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Adam Pearson is ready to roll the dice

NEW YORK (AP) ā€” Adam Pearson is an ardent believer in the old adage: Nothing wagered, nothing gained. Before Pearson was an actor, he worked at the BBC out of college.
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Adam Pearson poses for a portrait on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024, in New York. (Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP)

NEW YORK (AP) ā€” Adam Pearson is an ardent believer in the old adage: Nothing wagered, nothing gained.

Before Pearson was an actor, he worked at the BBC out of college. He was hired for six months, but, like much in Pearsonā€™s life, he was determined to make the most of it.

ā€œI decided Iā€™m going to meet every person on this floor and ask them for coffee,ā€ Pearson says. ā€œIf they say yes, great. If they, ā€˜No, youā€™re an idiot,ā€™ I already know that. Iā€™ve lost nothing in that transaction.

ā€œItā€™s all about taking risk and rolling dice,ā€ says Pearson.

For Pearson, that means something a little different than most. Since he was a young boy, Pearson has had neurofibromatosis, a condition that covers much of his face with benign skin tumors. But far from allowing that to define him, Pearson has become an acclaimed actor, a TV host and an activist for disabled people. He is braver than me. He is braver than you. He has acted, naked, across from Scarlett Johansson. In Aaron Schimbergā€™s new film, he stars opposite Sebastian Stan. Most would say he steals the show.

ā€œThis past year has been wild,ā€ Pearson said in a recent interview on a terrace at the New York offices of A24. ā€œIf you had told me that Iā€™d work with Scarlett Johansson, Sebastian Stan and Iā€™d be here talking to you right now, Iā€™d be like, ā€˜Nope. Not going to happen.ā€™ā€

ā€œA Different Man,ā€ which expands in theaters this week, has been causing a stir since it first in January. It follows Edward (Stan, with prosthetics and makeup), a disfigured man whose apartment neighbor is a young playwright named Ingrid (Renate Reinsve). After undergoing experimental surgery, Edward is shed of his neurofibromatosis, making him look like, well, Sebastian Stan. Ingrid, not knowing itā€™s Edward, casts him in her play inspired by her friendship with Edward. But when a charismatic man with neurofibromatosis, Oswald (Pearson), shows up, he quickly upstages Edward.

At ā€œthe end of this movie, everyone is going to see that Sebastian Stan is jealous of Adam Pearson, and theyā€™re going to believe and understand that,ā€ says Schimberg. ā€œIn a way, itā€™s me trying to take ownership of this idea that being different has value. People are coming away from it feeling like Adam is a star.ā€

Pearson, 39, grew up in the London district of Croydon. He has an identical twin brother named Neil who shares his condition though it manifests as short-term memory loss for Neil. After college, Pearson gravitated toward television. He parlayed his initial experience at the BBC into work on a number of series and documentaries, including several on himself.

ā€œI found out who I was by trying loads of things that I wasnā€™t and by realizing the facade of trying to please people is equally as miserable as the loneliness,ā€ says Pearson. ā€œOnce youā€™re comfortable in your own skin and figure that out, and get to the point where youā€™re like, ā€˜It is who I am, like it or lump it,ā€™ and the people that matter donā€™t mind and the people that mind donā€™t matter, thatā€™s when you can really find your way.ā€

Pearson's first acting job was in Jonathan Glazerā€™s in which he played one of the men picked up and slaughtered by Johanssonā€™s extraterrestrial. It was a unique baptism into the vulnerability required for acting. Pearson found that, in getting lost in the moment, acting could be freeing.

Pearson co-starred in Schimbergā€™s 2019 film ā€œChained for Life,ā€ playing an actor acting opposite a beautiful woman (Jess Weixler). The experience was rewarding for Schimberg but some of the discussion around it led to ā€œA Different Man.ā€ Some alleged Pearsonā€™s casting was exploitative, an argument that struck Schimberg as illustrative. Schimberg, who has a cleft palate, had written the role partially based on himself. He considers disability a core subject for himself as a filmmaker.

More than that, though, Schimberg felt the criticism represented a telling dilemma. He had spent much of his life seeing deformity portrayed inauthentically in movies like 1985ā€™s ā€œMaskā€ or 2017ā€™s ā€œWonderā€ by able bodied actors. If some took issue with Pearson appearing in a movie at all, what did that say about peopleā€™s willingness to watch and empathize for people living for deformity?

Schimberg resolved to structure ā€œA Different Manā€ as a movie that begins with one kind of portrayal and morphs into a more authentic one. He also wanted Pearsonā€™s role to be more reflective of his personality.

ā€œPartially because he was shy in ā€˜Under the Skinā€™ and partially because characters with disfigurements are often portrayed as shy, everyone assumed he was shy,ā€ says Schimberg. ā€œUntil I met him, I wouldnā€™t have known, either, how extraverted and gregarious he is.ā€

ā€œAnd on a deeper level, I was personally inspired by him," Schimberg adds. "It almost threw me into an identity crisis. I have a cleft palate. Iā€™m socially awkward, Iā€™m shy. Iā€™ve always sort of blamed this on having a cleft palate and the way Iā€™ve been treated because of it. When I meet Adam, I questioned: Why can he be this way and I canā€™t be this way?ā€

Oswald isnā€™t quite Pearson, though heā€™s close. ā€œOswald is me but with the volume turned way up, turned up ā€” to reference my favorite film ā€” to 11,ā€ says Pearson. ā€œHeā€™s really charming so thereā€™s a little bit of Ryan Gosling, ā€˜Stupid Crazy Love.ā€™ā€

Before shooting began, Pearson worked with Stan to synchronize and compare parts of their movements and performances. He was also learning. ā€œIā€™ve always said, if you want to learn how to do something, find someone who does it better than you and just get in their way.ā€

Pearson has spent two years working on a documentary about storytelling. On his recent trip to New York, he was shooting around the city for it. But ā€œA Different Manā€ is, he says, ā€œthe biggest thing Iā€™ve done. Itā€™s the breakout.ā€

ā€œReading all the reviews and the press and stuff has been somewhat overwhelming,ā€ Pearson says. ā€œIā€™m trying to play it cool. Iā€™m like a duck. On the surface, I look cool and sleek and elegant. And underneath Iā€™m kicking like mad. Weā€™ll see what happens. If this is where the acting journey ends, Iā€™m going out on a high. Iā€™m not taking anything for granted. Iā€™m remembering to take a breath and enjoy it all and not get too caught up in it."

Asked to recall a moment from this year that he'll cherish, Pearson describes attending the Berlin Film Festival with his mother and brother.

ā€œFor years, my mum has been like ā€˜Youā€™re not famous in this house,'ā€ Pearson says. "And then she saw me on the red carpet and she thought, 'Maybe he is a little bit famous.ā€™ā€

And he's getting used to it. Schimberg thinks Pearson might be more comfortable promoting ā€œA Different Manā€ than Stan, the veteran actor of Marvel movies.

ā€œIn the trailer itā€™s like, ā€˜Adam Pearson steals the show.' And I go, ā€˜Oh man, stealingā€™s illegal'" Pearson says, laughing. "But Iā€™m also like: Yeah. Yeah. Adam Pearson, turn up, steal the show, go home, repeat. Thatā€™s the plan now.ā€

Jake Coyle, The Associated Press