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Tom Hiddleston on playing Hank Williams, F. Scott Fitzgerald and ‘Loki v Batman v Superman’

April 29, 2026 | 海角精品黑料's Jason Fraley chats with Tom Hiddleston & Marc Abraham (Jason Fraley)

WASHINGTON 鈥斅燘efore Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Kurt Cobain聽and Amy Winehouse became music martyrs for their respective generations, Hank Williams left us eleven No. 1 country hits (three posthumously) when he died聽in the back seat of his Cadillac en route to a concert on New Year’s Day聽1953.

This provides the backdrop for the final聽scene of聽the new biopic聽“I Saw the Light,” as concert goers solemnly sing the聽title聽gospel tune upon learning of his untimely death聽by heart failure 鈥 triggered by聽alcohol, morphine and聽chloral hydrate to ease the pain of聽 鈥 at the young age of 29.

Starring the brilliant Tom Hiddleston as the tragic music genius, the film explores both聽Hank’s rise to stardom on hits like “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” “Lovesick Blues,” “Hey Good Lookin'” and “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and the damage his drunken womanizing had on聽wife Audrey (Elizabeth Olsen).

“People say to me that ‘Hey Good Lookin’ is like ‘Happy Birthday.’ It’s one of those things, you can start singing, ‘Hey Good Lookin’ anywhere in the world and people will join in, and they often don’t know it’s Hank Williams. So that’s how I knew Hank.聽But until I read the script, I had no knowledge of his life, his circumstances, his marriage … all of that stuff was new to me,” Hiddleston tells 海角精品黑料.

While the optimistic title hopes Hank聽“saw the light,”聽the tone is consistently聽dark, telling a dramatic tale of an often immoral聽anti-hero. It’s a conscious stylistic choice by writer/director Marc Abraham (producer of Norman Jewison’s “The Hurricane” and Alfonso Cuaron’s “Children of Men”), who appears just as聽fascinated by Hank’s inner demons聽as聽his music, knowing that both fed聽each other.

This fascination is understandable.聽Hank’s聽hard-living lifestyle has taken on mythical status, thanks to his “Bocephus” son Hank Williams Jr.聽calling聽it a “Family Tradition” and David Allan Coe immortalizing the legend聽with his 1983 hit “The Ride,” telling of a hitchhiker who gets a ride from Hank’s聽ghost:

“I was thumbin’ from Montgomery, had my guitar on my back, when a stranger stopped beside me in an antique Cadillac. He was dressed like 1950, half-drunk and hollow-eyed, he said, ‘It’s a long walk to Nashville? Would you like a ride, son?'”

Imagine if the film had used this as a framing device, albeit taking the movie in a more supernatural direction than聽the one chosen by Abraham, who adapts the script聽from a聽biography by Colin Escott, George Merritt and William MacEwen. Instead, “I Saw the Light” frames its story within a series of black-and-white rockumentary-style interviews by Hank’s聽songwriting peer Fred Rose (Bradley Whitford), who聽does his聽best Joseph Cotten recounting聽the rise and fall of Charles Foster Kane.

“I tried not to make it so much that you knew he was speaking in the past or in the future, he was just talking about Hank … What I really wanted to avoid was the idea of Hank or Audrey within the context of the film giving us information about what was taking place, so I kind of cribbed it from Bob Fosse, who used a similar technique … in ‘Lenny’ (1974),”聽Abraham聽tells 海角精品黑料.

Still, if there were ever a life that lent itself to magical realism, it’s that of Williams. As John Ford said, “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” Framing the story within the dreamlike context of “The Ride” 鈥斅爓hile a riskier approach 鈥 might have paid聽haunting聽dividends for a nostalgic聽narrator:

“Then I noticed the stranger was ghost-white pale when聽he asked me for a light, and I knew there was something strange about this ride.”

While such a聽peripheral narrator is easier to pull off in literature than cinema 鈥 think聽Nick “Old Sport” Carraway in “The Great Gatsby” (1925) — it would have actually worked for Hiddleston after playing聽F. Scott Fitzgerald in “Midnight in Paris” (2011). The聽eyes of are always watching like country gods staring down from concert billboards as Hank moves from town to town.

“That’s a such a great (analogy). You’re the first person to ever make that comparison … Scott and Zelda were a lot more sophisticated. They were a lot more educated. They had that sort of Princeton sheen and smoothness of that particular time. They had immense style, and their indulgences were more of the Champagne variety as opposed to the whiskey variety,” Hiddleston says.

