Ethan Hawke has been nominated for an Oscar for lead actor for his position in “Blue Moon,” directed by Richard Linklater from a screenplay by Robert Kaplow. Within the movie, Hawke performs lyricist Lorenz Hart, who wrote the sharp, witty phrases to such requirements as “My Humorous Valentine” and “Blue Moon.”
The drama captures one night time with Hart close to the tip of his life as he waits at Sardi’s for his former songwriting accomplice Richard Rogers (performed by Andrew Scott) to reach for a celebration celebrating the premiere of “Oklahoma!” By turns humorous and self-pitying, filled with regrets, disappointments and thwarted ambitions, Hart is portrayed by Hawke as a person who has usually been his personal greatest impediment and is coming to comprehend his time has handed him by.
Hawke had been beforehand Oscar-nominated for supporting actor in 2001’s “Coaching Day” and 2014’s “Boyhood” — and for co-writing “Earlier than Sundown” and “Earlier than Midnight.” He has been performing professionally since he was a youngster, with an in depth checklist of credit that features “Useless Poets Society,” “Actuality Bites,” “Gattaca,” “Hamlet,” “Earlier than the Satan Is aware of You‘re Useless,” “First Reformed” and plenty of extra.
Talking on the telephone through the morning of the Oscar nominations from his house in Brooklyn, the 55-year-old Hawke confirmed no indicators of slowing down, as he was heading to Park Metropolis, Utah, the subsequent day for the Sundance Movie Pageant. His new undertaking, “The Weight,” starring Hawke and produced by his spouse Ryan Hawke, could be premiering there and Hawke would even be talking at a tribute to Robert Redford.
“It’s true that this final yr is among the hardest working years of my life,” mentioned Hawke. “I went from ‘Blue Moon’ straight to ‘The Lowdown’ straight to ‘The Weight.’ One way or the other figured ‘Black Telephone 2’ in there. I labored my ass off the final yr. Ask my youngsters; they’re not glad about it.”
You latterly did an interview the place you mentioned you thought you had been possibly doing too many interviews. So I assume I apologize prematurely.
Ethan Hawke: It’s simply humorous, the quantity of vitality it takes to type of penetrate the zeitgeist right this moment is much more than it was once. I hate to sound like an previous man, but it surely was once you go on “Letterman” and everyone knew about your film. And now it’s like, wow. It’s only a lot totally different.
Congratulations in your nomination right this moment. Have been you watching the bulletins? How did you discover out?
Hawke: I don’t do this to myself. I came upon as a result of my spouse woke me up and instructed me. I let myself attempt to sleep in in order that I might attempt to keep away from the stress.
That is your fifth Oscar nomination, however the first for finest actor. What does that imply to you?
Hawke: Embarrassingly sufficient, it means quite a bit. I’ve devoted my life to this occupation and our tradition locations a excessive worth on that. And it means quite a bit to me. Frankly, I don’t assume I’d’ve thought after I did “Coaching Day” that it might take me so lengthy to get there. It’s been an extended street.
Margaret Qualley and Ethan Hawke within the film “Blue Moon.”
(Sabrina Lantos / Sony Footage Classics)
It’s such an excellent yr for films and also you discuss with such ardour and conviction — virtually as an envoy of films — about how necessary they’re to you. You appear to be you’re like cheerleading for everyone else as a lot as selling your personal work.
Hawke: I really feel that means, sincerely. I recognize you saying that as a result of I do assume that’s type of the job of those award exhibits and issues. We’re ambassadors for our occupation. All people is aware of that competitors and the humanities — it’s a recreation and loads of nice issues go unnoticed of their time. And time is the good curator, in fact. However films want a lift and it’s a part of our job to create substantive, significant leisure for individuals to have critical conversations and fascinating issues to consider and speak about and push the consciousness ahead. And so I really feel actually pleased with all these films that had been nominated and tons of them that weren’t, which can be all doing their job.
The truth that this nomination comes from a movie you’ve made with Richard Linklater, who you’ve labored so intently with through the years — does that make it much more particular?
Hawke: I couldn’t articulate that clear sufficient. It feels so great to get this for a film that was made so organically and rose up via not via the prism of enterprise, however via the prism of friendship. Robert Kaplow is a superb screenwriter and Rick’s his good friend, and we’ve been speaking about this for a decade. And that’s the way in which the entire tasks that I’ve performed with Rick have occurred, is that they type of are born out of friendship. And so to get to ring the bell with a movie that basically feels so linked to my life is especially significant.
What does that relationship with Richard imply to you?
