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Ariana Grande & Ethan Slater, "Wicked" Co-Star She Allegedly Began Dating Before His Divorce, Remain Together Despite Breakup Rumors
Celebrity News

Ariana Grande & Ethan Slater, “Wicked” Co-Star She Allegedly Began Dating Before His Divorce, Remain Together Despite Breakup Rumors

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Ariana Grande & Ethan Slater, “Wicked” Co-Star She Allegedly Began Dating Before His Divorce, Remain Together Despite Breakup Rumors

Despite the internet chatter, love is still in the air for #ArianaGrande and #EthanSlater.

Insiders told TMZ that the #Wicked co-stars are still “absolutely together romantically.” Breakup speculation ramped up after the U.K. premiere of Wicked: For Good on Monday night (Nov. 10), where the pair posed on opposite sides during press photos. While media reports and fans pushed the idea of a split, the duo reportedly maintained affection behind the scenes; witnesses say they were seen “holding hands and being affectionate backstage.”

Their relationship has remained under scrutiny, with many questioning the timing of their romance and the status of their previous relationships. Ariana had recently finalized her divorce when things turned romantic, while Ethan was still married to #LillyJay. Public criticism intensified after Lilly addressed the alleged affair, saying, “[Ariana’s] the story, really. Not a girl’s girl. My family is just collateral damage.”

Happy to hear Ariana and Ethan are still going strong?


November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Hawke in
TV & Streaming

Will ‘The Lowdown’ Return for Season 2? Ethan Hawke Breaks Down the Finale Episode (Exclusive)

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • The Lowdown star Ethan Hawke discusses the show’s season finale episode, “The Sensitive Kind.”
  • The actor teases what could happen next after the ending.
  • Plus, get an exclusive peek at an intimate conversation between Hawke and costar Kyle MacLachlan.

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for The Lowdown Season 1 Episode 8, “The Sensitive Kind.”]

The debut season of FX‘s ragtag noir The Lowdown, from creator Sterlin Harjo, came to an explosive ending as the mystery behind Dale Washberg’s (Tim Blake Nelson) death was unraveled by Tulsa’s resident “trusthstorian,” Lee Raybon (Ethan Hawke).

The episode, “The Sensitive Kind,” opened up where the previous episode left off, moments after Lee had chased Akron businessman Frank (Tracy Letts) into the One Well Church helmed by Mark Russell (Paul Sparks). As Lee realized he’d stepped into some real potential danger amidst the neo Nazis, Marty (Keith David) entered the space and claimed he was undercover and taking Lee into custody.

The ruse lasted only seconds for the men to get out the door and into Lee’s van, but they didn’t get away unscathed as Marty got grazed by a stray bullet when the One Well group charged after them, guns ablaze. While the men ultimately got away, Lee faced the consequences of his actions when artist Chutto (Mato Wayuhi) broke his shop window in retaliation for his grandfather Arthur’s (Graham Greene) death, which was unknowingly put in motion when he called Betty Jo (Jeanne Tripplehorn) and she sent Frank in search of Dale’s lost will.

While Lee told Chutto the land Dale had wanted to gift Arthur belonged to him, the young man didn’t want it, and that left the reporter to rethink his next move. As he tried to piece his latest story together, Lee faced his relationship with his daughter, Francis (Ryan Kiera Armstrong), who read a poem about his breakup with ex-wife Sam (Kaniehtiio Horn), which also forced Lee to reconcile his role as a father.

Shane Brown / FX

After he left Dale’s letters to his daughter Pearl (Ken Pomeroy), Betty Jo called Lee up, enraged and wanting answers, but that was exactly what Lee hoped for. The pair met in a neutral spot, and while Lee couldn’t say if the letters revealed that Donald (Kyle MacLachlan) was Pearl’s biological father, the conversation revealed that she had knowledge of Dale’s true death.

Lee took that and went off to write his story, but he recruited Marty to get Donald to a neutral location at Cyrus’s (Killer Mike) office to allow the political candidate an opportunity to read it first and offer a statement. Lee explained that Dale had been shot accidentally and was originally meant to be scared into selling his land. When Lee relayed to Donald that he had an opportunity to do something good with Dale’s legacy, he decided to gift the land to the Osage and cut ties with the wealthy power players in the area.

The episode concluded with Lee attending Sam’s wedding to Johnny (Rafael Casal), where he wished the newlyweds well, and set a boundary with his daughter, putting her best interest ahead of his own by telling her to stay full-time with her mother and stepfather. It was both a buttoned-up and open ending in a way that leaves us satisfied and hungry for more.

Below, star Ethan Hawke breaks down the finale’s highlights on community, filming alongside a star-studded ensemble, and the importance of story. (Plus, get an exclusive look at an intimate conversation between Hawke and MacLachlan in the video below).



I loved that book shop moment from the beginning, where Lee interacts with Dale, and later in the episode, when Donald asks if they ever met, Lee says he never did. Was he lying, or did he just not remember meeting Dale? 

Ethan Hawke: It’s kind of wonderfully mysterious, isn’t it? In my imagination, Lee didn’t remember that he’d met him until right then, all of a sudden. Sometimes that happens to you. You’re like, “Oh, wait, I remember something I hadn’t remembered before.” But he doesn’t have the confidence to verbalize it. Or maybe he always remembered, I don’t know. But it kind of gets at the wonderful nuance of truth-telling and how we all shade and hide the truth for when it makes sense to us and when we want to. And that’s how a lot of accidents happen.

That confrontation at One Well Church when Marty has to step in and save Lee is tense. How was it filming that sequence?

It was such a strange day of shooting to have all these unbelievably talented people there. I mean, Tracy Letts is one of the great American playwrights, and there he is acting with us, and Tom McCarthy is a brilliant filmmaker himself, and he’s there. Keith’s so genuine, a bona fide legend. I’ve loved Paul Sparks’ acting forever; he is one of my favorite actors. And so it was a great group of people. One of the fun things about playing Lee is that he’s just always thinking on his feet. He doesn’t really have a plan, and sometimes he’s really brave but in a stupid way. None of it’s thought out, and I don’t think he thinks through that moment. He’s just chasing [Frank] into that church, not really thinking about what he’s going to do, and then he’s just a cat trying to stay alive.

Keith David and Ethan Hawke in 'The Lowdown'

Shane Brown / FX

Speaking of Lee not thinking things through, he ultimately got Arthur killed in the previous episode because he spoke too openly in front of Betty Jo, and Lee is on the receiving end of Chutto’s anger because of it. Was that a learning moment for him? Will he be more careful moving forward?

