Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - Extended cut: Dakota Johnson on her new doc, childhood, and curating a sex museum
Episode Date: December 11, 2023Today we're giving you a chance to hear an episode that we'd usually share with our Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me+ supporters! It's an extended cut of our interview with actor, producer, and activist Dak...ota Johnson, whose new documentary is The Disappearance of Shere Hite. That's right — an extended cut. Our celebrity interviews sometimes last much longer than what we're able to include in our regular show. Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me+ supporters can hear extended cuts in regular bonus episodes. They also get a chance to play a special news quiz game over zoom with Peter Sagal and Wait Wait staffer! To find out more, and to hear our regular show without sponsor messages, sign up for Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me+ at plus.npr.orgLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, it's Peter Sagal. So it's the season of giving, right? And we at Wait, Wait, of course,
are in a giving mood. So we're here with an episode that we would normally only share with
our Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Plus supporters. But this spirit of Christmas visited me in my
sleep last night, and all of a sudden I have a new perspective. So we're going to share it with everyone. It is an extended cut of our recent interview with actor, producer,
and activist Dakota Johnson. That's right, an extended cut. In our regular show, we normally
have time to broadcast about six or seven minutes of our celebrity interviews. Got a lot else we
need to do, right? But often we bother those celebrities
for much longer. And Dakota Johnson was very kind and she let us do that. We asked her more about
her work on the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy, her movie star parents and grandparents,
Tippi Hedren, anyone? And her new documentary about the legacy of feminist sex researcher
Cher Haidt. It's called The Disappearance
of Cher Haidt. And just a little editorial comment here. It is really interesting, and I highly
recommend you watch it. So now is a good time to tell you, if you hadn't figured it out already,
that this conversation does, shall we say, linger on the subject of sex. So here it is,
our interview with Dakota Johnson,
and you might hear panelists Adam Felber, Joyelle Nicole Johnson, and Alonzo Bowden as well.
Thank you for being with us. I, you know, I like old Hollywood stories and I'm just
amazed by, I don't know what to call it, but your pedigree. Your grandmother was Tippi Hedren,
who is, of course, a star back in the day.
She starred in The Birds. Your mother, Melanie Griffith. Your father, Don Johnson. They broke up,
and then your mother married Antonio Banderas. So you grew up, I don't know how to put it,
and like with the A-list. I just have to ask, what was that like, if you can even, like, put a description to it? Well, I would tell you different things that
I tell my therapist. Okay. I have young children right now, and I know that for young children,
the world is just the world around them. They just assume that's what the world is like. So,
for young children, the world is just the world around them. They just assume that's what the world is like. So how old were you when you realized that not everybody's parents were,
for example, photographed by paparazzi whenever they went out in public? I mean, that your life
was unusual. Yeah, that, yes, that was obvious. That was a tricky thing to have to try to
understand as a child because, you know, I I think you you innately feel scared when somebody
comes at you with a camera you know it's not it's not a very normal thing to have to deal with and
it's certainly not normal to have your family talked about in the tabloids or in the news you
know and that was always difficult but I guess it is true you know that's what I knew so I also I was in
school when we were in Los Angeles I was enrolled in a school and I um had friends there and I
I had a I had a pretty stable upbringing for how unstable it was right that makes sense that kind
of does I read once in
an interview you said you had you but you never had any doubt that you wanted to go into the
business to into entertainment to be an actor or performer i was i was desperate from really one
really you looked around you're like looking at mom dad and you're like that's what i want to do
i couldn't wait i was always like trying on her wardrobe and the trailer and trying on her gowns and dresses,
you know, I couldn't wait. And I was studying everybody always. I was always wanting to watch
on set and I was always wanting to be behind the monitors and watch them and, you know,
be in the hair and makeup trailer. I just was obsessed with everything that they did.
Wow. That's really, now there's
sort of two related questions though. The first is in addition to of course, living with your
parents, you also saw them on screens. You saw them on big films and television shows. Was that
unusual to see your mom say, just be someone entirely different? I'm thinking again of you as a young child.
I think I had a funny, you know, it's interesting because a few nights ago,
my friend is one of the kind of founders of Vidiot, this organization in LA that hosts screenings of movies and they sometimes have people come and do Q and A's and things. And
they were showing Working Girl. So he asked me if my mom would go. So I brought her and we watched the movie and she hadn't seen the movie
in 35 years since it came out, since she was at the premiere. And we watched the movie together
with an audience and people were dying for her. They were like whooping and screaming and clapping.
