01x00 - The Road West

Episode transcripts for the TV show "1883". Aired: December 19, 2021 to present.*
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A prequel to "Yellowstone," "1883" follows the Dutton family as they flee poverty in Texas to a better future in Montana.
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01x00 - The Road West

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♪ MTV ♪

- " " is...
- Gritty.


- Intense.
- Beautiful.


It's epic. There's no question about it.

It's a young woman's
coming of age story.

- It's massive.
- Mind-boggling.

It's a journey.

There's excitement, danger,
unpredictability.

I don't care if I do any other
show for the rest of my life.


I only do Westerns from now on.

Those are the kind
of stories I like to tell,


and that's the way I like to tell them.

[SWEEPING DRAMATIC MUSIC]

♪ ♪

The idea to make " "

actually came from
one of the studio executives

asking me about the backstory
of John Dutton.

And I explained it to him

from the origin of where they came,

and he thought that that in
and of itself was a TV show.

I was intrigued by the idea,
and so I wrote some flashbacks

that people have now seen
on "Yellowstone".

So Taylor called, he goes,

"Hey, man, I want you to be in the show.

I want you to be in 'Yellowstone'.

Are you're interested in it?"

And he says, "I got this idea.

We're gonna do a flashback,

and you're gonna play
the original Dutton

who founded the Yellowstone ranch.

You're also gonna have a wife in this".

He says, "Do you think
Faith would be interested

in playing your wife in the flashbacks?"

♪ ♪

If you go in the handbook of directors,

you're not supposed to hire
a husband and wife

to do a movie together.

It's historically failed every time,

but you're also not supposed
to film kids or horses, so.

We both watch the show,

so we were excited
to have that invitation


and didn't know quite what to expect.

Then I spoke with Sam Elliott

about doing something in the space.

♪ ♪

I got a call from him.
"I got something to show you",

and he sent me this series of scripts,

and there was no saying no,

because it spoke to me.

The character spoke to me.
The show speaks to me.

♪ ♪

You know what I'm doing here?

Looking for a reason.

You wanna be my reason?

I had not found the connective tissue

between this origin story
of James Dutton

and this road to redemption
story of Sam Elliott.


I had not found the bridge.

And the actress Isabel May read for me

for another TV series,

and it dawned on me
that she was the bridge.

I called the network,
and I said, I found our lead,


and I haven't written a word,

and you're just gonna have to trust me.

♪ ♪

This is something different altogether,

'cause you're seeing it through
the eyes of a young woman.

And I don't think that's
ever been done before.

Not in this way.

We are seeing things through
an -year-old girl's eyes.

And it's a very different
vision of the West


because you see it,
sort of her innocence

and her magic that she's able
to show us this world


that has sex and v*olence and despair,

but also hope.

To play a character that
narrates her own story


as well as every other character story,

it's extremely humbling.

Freedom is riding wild over untamed land

with no notion any moment exists

beyond the one you are living.

It's pretty phenomenal, right?

If you just sort of look
at a big family tree,

it takes us back many generations

and that survival
and fighting for the land


and doing what's right
and protecting your family

are these similar themes

that were handed down
generation to generation

until we get the John Dutton.

[TENSE COUNTRY MUSIC]

♪ ♪

- Good sh*t.
- Yep.

James is John's great, great,
great grandfather.

You can see the bloodline.

You can see the strength
in the bloodline.

You can see the backbone
that this family has

and the power that they have,

and their concern for each other.

I believe in you,
and I believe in that boy,

and I believe in our daughter.
That's all.

That's why it's so important
to the Dutton family

present day to fight for his land.

And, like, you see how fierce they are,

fighting for what's theirs.

[g*nf*re, SCREAMING]

[SCREAMS]

[CRYING] God!

" " is a journey
of an unlikely group of people

fighting against the forces of nature,

the malice of humankind

in search of change and a new home.

♪ ♪

It's about freedom.

