The RS Interview: Ethan Hawke Talks New Movie Blaze, Positives of Fame - 27reservation

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The RS Interview: Ethan Hawke Talks New Movie Blaze, Positives of Fame


Ethan Hawke invited Rolling StonesDavid Fear to join him at one of his favorite Brooklyn restaurants for the latest installment of the RS Interview. Hawke has been earning critical acclaim for his role in Paul Schraders First Reformed, with some predicting hell get an Oscar nomination for his role as a conflicted priest. Hell also be returning to Broadway this month in a production of Sam Shepards True West, alongside Paul Dano. In our wide-ranging chat, the actor touched on an array of topics including his new movie Blaze, the importance of music to his acting and filmmaking and the positive effects of fame.

Over the course of his career, Hawke has played a slew of musicians, both real and imagined. But he notedthat music always plays a crucial role in his projects, regardless of the subject matter.

Its like the true, pure art form, Hawke said. Whenever I get a chance to direct, whenever Im in charge, the first thing I think about is the music. And the first thing I think about when I play a part is, what does it sound like?

Hawke both directed and stars in his latest film Blaze, which tells the story of Blaze Foley, an influential, but often overlooked member of the outlaw country movement. For Hawke, Foleys little-known, but no-less remarkable career offered the chance to make a music biopic that wasnt beholden to the classic tropes of the genre.

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Most every movie about a musician is made about a famous musician, so invariably it becomes about the pratfalls of success, the trials of celebrity the moment where Johnny Cash writes Folsom Prison Blues,' Hawke said. The advantage of blaze is theres no Folsom Prison Blues, there is no moment where he gets signed, there is no moment where the ego goes to his head. Its a whole different movie about the arts.

Elsewhere in the interview, Hawke discussed working with Denzel Washington onTraining Day andgetting life advice from Kris Kristofferson, while later he touched on some of his favorite writers, musicians and actors in a lightning round. The actor also offered a unique insight into what its been like to be famous since his teens, and how thats effected his outlook on art. Hawke recalled sitting in a restaurant with his Dead Poets Society co-star Robert Sean Leonard when suddenly one table stood up and began reciting Walt Whitmans O Captain! My Captain! just like in the film. Soon everyone else in the restaurant had joined in.

Theres some negative things that come along with feeling like youre in a glass wall and people are staring at you, but the overwhelming positive is the power of art, Hawke said. We live in a culture where everybody likes to be ironic or cynical, but Ive never been good at that. I learned with that movie, right off the bat, that art has a real power.

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