Ethan Hawke, Andrew Scott, and Bobby Cannavale attended the premiere of Richard Linklaterβs new drama βBlue Moonβ at the 63rd New York Film Festival on Monday.
The film is part of this yearβs Spotlight collection for the festival, which showcases βsignificantβ and βanticipatedβ features. It also marks Linklaterβs sixth time at NYFF.
Occurring on March 31, 1943, on the opening night of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammersteinβs musical βOklahoma!,β the drama focuses on lyricist Lorenz Hart (Hawke) at a moment where his professional relationship with Rodgers (Scott) β and with Broadway as a whole β is falling apart. βBlue Moonβ was written by novelist Robert Kaplow, who said he first got the idea for the film when he was 20 in an interview with The Knockturnal.
βI listened to an audio tape of Rodgers, and heβs talking about leaving Hart, and his tone was so cold, so business-like, and even a little callous,β Kaplow said. βI actually got a chill listening to it.β
Hart and Rodgers boasted a 20-year partnership, responsible for stage musicals like βOn Your Toesβ and songs like βIsnβt It Romantic?β that were written for films. Their final collaboration was on the musical βA Connecticut Yankeeβ in 1943, and the two parted ways due to a dysfunctional partnership. βBlue Moonβ explores Hartβs alcoholism, which not only contributed to this split but also led him to die from pneumonia eight months later.
βIt was an interesting relationship to explore,β said Kaplow. βThese two guys love each other and are completely exasperated by each other at the same time.β
Scott plays opposite Hawke as Richard Rodgers, who at this point is on the precipice of a career-defining show and immense prestige in the theater world. For Scott, tackling this Broadway icon meant exploring what wouldβve been the uncertainties surrounding the reception of his art.
βI like the idea of the artist going, βI wonder, will people like it?ββ Scott said in an interview with The Knockturnal. βYou see that artists donβt escape nerves.β
In line with Linklaterβs filmography, βBlue Moonβ is told through dialogue, this time almost exclusively in the iconic Sardiβs restaurant in the heart of New York Cityβs Theater District. Hawke told The Knockturnal about stepping into Hartβs mindframe at this point in his life, sitting at a bar and struggling to process the regression of his career.
βYouβre experiencing somebody in 90 minutes of real time whoβs about to die of heartbreak,β Hawke said. βThe stakes couldnβt be higher for him. Itβs like heβs present at a giant multi-car crash in the middle of a highway β on Broadway.β
Cannavaleβs character, Eddie, is a bartender at Sardiβs whoβs been privy to Hartβs emotional turmoil and isnβt supposed to serve him drinks. Cannavale told The Knockturnal that his years of bartending experience prepared him for portraying Eddie, which he said requires being βsociable.β
βI really did tap into my old bartender vibes, and I easily found them,β Cannavale said.
βBlue Moonβ is one of two Linklater films selected for this yearβs NYFF β heβll also be showcasing βNouvelle Vague,β a reimagination of the creation of Jean-Luc Godardβs βBreathless.β Linklater spoke to The Knockturnal about finding the βunique angleβ on moments in history, like in βBlue Moon,β and infusing creativity in biographical stories.
βFilms can really reimagine and recreate moments in history in a powerful way, unlike other artistic mediums,β Linklater said.Β
βBlue Moonβ will screen at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Oct. 5.
(Feature photo courtesy of Film at Lincoln Center)