It's about the American dream,
which, you know,

it's become this synonymous
with the idea of freedom,

about the beauty of it
and the ugliness of it,

and all the beautiful things

people will do for their freedom

and then also all the ugly
things they do for it.

I can be a good wife.

Stop. Quit it.

The thing about " ",
it's a tale that's been told.

It's a tale that
we're all familiar with,

the Oregon Trail.

But it's never been done like
Taylor's done it on the page.

You think we're fools just because we...

You have no horses, no g*ns.
You can't ride.

You are a f*cking fool.

♪ ♪

History is doomed to repeat itself

because it's never taught accurately.

As a storyteller, my job is to try

and hold a mirror up to nature

and reflect back the world as it was.

I think that it's truth through fiction.

There's a grittiness to it.
There's an authenticity to it.


It feels real.

The struggles are all real.
The people are all real.

We're traveling with
a caravan of immigrants.


It was incredible for me

because I am an immigrant myself.

So I get to tell a story of someone

who goes across the world
to follow their dream.

Most people who went West

saw ads in newspapers in Poland

and in Croatia and in Germany
and answered those ads

and saved up all their money,
sold everything they had,

and hired a group that would
take them on these wagons.


In the s,

there's actually a large flight
of immigrants to America

because there's overpopulation.

And there was a high rate
of unemployment.

It's actually interesting
there has been a Texan...


a German Texan immigrant
who wrote letters,

like beautiful letters,

how beautiful Texas is and everything,

and these letters were printed
in a German newspaper.

And many Germans at the time read them,

and that was their decision to come.

I think people dreamed of change

and creating something and having land

and being free.

It's a free country.

That's a free country.

That is Comanche land.

Beyond it is no man's land,

and that's where we're going.
You ain't free yet.

And these people didn't speak English,

had no notion of what
the Southwest was like

or the Great Plains were like.

Had no idea they were
horribly unprepared,

facing a whole new host of diseases

that they've never been exposed to,

elements they've never been exposed to.

It was an extremely dangerous,
dangerous journey.

♪ ♪

I'll push her. Now get to the back.

[GROANING]

[GRUNTING]

[SCREAMING]

This is what happened.

This is the journey
that our ancestors took,

and it was horrifying
and extremely difficult.

It's nothing new.
It's happened back then.

It's happening now.

We're all immigrants in this country,

and this journey... it's so compelling,

and it tells a story that
just... it's gut-wrenching

but it's truthful.

And there's a lot of people
in this journey

that haven't been represented
in other westerns.

I don't think that there is
a more misrepresented group

in American cinema
than the Native American.

And what little I can do to correct

that historical perspective
in fiction, I'm gonna do.


When historians write books
about native people,

a lot of times they put
us in this box, right?

And they say, oh,
they were hunter-gatherers,


or they lived according to this way.

It completely removes the idea

that we were also individuals.

We had our own individual tastes,

our own individual attractions.

And that's kind of the way
the storytelling has gone

in Hollywood for a long time.

One of the most interesting things

is the number one cause
of death on these wagon trains

was people falling off a wagon

and getting run over.

The number two cause of death

was accidental discharge of firearms.

Number three, it was drowning
in river crossing.

Number seven was Native Americans.

I think in all the stuff
that we learned growing up


was the number one fear
was Native Americans.

And nine times out of ten,
they were trying to help.

I made the Native American
community a promise


that I was gonna tell
their story truthfully.


And so, every opportunity
I get to do it,

I try to fulfill that promise.

♪ ♪

It's rare to have the kind of
story that we have been handed,

to be honest with you.
And I think for all of us,

we feel the responsibility

to do the best job that we can

to bring these characters to life

the way they were written.

There's three classic
struggles in these westerns.

It's man against man,
man against himself,


man against the environment.

In those struggles,
we're all in this in spades.

Let's go.

♪ ♪

" " is the origin story
of the Dutton family.

