Keefus Ciancia and T Bone Burnett, a Squarespace advertisement for the Super Bowl, the 1975 comedy Hearts of the West, the New Age music charts, and a single cassette tape of some tunes Bridges had set down with some old high school buddies, labelled 'July 1978'. One soon grasps that much of Bridges' life has moved this way, in bursts of what we might regard as cosmic serendipity and connection.
Bridges was born into a well-known Hollywood family. His mother, Dorothy, and his father, Lloyd, were both actors, as was his older brother, Beau. Although the young Jeff showed promise in art and music, his father encouraged him to join the family business, taking him along to set, securing him minor roles on his productions. 'I had questions about what I was going to do, and my dad would say: 'Jeff, don't be ridiculous, that's the wonderful thing about acting, it's going to call upon all of your interests.''
All the family loved music. They would sit around the piano, singing show tunes together. One of Bridges' earliest memories involves the Broadway composer Meredith Willson visiting the family home to try to persuade his father to take the lead role in The Music Man. 'His wife, Rini, was playing the piano and Meredith Willson was coming up to me singing: 'You got trouble! Right here in River City!''
He was a teenager in the 1960s, just as music shifted gear from the early rock'n'roll of Chuck Berry and the Everly Brothers to the likes of the Beatles, Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones. 'I mean every day, can you imagine, waking up going to school and here are the new Beatles songs?' he says. 'And that happened over and over! You take it for granted, kind of, but it's amazing!'
Bridges' high school was largely made up of the children of the entertainment industry. He hung out with an artsy bohemian crowd, rather than the jocks, each school day starting by getting stoned in his Buick while he and his buddies listened to the radio: '[There was] a lot of drug experimentation you know, during those times.'
On Wednesday evenings, a group of them would meet for a jam session at his friend Steve Baim's home. 'There was a main rule that there were no songs allowed,' Bridges says. 'Singing was encouraged, and making up songs, but nothing that would be played on the radio or anything like that. Just a big jam session.' As they left high school and moved through their lives, the Wednesday Night Jams continued – a way of rooting the group in their city, their friendship and their creativity. At some point around 1977, Bridges, who had been writing music alongside acting, invited his friends over to record some of his tunes. 'And the album is a result of that.'
Despite his father's advice, music had always remained an alluring and viable career path for Bridges. In the late 60s he even sold two songs to Quincy Jones, who used one of them, Lost in Space, for the soundtrack of John and Mary, starring Dustin Hoffman and Mia Farrow. As time went on, the indecision continued. 'I'd done 10 movies, I'd been nominated for an Academy Award [best supporting actor for The Last Picture Show, 1971], and I still wasn't…' He pauses, and his eyes glance off to the assistant once more. 'Oh thank you dear, I appreciate that,' he says, taking the latest pair of spectacles. 'Those are the ones!' He says, then looks at them more closely. 'No, these are not the ones!'
Something of a shift happened after making 1973 motor sports movie The Last American Hero. 'I had a great time making it, but usually after a movie your pretend muscle gets exhausted,' Bridges says. 'You don't want to pretend any more, you just want to be who you really are and not be in character.'
Shortly after filming wrapped, his agent was approached by the director John Frankenheimer with a part in his adaptation of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh. Bridges knew it would be a big deal – Frederic March, Robert Ryan and Lee Marvin were already signed up. Nevertheless, he was unsure. He told his agent to turn down the role. Five minutes later, he received a call from Lamont Johnson, director of The Last American Hero. 'He said: 'I heard you turned down The Iceman Cometh?' I said 'Yeah Monty, I'm bushed, man.' And he says, 'You're bushed? You're an ass!' And he hung up on me!'
Bridges took stock and decided 'to do a little experiment on myself and go kind of against what my intuition is telling me'. He took the role, loved the movie, and decided he would throw his hat fully into the acting ring.
It was an early example of Bridges exploring what he regards as the resistant element in himself. 'I find I have a lot of resistance, that's kind of how I roll,' he says. 'To do a movie, to bring me to the party, I resist, I resist. And there's such satisfaction in exploring that resistance and getting on the other side, not being afraid of it.'
Lately, he has been examining his resistance to cold. 'I'm getting into the cold-plunging, I've been doing that for a while, and my relationship with cold has shifted a bit,' he says. 'Normally you think of cold as an enemy, but it's just a feeling. All of those different emotions that come up, they're no big thing man! Come on!' He was always this way, he says, always resistant. 'I don't think I've changed much since I was a little kid. I feel basically the same.' I ask Bridges how he would describe himself at his essence, and he leans back in his chair and thinks. After a moment, he smiles, broadly. 'Frightened, and game.'
