Culture
Inside the Chiefs’ top 10 postseason blitzes unleashed by Steve Spagnuolo
The Athletic has live coverage of Chiefs vs Eagles in Super Bowl LIX, and Kendrick Lamar’s halftime performance.
NEW ORLEANS — Chiefs All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie is one of the NFL’s best coverage defenders, a player who can stay step-for-step with the best receivers. Most of the time, though, McDuffie’s favorite moment in a game comes when he doesn’t start the play backpedaling.
As the linebacker with the green dot on his helmet, Nick Bolton gets the play calls from defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo transmitted in his ear and relays them to his teammates. Bolton loves when he realizes — before his teammates know — that the Chiefs defense is about to go on the offensive.
Justin Reid, the Chiefs’ all-everything safety, reminds himself of a short message just before the defense blitzes the opposing quarterback.
“The only thought is, ‘Don’t be late,’” Reid said, smiling. “You don’t want to hang those guys covering out to dry.”
A sequence of details in the final minute of the Chiefs’ most recent game, a win over the Buffalo Bills, is part of why the team will play in Super Bowl LIX on Sunday. The Chiefs defense, led by Spagnuolo, is most known for its bold, exotic blitzes — especially in the biggest moments of postseason games. The Chiefs, who are aiming to beat the Philadelphia Eagles to become the first NFL team to capture an unprecedented third straight Super Bowl victory, have won nine consecutive playoff games. Each of those nine wins featured a successful Chiefs blitz at a critical time.
“Throughout the whole game, he plays the chess match with the offense,” safeties coach Donald D’Alesio said of Spagnuolo. “I’m showing this (play) to set up this (blitz) later in the game. Or I’m showing this to hope later in the game they slide (the pass protection) that way and we get the blitz coming the other way.”
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That’s exactly what happened with two minutes left in the AFC Championship Game against the Bills. The Chiefs defense, trying to protect a three-point lead, put the Bills offense in a pressurized fourth-and-5 snap.
Spagnuolo poured over his play sheet during the two-minute warning to find just the right blitz, one he hoped would surprise quarterback Josh Allen.
“I said to myself, ‘We haven’t run it yet, so let’s run something we haven’t run yet,’” Spagnuolo said of his boldest blitz this season. “It was on the list. It could’ve been on a third-down call. It was one of three or four (play calls).”
McDuffie blitzed from the perimeter, leading to immediate pressure on Allen, who was forced into a rushed deep passing attempt.
“I always tell people I have the biggest smile on my face when I’m blitzing,” McDuffie said, smiling.
The Chiefs make the stop on fourth down!
📺: #BUFvsKC on CBS
📱: Stream on @NFLPlus and Paramount+ pic.twitter.com/s4rXNURB3z— NFL (@NFL) January 27, 2025
Allen’s pass fell incomplete when tight end Dalton Kincaid failed to make a diving catch, surrounded by defenders. It was the Bills’ last offensive play of the season.
“I’ve got confidence in Spags,” coach Andy Reid said. “In certain situations, I don’t have to run over to him and go, ‘Hey, let’s not do that or this.’ I have enough confidence in him and been around him long enough to know he’s going to make the right call for the right time.”
Before the unit unveils its next attack, one the Chiefs hope to use to frustrate Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts, here’s a recap of the 10 most important blitzes Spagnuolo and his players have unleashed to outwit their opponents to help Kansas City become the NFL’s newest dynasty.
Jacksonville (2022 divisional round)
The situation: Chiefs leading 27-17, fourth quarter, 3:55 left, second-and-6 from midfield
The blitzers: Reid and safety Bryan Cook
Unsung hero: pass rusher Chris Jones
Although it was Bolton’s fourth career postseason game, he was still sometimes nervous or anxious with Spagnuolo calling a blitz for a significant moment in the fourth quarter. Bolton knew the Chiefs could give up a long completion to the Jaguars if Reid or Cook didn’t hit Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence.
