LOS ANGELES — In the midst of 20 months and within the midst of a pandemic, Harrison Ford filmed a “Raiders of the Misplaced Ark” sequel in England. He shot a 10-part comedy, “Shrinking,” in Burbank. He herded cattle up a mountain in subzero Montana temperatures for “1923,” the newest prequel to the hit western sequence “Yellowstone.”
He additionally celebrated his eightieth birthday.
“I’ve been working just about back-to-back, which isn’t what I usually do,” mentioned Ford, unshaven, sporting bluejeans and boots and easing right into a chair on the Luxe Sundown Boulevard Lodge right here earlier this month. He was in Los Angeles for one night time, for the premiere of “1923,” debuting Sunday on Paramount+. From right here, it was on to Las Vegas the subsequent morning for the subsequent screening, yet one more cease after a stretch of filming, journey and promotion that may exhaust an actor half his age.
“I don’t know the way it occurred,” Ford mentioned, taking a sip from his cup of espresso. “However it occurred.”
It has been 45 years since Ford leaped off the display screen as Han Solo within the first “Star Wars” film, laying the muse for a blockbuster profession during which he has personified a few of the most commercially profitable film franchises in movie historical past. He has appeared in over 70 motion pictures, with a mixed worldwide field workplace gross of greater than $9 billion. By now, it could appear, he has nothing left to show.
However at an age when lots of his contemporaries have receded from public view, Ford is just not slowing down, a lot much less stepping away to spend extra time at his ranch in Jackson, Wyo. He’s nonetheless attempting new issues — “1923” represents his first main tv half — nonetheless trying to find yet one more function, nonetheless pushed to remain earlier than the digicam.
“I adore it,” he mentioned. “I like the problem and the method of constructing a film. I really feel at residence. It’s what I’ve spent my life doing.”
And why ought to he decelerate? Ford reveals no signal of fading, bodily or mentally — he was fleet and limber as he strode into the Luxe for our interview, cap pulled down, and later, as he labored the room on the post-premiere celebration on the Hollywood restaurant Mom Wolf. In his tempo and eclectic alternative of roles, together with the weathered and weary rancher Jacob Dutton of “1923,” he appears as decided as ever to indicate that he could be extra than simply the swashbuckling motion hero who gave the world Han Solo and Indiana Jones.
“He can relaxation on his laurels: He doesn’t have to work financially,” mentioned Mark Hamill, who performed Luke Skywalker in “Star Wars” and who, at 71, doesn’t miss the 5 a.m. wake-up calls and the hustling for the subsequent function. “To be doing one other ‘Indiana Jones’ — I’m in awe of him.”
Ford is thought for being gruff and nonresponsive, an actor not given to introspection and with little persistence for “put me on the sofa” questions. There have been flashes of that in our 45 minutes collectively. “I do know I walked myself into that darkish alley the place you’re now going to must ask me to explain the character,” he mentioned at one level. “And I don’t need to.”
However for essentially the most half Ford was forthcoming, relaxed and contemplative. This was a promotional tour, and after a half-century within the enterprise, he is aware of how to do that. “I’m right here to promote a film,” Ford mentioned, although, in fact, he was there to promote a TV present — and to some extent, himself.
“I don’t need to reinvent myself,” he mentioned. “I simply need to work.”
FORD WAS ALWAYS extra than simply one other charismatic Hollywood motion star. He might act. There was the swagger and the smirk, however they had been put to service in presenting complicated heroes with flaws and self-doubt, together with John Guide, the detective in “Witness”; Jack Ryan, the C.I.A. analyst on the heart of the Tom Clancy novels that impressed the movies; and Rick Deckard, battling bioengineered humanoids in “Blade Runner.”
That fashion distinguished him for a lot of his profession from monosyllabic, musclebound motion stars like Arnold Schwarzenegger or Jean-Claude Van Damme, and it has at all times been integral to his attraction: Hamill mentioned he was struck by it the primary time they acted collectively.
“He was impossibly cool, world-weary, cautious, considerably snarky, flippant,” Hamill mentioned.
Tv isn’t completely new territory for Ford. When George Lucas forged him as a white-cowboy-hat-wearing drag racer within the 1973 movie “American Graffiti,” Ford was 30, making a dwelling as a part-time carpenter in Los Angeles. By then he had already been selecting up modest roles in sequence like “Ironside,” “The Virginian” and “Gunsmoke” because the late Sixties.
His function in “1923” is something however modest: the great-great-great uncle of John Dutton III, the household patriarch portrayed by Kevin Costner in “Yellowstone,” TV’s hottest drama. As with “Yellowstone,” the scope of “1923” is huge — the Western vistas, the sweeping aerial pictures, the complexity of the characters and their tales. It additionally options one other main star, Helen Mirren, as his spouse, Cara, the powerful matriarch of the household.
Ford watches little tv — he mentioned doesn’t have the time — and he knew little about “Yellowstone” when his agent first introduced him the function. (In preparation, he watched a few of “1883,” the primary “Yellowstone” prequel, which follows an earlier era of Duttons as they journey west by wagon practice to ascertain the household ranch.) Primarily based on an advance screener of the pilot, the cinematic ambitions of “1923” can be acquainted to anybody who has watched “Sport of Thrones” or “Breaking Unhealthy.” However they’ve, these previous 4 months, been a nice shock for Ford.