I think it’s what pushes the show into the deep end of the pool. It’s that sometimes all these characters — Lee and everybody — they’re breaking hearts and doing good and bad things simultaneously, and that’s the complexity and nuance of real life. Good guys don’t wear white hats and bad guys don’t wear black hats. I do think that scene that you mentioned with Chutto is the first real smack of humility that Lee gets. He sees himself as a caped crusader, and he’s forced to stare in the mirror and see that he’s not clean. And the great thing about that is if you can absorb humility the right way, it can lead to compassion. It’s what makes him able to make the necessary compromises to put aside the article he wants to write and write a different article that actually could serve a good purpose, and also helps him to be a good enough man and father to show up for his daughter at his ex-wife’s wedding.

Lee and Donald’s conversation in Cyrus’s office reveals that he didn’t know Betty Jo had gotten Dale killed. How important is it for Lee and Donald to share that moment of connection that leads to Donald handing over Dale’s land to the Osage?

Whether he’s doing that just to get out of trouble or whether he is doing it to be a good person, we don’t really know, but it doesn’t really matter. He’s doing the right thing. My favorite part of the show is when the season starts with Lee comparing Donald Washburg to Adolf Hitler, which is what we do when we want to demonize somebody today. The left wing calls people Adolf Hitler, the right wing calls people Nazis… And of course, at the end of the show, he realizes, this is a human being trying to play the cards he’s dealt. He thinks he’s a good person. He didn’t know that his brother was murdered; he wasn’t a part of it. He did look the other way when it was to his best interest, which is exactly what Lee’s done.

Ryan Kiera Armstrong, Kaniehtiio Horn, Rafael Casal, and Ethan Hawke in 'The Lowdown' finale

Shane Brown / FX

Did you know how Dale’s death really unfolded throughout filming, or did you learn when filming the finale episode? How did that process unfold?

The process was so mysterious. It really started with Sterlin having this idea for a show, and I don’t think he really knew exactly where it was going. He knew how it was going to end, and he knew what the feeling was. How we got there was mysterious to all of us. In a lot of ways, the show’s really about community, and the mystery is in service of the characters, which is why I love it.

In one of our first conversations about it, we talked through the wedding scene with the daughter and knew that was what it had to drive towards. It’s Lee’s journey about what it means to be a good man and how we can view our sensitivities as strengths and not weaknesses. The whole murder mystery part of it had some movement as we told the story. I used to make up stories for my kids when they would fall asleep, and sometimes, when you just let your subconscious roll, great stuff happens. They would fall asleep [and I’d be like] I’ve got to go write that down, but then I could never remember it.

Where do you think Lee and Francis stand after he tells her to live with her mother full-time? Is there a sense of rejection there?

It’s wonderfully nuanced because for the first time, he’s really trying to see what is in her best interest, and he sees that she has a good stepfather and that they have a good thing going, and that might be a great resource and value to her. He’s not seeing her life as a reflection of him, but as her own life. And so, in a way, it’s a mark of wisdom, and in another way, it’s really disappointing to her. She wants to be loved wholly and completely and blindly. And I think the feeling I get from that last scene is that they’re going to find their way, but I would love to do a second season just because her character’s getting to be a really interesting age and her problems are going to get more complicated. It’d be wonderful to see Lee try to parent a teenage daughter.

The full-circle nature of Lee gifting Samantha the painting he stole in the premiere episode is so satisfying. Is there more to uncover in terms of their history?

I think so, definitely. I mean, Tiio and Rafael are such great actors, and I would love to see the ongoing dynamics between all three of them. I would love to see future parent-teacher conferences where they all sit there and pick her.

Have there been any discussions about where the show might go if it’s picked up for Season 2?

Of course, we can’t help but daydream, but the truth is, I feel really proud of Episode 8. I love the way the show resolves, and I’m excited for audiences to see it. And the TV gods have to decide whether or not there’s an audience for it.

FX’s The Lowdown, Season 1, Streaming now, Hulu

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Hawke on 'Blue Moon' Interview: On Playing Lorenz Hart
TV & Streaming

Ethan Hawke Shines as Songwriter Lorenz Hart

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Berlin Film Festival. Sony Pictures Classics releases “Blue Moon” in select theaters beginning Friday, October 17.

In Richard Linklater’s “Before Sunrise,” Julie Delpy’s Céline suggests that “If there’s any kind of magic in this world, it must be in the attempt of understanding someone, sharing something.” Thirty years after Céline and Ethan Hawke’s Jesse fell in love, Linklater reunites with Hawke for “Blue Moon,” the long-time collaborators’ latest attempt to find that magic. The film in question seeks to understand Lorenz Hart, the great American lyricist who — alongside composer Richard Rodgers — is responsible for countless classics to be found in the great American songbook. But from the outset, Linklater understands the inherent difficulty that comes with capturing such a singular voice all these decades later. 

Seymour Hersh in Cover-Up

“Blue Moon” opens with two wildly contrasting quotes. One is from Oscar Hammerstein II, who claimed that Hart was “alert and dynamic and fun to be around.” The other is from cabaret legend Mabel Mercer, who describes him as “the saddest man I ever knew.” Both are true, of course, as Linklater captures so vividly, yet it’s telling that the more positive of the two quotes comes from Hammerstein, who replaced Hart as Rodgers’ partner and went on to create the musical “Oklahoma!,” which enjoyed more success than Richard ever found with his previous collaborator.

Set on the opening night of “Oklahoma!” in 1943, “Blue Moon” takes place entirely in the bar where Rodgers is set to greet his adoring public and celebrate what will eventually become regarded as one of the greatest musicals ever written. Hart doesn’t exactly share that sentiment. Throughout the night, which we experience alongside him in real-time, Richard’s former partner takes swipes at “Oklahoma!” at any given opportunity (most of which he creates for himself). 

“Am I bitter?” he asks Bobby Cannavale’s somewhat crass but well meaning bartender. “Fuck yes!” But even with so much bias against such a beloved American classic, Hart does make some good points. Why, of all things, is the corn described to be “as high as an elephant’s eye” in the song “Oh, What A Beautiful Mornin’”? And why does the title need an exclamation point? That jab has the added benefit of doubling as a wink to fans of Linklater’s “Everybody Wants Some!!,” which speaks to the knowing wit that drives “Blue Moon” forward. 

Through Hart, Linklater might have just found the perfect protagonist in whom to channel his signature chatty style. The writer famous for penning “My Funny Valentine,” “The Lady is a Tramp,” and the titular “Blue Moon” might be known for his exquisitely heart-wrenching ballads, but it’s his searing wordplay and wild overconfidence that dominate here; Hart is loaded endless quips and vulgar jokes that he just about gets away with depending on his audience. Robert Kaplow, who previously co-wrote Linklater’s underrated “Me and Orson Welles,” is clearly having so much fun with this screenplay, especially when he taps into widely circulated rumors around Hart’s sexuality.