The Duttons come from
Tennessee originally.

There's a number of people
who moved West


out of desperation from the South.

And America was unique in the fact

that, wherever you were that you failed,

you could simply move west
to a new place

and reinvent yourself
and reinvent your life.

The main characters are Tim McGraw,

who plays obviously James Dutton.

We have Faith Hill,
who plays Margaret Dutton.


We have Isabel May, who plays Elsa.

Sam Elliott plays Shea.

And then LaMonica Garrett plays Thomas.

Elsa Dutton is a daughter
of the patriarch

and matriarch of the Dutton family.

At this time,
we have two children, Elsa,

and then we have John.

I wanted to be John Dutton
'cause he was a boy,

and he loves the outside.

I love the outside too.

Elsa, she's very naive.

She's experienced very few things.

They lived on a little farm.

She'd seen the same people
her entire life,

and she was bored.
She was desperate to get out.

This child is spirited,

and she's hard-headed and strong,

but she's also very smart.

Elsa is extremely independent

at a time when a young woman

is not allowed to be
independent in such a way.


There are certain things
that we weren't allowed

to say or voice.
And as the journey continues,

she sheds that civilized kind of costume

and starts to flourish

because she loves this world so much

and what it has to offer.

There's a fair chance
you're too pretty for me.

If you are, rather know now
so I don't waste my time.

Maybe you're too pretty for me.

[LAUGHS]

Right away, Ennis is just
fully blown away by Elsa...

aside from her beauty,

her wit, her brashness.

And I think she's the first girl

that ever makes Ennis speechless.

Oh, my gosh, you're forward.

Part of the storyline is, you know,

they were escaping poverty
and looking for a better life.

And I think there's more to it

than that in my mind for James Dutton.

During the series, you find
out that I was a captain


in the Civil w*r for the Confederacy,

put in a position that
he didn't want to be in.

Tim's character was one
of those who was drafted

and conscripted into the army.

And then endured, you know,
years in a prison of w*r camp

and then came home
to a destroyed homeland

and had lost faith in that society.

He had a lot of pain and PTSD from that.

I mean, you see it in the flashbacks,

and you see little glimpses
of who James is,

and you know that he's not
as hard as he comes across.

He really cares about people,
but you also know that

his family's the number one
concern that he has.

He dreamed of a better place.

He dreamed of a life
where he could dictate

his own fortune or failure.

And his family trusted him.

In my work as I become
more invested in the people

that we're trying to help
as the journey goes on.

You know, I'm always
there for my family,

and I'm always concerned
about my family,

but I think as the show goes on,

you realize that James cares
more about people

than you think he does.

It's better to double
the latigo with him.

Girl, I've forgotten more about horses

than you'll ever know.

Margaret, at the age of ,

was a nurse in the Civil w*r.

That would change your life, basically.

It would give you a perspective of life

that a -year-old in this day
and age could never imagine.

I mean, she is really
this sort of strong-willed,

powerful woman of the West.

She's raising a young boy

and a young, you know, daughter
who's becoming a woman.

And obviously has to manage
all of that while she sort of

takes this family
on this very treacherous,

dangerous journey across America.

Her heart, she becomes
stronger and stronger

and stronger as the journey goes on.

The moment our first daughter was born,

I'm a mom for the rest
of my life, period.

I mean, that is the first thing.

That's the last thing.
That's the middle thing.


That's everything.
My character is most concerned


about what is this
going to do to my family?


- Look after your brother.
- I will.

- "Yes, ma'am".
- I said I will.

I know what you said.

What you didn't say is "Yes, ma'am".

Women don't say that to each other.

- Oh, so you're a woman now?
- Aren't I?

Elsa has always viewed her mother

as restraining her from, you know,

being able to fully embrace
all that life has to offer.

And so, therefore, she kinda
has it out for her mom.

Margaret and Elsa have such
a contentious relationship,

as most teenage daughters and moms do.

