.A Controlled Performance

United 93's Ben Sliney, as played by an actor who understood the role.

Midway through last April’s press screening of Paul Greengrass’s United 93, I made a mental note to watch the end credits for the name of the actor playing Ben Sliney, the national operations manager of the Federal Aviation Administration’s command center in Herndon, Virginia. On September 11, 2001, it was Sliney who issued a nationwide grounding of all air traffic in the moments following the crash of United Airlines Flight 175 into the second tower of the World Trade Center. Later, when American Airlines Flight 77 struck the Pentagon, he ordered all inbound flights to land immediately, regardless of their final destinations.

Both were unprecedented actions, and in a movie devoid of movie stars or outsize heroes, it’s the character of Sliney who provides the strongest point of connection for the audience. So who was this graying character actor inhabiting the role with such natural authority, making split-second decisions in the heat of the moment without losing his cool, the very embodiment of the professionalism to which Greengrass’ film is, in part, a kind of tribute? None other than Ben Sliney.

It’s an unseasonably warm January afternoon when I meet Sliney over a lunch of fresh deli sandwiches at the Long Island home he shares with his wife, Irene. Sliney retired in 2006, and the cold cuts are one of the things that brought him back to New York, where the Boston native began his career in air-traffic control in the 1970s and later practiced law for two decades before returning to the FAA in 2000. “It was too rural,” he says of Virginia in his boisterous, straight-talking way. “There are no delis. There are no butchers. There are no bakers. You buy everything in a supermarket, which was really alien to me. I couldn’t take it. I don’t want to go south of the Hudson again if I don’t have to.”

Sliney never planned on acting in United 93, having traveled to the film’s London set to serve as a technical adviser. But when Greengrass asked him if he’d play a small role as one of the movie’s New York-based air-traffic controllers, he agreed, and ended up showing an affinity for his director’s improvisational methods.

Meanwhile, for the professional actor cast to play Sliney — the thirty-year-old, six-foot-four, blond-haired and blue-eyed Tim Carr who, the 61-year-old Sliney jokes, “looked just like me” — things weren’t going as smoothly. “He had a hard time, I guess, adjusting to that style,” Sliney says. “There was no script, so you were just reacting to different stimuli. Of course, the stimuli were all familiar to me. I had something to say no matter what they threw at me.” After the production had shot for two full days with Carr, Sliney awoke the next morning to find a note under his door. “It said, ‘Can you please bring your suit and your shoes to the set?’ It was from [associate producer Mike] Bronner, and at the bottom he wrote, ‘This is not a test, this is not a drill,’ which is a line from the Air Force scene in the picture. I knew then that they wanted me to play myself.”

Sliney is hardly the first nonactor to step into his own shoes for a movie role: Cambodian refugee Dr. Haing S. Ngor won an Academy Award for playing himself in 1984’s The Killing Fields, while ousted American Idol finalist Jennifer Hudson has just been nominated for playing relatively close to the bone in Dreamgirls. And lest you think that playing yourself is a cinch, I suggest you compare Muhammad Ali’s performance in the 1977 biopic The Greatest to Will Smith’s in Ali and tell me who delivers the more compelling impersonation.

My point is that Sliney is very, very good, and that he possesses the sort of innate love of performing that cannot be faked. “With the camera, I didn’t really notice it at all,” he recalls. “In fact, on a couple of takes, I whipped around and almost ran into the camera guy.”

As to the obvious question: Having done it once, has Sliney been bitten by the acting bug? “I’d love to try it again. I didn’t think I did, but now I think it’s a lot of fun. You know what the truly remarkable thing is — second to flying first class on Universal’s ticket? You see the whole scene being shot that you’re in, and you see other scenes being shot. But then to see the final project, how they put it all together — that to me was fascinating. That’s the art.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

East Bay Express E-edition East Bay Express E-edition
19,045FansLike
14,611FollowersFollow
61,790FollowersFollow
spot_img