He is reluctant to be drawn on how different his relationship with music might be to his relationship with acting – whether it still holds any of that same resistance, if it requires him to use his 'pretend' muscle. 'It's a facet of myself,' he says. 'I don't think we ultimately know who we really are all the time. The task for all these different things, whether it's acting, music, painting, ceramics, the main task is getting out of the way, letting the thing come through you. And it can be frightening sometimes. But sometimes it just has its way with you, and when that happens, man it's a gas! And when it happens with a bunch of other artists and you're all doing it together, it's real magic. It's the magic of trees and flowers.'
Music has often been the thing that has glued together the various facets of himself, and connected Bridges to others. 'Whether it's making a movie or music, you're harmonising,' he says. 'You're saying: let's combine our strengths here and see what we can come up with and make it beautiful and real.'
Often, he will make a playlist for the character he's playing (for the Dude in The Big Lebowski, it was 'a lot of Creedence'). 'Then you play them in the makeup trailer,' he says. 'You get made up with all the guys in the show, you make that transition from who you are back into your characters. You get painted, you share music.'
He recalls shooting 1984's Against All Odds in Mexico with Taylor Hackford, and how on their first night in Mexico 'we split a bottle of tequila, and went through the whole Beatles catalogue'. How, stuck for nine months on the set of Heaven's Gate in Montana, Kris Kristofferson and T Bone Burnett invited a string of musical friends to join them. 'And we would just jam all the time. When we weren't working, we were playing.' Later, when he was offered the lead in Crazy Heart, playing an alcoholic country singer trying to turn his life around, he took the part because Burnett signed on to write the score.
In 2003, Bridges appeared alongside Bob Dylan in Masked and Anonymous. One day the director, Larry Charles, made a suggestion: 'Why don't you and Bob go off and you teach Bob some acting? Go and do some improvisation or something.' Bridges, resistant, eventually agreed. 'He was so great to work with,' he says. 'He's such an incredible actor. I mean his presence, right?'
Not long afterwards, Bridges was in his trailer, playing guitar, when Dylan appeared in the doorway. 'He said 'Hey man, you want to jam?'' Bridges still looks flabbergasted. I ask if he saw A Complete Unknown. 'Yeah, yeah,' he says. 'They all did such a great job but …' He seems puzzled by the film's existence. 'You know, you got the real thing …'
Lately, Bridges has been spending a little time going through what he calls his 'song mine', wondering what to do with all the tunes he's written. He is still writing. The songs fill his notebooks and his GarageBand files. Sometimes he sets them down with Cianca in their band the Abiders. Sometimes he puts them out as rough sketches on his website under the banner Emergent Behaviour. He asks only that if you dig them, you might make a donation to his chosen charities, No Kid Hungry and the Amazon Conservation Team. 'Let's create beautifully together,' the website suggests.
'I wrote a song recently about my old buddy John Goodwin,' Bridges tells me. He and Goodwin grew up in the same neighbourhood, and Goodwin became a professional songwriter – he provided material for the Crazy Heart soundtrack, which won an Oscar and two Grammys, and for Bridges' self-titled 2011 album, recorded after the film's success.
Bridges has called his Goodwin tribute song We Know That One. 'I don't know what style you'd call it. It's my own style, kind of. Let me see if I can find it …' He picks up a tablet, peers at the screen. 'All right. Let's see here. Scrolling, scrolling, music, lyrics, my lyrics, my chorus, lyrics …'
In the quiet of his garage, Bridges leans far back in his chair, hands behind his head, and begins to sing. His voice is dusky, and warm and kind, and as he sings, something about him seems to glow. The music is having its way with him, and it is real magic; the magic of trees and flowers.
'From the top it looks deep, from the bottom it looks high,
Dive into the lake through the reflection of the sky.
No need feeling lonely Johnny, on this road heading home,
We're all heading that way, no one's really alone.
Can't you hear us laughing as we cover our gold with the ashes,
Our freedom, yeah we're ditching our souls.
Johnny can't you see we use hilarity to numb.
I think we're just too damn sensitive Johnny, we couldn't be that dumb.
Do we need some kind of friction? Do we need some kind of brakes?
Something dragging in the dirt, is that what it takes to get us home Johnny, get us home safe?
In that case, maybe laughing ain't too bad while we wait.
I can feel my soul waiting for me up ahead, tapping his foot, he's covered all bets.
He's waiting with yours Johnny, they're playing in the sun,
Hear that tune they're playing, we know that one …'
Slow Magic, 1977-78 will be released on Light in the Attic on 12 April

