Adam Driver: My journey from Marine to actor
Adam Driver is working to bridge the cultural gap between the United States Armed Forces and the performing arts communities by bringing the best modern American theater to the military. Full bioJesse J. Perez - Actor
Jesse J. Perez works as a guest director and teacher at Juilliard, and he has done numerous readings for Arts in the Armed Forces. Full bioMatt Johnson - Drummer
Matt Johnson has played on some of the most critically acclaimed records in almost everyone's collections. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
in the country did at the time,
of patriotism and retribution
that I wasn't doing anything.
from high school that past summer,
of my parents' house paying rent,
in Northern Indiana,
for people who are interested --
but cultural hub of the world it is not,
I did in high school
may she rest in peace.
when I was a senior in high school,
and applied nowhere else,
LA acting odyssey
with, like, seven dollars
before my car broke down.
the beach, basically,
selling vacuums ...
4-H fairgrounds.
going into September, 2001.
in general -- at myself,
not having a respectable job,
drove to California and back --
I loved being a Marine.
of having done in my life.
expensive things was great.
the Marine Corps the most
for the least when I joined,
a motley crew of characters
of the United States --
nothing in common with.
became synonymous with my friends.
in a mountain-biking accident,
may find this hard to understand,
to Iraq or Afghanistan
the base hospital on a stretcher
outside to see if I was OK.
I was a civilian again.
acting another shot,
are small compared to the military.
bitch about now, you know?
on the air conditioner."
and dumpster-dive behind Panera Bread.
and this time I was lucky,
by how complex the transition was
imagine going through that process
to voice and speech class,
at the back of the room,
where I gave birth to myself --
without me overseas.
know how to apply the things
to a civilian context.
and emotionally.
and firing mortars.
put those skills in the civilian world.
is either steeped in tradition
to give away your position.
you have to maintain
who went before you.
because of this.
those rules spoke volumes
about your history
to prove my worth all over again.
while I was in uniform
I felt this sense of community.
with your closest friends
that they're not going to abandon you?
and characters and plays
my military experience
to me was indescribable.
to feelings for the first time
a valuable tool that was.
on my time in the military,
on the stereotypical drills
intimate human moments,
because they missed their families,
these circumstances,
it produced in them and me,
our feelings about it.
are actually very similar.
trying to accomplish a mission
it's not about you.
your role within that team.
sometimes they're not.
with complete strangers
to create a space
dissimilar communities,
to a group of people
a bit more thought-provoking
"volun-told" to go to in the military --
offensive events,
Chargers Cheerleader,"
about pop culture,
around the parade deck
pregnant cheerleader --
I love cheerleaders.
be to have theater presented
without being condescending.
called Arts in the Armed Forces,
dissimilar communities.
from contemporary American plays
like a military audience is,
theater-trained actors,
as minimal as possible --
no lights, just reading it --
be created at any setting.
is just as valuable a tool
acronyms for acronyms,
a collective experience.
the United States and the world,
to Camp Arifjan in Kuwait,
have had exposure to.
that acting is many things.
it's a business, it's --
is most applicable to you.
the military, for me, again --
from Marco Ramirez,
and good friend of mine, Jesse Perez,
who I just met a couple hours ago.
for the first time,
like mad, radioactive red.
you can maybe see the moon
and airplane exhaust
that won't let the angels in.
on the edge of an 87-story building.
and broken clock towers
for maybe like 100 years,
but has that hole on it near the butt
on the chain-link fence behind Arturo's
because I tuck that part in
and whips Batman for talkin' back.
from the Eastern Taxi Company
(Double beat)
to do is save people
cause it's frickin' long
my face is on, too,
all in my chest so no one can hurt me.
(Laughter)
Styrofoam leftovers up out of a trash can
of sesame chicken someone spit out
with a wack haircut in a black lab coat
all extinct for real one day.
on 40-ounce bottles of twist-off beer,
to some lady's house
have all been shot out
what they do in this city in the dark.
who don't know no better,
with rusted bicycle chains
in their arms start burning,
brand macaroni and cheese
I don't exist.
one of the good-for-nothings say,
in drunk language and turn pale,
to hurl its way out his Dickies.
at the one naked lightbulb.
"What?"
No, really -- there ain't no bat!"
gets it to the head -- pow!
into the dark cape before him,
back with the jump kick,
so I'm like --
to blow a hole in the moon.
who got it to the head,
who got it in the gut,
from the dark figure before 'em.
praying to Saint Anthony
he could remember.
in a Morse code for:
left standing,
between my pointy ears,
calling Saint Anthony,
"Ahhhhhhh!"
'cause I'm Batman.
got iced by guns a long time ago.
become good-for-disappearing
sludge shithole they crawled out of.
off his forehead.
by his janitor-man shirt collar,
but the cape helps,
straight in the eyes.
every 10 feet.
to building on his way there
as he pulls out his key chain
through the front door.
of warm tap water.
as they get to my room.
like, mad-slow.
of sidewalks in summer.
but not with sweat.
my window just a crack.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Adam Driver - Actor and Marine Corps veteranAdam Driver is working to bridge the cultural gap between the United States Armed Forces and the performing arts communities by bringing the best modern American theater to the military.
Why you should listen
Before he was an actor, Adam Driver was a Marine with the 1/1 Weapons Company at Camp Pendleton, California. After the Marines, he attended Juilliard and went on to star in films like Star Wars: Episode VII, While We're Young, Midnight Special and on HBO's "Girls." His performance in "Girls" has garnered him three Emmy nominations for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series, and he won the Volpi Cup Award for Best Actor for Hungry Hearts, which premiered at the 2014 Venice International Film Festival.
Driver co-founded Arts in the Armed Forces (AITAF), a nonprofit that that honors, educates, inspires and entertains active duty and veteran members of the United States Armed Forces and their families by engaging them in the power and social service of the performing arts. The organization enlists artists of the highest quality and chooses thought-provoking content with an eye to what might speak to this particular audience.
Adam Driver | Speaker | TED.com
Jesse J. Perez - Actor
Jesse J. Perez works as a guest director and teacher at Juilliard, and he has done numerous readings for Arts in the Armed Forces.
Why you should listen
Jesse J. Perez has starred in numerous off-Broadway performances including "Informed Consent," "Up Against the Wind and Triple Happiness." He has also worked at The Chekhov Project: Lake Lucille as a choreographer and done numerous readings for Arts in the Armed Forces.
Jesse J. Perez | Speaker | TED.com
Matt Johnson - Drummer
Matt Johnson has played on some of the most critically acclaimed records in almost everyone's collections.
Why you should listen
Matt Johnson | Speaker | TED.com