Richard Linklater likes to joke that if he and Ethan Hawke didn’t know each other so well, Hawke probably would have punched him during the production of “Blue Moon.”
The two Texans have been friends and colleagues for more than 30 years. When they began “Blue Moon” over songwriter Lorenz Hart’s set for a night at Sardi’s restaurant, they had made eight films together. This is a project they’ve been talking about for over a decade.
One can assume that this would be an old hatred between them. And yet, in select theaters on Friday, this was a movie that will require very different dynamics.
“I was nervous. I was riding him. That’s not the way I usually operate,” Linklater said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. “The movie is small scale. It seems minimalistic. But what Ethan was relying on was huge.”
Hawk said in a separate interview that the punching story was completely true. He realized that Linklater was channeling the Sidney Lumet in him – who was a great actor director, but a strict director.
Hawk said, “It was shocking to me. He didn’t want us to take the job lightly or for us to be friends.” “He’s been listening to me talk about acting for 30 years and he wanted to give me a chance to actually do it. Stop talking about it and do it.”
Hawk never backed down from a challenge. When they were making “Before Sunrise” in Vienna in 1994, Linklater remembered that Hawke had looked at the script and said “it probably wouldn’t work” but he plunged into it anyway. That’s when he’s convinced he’s found a kindred spirit, someone who pursues the impossible.
Linklater said, “If you want to do something different, do something that no one has seen before, you have to be in that field.” “You have to feel like you’re moving forward to some extent like, ‘We’re risking a major failure.'”
But Lorenz Hart, the writer of the “before” films, was not Jesse. Here was a man who was short, bald, extremely self-conscious about his looks and had the greatest personality and intelligence in the room. He was a genius and an alcoholic who had made himself unemployed. And amidst all this, times were changing and he was being left behind.
Every two years in the last decade they would get together and read scripts. Hawke loved the character and felt deep down that he was the right person to do it, but when it came time to flesh it out in principle, he said, “It became too scary.” During the first few days of rehearsals, Hawke became very ill.
“It’s like my body knew it was going to be something really stressful,” he said. “The phenomenon of the movie is Lorenz Hart and everyone is really supporting this picture.”
This included himself and his ego. “Blue Moon” will require reshoots, and the movie star that is Ethan Hawke will be missing.
Writer Robert Kaplow’s screenplay prepares audiences for “Oklahoma!” Takes you inside the famous Broadway Theater District restaurant Sardi’s on opening night. In 1943. Hart is sitting courtside with a bartender, waiting for his old associate Richard Rodgers to arrive at the party.
For over 20 years, Rodgers and Hart were a prolific and successful songwriting team, producing hits like “My Funny Valentine,” “Isn’t It Romantic?” Including musical hits and hundreds of classic songs. “The Lady is a Tramp” and “Blue Moon.” It’s one of the great artistic partnerships of all time. This film is about that breakup.
“Oklahoma!” Rodgers found a new lyricist in Oscar Hammerstein II, and the two scored hit after hit – including “South Pacific,” “Carousel,” “The King and I” and “The Sound of Music.” Meanwhile, Hart sings “Oklahoma!” Will die after eight months. Opening, at the age of 48.
Hawke said, “The country is changing, and the Jazz Age is ending and a new era is beginning and one of these guys is going to continue to lead and the other one is going to be completely left behind.” “And the fact that he’s so funny even in the face of tragedy? That’s where the script really shines: the duality of this guy. He’s extremely jealous and also very supportive and loving. He’s wickedly funny and self-destructive. He’s gay in love with a woman. Correlation of contradictions, he’s Larry Hart.”
The production used old-fashioned Hollywood tricks to make the 5-foot-10-inch Hawk look small on a micro budget. He shaved his head to achieve the bald look. And he built Sardi’s set in Ireland.
Linklater said, “I always describe it as the little scream in the night of an artist being left behind. It’s like living through your own extinction.” “I hope people respond to it the same way you do to a beautiful Rodgers and Hart song. It’s lyrical, it’s beautiful in a way, but it devastates you in a way.”
Making a living in art requires immense sacrifice, no matter how you look at it. And there’s always the possibility that the culture will pass you by. Hawk, for one thing, said there were three separate moments in his career when he was absolutely certain he was disrespected.
“There’s no way you can do this for over 30 years and not realize it,” Hawke said. “They come like waves and you have to try to survive.”
This experience made him think about the many people he had come in contact with who had guided him when he started out in theater in the 1980s. Many of them, like Hart, were closeted, and they viewed their vocation not as a job but as a kind of spiritual calling. One stage actor he was thinking about a lot was the late Richard Easton, with whom he had done a few plays before he passed away.
“When I was young, they told me, ‘One lifetime is not enough. That’s not enough time to learn what you need to learn to become the kind of actor you dream of becoming,'” Hawke said. “It’s a great attitude. It creates a constant feeling of learning and an ongoing process, and this part really required everything I’ve learned so far.”
“Blue Moon” is actually one of two Linklater films about artists that will hit theaters this month. “Nouvelle Vague”, about the making of Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless”, is about the beginning of a career. “Blue Moon” is about the end of one.
“There is a poignancy to an art career,” Linklater said. “I think we all think we’ll just keep running the table and keep doing that until we die. But things get in the way.”
One thing we don’t have to worry about is creative separation between Linklater and Hawke. Linklater might have given his friend some tough love, but they never argued, and in the end it was worth it. Hawk met the challenge and no one was punched.
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