Yellowstone star Kelly Reilly âcanât talkâ about showâs future
Warning: contains some Yellowstone plot spoliers
Cowboys, murderous revenge plots and family secrets have kept Yellowstone fans hooked since 2018.
It is one of the most watched shows in the US and turned creator Taylor Sheridan into the king of prime time television.
But last year, Paramount announced that the fifth season, which is due to end next month, would be the last.
Its star, Kelly Reilly, tells me it will be âan ending to the Yellowstone world we have knownâ.
âDoes it mean itâs the end of me playing her? Maybe, maybe not,â she says. âWe donât know yet is the honest answer.â
There have already been two Yellowstone spin-offs, with more in the works. Reilly, who plays the troubled and volatile Beth Dutton, says she would âloveâ to keep playing her character, but any spin-off âwould be a new beginning somewhereâ.
It sounds like something is possibly in the works, though, with Reilly saying she âcanât talk about the future because there are so many conversations happeningâ.
Yellowstoneâs drama on screen has been mirrored off screen, with the departure of its leading man, Kevin Costner.
He only filmed half of season five because of what he says were contract and scheduling issues.
Sheridan has said it was down to Costnerâs wish to focus on his Horizon film series, which the star is directing, co-writing, producing and starring in.
Either way, it leaves British-born Reilly as arguably the star of the show.
The daughter of a police officer and a hospital receptionist, the actress was born and brought up in Chessington, Greater London.
A far cry from the Hollywood Hills.
âIt hasnât happened overnightâ
She has previously starred in True Detective, Prime Suspect and Above Suspicion.
But Yellowstone has introduced her to a huge international audience.
I ask how it feels to be an in-demand leading lady.
âWell, Iâm 47 years old, it hasnât happened overnight, you know. So itâs not like Iâm getting whiplash,â she laughs.
âI have been a working actor for 30 years. Itâs not lost on me that thereâs a unicorn of shows that have such success worldwide and a character that has had this amount of attention or appeal.
âBut I treat it at armâs length. I donât spend too much time thinking about it. I have a very normal life. Itâs very important to me that my life is normal. Nothing has changed, other than Iâm really busy.
âI donât get to sleep at home very often, which is annoying because I love home!â
Most fans assume Reilly is herself an American, not the softly spoken Brit she is in reality.
She tells me that when Yellowstone started, she âdidnât do any pressâ because she wanted people to believe in her character.
âPeople talk to me as if Beth is real,â she says. âWe all talk about Beth like sheâs a real-life person.
âIâm always going to be a bit of a let down when people meet me. I go into the local bakery and the lady is like, âIâd love to drink with you.â
âI know what she means â she wants to drink with Beth. People want to feel part of that energy⊠someone so connected with their primal self.
âAnd weâre so disconnected. Weâre all on our phones, on social media. It is like it doesnât happen if someone doesnât take a picture of it. Beth is the opposite of that. She is just so alive.â
To say Reillyâs character has been put through the wringer would be an understatement.
Beth has survived attempted rape, attempted murder, crushing heartbreak and being betrayed by family members.
She even exclaims: âI am the rock therapists break themselves against.â
Reilly describes Beth as a âpowerhouseâ, telling me itâs been âsuch a fun adventure to put her onâ.
âIâm very introverted,â she adds. âI donât have any dreams of vengeance in my life.
âThereâs something really exciting about playing her. I feel like Iâm on an adrenaline rush for four months while I play her, and when Iâm finished Iâm like, I now have to go back to my quiet, boring life. And Iâm very grateful for my quiet, boring life after Iâve played her.
âBut by the time every summer comes around where Iâm sort of gearing up again and the scripts start coming in, I get excited again to meet her.
âIâm very aware of the gift of her as a character, but I lock her up in a padlocked box for six months of the year.â
The character of Beth quickly became a fan favourite, with articles devoted to getting her characterâs look, and thousands of social media posts about her.
One of Bethâs most memorable lines of dialogues, âYou are the trailer park, I am the tornadoâ, is even printed on T-shirts.
What does Reilly put that popularity down to?
âSheâs unequivocally herself and unapologetic about that,â she says. âAnd as a woman, it is so refreshing and so much fun to play.â
The actress believes Beth âhas penetrated a zeitgeist in women specificallyâ.
âI think it is that unencumbered kind of freedom that she moves through the world with. She is not afraid of dying, she is not afraid of losing.
âThere is a scene in season two where she is being attacked by a man who is in the process of raping her and is about to kill her and she is covered in blood.
âShe will not be a victim to him. And I think for women and for me, I love that. She is fierce.â
After all the trauma her character has experienced, Reilly says she âgoes through different phasesâ of considering what a happy ending would be for Beth.
âI trust Taylor and his vision for her. He loves her so much,â she says.
âI would like something cathartic, potentially. I would hate to leave her out in the wilderness. But I donât know if happiness is something any of these characters strive for.
âThey strive to protect, they strive to kill, they strive to be killed. These are not looking for peaceful lives.â
Yellowstone season five part two is on Paramount from Sunday, 10 November.