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Madonna slammed by Hamilton star for 'using iPad during Broadway performance'
Madonna slammed by Hamilton star for 'using iPad during Broadway performance'

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Madonna slammed by Hamilton star for 'using iPad during Broadway performance'

Hamilton star Anthony Ramos has claimed Madonna spent a whole performance of the Broadway show on her iPad, and has told her 'you don't have to stay here' Twister's star Anthony Ramos has claimed that Madonna caused quite the stir during her visit to a Hamilton show on Broadway. The 33-year-old actor, who played the original roles of John Laurens and Philip Hamilton, recounted the incident when the pop icon attended a performance, and his co-stars also made the same claim about the Queen of Pop. Ramos, appearing on Bravo's Watch What Happens Live last Thursday, recalled: "The most terrifying was Madonna with her iPad in her face. She was like this [shining a light] the whole time. "I was like, 'Damn, shorty. If you're not enjoying it that much, you know the door is right there. You don't have to stay here.'". ‌ Lin-Manuel Miranda, the musical's mastermind who also starred as Alexander Hamilton, seemed to reference the episode involving The Material Girl in a now-erased tweet back in April 2015. ‌ He had written: "Tonight was the first time I asked stage management NOT to allow a celebrity (who was texting all through Act 2) backstage. #noselfieforyou." Madonna's representative, however, countered these allegations, telling Us Weekly: "It's not true. She was invited backstage four different times. She texted post-show when they were doing their fundraising pitch. Madonna had already made a generous donation." Jonathan Groff, who portrayed King George in the production, didn't hold back either, bluntly claiming "that b**** was on her phone." He noted at the time: "You couldn't miss it from the stage. It was a black void of the audience in front of us and her face there perfectly lit by the light of her iPhone through three-quarters of the show." ‌ Back in April 2015, Playbill claimed Queen of Pop, Madonna, attended the show at The Public Theatre, but wasn't invited backstage after it was wrapped. Ramos recently reunited with his Hamilton castmates, including Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jonathan Groff, Christopher Jackson, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Leslie Odom, Jr., Okieriete Onaodowan, and Phillipa Soo, at the Tony Awards. To mark the musical's 10th anniversary, the cast performed a medley of tracks including Non-Stop, My Shot, History Has Its Eyes on You and The Room Where It Happens. ‌ Hamilton received a whopping 16 nominations at the 70th Tony Awards and won 11 awards. After starring in Hamilton, Ramos appeared in Miranda's 2021 musical, In The Heights. He also starred in 2024's Twisters with Daisy Edgar Jones and Glen Powell.

Eric Dane makes new romance official on first red carpet since ALS diagnosis ... after calling off divorce
Eric Dane makes new romance official on first red carpet since ALS diagnosis ... after calling off divorce

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

Eric Dane makes new romance official on first red carpet since ALS diagnosis ... after calling off divorce