Then she sees her mother
in a different light


because there's clearly a past
that she's unaware of.


Her mother can ride a horse beautifully.

And so she kind of starts to understand

my mother was something else
in the past,

and she gave that up,

and maybe she gave that up for me.

That's the biggest part of
James and Elsa's relationship,

that he understands her,

and he understands
the passion that she has.

And not only because
it's a reflection of him,


but it's a reflection
of Margaret as well.


She loves like Margaret.
She fights like me.

[GRUNTS]

Having Sam Elliot come
on board was just incredible

because I think he embodies everything

that the character of Shea should be.

When I think of Westerns,
I think him and Clint Eastwood.

Like that's just what it is.

Of course, my wife gets weak-kneed

every time she's around him.
I don't know a woman yet

that hasn't been weak-kneed
around Sam Elliott.

And I told my mama that I was
working with Sam Elliott.

She's like, "Oh my God, you're
working with Sam Elliott".

[CHUCKLES]

Shea is on a mission
to get back to Oregon.

Then at the same time,
he has something in him

that wants to help these
other people get there as well.

He knows that it's rife with hardship.

There's no question about that.

And a lot of them aren't gonna make it,

but he's driven to get those

that are tough enough
to survive to Oregon.

He is a troubled man for
a lot of different reasons.

First off, he was in the w*r.

You know, he's suffers from that.

He loses his family,

and I think that's the biggest burden

that he carries with him
throughout the show.


You know, Taylor talked to me
about Shea rode

with the Buffalo soldiers,

which was an all-Black
group of soldiers.

Shea is very heavy-handed with
everyone other than Thomas.

And... I don't know.

I get very emotional

talking about the relationship
of Shea and Thomas.

They're close. They're like brothers.

Thomas's story is not unfamiliar

to a lot of Black cowboys back then.

He's a former sl*ve.

At years old,
he went inside the house,

and the sl*ve owner was
passed away, natural causes.

So Thomas just gets on a horse

and just goes off and figures out life.

All that happened in between
then has helped shaped

who he was, his integrity.

And he met Shea during the w*r.
He was a soldier.

There were brothers-in-arms in the w*r.

Began fighting together
in the Civil w*r.

So they've been fighting
together for some years.

And that's how the bond
with them, you know,


became so strong.
It's like an s odd couple.

What in the hell is a "toilette"?

It's French for shitter.

When did you learn French?

Don't know French. It's just

the French word for shitter.

Two men who grow old together
trying to survive

and protect each other.

And so, relationships like
that that have so much history,

they don't have to say too much.

Thomas, he's a kind person.
He's an honest person.

And he's a very loyal person.

To me, he's the humanity of the show.

He's the soul of the show.

And he's the enforcer of the show.

So it's not a show where it's,
you know, "Yes, sir, no, sir".

Yes... it's, if you look at him wrong

or if you cross his moral code,

he's gonna k*ll you.

Get everything that was hers.

Nothing was hers.
It was his, and he's a thief.

Get everything that was hers.

It was like it's a different
Black cowboy take.


And I'm so glad Taylor,

you know, he chose me
to bring that to life.

Both Sam and LaMonica
are character builders,

and they really want
to understand what's motivated

the actions of the character
in the screenplay.

The show "Lonesome Dove",

Danny Glover played the role of Deets.

And Deets, the real-life Deets

on the Goodnight-Loving Trail,

was Bose Ikard.

And I found out he was buried
right there in Weatherford.

So me and a few castmates,
we went to the cemetery,

and it just... it moved me.

And it's, you know,

it's a story I'm very proud
to be a part,

telling, you know,
a story about Black cowboys.

He goes back to the truth.

The Westerns of post-Civil w*r

that painted these
matinee idol characters

in these false roles

and painted a really inaccurate
picture of the American West.