“There’s a couple of blitzes where you’re like, ‘Uh, I don’t know…’” Bolton said, laughing. “You look at the formation and they could block it or they have people to block it — or maybe they can get the ball out quick, like a screen alert. You don’t really know until you see the result of the play.”
Bolton was technically correct about this blitz: The Jaguars had enough blockers (six) to block each of the Chiefs’ six blitzers. But the Jaguars still had two interior linemen assigned to Jones, the Chiefs’ best defensive player. Jones occupied two linemen in the middle of the field, which allowed Reid to sprint untouched through the B gap, leading him to hit Lawrence as he released an intermediate pass.
The pressure influenced Lawrence’s pass, which was intercepted by cornerback Jaylen Watson, who made a one-handed catch.
OH MY GOODNESS @JAYLENWATSON12 pic.twitter.com/v4UrSL7CEK
— Kansas City Chiefs (@Chiefs) January 22, 2023
Cincinnati (2022 AFC Championship Game)
The situation: Tied 20-20, fourth quarter, 7:08 left, second-and-3 from the Bengals’ 36
The blitzers: McDuffie and linebacker Darius Harris
Unsung hero: cornerback Joshua Williams
The Bengals began the drive looking to take their first lead of the game.
The Chiefs appeared to be in zone coverage pre-snap, but Spagnuolo tested the Bengals’ offensive line and running back Samaje Perine to see if they could win each of the six one-on-one blocks. Indeed, the Bengals — in a rarity that night — succeeded and gave quarterback Joe Burrow enough time to find a favorable one-on-one matchup: receiver Ja’Marr Chase running a 15-yard corner route against Williams.
The play ended in an incompletion because Williams stayed close enough to Chase that the ball fell to the turf down near the Chiefs’ sideline.
“There’s a lot of moving pieces,” Spagnuolo said. “Everybody gets focused on the guys that are actually coming. But the guys on the back end that are taking things away so the quarterback can’t get (the ball) out of his hands (quickly) are just as important.”
On the next play, Burrow attempted a deep pass to receiver Tee Higgins, who was double-covered by Cook and Williams. Cook located the ball and deflected the pass up and away from Higgins. The ball landed in Williams’ hands for a timely interception.
Rookie DBs Bryan Cook & Joshua Williams came up big for the @Chiefs 🙌@Pepsi | #ChiefsKingdom pic.twitter.com/XdPSWGfa51
— NFL (@NFL) February 2, 2023
Philadelphia (2022 Super Bowl)
The situation: Chiefs leading 28-27, fourth quarter, 10:40 left, third-and-3 from Eagles’ 32
The blitzers: McDuffie and linebacker Willie Gay
Unsung hero: Jones
With the Chiefs clinging to a one-point lead, Spagnuolo wanted to force the Eagles to punt after a three-and-out. He called a blitz he felt would work against a run or a pass. He was right. Hurts did a run-pass option fake, which gave McDuffie and Gay plenty of time to generate immediate pressure from both sides of the Eagles’ formation.
Jones forced Hurts to escape the pocket, too, beating a double team against two interior linemen. With none of his three receivers open, Hurts threw the ball out of bounds.

On the next play, Kadarius Toney returned the Eagles’ punt a Super Bowl-record 65 yards to set up a touchdown.
Miami (2023 wild-card round)
The situation: Chiefs leading 26-7, fourth quarter, 7:27 left, first-and-1o from the Chiefs’ 25
The blitzers: Reid and Gay
Unsung hero: cornerback L’Jarius Sneed
Although the Chiefs were up 19 points, Spagnuolo wanted to stop the Dolphins from building any momentum with a touchdown. He hadn’t blitzed quarterback Tua Tagovailoa much to that point in a game that started with a temperature of minus-4, the fourth-coldest game in NFL history.
The Dolphins did not score because Spagnuolo called one of Reid’s favorite blitzes.