But there are key similarities, particularly in the marital clashes between Hiddleston and Olsen.

“There would be no F. Scott Fitzgerald without Zelda, and there would be no Hank Williams without Audrey. I think their relationships and their marriage, the intensity of the passion contained in those relationships, is what gave each of those men an engine to create their best work,” Hiddleston says.

As singers, the acting duo is every bit as up to the challenge as Joaquin Phoenix’s Oscar-nominated Johnny Cash and Reese Witherspoon’s Oscar-winning June Carter Cash in “Walk the Line” (2005). In fact, you could argue Williams’ voice is the tougher to master, because it features classic country’s ultimate twang and challenging vocal inflections 鈥 especially for a British actor like Hiddleston.

“I recorded ‘Why Don’t You Love Me’ in an聽hour, and I recorded ‘Lovesick Blues’ in about 10 days. ‘Lovesick Blues’ was my Mount Everest, because Hank’s control over that song is so masterful, and he used to say when he performed it live, ‘This song I’ve played 13 million and one half times.’ He had the luxury and privilege of having practiced it for years and I had about two weeks,” Hiddleston jokes.

To prepare for the role, Hiddleston moved to Nashville and lived as a guest with Rodney Crowell, who served as聽both the film’s executive music producer and Hiddleston’s “guide through the woods.”

“He himself was a huge Hank Williams fan. He saw Hank Sr. on his own father’s shoulders at the age of two when he was a child. It聽was one of his earliest memories. He’s been playing music for 40 years, understands Hank’s music, the footprint of Hank’s music on the rest of 20th-century culture, and he was able to piece it out for me and deconstruct it and demystify it,” Hiddleston says of Crowell.

While Hiddleston moved to Nashville to research the role, Abraham grew up in the region.

“I grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, which is up I-65 from Nashville, so I was a country music fan pretty much my whole life … I listened to George Jones and then Merle (Haggard), a big Kris Kristofferson fan and Willie (Nelson). Ultimately though, if you’re listening to those guys and you’re listening to the radio, no DJ is going to play a set without eventually playing a Hank Williams song,” Abraham says.

“I sat down in the front seat and turned on the radio, and them sad, old songs comin’ out of them speakers was solid country gold.”聽

While聽some of Hank’s聽“solid country gold” jams were prerecorded by Hiddleston, he took the acting risk of recording several of them live, including the posthumous classic “Your Cheatin’ Heart.”

“That was聽one of the ones that Rodney and Marc both insisted I sing live, because the lyrics to ‘Your Cheatin’ Heart’ are so pained and so sad that in order to transmit that, I didn’t want to record it ahead of time. It was actually an acting challenge as much as it was a singing challenge. What I needed to convey was the pain he was in and how that was connected to the song,” Hiddleston says.

As the film shows, Hank’s pain was both physical and emotional, dealing with the heartache of failed relationships and debilitating back pain due to the聽devastating effects of deformed vertebrae. Such a condition聽provides聽the perfect directorial聽symbolism for Abraham, who foreshadows Hank’s death in that infamous Cadillac by constantly showing him lying in back seat of cars throughout the movie.

“It’s nice that you spotted that,” Hiddleston聽says, a notion which Abraham humbly downplays, saying, “Hank was in pain. His back was always painful for him. They didn’t discover yet spina bifida聽until he was much older, so pretty much whenever he had a chance to lie down, he did … It was a conscious effort (as a director), but I think mostly it was about his back hurting. (That) was聽the truth of it.”

“Then he cried just south of Nashville and he turned that car around, he said, ‘This is where you get off, boy, ’cause I’m going back to Ala-bam.’ As I stepped out of that Cadillac, I said, ‘Mister, many thanks.’ He said, ‘You don’t have to call me Mister, Mister. The whole world called me Hank!'”

While Abraham’s directing delivers visual symbolism, his script has taken聽some heat from the sharp knives of film critics — some fair, some not. On the one hand, the dialogue is admirably聽elliptical.

“There’s a lot of information that takes place in movies … and you can do it a lot of different ways. You can have the dialogue have a lot of exposition, which is my least favorite thing in the world … (Instead), they’re in a hospital room and Hank’s talking to his wife Audrey, she asks him a question, and he answers her with a question. It’s very real dialogue. It’s how people talk,” Abraham says.

