Adrien Brody readily admits that the New York City he grew up in was rough around the edges. A native of Jackson Heights, Queens, he says the years he spent there in the 70s and 80s toughened him but also made him empathetic—in other words, they gave him the ammunition he needed to become an actor. It wasn’t long into Brody’s career that minor successes became major ones. Early roles in Restaurant and Summer of Sam, in the late 1990s, led to his being cast as Wladyslaw Szpilman in Roman Polanski’s The Pianist, in 2002, a part that made the then 29-year-old the youngest person ever to win the Academy Award for best actor. And while Brody’s career hasn’t slowed in the intervening decades, his latest performance, in The Brutalist, has drawn the same type of rare, unanimous acclaim that his breakthrough in The Pianist did. On this episode of Table for Two, Brody joins host Bruce Bozzi to discuss what drew him to the performing arts, the mental toll of Method acting, and his perspective on this year’s Oscars, which will take place on March 2. Hear a preview of the episode below, and listen and subscribe on the iHeart app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Lunch with Adrien Brody
On this week’s episode, the star of The Brutalist explains why he always looks so sad, being nostalgic for a broken New York, and how he hates being referred to as “talent”