The sexiest thing in the world, according to Hart, “is a half-erect penis.” That’s because a full one is an exclamation point — “The story’s already over” — but a half-erect penis? “Is it coming or is it going?,” Hart asks with a smirk, freely playing into what people thought of him at a time when few would be so ballsy (for want of a better word). When asked directly if he prefers men to women, Hart describes himself as “ambisexual,” a person who “can jerk off equally well with either hand.” This gatling gun approach to conversation can be a bit much, often making the movie feel like a one-man show whose supporting cast is being held hostage, but that’s very much the point. For some, Hart was just too much to be around. That’s especially true of Rodgers, who could no longer stand working with him so closely while working around his alcoholism for the better part of 25 years. 

“Your work is brilliant,” Rodgers tells Hart in a rare moment where he’s not trying to escape the clutches of his former partner and return to the party. “That’s not the problem.” No, the problem is that Hart is terribly sad and even more lonely — almost desperate, in fact. The endless talking and constant showboating, this perpetual “performing” as Hart himself puts it, reveals a man drowning in insecurity without actually explaining his feelings as such. Even the mouse who visits Hart each morning in his 19th floor apartment has stopped coming. 

Despite, or perhaps because of his pain, Hart is charming and “overwhelming” in equal measure, a force of audacious, vibrating energy. When he describes his writing protege Elizabeth (Margaret Qualley), dedicating reams of adjectives and metaphors to her beauty, he says upon first meeting her that “It was as if she was breathing different air to me.” Yet there’s very little air left for anyone to breathe when Hart begins to talk.

In lesser hands, this could have proved cartoonish or even unbearable, but Ethan Hawke is theatrical in the best way possible, commanding the screen with his every gesture and utterance without overplaying any of them. His energy thrums like a choir line vibrato, like “the sexiest thing in the world,” especially in the first third when we’re still getting to know Hart before Rodgers arrives. It’s in these scenes where “Blue Moon” works best — practically “levitating,” to borrow the word Hart uses to describe the hallmark of great art, which pulls you off the ground in ways that approach divinity. Linklater almost manages that here in the film’s best moments, even if “Blue Moon” does wane a tad in the middle.  

Once Hart’s former partner arrives, endless congratulations and glowingly positive review excerpts punctuate their conversation as Hart tries his best to get back in Richard’s good books without letting on how he really feels about “Oklahoma!”. Andrew Scott’s composer is the opposite of Hart in every way, as the pair were described in life. We’re only with them this one night, but there’s a lived-in chemistry between Scott and Hawke, as if they’re an old married couple but one doesn’t fully realize the relationship is over while the other has already moved on. Comfortable familiarity and an awkward desire to escape co-exist like the two quotes at the start, both true in incongruous harmony. Scott’s never overwhelmed by Hawke in the same way that most of the other characters are overwhelmed by Hart, grounded in his success and even pity that comes in waves for his so-called oldest “friend.” 

Eleven years after Linklater won the Silver Bear prize for his Oscar-winning “Boyhood,” Ethan Hawke might just have a shot at that same level of award recognition for his performance here in “Blue Moon.” It’s transformative in a way that the Academy loves, making Hawke appear five feet tall when he should in fact be the one towering over Scott, not the other way round. Yet he never seems smaller than he does when Qualley’s “Irreplaceable Elizabeth” doesn’t give Hart the love he’s so desperate for. Her monologue in the third act is a juicy one, mirroring the “irrational adoration” Hart feels with Elizabeth’s own story of unrequited love. Yet it’s Hart’s reaction, a rare moment of vulnerability that’s been wrenched out of him against his will, that intrigues more than the actual story itself. 

Together, she, Hawke and Scott form a fascinating push-and-pull dynamic where they’re simultaneously swept up in each other and against each other too. The fact this all plays out in real-time heightens that effect considerably, sweeping us up in the maelstrom of Hart’s bravado thanks to Hawke’s signature charm, even if it is undercut by something else barely concealed below the surface. Because even when his hands are clasped together in glee, waiting to hear the next part of Elizabeth’s salacious story with bated breath, Hawke plays Hart with an underlying sadness. 

Towards the end, just as things begin to wind down, the script punctuates this with a few exclamation points of its own, some offhand comments about how Hart’s “biggest stuff is still to come” and that “it’s like you’re writing my obituary.” Rodgers even suggests he go get help at Doctor’s Hospital, the same hospital where Hart did in fact end up dying seven months later of pneumonia. We know that because this is where the film began, in a freezing, rainy alleyway before settling into the wistful chamber piece it swiftly becomes. With this foresight to hand, “Blue Moon” plays into Linklater’s usual themes of time and memory and even dreaming in a more subtle yet no less poignant way than usual. 

That becomes clearest in the words “Nobody ever loved me that much,” Hart’s favorite line from “Casablanca,” which becomes his refrain throughout. Because here, we’re watching a film set in the ’40s which draws emotional resonance from an older classic while we sit with the knowledge of what’s to come and consider what could have been; how Hart’s legacy could have surpassed what Rodgers and Hammerstein achieved if he’d handled life differently. Yet “Blue Moon” doesn’t end in tragedy, even if we already know Hart’s story does. Instead, we end in the middle of a story Hart liked to tell, creating the illusion of a party — of a bar hangout that never ends. A story with no exclamation point, if you like, just as Hart would have wanted. 

But would he have liked this film overall or would he have despised “Blue Moon” just as he did the song that shares its name, the song for which he would become best known? That’s harder to say, although it’s tempting to imagine he would have enjoyed the attention and validation such a work brings, even if he might not love every aspect of it. The result is magic regardless, the kind Linklater strives for throughout his work, because it brings us closer to understanding Hart in all of his contradictory splendor, even if it doesn’t succeed completely. 

Grade: B+

“Blue Moon” premiered at the 2025 Berlin International Film Festival. Sony Pictures Classics releases it in theaters starting Friday, October 17.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | Mail: Ariana Grande & Ethan Slater’s relationship is currently ‘struggling’
Celebrity News

bitchy | Mail: Ariana Grande & Ethan Slater’s relationship is currently ‘struggling’

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

In the summer of 2023, a huge gossip story broke over the course of several weeks. Ariana Grande left her then-husband, then we learned that she was seeing her costar Ethan Slater, and that was the reason for her divorce. Then we learned that Ethan was married and he and his wife just had a baby not even a year before he met Ariana. Two marriages destroyed, all because of an on-set love affair. Well, Ariana and Ethan have given it a go ever since. They’ve been together, they’ve tried to have a real relationship. And obviously, Ariana is starting to get bored. It sounds like Ethan isn’t really into it either. From a Daily Mail exclusive:

Ethan Slater thought he was stepping into a fairytale when he fell for megastar Ariana Grande on the set of Wicked nearly two years ago… but the happy ending looks further away than ever for the couple. Back then, both left long-term partners: Ariana split from realtor husband Dalton Gomez, 30, after two years of marriage, and Ethan, 33, left his high-school sweetheart and now ex-wife Lilly Jay, 31.

