Danny McBride Discusses The Righteous Gemstones‘ Final Season and That Fantastic First Episode
Photos courtesy of HBO
The Righteous Gemstones kicked off its fourth and final season last Sunday night with a stand-alone episode starring Bradley Cooper as a Gemstone ancestor during the Civil War. Cooper’s thief-turned-chaplain started the family’s history of using religion as a money-making scam, and the golden Bible he carries throughout the episode becomes a major plot point across the rest of the season. Despite Cooper’s stature, it doesn’t come off as stunt-casting or headline-chasing; Cooper blends in seamlessly with this world, subtly playing his character’s cynicism towards religion, the war, and society in general in a period piece that goes for understated verisimilitude. It’s an audacious start to the show’s last season, with a longer running time than usual, none of the regular cast, and a completely new setting, and an impressive beginning to what might be The Righteous Gemstones‘ best season.
Paste talked to the show’s creator and star Danny McBride about the premiere, how Cooper was cast, and why Gemstones is ending after four seasons, just like his first HBO show, Eastbound & Down. It was a quick chat during a round of short interviews with most of the cast, and in order to keep the content pumping throughout the season we’re going to carve it up into smaller chunks in the weeks ahead. Here’s what McBride told us about that first episode and about the Gemstones family history that he’s slowly revealed throughout the show’s run.
Paste: So why is this the right time to wrap up The Righteous Gemstones?
Danny McBride: You just follow your instincts. It felt like when we started writing this season—you know, every season, we approach as if it could be the end of it, you never know what’s gonna happen or if you’ll be allowed to come back to tell more—and so I’ve always approached every season not really knowing if it was gonna keep going. But as I started the season, it just kind of became apparent when I was seeing what ideas I was gravitating towards. They were all ideas about closure and about moving forward. And it just felt like the story was reaching its logical ending.
Paste: We see more of the Gemstones family backstory this season, dating back to the Civil War. Danny, have you always had an idea of the family history going back as far as we’ve seen, or did that come together as you were mapping out this new season?