To tell the story truthfully
and really show


the American West
or a version of it accurately,


then you have to look
at those relationships,

and you have to re-examine a version

that Hollywood portrayed that was wrong.

♪ ♪

You know, I think my favorite moment

is this incredible scene that
we have Billy Bob Thornton


walking down main street
in the middle of the s.

And I look to the left,
and I see Billy Bob Thornton.

I look a little bit further,
there's Tim McGraw,

Sam Elliott, and LaMonica Garrett,

and I thought this is
a pretty good group

to walk into a bar with.

You know, you saw
"Reservoir Dogs" growing up,


you saw "Tombstone".
They all had that walk


where it was just these bad
dudes going to find trouble.

So I got to play out
those childhood dreams


of walking down that dusty road

to a gunfight in the saloon.

And it just happened to be with
all these icons next to me,

but it was... yeah, it was amazing.

Billy Bob Thornton,
he's this easy-going guy.


He's kinda unassuming.

We get inside the saloon,

and he just turns it on to this
stone-cold k*ller and sheriff.

Order this business on the Trinity.

So I'm supposed to stop
and have a line with Sam

right before the end of the scene.

And I got so caught up into
watching Billy Bob perform,


I just walked right past Sam,
just blew right by

and didn't say my line,
walked out the door.

And I looked at Sam and
goes, "Sam, I'm sorry.

I know I'm supposed
to give a line, and I forgot".

And he goes, "I noticed".

He's a powerful actor, Billy Bob,

and when he comes in at work,

it's hard to take your eye off of him.

Another incredible moment
is this Civil w*r sequence

that we have.

And out of nowhere,

Tom Hanks just shows up...

full beard, in character,
and a really powerful scene


between him and Tim McGraw.

It starts with Antietam,

and it starts with an original picture

from the battleground scene

and morphs out of the original
picture into a live sh*t.


And everybody's dead.

His whole company has been wiped out.

Captain.

Tom and I have been friends
for such a long time,


but no matter how good a friend you are,

when you're sitting there in
a scene that's that emotional,

and then you turn,

and you see Tom Hanks walk up
in a Union uniform,

look at you, and say, "Captain",

I just fell apart.

And then he sat beside me as I'm crying,

and he puts his hand on my shoulder.

Yeah, that's a great scene.

And of course, Tom,
you know, Tom was average.

[LAUGHTER]

When actors like this
are willing to come play

for a day or two,
of course now you're working

with some of the greatest
actors who've ever worked.


It's just a privilege.

[SOLDIERS SHOUTING]

I've done a lot of shows,

and I've never seen anything this big.

We did scenes in Fort Worth
with hundreds of extras,


businessmen going to work in the s,

two bar guys having fight.

We have huge scenes out in
sort of wild open with bandits.

We have everything that you can imagine.

We have -something wagons,

and it takes two to four
horses to pull them.


And I'm running from snow
and rain and schedule

and everything else.

It's epic. There's no question about it.

I'm not gonna compare it to anything

because I've never done
anything like this.

♪ ♪

"Yellowstone", at any given time,

we might have horses on set.
On this, at any given time,

we have , and we have a cattle herd.

Ironically, we are having to
actually have a trail drive

in order to film a trail drive.
And it's a challenge.

We have goats. We have chickens.

We have wranglers, cowboys
just working the horses

to make sure everyone is safe.

We have trucks and drivers
to move the whole company.

I mean, this is bigger
than a Beyoncé tour.


This is "Game of Thrones"
on the Prairie.

We began the sh**ting
in Texas in August.


So it was about , degrees.

There was sweat in places
I didn't know sweat can be.

I got wool on,

and wool is not Texas-friendly
in the summertime.

On top of the bandolier,
the belt, the g*ns,

like, ten-pound leather chaps,

like, everything is weighed down.

And my horse, he looks
like a utility camp.

First, we were in -degree
sweating, hot weather.

And three weeks later, we were
in ten-degree weather.


