Hawke’s ‘Blaze’ Hits Houston

8.15
8.15

Texas outlaw country crooner Blaze Foley, who penned classic and frequently covered outlaw staples like “If I Could Only Fly,” was a musician’s musician. Although the unsung songwriting legend, who counted folky gents like Townes Van Zandt, Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard as his contemporaries, wasn’t very well known in his time, it’s been said that if you watched one of his Honky Tonk performances in the years before his untimely and tragic death in the late ’80s, you would have found yourself elbow-to-elbow with Texas musicians.


The oft-forgotten music outlier is finally getting the respect he deserves through Blaze, a new biopic about his life co-written and directed by four-time Oscar nominee, Texas native and outlaw music fan Ethan Hawke. The film, which stars Hawke’s longtime musician friend Ben Dickey in the title role, opens in Houston on Aug. 24, two weeks before it’s released in New York and Los Angeles.

Hawke decided to do a Texas rollout of the film before a wider release because of Foley’s importance to the Texas music community. Blaze stops in several Texas cities over the next few weeks, with screenings at small theaters, intimate invite-only fireside chats, and performances featuring Hawke, Dickey and musician Jack Ingram.

“A lot of movies find friends over a decade. But to find your friends when it first comes out, you have to talk to like-minded people,” Hawke tells Houston CityBook, explaining why he decided to take such a nontraditional approach with the release. “And so the idea of coming down South and doing it the old-fashioned way felt right.”

The film, which Hawke describes as a “country music opera,” has already garnered rave reviews and earned acting newcomer Dickey the Special Jury Award for Achievement in Acting at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

Based on Foley’s longtime lover Sybil Rosen’s memoir, Living in the Woods in a Tree: Remembering Blaze Foley, the biopic features Dickey alongside an all-star roster of actors that includes the likes of Alia Shawkat, Charlie Sexton, Richard Linklater and Sam Rockwell.

“As one gets interested in the finer points of the fabric of country songwriting you stumble onto Blaze,” says Hawke, noting that he first got interested in the singer-songwriter after falling in love with a cover of Foley’s “Clay Pigeons” by John Prine. “I think for a certain kind of person he symbolizes nonconformity. He had a certain kind of authenticity to himself. He’s just an original.”

Art+Culture
Meet Brian Boyter, New High-End Residential Broker with an Unique Background

BRIAN BOYTER IS a Houston native with an interesting background in real estate. After an impressive 16-year tenure managing commercial transactions in a Fortune 500 Real Estate Investment Trust, he recently made the shift to high-end residential brokerage. The experience left him uniquely suited to thrive in the sometimes-emotional world of buying or selling a home.

Keep Reading Show less

THE TRUFFLE MASTERS is returning for its 11th year on March 3rd. Now a Houston tradition of sorts, the competition sees top chefs creating a dish using black truffles all benefitting Southern Smoke.

Keep Reading Show less

A new look from the soft landings collection

FROM THE OWNERS of popular Montrose haunts Traveler’s Table and Traveler’s Cart is another jetset-focused business. Owners Thy and Matthew Mitchell launched Foreign Fare in the fall of 2023 with long-haul travelers in mind. The pieces are wrinkle-free and designed to be functional as well as stylish. The line was recently featured in Travel & Leisure as a “first class look.”

Keep Reading Show less