Cue the social media meltdown. Fans roasted them as ‘homewreckers,’ memes went viral faster than Ariana’s ponytail whipping around her head. Then Lilly herself went public with a viral essay calling Ariana ‘not a girl’s girl’, spilling on what it was like to lose her high school sweetheart to a Broadway star.

The Spotlight hears that Ethan (once best known for playing SpongeBob SquarePants in a musical) has since mended his relationship with Lilly as they co-parent their three-year-old son. But insiders say he often looks like a man caught between the life he had and the globe-trotting whirlwind he signed up for with Ariana. One source adds, ‘He sometimes wonders if he should have stayed in his quieter world; the contrast is brutal.’

Because Ariana is busy: touring arenas, rehearsing the sequel Wicked: For Good and juggling media appearances. All of which, my source says, have left Ethan struggling to keep pace – especially while being an involved dad to his son.

‘He loves her, but he’s drowning in the circus of her life,’ one insider explains. ‘He’s used to a controlled Broadway stage, not sold-out arenas screaming for every move. Even when he’s home, he’s mentally halfway through the tour or rehearsals. It’s exhausting just watching him try to keep up.’

Just days before Ariana’s big VMA night in September, Ethan was spotted quietly in Jersey City with Lilly and their little boy, co-parenting duties in full swing. Meanwhile, Ariana was surrounded by brother Frankie, stylist Law Roach, Lady Gaga and basically her own mini army. Ethan? Nowhere in sight.

Their last public appearance together was, incredibly, in late April at a preview of Little Shop of Horrors, supporting Ariana’s Victorious co-star Liz Gillies – and before that, the Oscars in March, where they were photographed hugging and chatting all night. Sources tell The Spotlight that the intensity of Ariana’s schedule – combined with the shadow of her high-profile exes and past fleeting romances – has created tension.

I hear the couple won’t confirm, or deny, any split until after Wicked: For Good premieres, in an attempt to keep the attention off their relationship. But behind the curtain, I’m told, the fairytale has ended. Ariana is flying, and Ethan is somewhere in the wings, missing the calm he left behind.

[From The Daily Mail]

That last part is critical – there probably won’t be a big split announcement until after all of the Wicked promo. That being said, it’s not like Ari and Ethan really put their relationship front-and-center in the promotion last year. They even kept their distance on red carpets, and they were only photographed together behind-the-scenes at some awards shows. Anyway, this sh-t is as much of a cliche as Keith Urban. We all knew how it would play out as soon as we learned of their affair. Ethan blew up his life for a couple of years with a pop diva who only does three-year relationships, max.

Top 8 stories about Ariana’s Grande’s messy affair with Ethan Slater

Ariana Grande and her Wicked costar Ethan Slater blew up both their marriages to have an affair! Ariana was even friends with Ethan’s wife and he had a new baby at home. Sign up for our mailing list to get the top 8 stories about their messy affair.

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Photos courtesy of Backgrid, Cover Images, Lilly Jay’s IG.

New York, NY – Ariana Grande and her boyfriend Ethan Slater were seen departing the National Board of Review Awards in New York City.

Pictured: Ariana Grande, Ethan Slater

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*UK Clients – Pictures Containing Children
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New York, NY – Ariana Grande and her boyfriend Ethan Slater were seen departing the National Board of Review Awards in New York City.

Pictured: Ariana Grande, Ethan Slater

BACKGRID USA 7 JANUARY 2025

USA: +1 310 798 9111 / [email protected]

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New York, NY – Ariana Grande and her boyfriend Ethan Slater were seen departing the National Board of Review Awards in New York City.

Pictured: Ariana Grande, Ethan Slater

BACKGRID USA 7 JANUARY 2025

BYLINE MUST READ: BlayzenPhotos / BACKGRID

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*UK Clients – Pictures Containing Children
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Los Angeles, CA – Ariana Grande wearing custom Loewe with Jared Atelier jewelry arrives at the 31st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards held at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in Los Angeles.

Pictured: Ariana Grande

BACKGRID USA 23 FEBRUARY 2025

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, New York, NY – 20180610 Celebrities attend the 72nd Annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. -PICTURED: Ethan Slater -PHOTO by: Kristin Callahan/ACE/Instarimages.com -061018_TonyAwards_K072 This is an editorial, rights-managed image. Please contact Instar Images LLC for licensing fee and rights information at [email protected] or call +1 212 414 0207 This image may not be published in any way that is, or might be deemed to be, defamatory, libelous, pornographic, or obscene. Please consult our sales department for any clarification needed prior to publication and use. Instar Images LLC reserves the right to pursue unauthorized users of this material. If you are in violation of our intellectual property rights or copyright you may be liable for damages, loss of income, any profits you derive from the unauthorized use of this material and, where appropriate, the cost of collection and/or any statutory damages awarded

Featuring: Ethan Slater
Where: New York, New York, United States
When: 10 Jun 2018
Credit: Kristin Callahan/ACE/Instarimages.com

, New York, NY – 20180610 Celebrities attend the 72nd Annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. -PICTURED: Ethan Slater -PHOTO by: Kristin Callahan/ACE/Instarimages.com -061018_TonyAwards_K071 This is an editorial, rights-managed image. Please contact Instar Images LLC for licensing fee and rights information at [email protected] or call +1 212 414 0207 This image may not be published in any way that is, or might be deemed to be, defamatory, libelous, pornographic, or obscene. Please consult our sales department for any clarification needed prior to publication and use. Instar Images LLC reserves the right to pursue unauthorized users of this material. If you are in violation of our intellectual property rights or copyright you may be liable for damages, loss of income, any profits you derive from the unauthorized use of this material and, where appropriate, the cost of collection and/or any statutory damages awarded

Featuring: Ethan Slater
Where: New York, New York, United States
When: 10 Jun 2018
Credit: Kristin Callahan/ACE/Instarimages.com


82nd Annual Golden Globe Awards arrivals at The Beverly Hilton

Featuring: Ariana Grande
Where: Beverly Hills, California, United States
When: 05 Jan 2025
Credit: MediaPunch/INSTARimages

Ariana Grande at the 2025 National Board of Review Awards Gala at Cipriani 42nd Street

