Every year I think, okay, next season I'm just going to be gentle. K.R.: Every year I think it can't get more intense. It’ll be much quieter for Beth next season." Paramount NetworkĮsquire: And this year, Beth had maybe her most intense season yet. "Every year I think, okay, next season I’m just going to be gentle. We film it, then you forget about it for eight months, then it comes out and you're hit with it. When I go out to Texas, or I go out to Montana, or I go out west ever, I really see it. Even in New York, I'm out by the end of the island, by the sea. Kelly Reilly: Well in my life away from Yellowstone, I live between New York and the middle of the countryside in England. What's it been like to be part of this growing phenomenon? Now all of a sudden, if you're not watching Yellowstone, you're left out. This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.Įsquire : Yellowstone feels like it has come up from this grassroots, word of mouth spread.
(And no, she's not going to apologize for Beth's crude behavior-she knows you love it as much as you hate it, and yes that means me.) With a sure-thing fifth season on the horizon, Reilly joined Esquire to break down the finale and forecast what's to come for one of television's fiercest, and, for my money, misunderstood, characters. That doesn't mean Beth is in the clear, though. A decision has to be made, and she makes it. While viewers, at times, worried if Beth was going too far, things came to a head in the finale when she was nearly banished from the family she would (quite literally) die for. 'Yellowstone's Kelly Reilly is Holding Out Hopeįor the actress, the events of Season Four had been building towards an inevitable, if still illogical to most, end.Everything We Know About 'Yellowstone' Season 5.