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‘HE BECAME MY DAD…’ 😢 — When Bruce Springsteen Sat Down To Watch Deliver Me From Nowhere, He Expected A Film About Music

  • byJasmin
  • November 10, 2025
  • 3 minute read
bruce springsteen
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bruce-theboss-springsteen · Bruce Springsteen

Bruce Springsteen has never shied away from putting his life — and the people who shaped it — into his art. But even for “The Boss,” seeing his father come to life on screen proved to be an unexpectedly emotional experience.

In a recent interview following the first screening of Deliver Me From Nowhere, the rock legend praised actor Stephen Graham for his raw and deeply human portrayal of Springsteen’s late father, Douglas Springsteen. The film, inspired by Warren Zanes’ acclaimed book of the same name, explores the making of Nebraska — one of Springsteen’s most haunting and introspective albums, written during a period marked by tension, isolation, and the lingering shadows of his complicated relationship with his father.

“Stephen didn’t just play my dad,” Springsteen told Rolling Stone. “He became him. He just naturally inhabited his skin — the stillness, the quiet fury, the sadness. It was uncanny. Watching him felt like seeing my father again, sitting in that kitchen with a cigarette burning down to the filter.”

Bruce Springsteen Hails Stephen Graham's Portrayal of His 'Troubled' Father  in 'Deliver Me From Nowhere': He 'Just Naturally Inhabited His Skin'

Graham, best known for his roles in This Is England and Boardwalk Empire, has earned widespread praise for capturing the complexity of Douglas Springsteen — a man both hardened by life and haunted by his own silence. Critics who attended early screenings say the British actor delivers one of his most nuanced performances to date, portraying not just a father’s anger but the vulnerability beneath it.

“Bruce’s relationship with his father is the emotional spine of the story,” director Scott Cooper explained. “Stephen understood that from the very first read. He brought empathy to a character who could’ve easily been portrayed as cold or distant. Instead, you see a man who’s trying — and failing — to love his son the only way he knows how.”

The movie’s title, Deliver Me From Nowhere, references a lyric from Nebraska, an album that famously stripped away the rock bravado of Born to Run and replaced it with stark storytelling and haunting solitude. Springsteen recorded it alone on a four-track cassette recorder, channeling characters on the margins of American life — but at its core, the songs reflected his own battle with identity and inherited pain.

“I think making Nebraska was the first time I really faced the ghost of my dad,” Springsteen said. “There was love there, but it was buried under years of misunderstanding. Stephen’s performance reminded me of that — the distance, the quiet longing, the feeling that maybe you were both standing in the same room but worlds apart.”

Bruce Springsteen praises Stephen Graham for portrayal of his late father |  news.com.au — Australia's leading news site for latest headlines

Co-starring Jeremy Allen White as a younger Springsteen, the film traces both the creative process behind Nebraska and the emotional reckoning that came with it. It paints a portrait of an artist at a crossroads — a man torn between fame and solitude, light and darkness, father and son.

Early reactions suggest Deliver Me From Nowhere could become an awards contender, with Graham’s name already generating Oscar buzz. For Springsteen, however, the impact goes far beyond accolades.

“Art is funny,” he reflected. “Sometimes someone else’s performance helps you see your own life a little clearer. Stephen did that for me. Watching him reminded me of forgiveness, of empathy — of what it means to look at someone who’s gone and finally understand who they were.”

With Deliver Me From Nowhere set for a wide release later this year, audiences will soon witness the deeply personal story

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— Previous article

THE NIGHT THE DUET DIED: Loretta Lynn’s Final Song Beside Conway Twitty Still Haunts Country Music — A Goodbye the World Never Saw Coming.Saw Coming. It happened quietly, without fanfare — a night that began like so many others for two of country music’s greatest voices, and ended as the closing chapter of one of its most beloved partnerships. When Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty walked onstage together for the final time, no one in the crowd realized they were witnessing the end of an era — the night the duet, as the world knew it, died. The year was 1988. The place: Nashville, under the soft golden lights of a charity concert meant to celebrate country’s classic voices. Loretta and Conway had performed together hundreds of times, their chemistry effortless, their harmonies as natural as breathing. But that night, something felt different. Loretta was quiet backstage — not nervous, but reflective. Conway, too, seemed distant, pacing the hallway with a look that friends later described as “heavy, like he knew something the rest of us didn’t.” When they took the stage and the opening chords of “Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man” filled the room, the audience erupted. For a moment, time folded back — the magic, the laughter, the playful glances that defined their duets returned as if nothing had changed. But then came their final song: a tender, stripped-down version of “Feelins’.” The crowd fell silent as they began. Loretta’s voice quivered just slightly; Conway’s baritone softened, trembling with something unsaid. Their eyes met for a moment longer than the lyrics required — two souls bound by music, by friendship, and by years of shared triumph and heartache. When the last note faded, they didn’t bow. They simply stood there — looking at each other, smiling through tears — before walking offstage hand in hand. “That was the last time,” Loretta later told a friend. “We didn’t know it, but maybe we did. It felt like goodbye.” Just months later, Conway Twitty would fall ill and pass away unexpectedly in 1993, leaving Loretta shattered and the country music world in mourning. She would go on to perform again, of course, but she never truly sang those duets again — not the way she did when Conway was beside her. In the years that followed, that final performance became legend. Fans still trade bootleg tapes and faded photographs, calling it “the night the duet died” — not because the music ended, but because something sacred was lost with it. “There’ll never be another Conway,” Loretta once said softly in an interview. “And there’ll never be another us.” Their voices — hers like sunlight through lace, his like a river’s low hum — blended in a way that no producer could recreate and no era could replace. Together, they gave the world songs of love, laughter, and longing that felt achingly real because they were real. Now, decades later, when “After the Fire Is Gone” or “Feelins’” plays on the radio, there’s a pause — a quiet ache that sweeps over anyone who remembers. Because deep down, everyone who loved them knows: that night in Nashville wasn’t just a concert. It was a farewell whispered in harmony — the sound of two legends singing their last truth. And when they walked off that stage, country music was never the same again. Video

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At 75, Bruce Springsteen has traded roaring stadiums for bedtime stories and bike rides with his grandchildren. Once known for his electrifying performances, The Boss now finds his greatest joy in family life — quiet mornings, laughter-filled afternoons, and tender moments that fame could never buy. Friends say he’s never been happier, embracing a softer, more soulful rhythm far from the spotlight. For fans, it’s a touching revelation: the rock icon who once sang about running free has finally found peace at home — living his greatest encore as a devoted father and grandfather.

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