USA TODAY International Edition

Washington an action star in ‘ Tenet’

- Brian Truitt

He rushed for more than 3,500 yards at Morehouse College in the 2000s and was an NFL running back with the Rams for a spell. Still, all his football accomplish­ments didn’t prepare John David Washington for what he likes to call “Christophe­r Nolan training camp.”

Washington blossoms as an honestto- goodness big- screen action hero in Nolan’s mind- bending, physics- spouting spy thriller “Tenet” ( now showing nationwide where theaters are open), the “BlacKkKlan­sman” actor’s first bigbudget film and the first major movie to hit theaters shuttered by COVID- 19. Starring as a rookie secret agent known only as The Protagonis­t, who has to stop a Russian oligarch ( Kenneth Branagh) from dooming humanity, Washington had his mettle tested during several of Nolan’s signature action sequences.

“I’ll be honest, I was really confident about my athletic abilities and I was extremely confident that I would get the job done, maybe even underestim­ating how tumultuous that path to mastering inverted techniques would be because of my football background. But I learned the hard way and I learned early, too,” says Washington, 36, laughing.

Huge defensive linemen and linebacker­s tackling him is one thing. But bungee- jumping off a building – when he’s admittedly not very good with heights – is the sort of thing that challenges spirit and pride.

“This is it: I’m doing this for the art, I love it, and if this is the way to go, at least I did it on a Christoper Nolan set,” Washington recalls thinking. “I was scared.”

And because the film hinges on the concept of time inversion, Washington had to learn to say some of his lines backward and do fight scenes going forward and backward in time.

“I learned more about my body than I knew,” Washington says of that twomonth training process before filming started. “In football, you’re always taught to go forward, move the ball forward, as they say, ‘ move the chains.’ And in this case, moving the chains means going backwards. It means going the opposite of what you’re used to doing: Left means right, right means left. It was all these new rules of what success is.”

The actor, who’s the son of Denzel Washington, is still learning what that means in Hollywood, too. Growing up, he had small roles in two of his dad’s movies, Spike Lee’s “Malcolm X” ( 1992) and “Devil in a Blue Dress” ( 1995). A torn Achilles tendon in 2013 ended his football days but switched his focus to the family business: Washington starred opposite Dwayne Johnson in five seasons of HBO’s “Ballers,” playing a mercurial receiver in the twilight of his career, and scored Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild nomination­s for Spike Lee’s “BlacKkKlan­sman.”

Washington’s performanc­e, as a 1970s cop infiltrating the Ku Klux Klan, won Nolan over when he saw the film at

Cannes Film Festival and appreciate­d “the way he drew me into that story,” the director says. With “Tenet,” Nolan needed a powerful presence to carry the film and felt Washington’s athleticis­m did wonders: “The whole crew is there on set, watching this guy perform extraordin­ary things and just thinking, ‘ Wow.’ Suddenly, he owns the movie.”

Washington is “just one of the greatest collaborat­ors I’ve worked with: extraordin­arily hard- working, very, very thoughtful, and very considerat­e of everybody around him in the most wonderful way,” Nolan adds. That’s another lesson that his star learned on the football field: “I understand the importance of teamwork and how no one is bigger than the team,” Washington says. “We all listen to our head coach.”

Now if he could only see “Tenet” in a theater. His “dream” is to bring his family and friends to the cinema and watch it, “safely of course.” Washington already has his concession­s order ready: “Popcorn and Welch’s fruit snacks.”

While Hollywood is just getting around to restarting, Washington has been busy. He filmed a secret movie in quarantine, “Malcolm & Marie,” with “Euphoria” creator/ director Sam Levinson and co- star Zendaya.

“You can call it a passion project for a whole bunch of different reasons, especially given the time that we’re in now,” Washington says. He won’t divulge any plot points or a release date, but confirms that safety protocols were followed and “we really didn’t think about it when when we got going.”

Washington says he’s getting used to the new mask- wearing, social- distancing normal – and again, life comes back around to the gridiron.

“There’s no quick errand anymore. You’ve got to prepare to run an errand. You got to put your armor on,” he says. “Like when I used to play football, you can’t play without your helmet. That’s how I think about it: If I want to go play the game, I’ve got to wear my helmet.”

 ??  ?? Washington stars as a rookie secret agent known only as The Protagonis­t in the action thriller “Tenet.”
Washington stars as a rookie secret agent known only as The Protagonis­t in the action thriller “Tenet.”
 ??  ?? Christophe­r Nolan, center, goes over a scene with Clémence Poésy and John David Washington on the set of “Tenet.” PHOTOS COURTESY OF MELINDA SUE GORDON
Christophe­r Nolan, center, goes over a scene with Clémence Poésy and John David Washington on the set of “Tenet.” PHOTOS COURTESY OF MELINDA SUE GORDON

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