Featuring: Ariana Grande
Where: New York City, New York, United States
When: 07 Jan 2025
Credit: MediaPunch/INSTARimages


October 5, 2025 0 comments
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Very Scary Trailer #2 for Ethan Hawke's 'Black Phone 2' Horror Sequel
Hollywood

Very Scary Trailer #2 for Ethan Hawke’s ‘Black Phone 2’ Horror Sequel

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Very Scary Trailer #2 for Ethan Hawke’s ‘Black Phone 2’ Horror Sequel

by Alex Billington
September 4, 2025
Source: YouTube

“It took me a long time… but you of all people know ‘dead’ is just a word.” Universal has unveiled the scary second trailer for the highly anticipated sequel Black Phone 2, the horror follow-up to C. Robert Cargill & Scott Derrickson’s film The Black Phone which opened 2022. This one will land in theaters starting in this middle of October during the spooky season. The story of the masked man ain’t over yet. 4 years ago, 13-year-old Finn killed his abductor & escaped, now the sole survivor of The Grabber. But true evil transcends death… and the phone is ringing again. Will you answer? Following the blockbuster success of Blumhouse’s 2022 horror hit, which earned more than $160M worldwide and global acclaim, Universal announces the launch of a sinister new franchise with the release of Black Phone 2. “The Grabber” has big plans? Ethan Hawke, Mason Thames, Madeleine McGraw, Jeremy Davies, and Miguel Mora all return for this sequel, again directed by Scott Derrickson. Damn this looks crazy! They’re definitely riffing on A Nightmare on Elm Street with a dash of Dream Warriors thrown in. I really dig the snowy cold setting for this sequel.

Here’s the second official trailer for Scott Derrickson’s horror sequel Black Phone 2, direct from YouTube:

The Black Phone 2 Trailer

The Black Phone 2 Poster

You can watch the first trailer for Derrickson’s Black Phone 2 horror movie right here for a bit more footage.

Ethan Hawke is returning to the most sinister role of his career as The Grabber seeks vengeance on Finn (Mason Thames) from beyond the grave by menacing Finn’s younger sister, Gwen (Madeleine McGraw). As Finn, now 17, struggles with life after his captivity, the headstrong 15-year-old Gwen begins receiving calls in her dreams from the black phone & seeing disturbing visions of 3 boys being stalked at a winter camp known as Alpine Lake. Determined to solve the mystery and end the torment for both her and her brother, Gwen persuades Finn to visit the camp during a winter storm. There, she uncovers a shattering intersection between The Grabber and her own family’s history. Together, she and Finn must confront a killer who has grown more powerful in death & even more significant to them than either could imagine.

Black Phone 2, originally known as The Black Phone 2, is once again directed by acclaimed American genre filmmaker Scott Derrickson, director of the films The Exorcism of Emily Rose, The Day the Earth Stood Still, Sinister, Deliver Us from Evil, Marvel’s Doctor Strange, The Black Phone, and The Gorge previously, plus an ep of “Snowpiercer” and a short in V/H/S/85. The screenplay is again written by C. Robert Cargill & Scott Derrickson. It’s produced by Jason Blum, Scott Derrickson, & C. Robert Cargill. Made by Blumhouse. Universal sends Derrickson’s Black Phone 2 in theaters nationwide starting October 17th, 2025 this fall.

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September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Hawke on 'Blue Moon' Interview: On Playing Lorenz Hart
TV & Streaming

Ethan Hawke on ‘Blue Moon’ Interview: On Playing Lorenz Hart

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Ethan Hawke wears many hats. The multi-hyphenate writer-director-actor returns to the Telluride Film Festival for a Tribute with Berlin prize-winner “Blue Moon” (SPC), in which he plays Broadway lyricist Lorenz Hart. And Hawke is debuting his new documentary “Highway 99: A Double Album,” a two-parter devoted to the life and music of Merle Haggard, which will likely sell to a streamer as it hits the festival circuit. And showing at the Toronto International Film Festival is a new series debuting on FX September 23, “The Lowdown.” After all his recent efforts, Hawke, who has four Oscar nominations (three for collaborating with Richard Linklater), is ready to just talk. “I’m exhausted,” he said over breakfast in Telluride.

Ask E. Jean

Hawke has always loved music, and has learned a lot over the years from playing trumpeter Chet Baker (“Born to Be Blue”) and directing the music movies “Blaze” and “Seymour: An Introduction.” That one debuted at Telluride in 2014. “Seymour was my midlife crisis, right?” said Hawke. “It’s an old Shaker expression, but to master a craft, you have to apprentice three that surround it. My real mission is performance. That’s what I’ve done my whole life. That’s where the rubber meets the road. But learning about directing, learning about writing, learning about music, learning about these other things helps. It’s all connected.”

His two Telluride movies are united in that they’re both about songwriters, “two of the greatest American songwriters in the history of America,” he said. Lorenz Hart had partnered with Richard Rodgers on such American songbook faves as “Blue Moon” and “My Funny Valentine.” Hawke’s love for Merle Haggard was embedded from his youth. “For most of us, the music that our parents played is somewhere deep inside us forever.”

AUSTIN, TEXAS - MARCH 13: Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke attend Netflix's Apollo 10 ½ SXSW World Premiere on March 13, 2022 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Netflix)
Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke in 2022.Getty Images for Netflix

His dive into Haggard follows “The Last Movie Stars,” about Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, “my love letter to my own profession,” he said. “In thinking about what to do next, I love making documentaries, because it’s something you can work on slowly. When I was younger, I used to try to write prose, and I wrote some books because I needed a job to sustain the imbalance of an actor’s life. In the last few years, documentary has replaced that part of my life. Before I work on Larry Hart, I’m working on Merle Haggard. Then I take a break. I disappear for 8-10, weeks. I play Larry Hart, and then I come back into me again, and I’m talking about my childhood and my loves and things that are personal to me, and it helps keep me balanced.”

“Highway 99” is Hawke’s love letter to music. “I knew that whoever won the election, half the country was going to be despondent. Merle Haggard always wrote about people. He continued his whole life to never write from a left wing or right wing point of view, but from a humanist point of view. Country music is a place where men can express their feelings, where they often struggle, and it’s a really safe place to talk about what’s going on inside you.”

The two-part documentary digs into, among other things, the unrequited love story between Merle and Dolly Parton. And Hawke got to recruit some of his favorite singers to interpret Haggard’s songs. He asked them which songs they wanted to sing, and Nora Jones, Valerie June, Steve Rowe and others picked them. “I thought I could tell his life as a musical,” said Hawke. “I could use his own writing to tell his own story.”