You know, we were out there
last week in Montana


with snowcap mountains
in the middle of a field.

Me, Sam, and Tim are on top
of our horses on the mountain.

And there was like a blizzard
that came through,

like you couldn't see
your hand in front of you.

The wind was blowing.

There've been times
where I was so cold out here,


I didn't think I could
tough it out too long.


And the thing that brought me out of it

and continues to bring me out
of it is just looking around

and seeing these mountain
ranges everywhere,

and you think, my God,

how lucky we are to be here
number one, but number two,

how lucky we are
to be here making a film.


You never really know
what you're gonna get

from Mother Earth that day.

And that adds to the grand scheme

and the look of the show,

but it also adds to
the thrill as an actor


to get to experience such spontaneity

on set every single day.

The methodology of Taylor
is to make everything

look like a ten-hour movie.
It's so big and so beautiful,

but there's a word
that is so important to him,


and that is "authenticity".

I'm interested in the truth,
even though it's fiction...

as accurately retelling an event

or a world as I possibly can.

Everything is historically accurate.

Every building, every structure,

every wagon, everything.

We strive to do everything
period correct.

We spent a lot of time
in research together,


all the information we can.

So when the camera's tight
on a cast member,

that he has the right
equipment on his horse

for the time period.

I went to school for film
and watched countless movies,

countless westerns where
everything was wrong.

And you know, just me being
an indigenous person,

I would feel kind of
ticked off if I saw,

you know, that we weren't
accurately portrayed.

So when it comes to finding the props,

I am trying to do my absolute
best on sourcing them from,


you know, the proper places
and making sure that they are,


in fact, you know,
if it's a Lakota bow case


that it's an actual Lakota bow case.

The language that
the Native Americans speak

has to be authentic.

The beads that they wear
have to be authentic.

The wagons, the horse breeds,
the cattle breeds.

And I think these days
audiences respect it,

actors feel it.

After you've done all your
work on the text and character,

you finally get to put on the clothes.

And I think that's kind of
your superhero cape in a way.

If you look at the costumes,
we made them all.


We didn't call some costume house

and get a bunch of "Little
House on the Prairie" stuff.


Every dress, every suit, every jacket,

everything was custom-made
by Janie and her team.

I am very familiar with this period

because I designed
"Deadwood", the series,


which was living in .

And then, I designed the movie,
which was in ,

but no two shows are alike.

" " is the West.

And during this time, there were

a lot of cowboys in Texas.

And that was one of the aspects

that I love doing the research for.

When she put this coat on me
the first time, I squealed.

Yeah, I'm in love with my costume.

I love the costumes,

and the attention to detail
is microscopic.

You see these people, and then suddenly,

wow, we're really here.
It's like a time machine.

This was a great opportunity
to do a period piece.


And period makeup is a lot of fun.

You look at a lot of the old Westerns,

and you see makeup on them.

Taylor definitely wanted this raw.

He said, "I want dirty sweaty".

There is some makeup
that is being applied to them.


The trick with it is to make it look

like they're not wearing any makeup.

So the start of the show,
they're on a train.


And that's the only time
that they're kind of have a,


what I'd call a beauty look about them.

But once they start getting out
onto the wagon train,

we're gonna try to
keep them dirty looking.

These departments, from
our production designer

to our prop master, everybody,
they had to come together

and build a world
in a very short period of time.

Nothing existed. We created it all.

We wanted to avoid the clichés

and do things that are
a little bit unusual

that you haven't seen in
so many westerns.

Cary White, our production designer,

this is his wheelhouse.

And he was able to come up
with some really,

really smart ideas.

The building right next to us
was built in , .

We constructed
a complete façade around it


and turned it into
a real building of .

But also put Styrofoam cornices
on a lot of these buildings

up on the top of them

that gives them a much
more Victorian look.

And the whole thing tied together

when we put the dirt in.
It really just came alive.