On the other hand, the character arc feels just as elliptical, jumping from one failed romance to the other and聽skimming along Hank’s life story like a rock skipping across a pond.聽By the end, we wish we聽dove聽deeper to discover more of Hank’s motives. If we’re going to praise the power performances, consistent tone and clever visual symbolism, we must also admit an intangible聽emotional distance.

Creating an emotional connection with the audience is no easy task for any screenwriter, let alone聽in Abraham’s debut聽feature screenplay.聽As another ill-fated musician 鈥 AC/DC frontman Bon Scott 鈥 warned,聽“It’s a long way to the top if you wanna rock ‘n roll,” echoing Coe’s plea to聽pay your dues, moan the blues and聽bend those guitar strings聽like聽Hitchcock plucking viewers’ emotional chords:

“He said, ‘Drifter can you make folks cry when you play and sing? Have you paid your dues, can you moan the blues, can you bend them guitar strings? He said boy can you make folks feel what you feel inside? ‘Cause if you’re big-star bound, let me warn you it’s a long, hard ride.”

“Films like ‘All That Jazz’ and ‘Lenny’ and ‘Raging Bull,’ which are movies that don’t really explain why Jake LaMotta is who he is, (they) don’t pick him up as a young boy getting beat up by a bunch of boys on the street so you see he becomes a fighter. I love those kinds of movies,” Abraham says.

Fosse and Scorsese are great north stars for a聽hungry filmmaker in聽his second directorial effort.聽At the very least,聽Abraham coaches an amazing聽performance from Hiddleston, a worthy vessel as the Roy Scheider to Fosse’s “All That Jazz” (1979)聽or Robert DeNiro to聽Scorsese’s “Raging Bull” (1980).

“I couldn’t have done any of this without Marc. … He has the sophistication and experience to know that聽people are complex and contradictory and they get in their own way and they mean well, but sometimes they trip up … Marc’s an incredibly wise man,” Hiddleston says.

How does Abraham’s聽directing style compare to Hiddleston’s past directors?

“Woody Allen doesn’t give you as many takes as Marc … I feel like an instrument in the orchestra … It’s my job to play to the tune of a new conductor … The director has the baton, whether it’s Woody Allen or Guillermo Del Toro or Kenneth Branagh or Steven Spielberg,” Hiddleston says.

Each auteur only further continues to shape Hiddleston as one of the finest actors of this generation, racking聽up credits that would make anyone envious, from Spielberg’s “War Horse” (2011) to Allen’s “Midnight in Paris” (2011), Del Toro’s “Crimson Peak” (2015) to Joss Whedon’s “The Avengers” (2012).聽It’s the lattermost that cemented聽Hiddleston’s pop culture status as super villain Loki.

“I’ll never forget the first time I saw (‘Superman’)聽…聽directed by Richard Donner with Christopher Reeve when I was five or six years old. I probably saw it on VHS or on television, and I don’t think I’d ever seen anything greater than that in all my days. They were only five years worth of days聽(at that age), but as a kid, Christopher Reeve, I’ll never forget it. He was the first real superhero,” he says.

So with “Batman v Superman” currently No. 1 at the box office, what strategy would Hiddleston take to defeat both iconic superheroes聽in a dream triple-threat match of “Batman v Superman v Loki?”

“I think he’d be amused that the聽children are playing. He’d sit high up in a tree and watch them throw rocks at each other … You’re giving birth to a whole idea here, which is the idea that the Marvel Universe could somehow cross-pollinate with the DC Universe. Fans’ minds would explode,” he says.

Upon considering it more, Hiddleston thinks Superman would be his biggest obstacle.

“I feel like Superman would present a challenge. But he’s got form with people who wear red capes and fly around. You know, Thor wears a red cape and flies around a lot. I think he’d just be slightly exasperated by their need to go another 15 rounds in the ring. ‘Do we have to do this? I’ve been here before’ … I think he’d just be generally amused and patronizing about the whole thing,”

There’s only one way to solve it: smash a country guitar over both their heads and聽call it a day.

Listen to the full interview with Tom Hiddleston and Marc Abraham below:

April 29, 2026 | 海角精品黑料's Jason Fraley chats with Tom Hiddleston & Marc Abraham (Jason Fraley)
April 29, 2026 | (Jason Fraley)

Jason Fraley

Hailed by The Washington Post for 鈥渉is savantlike ability to name every Best Picture winner in history," Jason Fraley began at 海角精品黑料 as Morning Drive Writer in 2008, film critic in 2011 and Entertainment Editor in 2014, providing daily arts coverage on-air and online.

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