Sunday, November 17, 2019
Lessons from Bradley Cooper in empowering people
Lessons from Bradley Cooper in empowering people Lessons from Bradley Cooper in empowering people I saw âA Star Is Bornâ on opening weekend and, despite my outlandish expectations, it was one of the best movie experiences Iâve had in years. But that doesnât mean I planned to write about it.However, reading and watching the discussion around the film has revealed to me surprising details that matter for leaders and managers. Bradley Cooper, as director and standard-bearer for this film, has done two things besides make a well-received movie. He has 1) consistently given public credit to others, and 2) demonstrated that he understands that creating a vision for a team means leaving room for those people to shine.Giving creditCooperâs not being glib or thoughtless in his praise of others, at least not that Iâve seen. He doesnât give credit when itâs not warranted - say, denying his role in the directing, acting or storytelling. He doesnât embellish the accomplishments of whomever heâs praising, either.Rather, when an aspect of the film is mentioned that was acco mplished by someone else, Cooper gives specific credit to that person. This sounds insignificant, and maybe it should be, but such actions stand out in our society.This isnât entirely new. He went on âEllenâ over a year ago to talk about the movie while it was being made, and almost immediately, he answers Ellen DeGeneresâ âYouâve written, youâre directing, youâre starring in âA Star Is Bornââ by noting that he has two co-writers on the film.He then goes on to talk about how audiences will get to witness Lady Gagaâs talent, as well as how heâs learned how difficult singing is when you need to do it on camera. These are small things, but when people are asked to talk about yourself publicly, they tend to only talk about themselves.More recently, I saw Cooper deflecting Jimmy Fallonâs praise for having the No. 1 song on iTunes (âShallowâ) by noting the songwriters. This could just be the type of name-checking that you see at awards shows (âIâd like to thank my agent ⦠â, but Iâm not so sure. After all, most folks donât know or care who Mark Ronson is, nor do they care that Cooper only sang on the song and didnât compose it.If you accomplish something, stand up for it. Enjoy the praise! But itâs so easy to start taking credit for things you didnât do or start to think that you didnât have help along the way.Vision requires a collectivePerhaps more surprising to me is to hear the stories of âA Star Is Bornâ actors talking about how Cooperâs generosity as a screenwriter and a director.After all, he spent years thinking about this movie, securing the rights and funding, writing the script and songs, preparing to act and direct, soliciting cast members, ensuring the film slyly mentioned every predecessor. Cooper even spent months changing his voice to win over Sam Elliott.He potentially put his career on the line to remake a film that had last been attempted, rather inauspiciously, more than 40 years earlier. One might think heâs being a micromanager. And perhaps he was with certain things.But then you see Shangela of âRuPaulâs Drag Raceâ talk about getting to improv the drag bar scenes. Cooperâs real-life ear doctor, who has an early scene, says he was told to improv because â[y]ou know this stuff much better than whatever we wrote into the script.â If thatâs not enough, thereâs the interview with the woman who plays his assistant â" she told Vulture how Cooper encouraged her and other actors to build on the scripted dialogue.This direction Cooper provided wasnât just about freedom but also about a safe environment. Dave Chappelle has acted in many films, and he had one of the most famous and renowned comedy shows ever made. But âA Star is Bornâ was different for him:âThe way he directed me and the way we would talk about the scene, and the way he would create an environment that gave me the courage to actually be vulnerable in a way that comedy would never le t me be. I never felt threatened or unsafe.âEven Cooper felt free to disregard his own script at times. His vision appears to have been bigger than just the script.âThe one thing that I begged of everybody in the room here is to trust me,â Cooper said. âEven if the movie sucked ⦠they were going to be authentic no matter what.âNote that none of the characters mentioned above are, technically, essential to the movie. But they were essential to Cooperâs vision, and he told them so in his words and actions. When you have essential people, you want them to deliver their best. And so you guide them, but you also donât get in their way.Where are you taking credit when you shouldnât? Where can you take a moment to spotlight someone who is deserving but underappreciated?If you have authority and power, how can you deploy it to showcase the deserving people around you?James daSilva is the longtime editor of SmartBriefâs leadership newsletter and blog content, as well as n ewsletters for distributors, manufacturers and other fields. Before SmartBrief, he was a copy desk chief at a small daily New York newspaper. Contact him @James_daSilva or by email.This article first appeared on SmartBrief.
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