They brought in layers
and layers and layers of dirt.

And it's all compacted and then
top dressed appropriately

to make it all safe for the
animals that we have here.

I think we went a solid two months prep

to sh**t for four days
on house half-acre.

I mean, the stuff that they've done

is just so incredibly epic.

I like to get on set early and
walk around some of these sets


just to put yourself in that world.

So it makes it easy to find
the emotion in the scene.

This show would not be possible

without everyone that you don't see.

It is not a walk in the park.

It is hard work, and it's...

f*cking awesome.

Can I say that?

- Sure can.
- I just did.

I don't rehearse with my actors.

There's no way for me to inform
them what this way of life is.

You just have to do it.

I just take them out
and put them to work.


The purpose of cowboy camp

is to get actors comfortable
enough on the horses

that they weren't nervous
when they were riding.


The better I can make them as a rider,

the more they understand
the thing they're acting out,

the better the performances,

the more authentic the scenes
look, then it looks real.

Cowboy camp is the actors
get here about : ,

and then we start just exposing them

to real-life situations in .

Cowboy camp was probably

the most helpful thing in the world.

- Good morning, guys.
- Morning.

How's everybody doing?

And we all got to spend
a couple of weeks together,

just riding horses and roping
and herding cattle.

And here comes Taylor walking up like

he's the first one out there.

And he'll never ask you to do anything

that he doesn't do
as far as being on a horse.

We take them down and
have them work cattle.

We have them part them
out and sort them.


Roping, horseback riding,

herding cows.

We take them down to the pond
and have them swim horses

so we can prepare them
for the river crossings

that are coming up in the script.

Most of us learned how to drive wagons,

which is dangerous, by the way.

Climbing up rocks, going
through lakes and rivers,

and steering cattle.

I'm learning how to ride a horse,

and I'm swinging the rope around.

We're sh**ting g*ns back
to riding horses, lassoing.

We just played little games
where you put, for example,

an egg on a spoon

and have to ride
straight back and forth.

And whoever does it the fastest wins.

So it was really fun.

You had to carry the egg on a spoon,

but I dropped it every time.

So some people were
getting a little crafty,

and when they get further away from us,

their thumb would ease over the eggs,

so you really can't see
what's going on and like,

wait a minute, like you got
glue on that or something?

Like, you know, what's going on?

I'd heard Taylor cheated
when he does it.

That he puts his thumb on the egg.

I'm not saying that that's true.

I'm just saying that I've heard
that Taylor cheated.

There's no proof of cheating,

but it is suspected.

You know, everyone was very competitive,

but in a supportive way
to somewhat degree.

Everything that we have done,
we've learned how to do it

properly by the best of the best.

For all the talent,
they're trying to get them

comfortable with driving and riding.

So then, when they get on camera,

it becomes second nature to them.

Everyone will remember
their lines and not panic,


so they look the part.

They feel the part.

They can be the cowboy.

A lot of what we're doing now
is day in and day out,

so this becomes second nature.

So when we're going through the script,

that's what you could focus on

and not have to worry about
where my hands are,

and where's the g*n?

You must know how
to do it the right way.

Otherwise, it's just
kind of watered down,

and it just feels wrong.

Cowboy camp gets you ready for the show.

You're not showing up

and putting some dirt and makeup on.

Before you ever do that,

you're falling off of a horse.
Your back is hurting.

As a cowboy in ,

you didn't have nice cushiony saddles.

You know, you didn't have
all the fancy modern equipment

that you have today.

Oh, it's bare-bones. It's bare knuckles.

This is my first time
on an s saddle.

A hundred years ago,
if you went across country

from New York to California,

this is the way you went.

This is rougher than heck.

I'll tell you it's a lot
harder than it looks.

I mean, you see those wagon
drivers kind of leaning over.

I mean, oh man,
it did a number on your back.

There's an experience of time.