“They preserve calling it tv,” Ford mentioned, gesturing with a twist of his higher torso to a tv display screen within the subsequent room. “However it’s so un-television. It’s, , an enormous vista. It’s an extremely formidable story that he’s telling in epic scale. The size of the factor is big I feel for the tv.”
Ford mentioned he had agreed to the function after Taylor Sheridan, the lead creator behind the “Yellowstone” franchise, introduced him to his ranch outdoors Fort Price and sketched out the character. (“I’m 80, and I’m taking part in 77,” Ford mentioned with a wry grin. “It’s a little bit of a stretch.”) Ford was intrigued by Dutton, a stoic and somber rancher who should battle within the last years of his life to guard his land and household.
“The character is just not the same old character for me,” Ford mentioned, likening it to his function taking part in a psychiatrist with Jason Segel in “Shrinking,” created by Segel and Invoice Lawrence and Brett Goldstein (of “Ted Lasso”), debuting subsequent month on Apple TV+. “I’ve by no means been to a psychiatrist in my life.”
Filming “1923” examined his resilience and his love of the craft. Montana proved a brutal place to work; the forged and crew encountered blinding blizzards and stunningly chilly temperatures throughout 10-hour days spent nearly completely outside.
“It was a nightmare,” mentioned Timothy Dalton, a former James Bond, who performs a rancher who challenges Ford for management of the land. “We’re on prime of a hill with a blasting wind coming at us. The cameras freeze up. Your toes freeze up.”
Ben Richardson, who directed a lot of the “1923” episodes, described filming Ford as he rode horses up steep mountains, in opposition to knife-sharp winds, as Dutton herds cattle to increased altitudes and the promise of fields to graze.
“I’ve by no means had a grievance from him,” Richardson mentioned. “I can’t specific how a lot of a group participant he’s — to the purpose that it’s stunning. He’s Harrison Ford. He might be doing something. I’m certain there are individuals who would favor to have a double standing in. He didn’t.” He added that he had “in all probability seen ‘Blade Runner’ 20 instances,” finding out how Ford offered himself onscreen.
“There’s one thing actually compelling about watching him take care of tough conditions,” he mentioned.
From Ford’s earliest days as Han Solo, he has been cautious of being typecast as a go-to motion hero. He agreed to do the blockbusters urged on him by a Lucas or Steven Spielberg, however he additionally sought greater than laser weapons and bullwhips, gravitating to movies like Peter Weir’s “Witness” (1985), and to administrators like Alan J. Pakula (“Presumed Harmless,” “The Satan’s Personal”).
“I at all times went from a film for me to a film for them,” he mentioned, referring to administrators — and audiences — with a style for action-hero blockbusters. “I don’t need to work for only one viewers.”
So it’s that Ford will play a rancher in “1923” and a therapist in “Shrinking”— six months earlier than his fifth “Indiana Jones” film, “The Dial of Future,” opens in June.
“He doesn’t get the credit score for the range of his decisions that he has chosen,” Hamill mentioned. “All people loves ‘Indiana Jones,’ however we all know what it’s, and we’ve seen it earlier than — he might do these for the remainder of his life. The truth that he’s doing one thing tougher and extra thought-provoking is one thing I like about him.”
A CENTRAL PARADOX of Ford’s biography is that “Star Wars,” the franchise arguably most liable for reshaping the trade in its picture, made him one of many final true film stars, a person whose title alone might promote tickets; Hollywood’s shift from star autos to mental property, from large display screen to small, can now be neatly tracked over the arc of his profession.
“Star Wars” united a rustic — crossing geographic, class and political strains — enthralling audiences who gathered in theaters to share in its fairy-tale story of affection and journey. As of late, audiences are made up of family and friends gathered in a front room, and Ford faces questions on whether or not the “Yellowstone” franchise is a paean to Crimson America.
“I’m conscious of the curiosity within the politics of the characters,” he mentioned, including that he had little interest in the political views of Jacob Dutton. (Ford, who was born in Chicago to Democratic mother and father and supported Joe Biden in opposition to Donald Trump in 2020, advised that the viewers for “Yellowstone” was so huge that it was unlikely to be made up of solely Republicans.)
When Ford started engaged on “1923,” Sheridan advised him to method it as if it was 10 hourlong motion pictures. “And that’s the way in which it feels to me,” Ford mentioned. “However we’re working at a tv tempo. There’s one thing about motion pictures that enables for, , just a little bit, , a form of luxurious of time and a sure …”
He hesitated as he thought of the dangers of a highway higher not taken, of Harrison Ford weighing in on the deserves of flicks versus tv. “I don’t assume I actually need to get too deep into this as a result of there’s no place to go along with it, for me.”
“I’m doing the identical job,” he mentioned. “It’s simply being boxed and distributed otherwise.”
Ford is just not a pioneer. He resisted tv for a few years, and in lastly relenting, he’s following different main field workplace stars — Kevin Costner on “Yellowstone” and Sylvester Stallone on “Tulsa King” — who’ve joined Taylor Sheridan tv productions.
Nonetheless, as he ready to attend the premiere of “1923,” at a giant display screen tucked away in an American Legion Corridor in Hollywood, it was clear the place his coronary heart remained.
“The vital factor is to enter a darkish room with strangers, expertise the identical factor and have a possibility to contemplate your frequent humanity,” Ford mentioned. “With strangers. And the music — the sound system is best, proper? The darkish is deeper, proper? And the icebox not so shut.”
Ford paused at his revealing reference to a kitchen equipment from one other period — the period when he grew up. He couldn’t assist however snigger at his lapse. “Icebox!” he mentioned.