And she felt so blown away by it she was so caught off guard and
I was watching her performance and I think when I was younger watching her didn't it didn't like
I don't know there's something so so special about her and her artistry and the way she performs and
it's almost like devastating in the most beautiful way.
And I think when I was younger, I was like,
yeah, that's my mom, and I can tell that she's really good,
but that's my mom, so okay, let's move on,
and I'd rather watch some other...
Could you offend your parents?
Your parents are like, oh, your dad's like,
oh, Nash Bridges is on tonight.
You're like, yeah, no.
Yeah, I'd rather watch the OC dad.
You know, I was still a kid.
It's a kind of rebellion.
All right.
Related.
I'm sorry.
Please go ahead.
But watching her now as a woman,
I think is a very different experience.
You mean the fact that you're a woman
as opposed to a little child? Yes. Right. That's what I meant. Well, yeah, okay. She's always been a woman. Yes.
I remember. I've seen her in films. It must have been, especially thinking of your grandmother,
Tippi Hedren, who lets, I mean, my understanding is that she was more or less,
because she didn't want to give in to our Alfred Hitchcock, shall we say, attentions,
her career was over. It must have been that you were, you must have had your guard up going,
let me put it this way, did you feel prepared for what fame and stardom
might bring to you because of the experience of your relatives?
fame and stardom might bring to you because of the experience of your relatives?
In some ways, but I think social media plays a very different part in that these days. And they didn't have to handle it.
They didn't have to deal with that.
My grandmother, especially, was more, she was a movie star when she was on a red carpet.
But when she was walking down the street,
she was walking down the street, you know.
Yeah.
Whatever she had to deal with, she never became a meme.
She never became a meme.
Sometimes now she's a meme with like the photos of the tigers
jumping through the window of her house.
But that's when she took a different career.
I should point out to people who do not know that that was not an obscure sequel to the birds, the tigers. That is something that Tippi Hedren has devoted her life to,
to providing sanctuary for wild animals. So there you are.
Yes. Let me ask you about Fifty Shades of Grey.
I want to get to what you're doing now, which is fascinating. So going back to the early 2010s, Fifty Shades of Grey,
huge literary sensation, biggest bestseller.
Everybody knew the movie was going to be enormous.
So when you went up for the role,
did you know what it would do if you got it?
And were you ready for that?
if you got it and you were you ready for that um I don't think I had a full grasp of what it would do and I don't think that I was fully ready for it yeah but I I I guess I understood on some level
that it was going I mean the hope was that it would be a that it would be a hit and that it
would be good because you know know, I think that's
what you want. You want your work to end up being good. It doesn't always, but I don't know. I guess
to an extent, I understood that it would be popular because the books were so popular. And
I think people were so speculative. They were so curious about what it would be like that that was a lot of where the drive to the cinema came from I think but um no I don't I
don't think there's a a way to be fully fully prepared for that yeah I I I can't imagine but
I also thought that if anybody might be it might be you, given the experience in your family, but did your parents
or step-parents or anybody have any advice for you as that portion of your life began? Like,
okay, this is going to happen. You got to be ready. My grandmother, you know, I had never done a big,
I didn't, I had never done big press junkets or a press tour or anything like that.
And she was like, you know, you're going to get asked a lot of questions.
And sometimes someone will ask you a question.
But you don't always have to answer just because somebody asked.
Right.
And I was like, oh, okay.
So I'll just be quiet.
And I remember having these, like, really uncomfortable moments where I didn't want to answer a question so I'd say
absolutely nothing like not a word and the person thought that I was malfunctioning or like having
yeah that's not allowed you're supposed to blather mindlessly don't you know the rules
or you're supposed to say some like really clever response that answers but doesn't answer and then tells the person that you're not answering the question and to move on or get out.
Right.
You know?
And you just sat and stared at them in silent judgment.
Yeah, I was just like, well, she said to not say anything if I didn't want to say anything, so I'm not going to say anything.
say anything if I didn't want to say anything,
so I'm not going to say anything.
I'm also guessing that the junkets for the Fifty Shades movies had more than the
usual share of questions that you don't want to answer,
right? Yes, especially
in certain countries. Like, Germany
was weird.
Yeah, I bet.
Can you tell us more,
Fraulein, about that?
Of all the countries, Germany was the weirdest?
I would like to show you a video and get your reaction to it.
I made it myself.
Scary.
