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The surprise, to be clear, wasn’t seeing Stan’s name in such lofty company. Long a fan favorite for his roles as Gossip Girl’s Carter Baizen and Marvel’s Bucky Barnes, Stan, 42, has enjoyed a breakout year on the big screen. So much so that he won a Golden Globe (for Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy) earlier this month.
But Stan got his Golden Globe for portraying an actor with neurofibromatosis who undergoes an experimental procedure to change his face in A Different Man.
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His Oscar nomination, in contrast, is for playing Donald Trump in The Apprentice.
It’s hard to imagine a more fraught performance — or a more charged moment for it to be recognized. Since 1929, the academy has nominated seven other actors for playing U.S. presidents, but none of those presidents were still in office — issuing controversial executive orders, dividing public opinion and generally dominating American public life — when the nods were unveiled. Instead, they were all historical figures: preserved in the past, without any real power to influence the present.
But Trump is arguably the most powerful person in the world. And Stan’s path to the Oscars has been anything but assured as a result.
Written by journalist Gabriel Sherman and directed by filmmaker Ali Abbasi, The Apprentice attempts to tell Trump’s “origin story” through the lens of his relationship with notorious New York lawyer Roy Cohn (played by Succession star Jeremy Strong).
Jeremy Strong as Roy Cohn and Sebastian Stan as Donald Trump in The Apprentice. (Briarcliff Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection)
“Looking back on some of those earlier interviews with [Trump] when he was really young and trying to get tax abatements to [build] the Grand Hyatt, there was something … pure and honest,” Stan told Yahoo Entertainment in October. “There was great potential that I saw in that person at that time.”
In Stan’s view, it was the hard-charging Cohn who taught Trump to be more “brutal.”
“The loss of empathy and humanity, I think, was really tragic,” Stan said.
Needless to say, Trump and those around him see The Apprentice differently. Early investor Dan Snyder, a billionaire who once owned the NFL’s Washington Commanders and donated more than a million dollars to Trump’s political efforts, was reportedly “furious” with a February 2024 rough cut; lawyers for his production company soon began to fight its release.
When the film finally debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2024, Trump’s attorneys responded with a cease-and-desist letter seeking to block “all marketing, distribution, and publication.” Trump himself weighed in on Truth Social a few months later, calling The Apprentice “a cheap, defamatory, and politically disgusting hatchet job” made by “HUMAN SCUM” and designed to “hurt” him “right before the 2024 Presidential Election.”
Hollywood wasn’t particularly welcoming, either. According to Abbasi, both Paul Thomas Anderson and Clint Eastwood passed on directing the film due to “business risk,” and almost every Hollywood studio declined to distribute it.
“I wasn’t naive about [Trump] being a divisive figure,” the director told Yahoo Entertainment, “but I was maybe a bit naive about how the rest of the world would embrace that and how the corporate structure in Hollywood would want to jump on the opportunity.”
With a limited budget for marketing and distribution, TheApprentice opened on Oct. 11 and earned just $17.3 million at the box office. The following month, Stan revealed at a Q&A that Variety had invited him to participate in its Actors on Actors series — but that none of his counterparts would agree to a mutual interview.
“Actors, directors, producers, writers who have seen the movie rave about it” in private, Stan said, “but I couldn’t find another actor to do it with me because they were too afraid to go and talk about this movie.”
“We couldn’t get past the publicists or the people representing them,” he added.
(In a statement to USA Today, Variety co-editor in chief Ramin Setoodeh confirmed that “other actors didn’t want to pair with [Stan] because they didn’t want to talk about Donald Trump.”)
In a way, then, Thursday’s Oscar nomination represents vindication for Stan: a belated public admission of what industry types were privately telling him all along. Now academy voters have an opportunity to send Trump a message on March 2. It will be fascinating to see if they take it.
In a shocking turn of events, former President Donald Trump has come out swinging against the hit reality TV show “The Apprentice,” calling it a “hatchet job” and claiming that it unfairly portrayed him in a negative light.
However, despite Trump’s protests, it seems that the show has ultimately had a positive impact on one actor’s career. Sebastian Stan, known for his roles in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and various other films, has just been nominated for an Oscar for his portrayal of Trump in a new biopic.
Stan’s performance has been praised for its uncanny resemblance to the former president, as well as its depth and nuance. Many critics have hailed it as a career-defining performance for the actor, who has previously been known for his charming and often villainous roles.
It seems that Trump’s criticism of “The Apprentice” has inadvertently launched Stan to new heights in his career, with the actor now being recognized for his incredible talent and dedication to his craft. Only time will tell if Stan will take home the coveted Oscar, but one thing is for sure – his portrayal of Trump will go down in history as one of the most memorable performances of our time.
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Donald Trump, The Apprentice, hatchet job, Sebastian Stan, Oscar nominee, portrayal, president
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