Skip to main content
March 24, 2025

Stephen Applebaum remembered

Nicol Wistreich

Stephen Applebaum, the best film interviewer I’ve known, died on February 7 2024 after his cancer returned. Netribution was incredibly lucky to publish his work for many years both online and in our books. Scrolling his Facebook page, it’s impossible not to be moved by the pictures and videos with his children and wife in his final months. They reveal a different Stephen to the man I first met at the Edinburgh Film Festival 2000 – longer haired, warm-eyed, and spectacled.

Portrait of Stephen Applebaum

I won’t pretend I knew him well, beyond one quite legendary evening at the festival that went from an unprintable story with a Hollywood A lister at a premiere party to a punch-up at the TV festival hotel bar. We met a few more times. But I knew some of his work intimately and always looked forward to reading his next submission, the interviews overflowed with insight. He seemed able to coax wisdom and fascinating stories from anyone he spoke with, he had that essential way of keeping them relaxed, I guess. Initially we paid him for a few reviews for FilmFestivals.com, but even when we had none, he continued to send us and upload Q&As that no-one else would publish. I’m not sure if it was so he could demonstrate to the publicists that the interview had been useful, or because he liked what we doing – either way we benefitted.

For Netribution 1 he brought Mark Ruffalo, Kelly Reilly and Michael White at the very start of their film careers, and Jack Cardif or John Boorman late in theirs.

In Netribution 2 he brought so much named talent and stars it made us look like a serious film journal with a budget, when we were completely no-budget bootstrapped. I was only just getting the hang of Netribution’s ‘CMS’ which meant writers could self-publish – and will never forget the night that he got the hang of it too – first an interview with Helena Bonham Carter appeared. Then Lexi Alexander, then Tim Burton. Then came Kevin Costner and Nicole Kidman – all exclusive interviews. I was in awe, and it was probably the pincacle of my experience with ‘user-generated content’ as it became to be known. It’s a great regret I never got to pay him for any of it.

But his impact was much wider – beyond his book on the Wicker Man, he gave Vidal Sassoon his last interview before he died, and managed to get countless confessions and intimate revelations from those he met over the years. He was the first film journalist I got to know, and he taught me a lot about the sometimes humiliating efforts to gain access from publicists, and engagement from interviewees. One I won’t forget is that if stuck for an opening question, he’d go for ‘what was the genesis of the film?’.

I don’t really know how to write a proper obituary for him. I can tell you he started as staff writer on VNU’s What Micro magazine, which you can read from his Blogspot. I haven’t yet figured out how best to memorialise a writer who would have had a public obituary long ago if he’d been film editor of a journal. But there’s nothing – and so for now, in nothing’s space, I’ll revisit his interviews over the coming months and republish some of the highlights and insight from them, starting with what he sent us in 2001.

Before I do, I have to share my biggest regret, of not making more effort to keep in contact with him, beyond the often hostile environment of social media. I didn’t even know he’d died until I checked his Facebook page late last year ahead of reaching out to him about Netribution’s 25th year. The shock of this in part motivated me trying to reach out to everyone I knew back then with this anniversary edition – so to finish here’s a somewhat cliché reminder to re-connect with anyone dear you’ve lost touch with, lest one day you can’t.

Remembering Stephen Applebaum, six interviews from 2001

Nicol Wistreich
Nicol Wistreich
24 posts
24 followers

Image of Nicol Wistreich

Nicol Wistreich


Comments (4)

  • Thank you so much for this lovely tribute. I’m his niece and sitting with his sister and mother. We have only just found this! Such kind words and lovely see he’s remembered and recognised for his professional works.

    • Dear Carly – thanks so much for your message, it means a lot. He was such a fantastic interviewer – I’m really sorry for you and your family’s loss

  • Hey Nicol. Stephen’s son here.

    Thank you for writing this. My dad was such a talented writer, deep thinker and so passionate about film and the arts. I’m glad he had such an impact through his work and I’m moved that you would take the time to write this in his memory.

    I think about him almost every day and I’m so glad there are things like this to further tell his story. It gives him life and enables me to continue to understand him even more, even in passing.

    Thank you 🙏🏼

    • Dear James – Pleased to meet you and thank you very much for his message. He really was such a talented writer and thinker – I regret I didn’t have the information to write a fuller obituary as he deserves. Your father was such an impressive interviewer and must have had lots of stories from his encounters. I cannot imagine how difficult it must have been for you and his other nearest to deal with such a quick and unexpected loss. I’m very pleased to have known him.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post’s permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post’s URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)