I actually had not seen the movie, I'm going to confess,
so I watched it this week.
Are you okay?
I'm fine. I'm fine. I'm going to confess. So I watched it this week. Oh. And, and, Are you okay? I'm fine.
I'm fine.
I'm okay.
One of the,
one of the many things,
Well,
you said that while you were covering your face.
Oh my God.
I forgot.
He forgot she could see you.
He can see you.
He's black.
I was about to say,
I,
I didn't,
I forgot for a moment that she could see me while I was having a personal moment
but I realized it's only turnabout is fair play
I guess
anyway
one of the many things amazing is like
I have never seen a movie with better production design
in my life
put aside the sex
that cannot be true
no really
that's insane. No, like
Christian's apartment is amazing.
Have I just not been around
enough? I don't know. I mean,
have you ever seen another movie?
I can't.
Really? Oh, wait a minute.
Dakota, can I say I think you're prepared for any question.
Yeah, I know.
Wait a minute, if I understand correctly,
I'm just supposed to stare at you in silence now.
Wait a minute, no, I was going to go someplace else,
but are you saying that you do not think
the quality of the filmmaking was top-notch?
Is that what you're saying?
I do. Of course I think it was very well done i do i think it's the best production design of all time no okay that's
fair that's fair i i was just going to ask if you kept anything from the set like you know a
particularly nice flogger i have no idea actually yeah you yeah. You did? What did you keep?
A particularly nice flogger.
Of course.
Jamie Dornan, who plays Christian Grey in the movies,
he had a flogger framed for me and gave it to me as a wrap gift.
He framed a flogger for you?
Yeah.
I was like, well, what use is that?
Right? Yeah.
Get it out.
I assume it's like in one of those display boxes. Does it have like an
in case of really saucy times, break glass?
Yeah.
It was like something
funny from the shoot,
I think, that was engraved
in the, yes, it was like a nice case. I don't know.
It's in my garage somewhere.
Somewhere.
You know, with all the other floggers.
I have to say, I'm still stuck on the production
design question, too.
It wasn't Dune.
There was a movie with some production design.
But it looked really nice. It was a nice No. There was a movie with some production design. But it looked really nice.
He was in a nice apartment.
It was a guy's apartment.
He reads Playboy for the articles.
Yeah.
I do want you to know, Dakota, though,
that before I sat down to watch Fifty Shades,
because, you know, I'm talking to you,
I actually, the first thing I made sure to do was watch your new documentary,
The Disappearance of Cher Haidt, which you produced,
and also you provide the voice of Cher Haidt reading her work.
And it's absolutely fascinating, especially to me,
because I'm old enough to have been around during the 70s and 80s
when Cher Haidt was very well known.
Can you tell us who Cher Height was and
why you wanted to participate in this documentary about her? Yeah, so Cher Height was a sex
researcher, educator, and she really specialized in female sexuality. And she wrote this book
called The Height Report, which is the 30th bestseller on
the New York Times list. Of all time. Of all time. And most people don't know who she is.
And I found that incredibly fascinating because she essentially gathered quantifiable data that suggested or proved that the female orgasm is
incredibly complex and way more complex than that of a male's and that female sexuality is very
different from male sexuality and she was just publicly silenced over and over again she was
criticized she was totally shut down and basically blotted out
of history. And she became so, you know, she was really passionate about, uh, trying to educate
people and just show that this was real and that women's bodies and sexuality is a different,
is a whole different ball game. And,. And she got fed up with it.
It's called The Disappearance of Sher Haidt,
and she disappeared to Germany.
Where we've already established people are totally cool
with all that stuff.
Yeah, so I guess it worked out there.
And then, you know, sadly she died in 2020
and so then
this documentary came along
and
Nicole Noonan who directed
Crip Camp which is another
incredible documentary
she directed it
she came to us and asked if we would
produce it with her and if I would do the voiceover for Cher.
And I think she came to me because of my work in sexual wellness.
I am the co-creative director of a sexual wellness company called MAUD,
which is Sustainable Affordable Quality Sexual Wellness Products.
Right. And I was going to ask you about that.
I assume you called it Maud just to capture
the incredible erotic energy of Bay Arthur.
Precisely.
Precisely.
Precisely that.
You've actually, I mean it's interesting because
your big movies, the ones
that really sort of lifted you up were these
Fifty Shades of Grey movies,
which one might argue are sort of a more fantastical view of sexuality.
