logo
Meet Corenswet, cinema's new Superman

Meet Corenswet, cinema's new Superman

Arab Times09-07-2025
LOS ANGELES, July 9, (AP): In true Clark Kent form, the new Superman would like to correct the record. David Corenswet gave an interview to Entertainment Weekly in 2019 where he said his 'pie in the sky ambition' was to play Superman. At that point, the role was not on the market. And Corenswet, a Julliard graduate and Philadelphia native, was just making a name for himself in the industry, with plum breakout roles in two Ryan Murphy Netflix series: 'The Politician' and 'Hollywood.' Tall, dark, and you know, handsome, people had told him that he looked like Superman for a long time. He did not, he told The Associated Press in a recent interview, think that he was going to get the chance to play him. But a few years later, he was actually cast to lead James Gunn's 'Superman' which will begin a new, hopefully high-flying, era for the DC universe of films when it hits theaters on July 11. And that once innocent quote took on a life of its own.
Many headlines and stories misinterpreted the phrase and wrote that he said it was his dream role, as though he'd manifested it into existence. 'I said it was my pie in the sky ambition, which I meant to mean that there was no (expletive) way it was ever going to happen,' Corenswet, 31, said. 'I sort of was thinking of it as, 'Oh, who wouldn't love to get to play an iconic role like that? Wouldn't it be amazing and impossible if we lived in a universe where that could even be considered?'' Right around the time when Gunn was starting to think about casting his new Superman movie, he decided to watch his friend Ti West's movie 'Pearl.' In that darkly comedic horror, Corenswet stood out to him as an interesting and charismatic presence. He played a projectionist at a local movie theater who catches Pearl's attention (and, later, faces her wrath). West had nice things to say about him too. 'David was one of the very first auditions that I got,' Gunn said.
'Instantly, it was a relief because he had a playful charm about him that was not evident in 'Pearl.' He had a sense of humor. That made me go, 'Ooh, this might be a really good match.'' That was just the beginning of the long casting process. Even Nicholas Hoult, who was ultimately cast as Lex Luthor, was up for the part. And though it was 'extensive,' Corenswet said it was one of the most 'satisfying audition processes' he's ever gone through - not because he booked the role, but because he felt he got the opportunity to show them what he had to offer. Gunn laughed that Corenswet actually has a lot of Superman in him. 'Superman is a square and David is a square,' Gunn said. 'He listens to American Songbook. Like Dean Martin and Cole Porter. That's what he listens to on his iPad. That's weird. But oh, so Superman.' When Gunn called him with the good news, the first person he told was his wife. The second was his sister, who couldn't pick up the phone because she was on a golf course. 'She texted, 'Is it possible that was a phone call with super good news?'' he said. 'I said, 'Yes. Super good news.'' It may be something of a Superman tradition to try on your predecessor's costume during a screen test. Henry Cavill did it with Christopher Reeve's, and Corenswet did it with Cavill's, which he called a 'marvel of engineering.' But the first time Corenswet put on his own Superman costume was not some magical, transportive moment.
He said, it was 'wonderfully mundane.' The suit was still in its beginning stages, not totally put together and even a little small, as he'd already started putting on weight for the role. 'I remember the feeling of kind of growing into the suit and the suit growing around me fitting by fitting,' Corenswet said. 'We had such an amazing costume team and they built the suit around me over the course of many weeks and months and it started to feel just a little bit like home for me.' The first time he felt the impact of it was through the eyes of other people. To him, it was old hat, but when he walked onto set the first time in the suit he noticed something different from the cast and crew. 'I saw their faces sort of light up and I went, 'Wait a minute, these people aren't that fond of me,'' he laughed. 'That's when it hits you.' There are almost three roles involved in playing Superman. There's the person he is with his parents and the people he grew up with. There's Clark Kent of the Daily Planet. And then there's Superman. 'He's a public-facing character, he's a symbol,' Corenswet said. 'There's a presentational element to it, because he does want to present an image of calm and authority. While he doesn't always feel that way, he always wants to make other people feel that way as Superman.' To prepare for Clark Kent, Corenswet looked at the All-Star Superman comic and how Christopher Reeve changed his posture when Lois left the room, but he also drew inspiration for the voice and demeanor way outside of the canon: His brother-in-law, who is 6'8' and 270 pounds, but is the 'quietest, most wonderful man.'
'That's where I sort of took the spirit of Clark,' Corenswet said. 'He's this big presence, but he's desperately trying to be as small as possible and as quiet as possible.' Gunn has promised that the film is 'a personal journey for Superman that's entirely new.' He's a character who is 'pretty damn good, but fl awed.' And anyone who has seen the trailer knows there will be romance with Rachel Brosnahan's Lois Lane - but there's even a different spin on that. 'He's in love with her,' Gunn said. 'She's the one that needs the convincing in the relationship. It's not him. You really see where he needs her in his life.' Corenswet said that in addition to the action and thrills, the movie also has a Preston Sturges quality to it with 'longing romance and witty comedy.' Fitting for their reporter characters, 'His Girl Friday' was also a big reference with 'the rhythm, the patter and the feeling of two people in love who really are an equal match for the other.' The movie is the start of a new era for DC films, and will raise Corenswet's profile immeasurably. He's been in big movies before, including 'Twisters.' But being Superman is different. 'The thing that it changed about my life immediately was that I had this amazing mission that I got to go on of playing the part and getting to be a piece of making this awesome film,' he said. 'I have so many new friends now. James brings together such a familial cast and crew. And shooting the film is sort of like an extended summer camp.' Adding to the summer camp vibes: On the last day they even gathered to watch a little blooper reel that Gunn had put together. But what will happen come release is not really something he can fathom at this point. 'I expect some things will change when the film comes out,' he said. 'But you know, one still has to wake up and eat breakfast.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Flight delay sparks jazz performance by Dave Koz, goes viral
Flight delay sparks jazz performance by Dave Koz, goes viral