“The Last Movie Stars”

When it came to his ninth collaboration with Richard Linklater, “Blue Moon,” Hawke’s music movies helped him to prepare for Larry Hart. “Things like studying jazz for Chet Baker, studying the piano with ‘Seymour,’” he said, “studying the pain of trying to be a songwriter through ‘Blaze.’”

The pain of Lorenz Hart comes through in this achingly sad story set at the end of Hart’s partnership with Rodgers (Andrew Scott). It all takes place at Sardi’s on the opening night of “Oklahoma!” — which Rodgers composed with Oscar Hammerstein II instead of Hart, sealing their split. “If you are feeling a lot of pain,” said Hawke, “there’s this idea that success or approval from others is going to quiet that pain or bandage it. But in the history of mankind, it never does. He’s heartbroken about Rodgers. He’s setting himself up, and he’s distracting himself that he’s in love with this young woman [Margaret Qualley], and he’s not even heterosexual. But he can’t deal with the real pain that’s happening. He can’t look at it for a second. That movie is about a man who died of heartbreak. The alcohol was part of his sadness, the pain was too great to suffer without it. Alcohol is a painkiller.”

The movie starts out with Hart walking out of “Oklahoma!” and ponying up to the bar at Sardi’s, where the bartender (Bobby Cannavale) tries to keep his drinking under control. Hart is a great talker, the words flow out of him like butter. Hawke has to sustain the rhythm and cadence of long speeches. And theater vet Cannavale, who had bonded with Hawke on “Hurly Burly” when they were both going through divorces, was there for him on “Blue Moon,” running lines. “He was my de facto acting coach,” said Hawke.

Ethan Hawke in

Hawke was a “monk” during production, he said. “I would just sit in my dressing room and listen to Ella Fitzgerald sing Rodgers & Hart songs over and over again. If you listen to the music, you start to realize how well the script is written, because the script functions like a Larry Hart song. It’s so funny and absolutely heartbreaking and poignant and witty and irreverent and lewd. So I started looking at that first monologue as the lyrics to the song. Rick [Linklater] was going to be Rodgers. Rick was going to write the music and build it and make sure it was sculpted right, and make sure it was presented right.”

Nailing this performance was about words. “This guy doesn’t walk and talk like me, so it’s voice and speech,” said Hawke. “He speaks in complete sentences. He speaks with clear ideas. It always has to be the perfect word choice. It had to have the language.”

But it was also movement and body language. Hart was short, with a hideous combover. “I grew my hair really long and then shaved the middle so that I could do the combover,” said Hawke, who is just under six feet. “A combover is about the most unflattering look that men have ever come up with. So what happens immediately is your own self-esteem drops, because everybody starts looking at you, talking to you differently. We did all these old school stagecraft tricks to make me smaller.”

They built a trench in the floor and he bent his legs inside wide pants. “When you do a scene with Margaret Qualley when you’re a foot shorter than her, is different than being two inches taller than her, because she doesn’t take it seriously.”

Luckily, Hawke had a decade to get used to the movie. Linklater gave it to him when he was in his early 40s and said, “when you’re old enough, we’re going do it.” They’d get together every couple of years and do a reading of the screenplay, Hawke said, “and we’d prune it and tweak it and talk about it.”

The actor didn’t feel any anxiety about it until just before shooting in Ireland. “Then I realized that this movie was going to put Rick and me up against the wall of our talent,” he said. “The bullseye in this movie is so small. There’s so many ways to go wrong. One room, real time. Larry Hart is dying.”

Also, the movie was filmed fast. “Rick had to be incredibly decisive and clear,” said Hawke. “We didn’t have a big budget, no budget, but luckily, we didn’t need one. We needed ideas and great actors. I knew if the guy playing Rodgers wasn’t phenomenal, the movie wouldn’t work. That was the biggest challenge.”

In just a few quick scenes during the after party, the movie establishes the relationship between these former partners who are both grieving the breakup. “There’s a certain Lennon-McCartney to Rodgers and Hart,” said Hawke. “For these two people who are that creative together for that long. It’s a high level of intimacy.”

But Rodgers is moving forward, while Hart is descending into alcohol. Hawke had long admired Scott, who also comes from theater. Qualley does not, but they all rehearsed the hell out of it and it all came together.

Next up: Sterlin Harjo’s FX series “The Lowdown,” in which Hawke plays a renegade truth-teller. “I got to have this character built for me by this brilliant young man,” said Hawke. “And I had so much fun.”

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Hawke's Merle Haggard Doc
TV & Streaming

Ethan Hawke’s Merle Haggard Doc

by jummy84 August 30, 2025
written by jummy84

If you watched Ken Burns’ 16-hour “Country Music” documentary when it came out in 2019, you might’ve been wishing that every legend whose life flashed by too fast could get his or her own breakout, but Merle Haggard most of all. The singer-songwriter, who died in 2014, could frankly use a little help on the immortality front, especially if there’s a danger of the novelty song “Okie From Muskogee” becoming the one tune he’s remembered by … a fate that might be slightly worse than total cultural erasure.

Thankfully, he’s found that posthumous benefactor he needed in Ethan Hawke, whose “Highway 99: A Double Album” does Haggard right and then some — although if you’re a true-blue fan, you may think that even a three-hour-plus running time isn’t quite enough. Launched at the Telluride Film Festival, “Highway 99” has a lovely, easygoing rhythm to it, like one of its subject’s train songs, inspired by the days when Haggard was an actual freight-hopper.

Hawke keeps the two-part movie’s energy and interest going past intermission and beyond (yes, there’s an actual “Brutalist”-style time-out clock to tell you when to get back to your seat), by interspersing all the archival footage with performances from about 30 leading lights from the worlds of contemporary Americana and country, from Norah Jones to Jason Isbell. These acoustic cover tunes serve as sweet chapter stops, and with any luck, the film’s title will eventually become literal with a soundtrack album.

All these celebrity guest interpreters aside, it’s still Haggard’s magneticism that’s the main reason to invest this much time in a movie. It may be a measure of just how charismatic he was and is that not just one but two of his ex-wives rejoined his band, the Strangers, after decent divorce intervals. That’s charisma. Or, sure, a paycheck. Or maybe his exes just felt what audiences understood: the lure of a poet laureate who lives to entertain but isn’t timid about wearing his wounded heart out on his sleeve.

The film opens with Hawke narrating and driving around Haggard’s native Bakersfield in his dad’s old car, talking about how he grew up developing a love for “the Hag” via the osmosis of dashboard tapes. The natural fear in these initial moments may be that the famous director is going to make it as much about his own journey as his subject’s, but Hawke turns out to have a pretty solid sense of how much to bring himself back into the picture. Anyway, all those Bakersfield driving shots do serve a filmmaking purpose: Most of Haggard’s most revealing interviews were audio-only, and you’ve got to have something on screen while the late legend is unexpectedly pouring his heart out to some ancient interviewer.