You know, you realize old people

traveled like this , miles,

and you understand
what a journey like this means.

This training creates
an authentic cowboy

because you're... you know,
the blisters are real.


The cuts are real.

You know, I'm running into
barbed wire fences on my horse.

I've been to like Hell Week
and camps and football,

and this is a whole different beast.

When they get off at night,

they feel like their legs are melted.

They got cramps in their thighs.

They got cramps in their calves.

They go, "My butt's sore".
Yeah, probably is.

You ain't never sat
on a saddle that long.

They're grinding us into the ground.

I mean, by the time
we finished riding horses,

I'm like completely soaked through.

Like, it's kinda gross.

I feel bad for everyone
that has to smell us.

Cowboy camp was this
incredible bonding experience

between all of the talent.

Everybody gets to come out there.

They don't know each other.

And they start to sort of work
together and understand

what their characters are gonna be,

where are they going,

and how hard this is gonna really be.

Cowboy camp is extremely
important for teamwork.

We're all trying
to build chemistry as actors.


And there's nothing more team-oriented

than getting cattle,
I mean, over hills

and through alleyways
for miles and miles.


So if you're not communicating
to your teammates,

then it's not gonna work.

The only way to survive at that time

was to be collaborative,

and people would go out of
their way to help one another


without expecting anything.

Well, it's the only way
that you can survive


in an environment like that.

You become a group, you know,
'cause we will be

on this journey for half a year

and go through hell.

We're all doing this together.

So we're all dedicated to it.

And that's been extraordinary to watch.

It's about to be a family.

It's about to be all of us
against the world.

So against nature, literally.

So we all have to trust each other.

We have to, you know,
hold each other accountable

and just being out here period,

being on the ranch together and bonding,

and like... it's great for what
we're about to encounter.

From a production standpoint,

I've never seen
so many different departments

have to coordinate
so many different details.

I have never worked on
a company this big in my life.

Then you got cattle that, you know,

one day they might be like,

we don't feel like doing
what you tell us to do today.


And they're running
in different directions.


I think it's borderline miraculous

that the show has come together

because it's taken a lot
of people and a lot of work.

And you know, it's just
impressive what this team

has been able to do.

This is unique and very special.

And the production scale is huge.

For me, I don't feel it because
it still feels so personal.

Taylor creates such an incredible world

with his writing that
it's so easy to get lost in it.

You got it. You got him, son.

My most favorite scene is

a scene with Tim.

I had to hunt with my dad,

and it was blood from the deer.

It's your first k*ll,
so I got to blood you.

To sh**t a deer and do
the whole blooding situation


and explain to him why
we did it and what it means

and how we have to thank the animal

for giving us sustenance in life...

To be able to do that
was pretty special for me.

It felt cool.

It felt really cool.

And you can see the similarities

with "Yellowstone".

There are certainly similarities

to John Dutton and James,

and you can see the tradition
that started it.

I think absolutely fans
will find Easter eggs through

this whole thing, and I'm excited.

And I think it'll be
a fun journey for people

to pick them out.

Well, I would ask you,
was there ever a time

that you went out on Easter
and found only one Easter egg?

Look, I think the journey
we're about to go on


in the rest of the episodes
is pretty magical, right?


We've just gotten started.

I'm thrilled for people
to see Elsa's journey


because it's quite a dramatic one.

It's not what you would
expect whatsoever.

I think all of us are pushed

to what we think will be our limit.

We're just on the trail,

and we'll see who survives.

Every episode brings a new
level of excitement and danger,

and unpredictability.

So just find a huge box of tissues,

nice bucket of popcorn,

the biggest TV you can find, and enjoy.

I could barely get through it
without just falling apart.

I couldn't do it.
I'm literally snot crying.

I feel that the audience is going to get

very connected to these characters,

and heartbreak is coming,
as you would imagine.


And some catharsis is coming,

and some beauty's coming,

and you know, I can't say
much more than that.
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