And you've really gotten into sort of like sexual education and this researcher who was all about the actual facts of it.
And was that in any way like a reaction to the fact
that you were known for this kind of approach to, I don't know, sexuality
and you wanted to sort of lean into the reality of it?
Or was it just something you'd always been interested in?
Well, I think having done those movies and been able to,
like I was interested in those films because of the dynamic between the two people.
And that was very intriguing to me.
And then from that, having so many conversations over the years
with people about sexuality and how different preferences
are different preferences, and as long as it's consensual,
it's all okay, and as long as you're not hurting anybody
without their consent.
Yes, yeah.
I like that.
You know, it's, I guess I have an ease in talking about it,
and I think that it should be talked about.
I think sexual wellness should be more accessible.
I think people should be able to take care of their bodies in that way,
just like they take care of, you know, they take their daily vitamins.
Like, it's all a part of us.
So when I started working with Maud,
I guess it is something that I'm incredibly interested in
and passionate about.
And I'm also beyond perplexed
that this is still a conversation we're having today.
Right.
That does seem strange.
I mean, it's weird.
I was watching the Cher Height movie and people were reacting
this all happens on film
this is documentary right
of people with such you know
ignorance and
prejudice and stubbornness
to what she was telling which was the truth
and I'm like I remember that happening
that was like in my adult lifetime when that happened it It wasn't that long ago. Did you know about, did you know who she
was? Yes. As a matter, I do, I didn't know who Cher Height was. I remember the Height Report being
everywhere. Of course, I was kind of young, so I didn't read it. But I also remember the period
that the movie gets into where she was discredited. I'm making, you can see me, I'm making air quotes.
Yes, right? Yeah. Discredited and perceived as being kind of nuts or crazy
or something like that,
and essentially driven out of polite society.
And if you had asked me who Cher Hite was
before I saw this movie, I would have said,
yeah, oh yeah, she was the sex researcher,
she was making it all up or something,
because I just absorbed that.
And so seeing that movie was like a really
almost frightening reminder of how like, like backwards we have been quite recently.
Or currently.
Yeah, there's that.
You actually, you also, I found out,
you actually curated an exhibit
in the new Museum of Sex in Miami.
Yes.
So this, I mean, it's a funny thing because obviously all of this ties together in my life.
Like sexual wellness has become a form of my activism and I'm very proud of that and I am here for it 100%.
So we had this opportunity to curate an exhibit in the Museum of Sex, which is opening in Miami next week.
And our exhibit is 100 Years of Design and Decency. And what's really fascinating about
going through and curating this exhibit is that, you know, for as long as a sex device like a vibrator has been around it has been marketed as um it can't
be marketed as a female orgasm tool it cannot be marketed as like in the you know when in the
exhibit we go through decades and first of all the the devices look like they you would work on your car with them
so scary looking and they're marketed as like an all-body device or a facial massager and but
really you knew what it was for i do remember i'm also old enough to remember like the old
sharper image catalogs like oh personal massager And there was a woman like holding the thing against her upper arm with
a weirdly, weirdly broad smile on her face. And I'm like, I'm like 11 years old. I'm going,
is her arm that sore? She must do a lot of typing. Yeah. Yeah, but the thing that's so interesting
is that they didn't market it
as a device for female sexuality.
And today, you know,
you can advertise about condoms,
you can advertise about erectile dysfunction,
but you still cannot advertise
about vibrators or female sexual devices.
Well...
And it's astonishing.
Well, fortunately, we can talk about them here.
Well, here I am.
Here you are.
I know.
I got to ask you one last thing.
You got to be a superhero.
I sure did.
You sure did.
You've got a new superhero movie coming out, Madam Web, right?
Yes.
What do you have?
There's also vibrators in that movie.
There is?
Oh, gosh.
So wait a minute.
So basically it's a consistent theme.
So you're doing this vibrator exhibit.
You've got the documentary about the sexual educator.
There's no vibrators in Madam Web.
It's a Marvel movie.
Damn it!
I was...
I just... What kind of madam did you think we were...
I'm just thinking that could be a great idea.
I mean, I know they're running out of superheroes.
Right?
So, like, the human vibrator.
Right?
I volunteer as tribute.
Oh, there you go.
She's cornered by the supervillain.
What's she going to do?
All of a sudden, he's very distracted.
Thanks again to Dakota Johnson,
who is an extremely impressive person in many ways. For more extended cuts of our celebrity interviews, sign up for Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Plus.
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