
Michael Stipe has suggested that Billie Eilish could play him in a future R.E.M. biopic.
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His pitch came during his appearance on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert on Thursday (April 23), when Colbert raised the topic of a potential R.E.M. film, given the slew of musician biopics cropping up in recent years.
Colbert asked Stipe who would take on the role, saying “It’s got to be David Cross,” to play bearded Stipe, before the two wondered who could play his younger self.
“Maybe Billie Eilish could do it,” Stipe suggested. “She’d be good,” Colbert agreed. “You guys got similar blue eyes there.”
When asked whether they had ever met, Stipe said Eilish had once held a door for him at a restaurant in Manhattan. “She’s incredibly polite and sweet, but I didn’t know who she was until she was down the street.”
Watch the interview below.
Also on the show, Stipe attempted to describe the sound of his new album. “One of the songs is the sound of a tree hearing itself for the first time,” he said. “It’s this confusing situation. My friend recorded a tree in my backyard in Georgia and played it back to itself, and so it sounds like Daft Punk, but I’m putting a sea shanty [in the song].”
He later gave a live debut to a new solo song, ‘The Rest Of Ever’, which sees him earnestly addressing a loved one, embracing the deep huskiness of his current vocal register.
The legendary singer has been working on his first full solo album for several years and while he has said in recent weeks that it has taken “longer than I wanted”, he has said he is now adding the finishing touches to the record, and has said it should be out in 2026.
Previous Stipe solo releases include the 2019 single ‘Your Capricious Soul’ and ‘Drive To The Ocean’ the following year. He also released ‘No Time For Love Like Now’ with Aaron Dessner’s Big Red Machine in 2020.
Last month, he also joined forces with Andrew Watt, Josh Klinghoffer and Travis Barker to share the new theme song for the show Rooster.
By all accounts, Stipe remains on good terms with his former R.E.M. bandmates – guitarist Peter Buck, bassist Mike Mills and drummer Bill Berry – and they appeared together in summer 2024 when they were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
The band split amicably in 2011, while Berry had left the group during the height of their commercial success in 1997. However, at the ceremony, the quartet gave a surprise acoustic performance of their 1991 classic ‘Losing My Religion’. That marked the first time the four played live together since their 2007 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction.
Last month, Stipe joined Michael Shannon and Jason Narducy at one of their ‘Lifes Rich Pageant’ 40th anniversary tour shows in Brooklyn. They played versions of R.E.M.’s ‘These Days’ and ‘The Great Beyond’. A year ago, he also sang ‘Pretty Persuasion’ with them.
Stipe has also been clarifying lyrics from ‘It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)’ on Bluesky, revealing that many fans have been getting some of the lines wrong for decades.