USA TODAY International Edition

Hawke’s novel reads like a memoir

- David Oliver

A quick look at the summary of Ethan Hawke‘ s book might make you think it was his memoir: “Love, fame and heartbreak – a searing story of a man making his Broadway debut as his marriage implodes.”

But it’s not. It’s the movie star’s fourth novel, “A Bright Ray of Darkness” ( Knopf, 256 pp.), out Tuesday, imbued with elements of his real life. An elementary school detective could scroll through his Wikipedia page and discover he was married to Uma Thurman from 1998 to 2005 and that he made his Broadway debut in “The Seagull” in 1992.

“I thought if I could use my experience­s and weave them together to create a fictional version of reality, I could tell a story that might have a larger point in my own life,” Hawke (“The Good Lord Bird”) tells USA TODAY over the phone.

The book – for which Hawke had the idea 20 years ago – chronicles William’s preparatio­n for and ultimate performanc­e as Hotspur in Shakespear­e’s “Henry IV, Part 1 and 2” while dealing with the fallout of cheating on his rock star musician wife, Mary. The first- person approach makes it read like a memoir, and like a book only an actor could write ( especially an actor who’s played the role of Hotspur himself).

“There’s an intimacy you have with a play when you’ve lived inside that imaginativ­e world,” Hawke says. “There’s just little things you know about it that you don’t know about a play you haven’t done.”

It helped, too, that the play’s themes

tied to what he was trying to write about: fathers, sons, forgivenes­s, healing and the difference between a good guy and a bad guy.

“It just seemed like the perfect play to hold this novel,” he says.

Hawke wrote in his experience as a film actor turning to theater; he landed in “The Seagull” amid the buzz of “Dead Poets Society.”

“I was really insecure about my right to be there,” he says, and mentions that Laura Linney was in it and had just graduated from Juilliard. She was more facile and equipped for that experience, he says.

William endures a negative review for his role in the novel, something Hawke experience­d for “The Seagull.”

“It’s a hurtful experience when you do what you love and people mock you for it,” he says with a laugh. “It’s a process one has to grow through. In truth, it actually makes you much stronger. But it doesn’t mean it’s not painful.”

Not getting to do what you love at all proves difficult, too. Hawke has “spent my whole life from 13 on acting pretty much constantly. So for me to stop that river, for that river to dry up, has been really painful in a lot of ways.”

But that hasn’t stopped him from acting. He’s been working on a Zoom production of Samuel Beckett’s iconic postmodern play “Waiting for Godot” for The New Group. And yes, it’s not a reading, but a production.

He rehearses a few hours per day with co- stars John Leguizamo, rapper Tariq Trotter ( aka Black Thought of The Roots) and Wallace Shawn.

Hawke will be playing Vladimir, one of the characters “living in perpetual uncertaint­y, insecurity, anxiety and loneliness,” per The New Group – in case that sounds familiar. “We’re rehearsing it as if it’s like people Zooming each other in some post- apocalypti­c world,” Hawke says.

He says that audiences will be surprised how interestin­g the production is in light of the pandemic: “The same way what Beckett was writing about the ravages of WWII, we’ve had our own ravages we’re living through. It speaks to my ear, at least in a new way that makes it really worth revisiting.”

In real life, Hawke would love to get a COVID- 19 vaccine and finds the current state of the country exciting given the change in leadership.

“The combinatio­n of this toxic grifter who was running our country being gone and a vaccine? It does feel like the sun is rising, doesn’t it? You feel it all over,” he says.

He notes, of course, that we are not done with the pandemic. “The sun is not coming up as fast as we want,” he says.

Speaking of the sun – will another film be added to the “Before” series?

Richard Linklater’s “Before Sunrise,” “Before Sunset” and “Before Midnight” romance films starring Hawke and Julie Delpy as Jesse and Céline have come out every nine years since 1995 – meaning a fourth movie, in theory, would be due in 2022. “I’d love to see Jesse and Céline quarantini­ng,” Hawke says. “I don’t know, where they’d be, some apartment in Prague, or some strange city they find themselves trapped in.”

He does say that we’ll all be pretty sick of pandemic art pretty soon, however, and is looking forward to the day he can stand onstage again.

“The next time I get up on stage, I’ll just be so grateful to be in that room with those people,” he says. “I never knew that we had so much to be grateful for.”

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Ethan Hawke stars in Showtime’s “The Good Lord Bird.”
GETTY IMAGES Ethan Hawke stars in Showtime’s “The Good Lord Bird.”

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