Starring in Gia Coppola's new movie 'Mainstream,' the actor/musician muses on creativity during lockdown.
At first, everyone thought Nat Wolff was crazy. He was just wrapping work on the miniseries “The Stand,” which eerily enough features a pandemic, as the world around him was beginning to worry about the coronavirus. Having seen how things play out on the show, he was urging his family and friends to stock up at the grocery store and “stop listening to Donald Trump,” a behavior never seen before but adopted in hopes of believing the president was right in downplaying the virus.
“I was pretending to be in jail, throwing toilet paper through the jail cell. And then I was reading in the news that the prisoners in Italy were doing the exact same thing,” Wolff says. “So it was really trippy.”The rising actor has since spent much of the pandemic allowing himself to take time off for the first time since he began acting as a child, reconsidering where he wants his career to go and what it means to be creative.
“I hadn’t been around more than three people since March 5. And then I just walked into this, it was Halloween. I walked into the Halloween party that they were having, I was just like, ‘oh my god,’” he says. Up next, he is set to play his hero Paul Westerberg in “The Trouble Boys,” a biopic about The Replacements.
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