‘The Blacklist’: Notoriously Private Star James Spader Used to Carry a Bag of Antacids to ‘Any Sort of Public Appearance’
NBCβs The Blacklist couldnβt survive without leading man James Spader as the ever-charming criminal Raymond βRedβ Reddington. While Spader plays a confident conman on TV, he once revealed a fear of public appearances so bad, he toted around a bag of antacids. The star has zero online presence and doesnβt take part in much of The Blacklistβs off-camera shenanigans proving Spader is more mysterious than Red himself (and weβre OK with it).
βThe Blacklistβ star James Spader rarely does interviews

Thereβs no debate β Spader is The Blacklist. Without his role as the FBIβs criminal informant, weβd never hear him wax poetic about βa little village off the coast ofβ¦β in any given episode. Acting is one thing, but Spader himself doesnβt make a lot of appearances but not because heβs too pretentious or important.
As the man typically absent from cast events and interviews, Spader has spoken in various interviews as to why he keeps a low profile. Just before the season 8 finale, Amir Arison, Megan Boone, Harry Lennix, Diego Klattenhoff, and Laura Sohn filmed a bit answering fan questions and once again, Spader wasnβt a part of it.
As the leading role, executive producer, and linguist of the show, Spader has his hands full. But interviews for the Sex, Lies, and Videotape star are few and far between. Aside from the sporadic talk show, youβll be hard-pressed to find much content from Red himself over the last few years. As it turns out, itβs not by coincidence.
Spader once revealed he carried bags of TUMs
In a resurfaced 1994 interview with David Letterman, a younger Spader walked onto the set with a bag of TUMs. When asked why he had them, the star revealed he doesnβt care for βany sort of public appearance.β Letterman poked at the sentiment but Spader held strong stating that premieres βdrive me crazy.β
βAnything where thereβs any sort of flashing lights at you,β he said. βMy wife and I are just pathetic, you know. We arrive at a premiere and you walk out of the car and thereβs immediately bright flashing lights in your eyes and you take a dose of anti-seizure medicineβ
He continued: βItβs sort of sad the way I walked out here,β he said. βI have that sort of fixed grin; the deer-in-the-headlights kind of look. If they ever need to shoot immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, my wife and I would be the perfect candidates.β
Itβs been 27 years since that interview but the Blacklist star appears to feel the same anxiety today. This is likely why he doesnβt do a lot of press, despite the demand.
βThe Blacklistβ star thinks thereβs a βsearch engineβ in himself for eccentricities
All isnβt lost on Spader on why heβs considered one of Hollywoodβs most elusive and eccentric. His wild upbringing has a little to do with that, but his work in Hollywood plays to those strengths. In a 2016 interview with Stephen Colbert, he explained why he believes heβs sent specific projects because of his renowned eccentricities.
βI look for that in my life,β he said. βI always look for the eccentric; the strange. Iβm definitely one of those people on the street when thereβs something strange and maybe even disturbing going on in the street, I tend to be drawn to it.β
He added that he canβt help himself but allow the βpeculiaritiesβ of the characters to be the thing that is most compelling and interesting to me.β
In terms of playing Reddington, Spader noted that he respects the role because [Red] has aβ lack of fear; a fearlessness.β And, if youβre wondering why Spader isnβt on social media, he thinks βthe devil has more important things to do,β other than motivate him to speak about his life online.
Sorry, blacklisters but if youβre looking for more from Red, it wonβt be from a tweet.