Bruce Springsteen is reliving his glory days on set.
But the singer, 75, got candid on which scenes he stayed away from in Jeremy Allen White’s portrayal in the upcoming biopic, “Deliver Me From Nowhere.”
“If there was a scene coming up that was sometimes really deeply personal, I wanted the actors to feel completely free, and I didn’t want to get in the way, and so I would just stay at home,” Springsteen revealed in an interview with Rolling Stone published Thursday.
The icon added, “If Scott Cooper, the director, wanted or needed me there for something, I would try to make it. But I was on tour in Canada for the whole first month or so of the filming, and so I was really out on the road quite a bit and working at that time.”
Springsteen went on to praise White, 34, for being “very, very tolerant of me the days that I would appear on the set,” while also noting the project includes “some of the most painful days of my life.”
While on set, the musician told “The Bear” star, “Look, anytime I’m in the way, just give me the look and I’m on my way home. The days that I got out there, he was wonderfully tolerant with me being there. And it was just fun. It was enjoyable.”
The biopic follows Springsteen’s upbringing in Freehold, N.J., and the making of his 1982 album “Nebraska.”
The movie hits theaters Oct. 24 and includes Jeremy Strong as Springsteen’s producer and manager, Jon Landau, Stephen Graham as the rocker’s father, Douglas, Paul Walter Hauser as Mike Batlan, who created a set-up for Springsteen to record his music in his bedroom, and Marc Maron as Chuck Plotkin, the producer who mastered the songs on the album.
When the outlet asked the Grammy winner if he would consider performing “Nebraska” in order to promote the film, Springsteen wasn’t fully on board.
“I doubt I’ll do it,” he confessed, “but I could possibly go out and play that record straight through one day. I think that would be fun to do, and the fans would get a kick out of it. That’s not off the table.”
In October, the Boss appeared on the British chat show “The Graham Norton Show” where he gushed over the film’s “lovely cast” and told Norton, 62, he’s “involved a little in the project.”
“This is not easy to do because you can’t do an imitation, you have to do a personal interpretation,” Springsteen explained about White stepping into his footsteps. “It’s difficult, but he is a great actor and sings pretty good.”
During an August interview with GQ, the “Shameless” alum gushed over the musician being “really supportive of the film”
“I’ve had some access to him, and he’s just the greatest guy,” he shared.
The trailer dropped on Wednesday, and starts with Springsteen looking to buy a new car before the salesman recognizes him.
Springsteen replied, “Well that makes one of us.”
Then, the young singer is recording a song in his room, telling the engineer: “It don’t need to be perfect. I want it to feel like I’m in the room by myself.”
The clip also shows Landau going to bat for his artist in a room full of music label execs.
“This isn’t about either one of us. This isn’t about the charts. This is about Bruce Springsteen,” he said. “And these are the songs that he wants to work on right now.”
“Bruce is a repairman and what he is doing with this album is he’s repairing that hole in his floor,” a voiceover noted in the trailer. “He’s repairing that hole in himself. And once he’s done that, he’s going to repair the entire world.”
“I’m trying to find something in all them worries,” Springsteen added.