Arab Times

time11 hours ago

  • Arab Times

Flight delay sparks jazz performance by Dave Koz, goes viral

LOS ANGELES, Aug 20, (AP): Passengers on a flight from St. Louis to Seattle got an unexpected pick-me-up when jazz saxophonist Dave Koz and bandmates held an impromptu jam session in the aisle while the plane was stuck on the tarmac hundreds of miles from their final destination. It happened Aug. 11, when Koz and fellow musicians on the Dave Koz & Friends Summer Horns Tour were headed to Seattle for two days of shows. What was supposed to be a direct flight was beset by delays, including having to divert to Boise, Idaho, after flight crew members timed out and needed to be relieved, and the plane encountered a mechanical issue, Koz said Tuesday. This wasn't the first delay the band experienced since its tour started around mid-July, and it even had to cancel two shows because of travel-related issues, Koz said. But the delay last week was particularly deflating, not just for the musicians but for everyone on the plane. "You could just feel the energy. Everybody was so frustrated,' Koz said. A flight attendant who saw the musicians bring their instruments on board asked if they'd be willing to play a song while they were stuck in Boise. A video of them performing Stevie Wonder's "You Haven't Done Nothin'' - the closer to their show - went viral on social media. It shows Koz and fellow saxophone player Marcus Anderson grooving in the aisle with other horn players behind them, and Jeff Bradshaw on trombone getting creative to play the large instrument between seats. Passengers are seen smiling and swaying in their seats, with some recording the performance on their phones. Anderson said it felt good to lift spirits, though Koz admitted being nervous that some passengers might not like "horns playing in people's ears.' Anderson likened the feeling afterward to that of a great workout at the gym. The musicians never thought about the possibility of going viral, he said. "It was just doing something good for the people.' They performed just the one song, but they knew that was enough. "It just was right, and it brought everybody together in a way that was very special,' Koz said. "I'll remember that moment for the rest of my life.'

Tamar Braxton says she 'almost died' in a weekend accident
Tamar Braxton says she 'almost died' in a weekend accident

Arab Times

time11 hours ago

  • Arab Times

Tamar Braxton says she 'almost died' in a weekend accident

LOS ANGELES, Aug 20, (AP): Singer, actor, and reality TV star Tamar Braxton said Tuesday that she "almost died' in a weekend accident that she doesn't remember. "I was found in a pool of blood from my friend with a face injury,' Braxton wrote in an Instagram post. "I fractured my nose, lost some teeth, and mobility." She added, "I don't even know what happened to me.' Braxton, 48, earlier in the day had posted "Thank you God for waking me up today,' in an Instagram story. She said she was getting calls after and was struggling to talk, so she shared what had happened to her. The post also said, "the way I look at life now is totally different. As my health is on the mend, my mental journey begins… pray for me for real.' An email to Braxton's manager seeking more details was not immediately answered. Braxton was part of a singing group with her sisters, including Toni Braxton, who went on to a major solo career. They and other family members appeared on the reality series "Braxton Family Values' starting in 2011, and Tamar Braxton has since appeared in spin-offs and other reality shows. As an actor, her recent credits include the TV series "Kingdom Business.' And she has spent much of the year on a solo singing tour.

