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Ethan Hawke on 'Blue Moon' Interview: On Playing Lorenz Hart
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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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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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