The mentions of Hawke’s father aren’t completely incidental to the main course here. “Highway 99” is in part a tale of Haggard’s lifelong lamenting of the death of his own father at age 9, something he was fairly candid about in memoirs and interviews about carrying as a wound that neither time nor love could heal. Mama tried, as the song famously says, but young Merle acted out by becoming a rather dedicated juvenile delinquent from the time of that death until his early 20s, constantly in and out of jails or other facilities where beatings became a way of life. Who knows if this counted as printing the legend, but Haggard is seen confirming the info that he escaped from 17 institutions before he was 21.

“I’ve had the shit kicked outta me, and I’m surprised at my own integrity, that I don’t hate people,” the star is heard saying. And the more you learn about that rough early going — which included being in the audience at San Quentin when Johnny Cash did his iconic concert there — the weirder it seems that Haggard comes across as a truly tender-hearted soul all the way to the end (assuming that you allow for tender hearts becoming careless or brusque with a succession of five wives).

Haggard could have exploited his “outlaw” past for all it was worth once he became an expert wordsmith and picker, but as the movie makes clear, he was embarrassed to let anyone find out what would have been understood as good branding in this day and age. Finally, it was Cash, who had him on his late-’60s TV show, who outed him as an ex-con, assuring him it’d be fine. But even then, Haggard didn’t exploit his bad-ass past. He’s the guy who titled a song and album “I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am,” but also the fellow who sang “Sometimes I hate myself and wish I could scream” (in one of his most touching and self-effacingly telling songs, “Sometimes I Dream”). Hawke makes the point that Haggard was not exactly alone among American men of his generation in being driven by the twin poles of pride and shame.

There’s fun stuff in the doc, like Dolly Parton telling Hawke about the time he called in the middle of the night to profess his massive love for her (which she found a polite way to brush off, just the way you’d imagine her doing). Or Rosanne Cash talking about Haggard’s late-in-life fascination with aliens, as expressed in his fondness for the conspiracy radio show “Coast to Coast” (which he once made a four-hour call into, excerpted here).

But the movie is careful to concentrate just as much on his art and all the complications that entailed. As fans well know, Haggard veered from his groundbreaking and seemingly liberal-minded anthem of interracial love, “Irma Jackson,” to the seemingly conservative “Okie From Muskogee” and “Fightin’ Side of Me,” and then going back to making one of his last musical statements a sort of campaign song for Hillary Clinton, “Let’s Put a Woman in Charge.” A walking contradiction, as Kris Kristofferson would put it? Or just someone whose favorite color is deep purple?

Although much of the best material is audio-only, Hawke did manage to get ahold of the complete interview Haggard gave Burns back in 2014. (Rosanne Cash explains that he did it at her behest, at a time when she thinks he knew he was soon to die and wanted to do her a favor.) It’s almost heartbreaking to hear his labored breathing as he talks with Burns, but then the twinkle emerges, and it lights up the screen. At the end of his life, he was still learning to take a lot of pride in who he was. Hawke, for his part, can take some in finally giving a hero such a heartfelt, trenchant and long-overdue screen immortalization.

August 30, 2025 0 comments
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Will Ethan Hawke Win an Oscar for Playing Lorenz Hart in Blue Moon?
TV & Streaming

Will Ethan Hawke Win an Oscar for Playing Lorenz Hart in Blue Moon?

by jummy84 August 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Is it time for the “Hawke” to swoop in and nab his Oscar prey?

After four Academy Award nominations spanning both acting and writing, Ethan Hawke may have found the role that finally earns him an Oscar. In Richard Linklater’s “Blue Moon,” the actor delivers a searing performance as lyricist Lorenz Hart, one half of the legendary Broadway songwriting team Rodgers and Hart.

The film premiered in February at the Berlin International Film Festival, where Hawke’s co-star Andrew Scott won the Silver Bear for best supporting performance. “Blue Moon” has since screened at the Telluride Film Festival, where Hawke received one of the festival’s Silver Medallions — a distinction that has proven to be an Oscar bellwether.

Recent Silver Medallion recipients include eventual nominees Cate Blanchett for “Tár” (2022) and Adam Driver for “Marriage Story” (2019), along with eventual winners Anthony Hopkins for “The Father” (2020), Renée Zellweger for “Judy” (2019) and Casey Affleck for “Manchester by the Sea” (2016).

Set to be released by Sony Pictures Classics, the film takes place in early 1943 — the opening night of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Oklahoma!” — and finds Hart in the depths of depression and alcoholism. Rather than celebrating his former partner’s new success, Hart retreats to Sardi’s restaurant in Manhattan, drowning his sorrows while reflecting on his tumultuous past.

sabrina lantos

Hawke embodies Hart’s wit and vulnerability with remarkable precision, channeling the man behind classics like “Blue Moon,” “The Lady Is a Tramp” and “My Funny Valentine.” The performance captures brilliance colliding with despair, rendered with both humor and heartbreaking authenticity.

Despite decades of critical acclaim, Hawke has never won Hollywood’s top acting prize. His previous nominations include supporting actor for “Training Day” (2001) and “Boyhood” (2014), plus shared screenplay nominations for “Before Sunset” (2004) and “Before Midnight” (2013) with Linklater and Julie Delpy. His enduring partnership with Linklater — “Blue Moon” marks their ninth collaboration — has consistently produced career-defining work.

The Academy has a proven track record of rewarding actors portraying real-life musicians and performers, from Jamie Foxx as Ray Charles in “Ray” (2004) to Marion Cotillard as Édith Piaf in “La Vie en Rose” (2007). However, stories about lyricists and composers remain rare, potentially making Hawke’s portrayal stand out.

Hart represents a unique figure — someone indispensable to the American songbook yet deeply fragile in his private life. This duality offers the kind of complex, transformative role that Oscar voters traditionally embrace.

The best actor race looks to be exceptionally competitive this year. Venice Film Festival alone showcased several potential contenders: George Clooney in “Jay Kelly,” Oscar Isaac in “Frankenstein,” Dwayne Johnson in “The Smashing Machine” and Jesse Plemons in “Bugonia.” Other viable candidates include Michael B. Jordan in the box office smash “Sinners,” Wagner Moura in “The Secret Agent” who won best actor at Cannes and Leonardo DiCaprio in the yet-to-be-released “One Battle After Another.”

At Telluride, Hawke also presented his music documentary “Highway 99: A Double Album,” about country legend Merle Haggard. While still seeking U.S. distribution, the project demonstrates Hawke’s versatility as both actor and filmmaker — a quality that often resonates with Academy voters.

