SPOILER ALERT:Â This post contains spoilers from Season 5, Episode 14 of âYellowstone,â âLife Is a Promise,â which premiered Sunday, Dec. 15 on Paramount Network.
Itâs been a long, dusty and bloody road for the Dutton family over the past five seasons of the massively popular Western series âYellowstone.â As the season came to a close (before a Beth and Rip spinoff launches), viewers experienced some shocking deaths over the final few episodes â including one committed by a horse. But amid the bloodshed, there was also a sense of closure for this chaotic and influential Montana family. âYellowstoneâ executive producer Christina Alexandra Voros unpacked the eventful final episode for Variety.
Do you know what the original ending would be if Kevin Costner had stayed on?
I never had a specific conversation with [creator] Taylor Sheridan about where this was going to end prior to Kevinâs departure. I do know that members of the cast have talked about conversations they had with him early on â you know, Season 1 â where they got the sense that he has always known that the ultimate ending has to be the loss of the patriarch and passing on the legacy. But that information is almost secondhand for me. I do know that it changed the âhowâ if not the âwhat,â but I wouldnât be able to talk specifically about what that differential was.
I think the limitations that were put on Taylor with Kevinâs departure really brought out a side of his writing that I know people have mixed feelings about: The flashbacks and the way that the season was structured overall. I actually thought it brought out a different layer, the way that he puzzled through how to tell this story with the absence of the person that youâre telling the story about. I thought it made for some really interesting creative choices. Sometimes limitations can be the best friend of good art because it forces you to think creatively about things in a way that is not as straightforward as you might have originally planned.
We really get to know Travis this season, and seeing Taylor play a cocky playboy was a fun gear. What would you say is the biggest way that Taylor is like Travis in real life, and the biggest way heâs different?
Taylor is a brilliant writer and a brilliant director, but I feel like I have learned more from him as a general and as a businessman, or as much as I have from him in that capacity as I have from him as an artist. You look at the journey that he has made since âYellowstoneâ began, when he was a first time director of a TV series that got Kevin Costner to play the lead, to having seven shows spinning at one time and being one of the most talked about names in television. That comes from his tremendous skill as a storyteller, and his brilliance as a writer. It comes from his ability to change the rules of the game. Show me someone 20 years ago who could be living in Texas and running half a dozen TV series from the place that he wants to be living in because he hates L.A. and heâs chosen a life that allows him to be prolific, but also on his own terms.
I think you see that in Travis. I think he is a tremendous salesman. I think he likes beating the system, enjoys being able to flip the script literally and figuratively. I also think that if you ask him about it, this was a very depressing season of television. Bringing Travis in allowed for a little bit of comic relief in a season that you didnât get much of that. Thatâs always been part of âYellowstone.â Terrible things happen, you lose people, but then thereâs a funny scene in the bunkhouse, or thereâs a great country musician that people donât know about who gets discovered in this cameo. Thatâs always been part of the DNA of the show. So I think people were so wrapped up in the tragedy of this final season that some folks forgot that thereâs always been an element of comedy in this. Itâs always been present, and he just cast himself as the element that brought some of that levity because everyone else was so absolutely devastated about the loss of John Dutton. It would be hard to find the comedy from Beth and Rip and Kayce. I thought it was a pretty bold move on his part, but I think it served the story.
What was the process of choreographing the episodeâs major fight between Jamie and Beth?
Itâs all hands on deck. Weâve been very lucky with the the stunt coordinators that have been with us on this show from the beginning â Jason Rodriguez, Jordan Warrack and, back when we first started, Wade Allen â are are some of the best in the business. One of the things I love as a filmmaker is that the cast is so gung ho and committed that they want to do as much of it as they can possibly do, so they are getting it in their DNA. Obviously there are places where you will put in their doubles, who have also been with us from the beginning. Theyâve learned the way the actors move and have been studying that so you do have that element for places where you want to pull the pad out and someone has to hit the ground and Kelly has 12 more days of shooting and nothing can happen to her. But Kelly and Wes did the majority of that fight themselves, and even if they are not taking a punch or throwing one, the energy it takes to keep in that space emotionally is exhausting. So I think what people donât realize when they see that fight is yes, it looks real and bloody and gruesome, but just staying in that mindset of being this ferocious takes a great deal from the actors to stay in the headspace. Forget about the milk and the bear spray and the stabbing and all that. Thatâs the easy part. My kudos to Kelly and Wes for being able to keep in that extreme state of war emotionally throughout that scene.
Luke Grimes said in a recent interview with Esquire that, for this chunk of the season, âthere was a part of Kevin being gone that meant some of the conflict was gone.â Do you agree with him on that assessment from your vantage?
I didnât see the quote that some of the conflict was gone. Someone sent me him saying it was the easiest season of filming that weâd had, and I think that comes from many sources. I think that it was the seventh year of making a story with a lot of the same crew that started making it from the beginning. I think that there was something really gorgeous that happened of life imitating art imitating life, where you take the patriarch away and everyone else has to fill that space on the stage and being held responsible to carry that dramatic weight on the show. I actually think itâs a really beautiful thing for an actor, and I felt like the cast this season really stepped in to fill that space. That kind of work is energizing and it gives a new meaning to perhaps playing the same roles that youâve been playing every year, because itâs all on your shoulder.
Ironically, the purpose that is felt by the characters who have to figure out how to move forward was also felt by the cast, who had to figure out how to move forward without someone whoâd been shouldering a lot of the storyline in all the seasons past. It felt like everyone had this new energy moving in, and the fact that we knew it was the last season ⊠everyone knew how special what we were doing was and how much we loved each other as a creative family. So there was just a real sense of inspiration. No season of Yellowstone is easy for anyone: Youâre up against time and money and elements and weather and all of it. But this season felt inspired and really enjoyable to be making from start to finish and I think itâs I think it is because everyone realized that it was our last chance to get to do this together and every day was precious.
Right before the finale, we learned that the Beth and Rip spinoff was moving forward. Have you been involved with any of the discussions about the show at this point?
No, itâs too early to tell. I would be a fool to try to guess or bet on how Taylor is alchemizing these stories in his brain. What I will say is one of the things Iâve always been blown away by about him as a writer is he writes like something is passing through him. When we did â1883,â I got a script on a Tuesday and, by the following Tuesday, there were three more scripts and it just sort of came like a force. When he has a story in his mind it comes out very quickly and comes from a place thatâs mysterious to me. So I donât know what the next story is for him, I just hope I get to be there when he puts it on the page.
Youâve mentioned that you like to keep an eye on what fans are talking about during the season. Were there any things you were surprised to read or misconceptions youâd like to address or set the record straight on?
Itâs funny that itâs been such a cross-section. There are the people who canât stand anything, and I think you know when you are coming to an end of the story, itâs just part of human experience. It changes the lens through which youâre looking at. I mean, it happens in relationships. If you were told this is the last person you are ever going to get to date in your life, you might be a little choosier. So I think people have fallen in love and not had to think about it ending for six seasons and then, all of a sudden, you know that itâs ending and the stakes are high.
People have their ideas of how they wanted it to end because they feel a level of ownership in the storytelling, since theyâve been following the story for so long. So I have seen the full range of praise and snark, and people arguing every angle of the political spectrum from super-conservative red state values to wokeness. Whatâs interesting to me is that it is summoning all of these different, conflicting ideas of what this season is and everyoneâs watching the same season. I think ultimately that is the purpose of art and that is the purpose of narrative: Storytelling is to provoke these conversations. I think the fact that the reaction has run the gamut is a sign that weâve been doing something right.