Terence Stamp, famed for his role as 'Superman' villain General Zod, dies at 87
Terence Stamp, famed for his role as 'Superman' villain General Zod, dies at 87

Arab Times

time2 days ago

  • Arab Times

Terence Stamp, famed for his role as 'Superman' villain General Zod, dies at 87

LONDON, Aug 18, (AP): Terence Stamp, the British actor who often played the role of a complex villain, including that of General Zod in the early Superman films, has died. He was 87. His death on Sunday was disclosed in a death notice published online, prompting a wave of tributes from an array of fans and those close to him within the industry, including the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, or BAFTA. The London-born Stamp started his film career with 1962's seafaring "Billy Budd,' for which he earned Oscar and BAFTA award nominations. His six decades in the business were peppered with highlights, including his touching portrayal of the transsexual Bernadette in 1994's "The Adventure of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert," the second of his two BAFTA nominations. But it will be his portrayal of the bearded Zod in 1978's "Superman' and its sequel, "Superman II' two years later, that most people associate with Stamp. As the Kryptonian arch enemy to Christopher Reeve's Man of Steel, Stamp introduced a darker, charming, and vulnerable - more human - element to the franchise, one that's been replicated in countless superhero movies ever since. Edgar Wright, who directed Stamp in his final feature film, 2021's "Last Night in Soho,' remembered the actor in an Instagram post as "kind, funny, and endlessly fascinating.' "The closer the camera moved, the more hypnotic his presence became. In close-up, his unblinking gaze locked in so powerfully that the effect was extraordinary. Terence was a true movie star: the camera loved him, and he loved it right back,' Wright said. Bill Duke, who starred with Stamp in director Steven Soderbergh's 1999 crime drama "The Limey,' said he was "deeply saddened' to hear of his death. "He brought a rare intensity to the screen, but off-screen he carried himself with warmth, grace, and generosity,' he said on Facebook. Stamp started his acting career on stage in the late 1950s, where he acted in repertory theatre and met Michael Caine, who was five years older than himself. The pair lived together in a flat in central London while looking for their big break. He got his break with "Billy Budd' and Stamp embarked on a career that would see him in the early 1960s be part of the "angry young men' movement that was introducing an element of social realism into British moviemaking. That was perhaps most notable in the 1965 adaptation of John Fowles' creepy debut novel "The Collector,' where he played the awkward and lonely Freddie Clegg, who kidnapped Samantha Eggar's Miranda Grey in a warped attempt to win her love. It was a performance that would earn the young Stamp, fresh off his Oscar nomination, the best actor award at that year's Cannes Film Festival. While part of that 1960s British movement, Stamp learned from some of the most seasoned actors from the classical era, including Laurence Olivier. "I worked with Olivier briefly on my second movie (1962's "Term of Trial"),' Stamp recalled in an interview with the AP in 2013. "And he said to me, 'You should always study your voice.'' Stamp then segued into a spot-on Olivier impersonation, continuing, "'Because, as you get older, your looks go, but your voice will become empowered.'' His career took a bit of a hiatus from the late 1960s after he missed out on the role of James Bond to replace Sean Connery, that included a years-long stint in India and which saw him embrace a more holistic approach to his self. It was the unexpected role of General Zod that brought him back to the limelight. He played John Tunstall in 1988's "Young Guns,' the Galactic Republic leader in 1999's "Star Wars' prequel "The Phantom Menace,' appeared in the comedies "Yes Man' and "Get Smart' in 2008 and delivered voice performances in the video games "Halo 3' and "The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion.' Born in London's East End on July 22, 1938, Stamp lived a colorful life, particularly during the 1960s when he had a string of romances, including with actress Julie Christie and model Jean Shrimpton. He married 29-year-old Elizabeth O'Rourke in 2002 at the age of 64, but the couple divorced six years later. Stamp did not have any children. Stamp retained his looks as the years ticked by, his natural handsomeness hardened by a more grizzled look. He generally sought to keep his standards high - to a point.

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