THE SWEATIEST, most homeworklike moment of any documentary is the job of setting the stakes, that necessary introduction that typically relies on sweeping generalizations about time and human nature. A six-part series on the lives of Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, directed by and prominently featuring Ethan Hawke, could have slipped into plaintive nostalgia for a bygone era or underexamined hero worship for the two icons' towering legacies. Its title alone, The Last Movie Stars, feels a bit like a joke when articulated by a man with a lengthy section of accolades on his own Wikipedia. But the docuseries runs on Hawke's enthusiastic curiosity about his subjects. He showcases Newman's and Woodward’s work with a careful critical assessment, and the result is personal and loving, especially in the many sequences that dwell on the stars’ darker, less flattering qualities.
The series’ foundational material comes from a massive library of interviews Newman helped collect as part of a potential memoir. Although he eventually destroyed the tapes, one of his children gave Hawke boxes and boxes of transcribed interviews with over a hundred of Newman’s and Woodward’s friends, family members, and collaborators. Hawke makes two choices about those transcripts that shape what eventually becomes The Last Movie Stars: He asks other celebrities to narrate them, and he includes his conversations with these other actors about the project in the series itself.
This story is from the August 01 - 14, 2022 edition of New York magazine.
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This story is from the August 01 - 14, 2022 edition of New York magazine.
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