In “Blue Moon,” Hawke delivers a turn that is both theatrical and intimate, showcasing an actor at the height of his craft. He renders Hart as a man hanging by a thread while compelling audiences to absorb every moment. In addition, if the Academy embraces Hawke’s worthy efforts, it could help right the wrong of Andrew Scott’s Oscar snub for “All of Us Strangers” (2023), which also premiered in Telluride. There are many instances of where a well-regarded leading turn in a biopic can help pull through an equally compelling supporting player, even if the film as whole isn’t garnering much traction (i.e., Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong from “The Apprentice” or Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon from “Invictus”).

With no clear frontrunner emerging in this year’s awards race, the combination of a beloved actor, a humanistic portrayal and a celebrated filmmaker like Linklater could prove irresistible to voters.

For Hawke, after years of near-misses, the stars could finally be aligning for Oscar gold.

“Blue Moon” also stars Andrew Scott, Margaret Qualley and Bobby Cannavale and is scheduled to be released on Oct. 17.


See all Academy Award predictions


Variety Awards Circuit: Oscars


August 30, 2025 0 comments
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See Ethan Hawke in ‘The Lowdown’ Trailer from FX, Sterlin Harjo
TV & Streaming

See Ethan Hawke in ‘The Lowdown’ Trailer from FX, Sterlin Harjo

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

A well-established trope in film noir is that the protagonist comes out somewhat worse for wear by the end of the story. From the looks of its trailer, FX’s forthcoming series The Lowdown will stay true to that.

As lead character Lee Raybon, Ethan Hawke gets beaten up (and manhandled, and shoved in the trunk of a car) a good amount in the trailer. The reason? Lee is a self-appointed “truthstorian” who is committed to exposing corruption in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which often gets him sideways with those in power.

The Lowdown is Sterlin Harjo’s follow-up to the critically hailed Reservation Dogs at FX. Watch the trailer for the “Tulsa noir” series below.

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Here’s how FX describes The Lowdown: “When the publication of Lee’s latest exposé — a deep dive into the powerful Washberg family — is immediately followed by the suspicious suicide of Dale Washberg (Tim Blake Nelson), the black sheep of the family, Lee knows he’s stumbled onto something big. Following a trail of breadcrumbs Dale has left behind, urging someone to dig deeper into the circumstances surrounding his death, Lee does just that. What Lee finds is that Betty Jo (Jeanne Tripplehorn), the grieving widow, seems to be more interested in her brother-in-law Donald Washberg (Kyle MacLachlan), a gubernatorial candidate, than in her dearly departed. And powerful forces want to prevent Lee from learning anything more.”

The series also stars Ryan Kiera Armstrong (Skeleton Crew, Hulu’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot) Kaniehtiio Horn (Reservation Dogs) and Keith David (Duster). Harjo created The Lowdown, which is set to premiere Sept. 23, and executive produces with Hawke, Garrett Basch and Ryan Hawke. FX Productions is the studio.

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Hawke, Kyle MacLachlan, Keith David in 'The Lowdown' Trailer
Hollywood

Ethan Hawke, Kyle MacLachlan, Keith David in ‘The Lowdown’ Trailer

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Ethan Hawke, Kyle MacLachlan, Keith David in ‘The Lowdown’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
August 26, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Now and again, he gets in over his head…” FX has unveiled an official trailer for a streaming series called The Lowdown, a Tulsa, Oklahoma thriller about a journalist who digs too deep into the underbelly of a dangerous local family. Created by filmmaker Sterlin Harjo of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma. Ethan Hawke stars as Lee Raybon. It follows the gritty exploits of citizen journalist Lee, a self-proclaimed Tulsa “truthstorian” whose obsession with the truth is always getting him into trouble… A determined bookstore owner in Tulsa moonlights as an investigative journalist, digging into local corruption. When his reporting uncovers sinister connections within, he must protect both his family and the truth. Lee has also gained the attention of a mysterious stranger who seems to appear whenever Lee least expects it: refined and suave, Marty shares Lee’s appreciation of great literary minds, and seems unusually interested in his investigation into the Washbergs. The ensemble features Keith David, Kyle MacLachlan, Kaniehtiio Horn, Ryan Kiera Armstrong, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Scott Shepherd, Siena East, Cody Lightning, Michael “Killer Mike” Render, Tim Blake Nelson, and Tracy Letts. Aside from the recent series “Tulsa King” also set in Tulsa, this also reminds me of the “Fargo” series. Though this looks much funnier than those two.

Here’s the main official trailer (+ poster) for FX’s thriller series The Lowdown, direct from YouTube:

The Lowdown Series Trailer

The Lowdown Poster

Lee (Ethan Hawke) lives and works in a rare bookstore tucked in the heart of Tulsa – a local refuge and unofficial community hub. While no idealist, he’s fiercely committed to exposing corruption & unearthing the city’s hidden rot, even when it puts him at risk. His sleuthing pulls him deep into Tulsa’s underbelly – and often away from his 14-year-old daughter Francis (Ryan Kiera Armstrong), a precocious kid who’s inherited his curiosity and longs to join him. His ex Samantha (Kaniehtiio Horn) is exasperated by Lee’s endless digging, but still sees the good in him – especially when it comes to Francis, the one thing they’ve never stopped showing up for. When the publication of his latest exposé – a deep dive into the powerful Washberg family – is immediately followed by the suspicious death of Dale Washberg (Tim Blake Nelson), the black sheep of the family, Lee knows he’s stumbled onto something big. Following the trailer that Dale has left behind, urging someone to dig deeper into the circumstances surrounding his death, Lee does just that. And what Lee discovers is that Betty Jo (Jeanne Tripplehorn), the grieving widow, seems to be more interested in her brother-in-law Donald Washberg (Kyle MacLachlan), a gubernatorial candidate, than in her dearly departed. And powerful forces want to prevent Lee from learning anything more about them…

The Lowdown is a series created by Native American writer / director Sterlin Harjo (Seminole Nation of Oklahoma), director of the indie films Mekko and Love and Fury previously, plus episodes of the “Reservoir Dogs” FX series recently. With writing by Duffy Boudreau, Sterlin Harjo, Sneha Koorse, Olivia Purnell, Scott Teems. And featuring episodes directed by Sterlin Harjo, Macon Blair, Danis Goulet. It’s produced by FX Productions. Executive produced by Garrett Basch, Sterlin Harjo, Ethan Hawke, Ryan Hawke. FX will debut The Lowdown series streaming on Hulu starting on September 23rd, 2025 coming soon. Look any good?

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August 26, 2025 0 comments
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