Hawke: Phrases fail. I believe that friendship is the substance of our life. When friendships or amorous affairs or collaborations occur the precise means, they’re type of easy. And your life is richer due to them, not your work. Your life, your character is improved. I all the time like to inform my youngsters, you spend your life with your pals, so your pals are your life, so select them correctly. They actually form you. And I’ve been actually fortunate to have an excellent good friend who occurs to be one of many definitive filmmakers of our period.
And I don’t take that evenly. Give it some thought, Rick has two — I do know he doesn’t care, so it type of makes it much more humorous — however he had two of one of the best films made this yr [“Blue Moon” and “Nouvelle Vague”]. And he doesn’t win any prizes but it surely’s type of a testomony to what’s particular about his filmmaking is that he disappears and lets the undertaking seem and he doesn’t put his signature throughout it. I used to be lucky sufficient to work with Sidney Lumet and so they’re paying homage to one another in a means. They’re simply utterly devoted to the work. And it’s great to have a accomplice like that.
What did you hook up with concerning the character of Lorenz Hart?
Hawke: It’s deeper than simply the character. It has to do with what the movie’s type of about. My love of the theater and my love of the individuals who dedicate their life to creativity and the type of highs and lows of that life, and the silliness and stupidity of that life, and the moments of elegiac grace. I like what the movie is about. It’s type of a howl into the night time of an artist being left behind. And indifference is type of the sensation most of us on this occupation really feel more often than not, clearly not right this moment, however most of our lives are met with absolute indifference.
And it additionally had the great fortune of the way in which Rick works. He’s so affected person — we labored on it and dreamed about it for 10 years. And we knew it was fragile. We knew it was delicate. We knew the bull’s-eye was extraordinarily small. It’d be a simple film to make badly. So it was solely execution-dependent. And that’s the enjoyable of Rick is he loves to consider it.
You shaved your head for this. Have been you assured it was going to develop again?
Hawke: No. At my age you’re like, “Wait a second, is that this only a big mistake?” However we knew we needed to get the look proper. So we had been all in.
You simply appear to be you’re in such an unimaginable place proper now in your profession, you’re making tasks like “Blue Moon” and “The Black Telephone” films, you’re doing TV work, you’ll be able to direct your personal tasks like “Wildcat” or “The Final Film Stars,” about Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. How do you see the place you might be proper now?
Hawke: It feels actually good as a result of I’ve much more I need to do. I’ve began to really feel like one lifetime’s not sufficient for this occupation and that there retains being a lot to be taught. I get extra excited concerning the potentialities of how storytelling can influence our tradition and what the obligations are with that and the way a lot enjoyable I’ve had. I’ve actually had a ball — my entire profession I’ve gotten to do issues the way in which that I wished to do them.
And it’s type of thrilling for me to look at Stellan [Skarsgård] this yr and like get impressed. I imply, he’s a correct grown-up and he’s humble and so gifted and had such an incredible profession. And it makes me actually excited concerning the future. I’ve all the time had these enormous actors I’ve admired, Christopher Plummer, Jason Robards, individuals who’ve realized how one can develop up and be an grownup on this occupation. That’s what I’m attempting to do. So I really feel like that’s the second you’re discovering me in.
As a result of it appears at this level that you just’re all the time working. Do you ever take into consideration simply taking a break?
Hawke: I’ve been all the time working since ’89. The factor is, I simply like it. My spouse and I’ve this little manufacturing firm and we each simply like to work and make issues and attempt to sneak issues into the environment that may not exist in any other case. And it’s the way you outline work, proper? More often than not it’s not work for me. I cherished making “Blue Moon.” Once I’m on a set with Richard Linklater, I’m precisely the place I need to be. My relationship with my work is one the place I wouldn’t need to take a yr off as a result of I wouldn’t know what to do.
I’ve seen lots of people, once they speak about you, they are saying they used to search out you annoying — who does that man assume he’s, writing a novel or directing a film? — however that they’ve come to actually respect and admire you for the truth that you attempt to take action many various issues and also you’ve actually stored at it. How do you’re feeling about it while you hear individuals speak about you in that means?
Hawke: I believe they’re proper too. It’s a basic suspicion and if you happen to can’t stand up to that suspicion, then it’s best to cease. Like you need to cross via that if you happen to’re critical and you need to be keen to be criticized, to be made enjoyable of. It’s a small luxurious tax for attending to do it. You actually need to be doing it since you need to supply one thing. And so if you happen to’re providing it, then individuals can do with it no matter they need. They will throw it away. They don’t should take it.
I believe a few of the stuff that was occurring to me after I was youthful, dealing with that perspective was actually really good for me. I imply, I hated it. All of us need to be favored and understood and for individuals to know our intentions and know that our intention is true and we’re coming from an excellent place. All of us crave that. However you simply can’t give it an excessive amount of credit score. And also you’ve simply acquired to maintain placing one foot in entrance of the opposite.
