Interviewer Asked Clint Eastwood ‘Are You Afraid to Die’ — His Answer Left the Room Frozen HT

 

October 26th, 2023.   CBS News Studios, Los Angeles,   California. Two gray armchairs at the   slight angle of a conversation rather   than a confrontation. A small round   marble table between them. Two glasses   of water untouched. The quiet   infrastructure of a room built   specifically for people to say things   they mean.

 

 The interview had been   scheduled for 40 minutes. Career   retrospective. The natural occasion   provided by a new film, a new chapter,   the accumulated weight of a career so   long, it had outlasted the categories   built to contain it. The questions had   been prepared with professional care,   chronological, respectful, the   architecture of an interview designed to   illuminate without discomfort.

 

 Sarah   Mitchell had been conducting interviews   for CBS for 11 years. She knew how   interviews moved, the rhythm of question   and answer, the small negotiations of   cander, the practice way that people in   public life give you something real   inside a frame they control. She thought   she knew how this one would move.

 

 Clint   Eastwood was 93 years old, white hair, a   face that had been photographed 10,000   times, and that still in the October   afternoon light contains something   photographs had never quite captured.   the quality of a face that has stopped   performing anything and has become   simply completely itself.

 

 He sat with   the upright ease of a man whose body had   aged, but whose presence had not   diminished by a single degree. Sarah   looked at her notes at the question she   had written and crossed out and written   again. The one her producer had flagged   as potentially uncomfortable that she   had almost removed three times and kept   because something told her it was the   only question in the room that actually   mattered.

 

 To understand what that   question meant in that room, you have to   understand what 93 years looks like from   the inside. From the outside, 93 is a   number, an occasion for retrospectives   and career summaries, and the reverence   cultures extend to people who have   persisted long enough to become   monuments. From the inside, it is   something else entirely.

 

 It is the   specific daily arithmetic of a man who   has buried his parents, his   contemporaries, his collaborators, his   closest friends, who has watched the   people who shaped him leave one by one.   John Wayne gone 1979.   Lee Marvin gone 1987.   Sergio Leon gone 1989. The directors,   the co-stars, the people who were in the   rooms where the important things   happened and who are no longer available   to confirm that the rooms existed.

 

 At   93, you are simultaneously the most   experienced person in almost any room   you enter and the most acutely aware of   what experience costs. What it removes   as it gives the specific trade that time   extracts in exchange for the depth that   only time can provide. Clint Eastwood   had been living with this arithmetic for   years.

 

 Had been doing the private   accounting that 93 years requires. Had   arrived somewhere in the process at a   set of conclusions that he had not been   asked about in an interview until a   Tuesday afternoon in October when a CBS   journalist looked at her notepad and   asked the question she had almost   removed three times.

 

 The crew behind the   cameras,   sound engineer Marcus at his board,   camera operator Daniel at his position,   producer Lisa with her headphones, moved   with the practiced efficiency of people   running a machine they knew well. They   were about to stop moving entirely. The   first 30 minutes went as expected.   questions about the new film, about   directing, how the process had changed   from the early years to now, what he   understood at 93 that he hadn’t   understood at 40.

 

 You get slower, he   said, and the slowness turns out to be   most of it. Questions about legacy, he   was quiet for a moment. Legacy is what   other people decide, he said. While   you’re making the work, you’re just   making the work. The legacy conversation   is for afterward. I’m still in the   middle.

 

 The crew moved with professional   efficiency. Notes were taken. Time codes   were logged. The interview was going   exactly as good interviews go. Sarah   looked at her notepad at the question.   She looked at the 93-year-old man with   the steady eyes and the face that had   stopped performing anything. She asked   it, “Mr.

 Eastwood, are you afraid to   die?” The set went quiet. Not the manage   quiet of a professional pause. the   involuntary quiet of a room that has   received a frequency it was not tuned   for. Behind the camera, Marcus’ hands   stopped moving on the soundboard. Daniel   held the camera with the specific   stillness of someone who understands his   only job right now is to not interfere   with what’s in his frame.

 

 Lisa, with her   headphones, became completely still.   Sarah had the expression of someone who   has jumped from a height and is in the   moment between the jump and whatever   comes next. Clint looked at her. He did   not look away. Did not look at the   ceiling or the floor or the middle   distance that people look at when they   are buying time.