Eric Dane kept a brave smile on his face as he walked his first carpet since heartbreakingly announcing his diagnosis with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). He shatteringly revealed in April that he had developed the a rare and incurable degenerative condition, which impairs the nervous system over time and causes the muscles to increasingly suffer from paralysis. About half of ALS patients have a life expectancy of three years after the initial onset of symptoms, though some can survive for decades. Shortly before news of his illness went public, his amicable estranged wife Rebecca Gayheart - with whom he has two daughters - dramatically called off their divorce. They have evidently not rekindled their romance, however, as it emerged this week that Eric, 52, is dating photographer and filmmaker Janell Shirtcliff, 41. Janell and Eric were glimpsed on a date this Tuesday, and by Wednesday, they went red carpet official at the premiere of his new Amazon Prime show Countdown. The pair were seen gazing lovingly into one another's eyes as they posed together for the cameras, Eric in summery white and Janell in a sleek burgundy cocktail dress. 'The two have been in an on-and-off relationship for over three years and care deeply for each other,' a source recently told Entertainment Tonight. 'Eric asked Janell to be there for him during this time, and she wanted to show up for him,' the insider explained, adding that they are 'extremely close and mean a great deal to one another' and that they enjoyed 'a beautiful day together full of laughs, lightness, and love' this Monday. While walking the red carpet for his new police procedural on Wednesday, Eric remarked: 'I feel good,' during an interview with Variety. 'It's nice to be here with everybody and see the hours and hours of work that we put into this come alive on screen,' added the Grey's Anatomy alum. His sighting comes after he responded to a query about whether he would continue his career amid his illness by bluntly replying: 'I'm going to ride this till the wheels fall off,' while speaking to E! News on Tuesday. 'It keeps me sharp. It keeps me moving forward, which is super important right now.' Eric insisted he feels 'great when I'm at work' despite losing the function of his dominant right arm in the year since he was diagnosed with ALS. 'Of course, there have been some sort of setbacks,' Dane admitted. 'But I feel pretty good. My spirit is always pretty buoyant, so at the end of the day, that's all that matters.' Audiences can next catch the SAG Award winner as Special Agent Nathan Blythe in Derek Haas' new 13-episode crime drama Countdown, which premieres June 25 on Amazon Prime Video. Eric's co-star Jensen Ackles said he brought a 'beautiful, quiet leadership' to the cast that was 'incredibly needed' in Countdown: 'That was just something that was so beneficial to the process of creating a team both on and off camera.' Dane recently reprised his role as the closeted real estate agent Cal Jacobs in the third season of HBO hit show Euphoria, which is produced by and starring Zendaya as Ruby 'Rue' Bennett. 'I've shot already,' the San Francisco-born silver fox teased. 'It's good.' Sam Levinson's drug-fueled drama will welcome newcomers Sharon Stone, Rosalía, Marshawn Lynch, and Kadeem Hardison in season three. But it's unclear what the status is of Malik Vitthal's Montenegro-set wedding thriller Family Secrets, which cast Eric as the family patriarch back in 2023. And Dane famously got his big break portraying plastic surgeon Mark 'McSteamy' Sloan from 2006–2012 on the ABC medical drama Grey's Anatomy. The Bad Boys: Ride or Die action star is currently taking medication to slow the symptoms and he's also participating in a research study. 'I will fly to Germany and eat the head off a rattlesnake if [doctors] told me that that would help,' Eric told Good Morning America 's Diane Sawyer on Monday. 'I'll assume the risk.' Dane fears he will lose function of his left hand 'in a few more months' and he's also 'worried about my legs.' 'Sobering,' the father-of-two admitted. 'I'm very hopeful, yeah, I don't think this is the end of my story. I'm pretty resilient. I just don't feel, like in my heart, [that] this is the end of me.' On average, ALS patients live two to five years following their first symptoms, but FDA-approved medications and physical/speech therapies might slow down the progression of the disorder.

Tourist teases Brits because of difference between EU and UK queue at Spanish airport
Tourist teases Brits because of difference between EU and UK queue at Spanish airport

Daily Record

time2 days ago

  • Daily Record

Tourist teases Brits because of difference between EU and UK queue at Spanish airport

Irish comedian Peter Flanagan arrived in Malaga Airport and recorded himself zooming past a queue of Brits who were waiting for non-EU border control A holidaymaker has divulged the advantages of travelling with an Irish passport post-Brexit, as he breezed through immigration at Malaga Airport while a long line of Brits queued for non-EU border control. Comedian Peter Flanagan captured his smooth passage and couldn't resist a cheeky jibe at the longer lines. Mocking the waiting Brits, he quipped: "The humble and brave country of Ireland. Look at that now, oh yeah, that's good, that's good." ‌ Since Britain's departure from the EU in 2020, British passport holders have been stripped of the free movement privilege once enjoyed within the EU and now have to join separate queues at EU borders. ‌ Reacting to his TikTok footage, one viewer remarked: "Yes, UK passport holders will be able to use e-gates in the EU, following an agreement between the UK and the EU, though implementation will be phased in starting in October 2025." Another chimed in with a personal anecdote: "I showed my Irish passport to UK customs officer and he said at least you have a real passport!". Another Irish citizen agreed, saying: "I showed my Irish passport in France and his words to me were ''Irish very good people, you go here' pointing me to a desk with no one waiting! The other queue was at least 100 long." Another commented on the Brexit vote's consequences: "This is what we voted for. Some of us were educated and knew this kind of thing would happen and didn't vote for this." Yet another defended the wait: "We British people would rather spend an extra 10 minutes waiting for immigration than waste billions to support the EU bureaucracy." One commenter wrote: "hhahahahhHAHAHAH I'm from Malaga, I've been at the airport thousand of times I can tell you FOR A FACT, that that empty lane he just walked into leads to a row of automatic scanners THAT DO NOT WORK (never have) so right after this video switched off, he turned around and got back in the queue."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store