 

 He looked at her   directly with the same steady unhurried   attention he had brought to every answer   in the preceding 30 minutes. He was   quiet. Not the silence of someone   searching for words. The silence of   someone deciding which of several   complete thoughts to offer. the quiet of   a man who has visited this territory   often enough that he has multiple routes   through it and is selecting the one most   suited to this particular afternoon.

 

 The   silence lasted 7 seconds. In television,   7 seconds is an eternity, the unit of   time that separates a pause from a   moment that transforms a hesitation into   something the room understands without   being told is significant. No, he said   simple, direct, the single syllable of   someone who means it completely.

 

 Sarah   waited. I used to think about it more.   He said, “When you’re young, death is   abstract, something that happens to   other people in other times. You know   it’s coming eventually, but eventually   is very far away. And far away, things   don’t require much attention.” A pause.   Then you get to a certain age and it   stops being abstract.

 

 He looked at his   hands for a moment. The hands of 93   years. The specific honest evidence of   time mapped in every line. I’ve watched   a lot of people go, he said. People I   loved, people who were better than me at   most things and who didn’t get the years   I got for reasons that have nothing to   do with merit. He looked back at her.

 

  When you watch enough people leave, you   stop thinking of death as the enemy. It   starts to look more like the   destination, the place everyone is   going. And when you understand that,   really understand it, not just   intellectually, but in the way your body   understands things, it stops being   frightening. A pause.

 

 Finding the exact   word with the care of someone who has   learned that the exact word is the only   one worth using. It becomes clarifying.   Behind the camera, Lisa had lowered her   headphones from her ears. Marcus had   both hands flat on the soundboard and   was not moving them. Daniel was holding   the camera with held breath attention.

 

  Sarah Mitchell had her notepad in her   lap and had not looked at it in 4   minutes. She was looking at Clint   Eastwood, the way people look at   something they did not expect to find in   the place where they were looking.   Clarifying, Sarah said, not a challenge,   someone repeating a word to make sure   they’ve received it correctly.

 

 When you   know the time is finite, really know it,   not as a concept, but as a fact you live   with every morning, it changes what you   do with the time. He shifted slightly in   the chair. The things that wasted your   attention when you were young, the small   anxieties, the professional   competitions, the need to be right in   arguments that don’t matter.

 

 They fall   away. Not all at once, gradually. And   what’s left after they fall away is   simpler and better than what was there   before? What’s left? Sarah asked. The   work, the people you love, the mornings.   No ceremony, no performance of   profoundity, the delivery of someone   stating facts. I still get up every   morning and I’m grateful for the   morning.

 Not in the way people say that   when they mean something general. I   mean, I stand in the kitchen with my   coffee and I look at the light coming in   and I think, “This is another one. This   is one more.” A pause. At 93, one more   is not something you take for granted.   In the sound booth, Marcus Webb would   tell his wife about this conversation   that evening, 17 years in audio, a   thousand interviews.

 

 He would tell her   that he had never heard anyone say   anything quite like that, in quite that   way. Not because the words were unusual.   He had heard variations before. Because   the man saying them had earned them in a   way that made them different from every   other time he had heard them said. “Are   you at peace?” Sarah asked.

 

 The question   that arrived naturally after the answer.   The question the answer had made   possible. 3 seconds of silence. The   silence of a man finding the honest   version of an answer that has a   dishonest version available. Mostly, he   said, “There are things I do   differently. People I could have been   better to.

 

 Time I spent on the wrong   things.” He looked at her. Peace doesn’t   mean no regrets. It means the regrets   are in their right size. They don’t take   up more room than they deserve. When   you’re young, regrets are enormous. They   fill everything. Every mistake becomes a   referendum on who you are. At 93, you’ve   had enough time to see what the mistakes   actually cost and what they didn’t cost.

 

  Most of them cost less than you thought.   And the ones that cost more, you’ve had   enough time to try to address them or to   accept that you can’t and to carry that   acceptance without letting it become the   whole story. Does the work give you   peace? Or Sarah asked. The work is the   piece.

 

 He said, not the result of the   work, the doing of it. The morning when   you wake up and there’s something to   make, something that doesn’t exist yet   and needs you to make it exist. He   paused. That’s never gone away. At 93, I   still wake up and there’s something to   make. As long as that’s true, I’m fine.   Behind them, producer Lisa Quan, 11   years in television, present for more   significant interviews than she could   count, was aware that she was crying,   not dramatically, the specific quiet   tears of someone receiving something   that has arrived at the exact frequency   of something they needed without knowing   they needed it. She would think about   this moment for a long time afterward,   not as a professional memory, as a   personal one. “Can I ask you something?”   Clint said. Sarah looked up from her   notepad. She had forgotten she was   holding it. “Go ahead,” she said. “Why   did you ask that question, the fear   question? It wasn’t on the list your

 

  people sent over.” Sarah was quiet for a   moment, deciding how honest to be. I   wrote it down and crossed it out three   times, she said. I kept it because it   felt like the only real question.   Everything else felt like information.   That question felt like the actual   conversation. Clint nodded slowly.

 

 Most   people don’t ask it, he said. They think   about it. Everyone over a certain age   thinks about it, but they don’t ask it   out loud because asking it out loud   means acknowledging something they’d   rather leave in the peripheral vision. A   pause. The things we leave in the   peripheral vision are usually the things   most worth looking at directly.

 

 Is that   something age teaches you? Age teaches   you that the things you were avoiding   were never as bad as the avoidance. He   said, “The thing itself, whatever it is,   death, failure, the conversation you’ve   been putting off, is almost always   smaller than the space you’ve created   for it by not looking at it.

 

 The not   looking is what makes it large.” He   leaned forward slightly. The deliberate   forward lean of someone arriving at the   thing they most want to say. The   question you crossed out three times was   the right question. He said, “The   questions we cross out are usually the   right ones.

 

 We cross them out because   they matter, and the things that matter   are the things worth asking.” The   interview ended at 4:17 in the   afternoon, 47 minutes, 7 over schedule.   Nobody had mentioned the time. When the   crew began striking the set, the room   had the specific quality of spaces that   have held something significant and are   now returning to their ordinary   function.

 

 Sarah sat in her chair for a   moment after Clint had stood, notepad in   her lap, the notepad with its prepared   questions, most of which she had asked,   and one which she had written and   crossed out three times and ultimately   asked, and which had produced the only   part of the afternoon she would remember   20 years from now.

 

 Marcus was reviewing   his levels, performing a routine task,   and thinking about something else   entirely. Daniel was breaking down his   camera, pausing once to look at the gray   armchair where Clint had been sitting.   Lisa had her headphones around her neck   on her phone for professional necessity,   keeping the other part of her attention   on something she was going to need some   time with.

 

 Clint paused at the edge of   the set before he left. turned back   once. Not dramatically, the natural turn   of someone who has thought of something.   He looked at Sarah. Good question, he   said simply without decoration. He   walked out into the California afternoon   into the ongoing ordinary business of a   day that had contained somewhere in the   middle of it 47 minutes that none of the   people in that studio would forget.

 

 The   interview aired on a Sunday morning. By   Monday, it had been viewed 11 million   times. Not because of the celebrity,   though celebrity was part of it, because   of the specific rare quality of watching   someone tell the complete truth about   something everyone is afraid of. in the   way that complete truth sounds when it   arrives from someone who has had enough   time to earn it.

 

 The two minutes and 14   seconds that circulated, the core of   what he said traveled with a particular   velocity of things people feel the need   to share because sharing is the closest   approximation of saying, “I needed this   and I think you might too.” comments   from people of 90 and people of 19, from   people who had just received a diagnosis   and people watching a parent decline and   people who had simply needed to hear   someone explain that the thing they were   most afraid of was smaller than the   avoidance. Sarah Mitchell received more   correspondence from that interview than   from any other in her career. Letters   and emails from people she had never   met, all saying variations of the same   thing. I didn’t know I needed that   answer until I heard it. She kept the   notepad, not as a professional artifact,   as a personal one. The physical evidence   of a decision she had almost not made,   that she had come within a single

 

  crossing out of not making that had   turned out to be the most important   professional decision of the year. Clint   Eastwood went back to Carmel, back to   the mornings with the coffee and the   light, back to the work. always more   work, always something that didn’t exist   yet and needed to be made to exist.

 

 Back   to the simple sustaining arithmetic of a   life that had been lived long enough to   understand what living was actually for.   He was not afraid. He had said so in a   gray armchair in a CBS studio in Los   Angeles to a journalist who had almost   not asked the question and the room had   gone quiet with the specific silence   that follows something true when it   arrives in a place not entirely prepared   for it.

 

 The silence people carry out of   rooms and into their cars and homes and   the rest of their days that surfaces at   unexpected moments in the morning with   coffee looking at the light coming in.   Are you afraid to die? No.   [clears throat]   Two syllables. 93 years.

 

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