“There’s one where I get to blitz the A gap and we disguise it like I’m not even coming at all or like I’m (more) coming off the edge,” Reid said. “At the last moment, we get to run over the center and we’ve got some twist (with defensive linemen) happening and you have a corner coming, too. Usually, somebody gets home.”
When the Dolphins showed their formation before the snap, Tagovailoa had three receivers on the right side. Tyreek Hill was the closest to the offensive line. Across from Hill was Reid, giving the impression that he would be the defender in man coverage. But just before the snap, Reid timed his blitz toward the A gap with McDuffie moving to cover Hill.
Tagovailoa then made an ill-advised decision: He targeted Hill, who was double-covered, on a deep pass. Sneed broke up the pass in the end zone.
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Buffalo (2023 divisional round)
The situation: Chiefs leading 27-24, fourth quarter, 13:38 left, second-and-2 from the Bills’ 33
The blitzer: linebacker Drue Tranquill
Unsung hero: Reid
Spagnuolo rarely blitzed Allen in this one, the Chiefs’ first road playoff game in the Patrick Mahomes era.
The Bills were hoping to retake the lead when the Chiefs employed one of their best run blitzes. Before the snap, Reid moved forward, suggesting to the offensive line that he could blitz. Reid wanted the Bills to see that. The Bills responded by having their left tackle take responsibility for blocking Reid. The Bills, though, didn’t know that Tranquill, in the middle of the field, was going to blitz from the A gap. Unaccounted for, Tranquill tackled running back James Cook for a 3-yard loss.
Two plays later, the Bills turned the ball over to the Chiefs on a failed fake punt.

“The players have confidence in their (assistant) coaches and Spags,” Andy Reid said. “They want to learn the system, that’s a tough system. You have to really stay focused during the meetings, you have to detail it at practice, you have to detail the walkthroughs that you do. Then, most of all, you have to execute it on game day.”
Baltimore (2023 AFC Championship Game)
The situation: Chiefs leading 17-7, fourth quarter, 15:00 left, second-and-8 from the Chiefs’ 9
The blitzers: Tranquill, Bolton and Reid
Unsung hero: Sneed
Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson made the right decision in the red zone when he noticed the Chiefs’ Cover 0 blitz: he identified that receiver Zay Flowers was open on a slant route for an easy, short completion.
“It goes back to Coach Spags just trusting us,” McDuffie said. “When you blitz, there’s some holes in the defense and some guys may be put in awkward situations.”
Flowers made the reception in front of Sneed, who was trailing in coverage. But as Flowers sprinted toward the end zone, he dived, extending the ball toward the goal line. Sneed, with perfect timing, knocked the ball out of Flowers’ hands. The ball bounced into the end zone, where McDuffie recovered it.
Sneed’s momentum-halting highlight dropped the Ravens’ win probability from 28.3 percent to 13.5 percent, according to Next Gen Stats.
“I’m just thankful, man,” Sneed said. “I just punched the ball out. We practice that every week.”
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, L’JARIUS SNEED!!! pic.twitter.com/rHw8hcuUgG
— Kansas City Chiefs (@Chiefs) January 28, 2024
San Francisco (2023 Super Bowl)
The situation: Tied 16-16, fourth quarter, 2:00 left, third-and-5 from the Chiefs’ 35
The blitzers: McDuffie and safety Chamarri Conner
Unsung hero: pass rusher Chris Jones
Every Friday in practice, the Chiefs go through end-of-game scenarios — such as five seconds and the opposing offense has one timeout or 20 seconds left and is trying to get a few more yards to get into field goal range to win the game.
“It may not come up that Sunday in the game, but it’s going to come up (maybe) three weeks down the road,” D’Alesio said. “We’re just always kind of prepared for that moment.”
After the two-minute warning in last year’s Super Bowl, Spagnuolo called one of his favorite six-man blitzes. McDuffie, who lined up in the slot, appeared to be in a matchup with receiver Brandon Aiyuk before the ball was snapped.
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When quarterback Brock Purdy dropped his eyes to receive the shotgun snap, McDuffie sprinted toward him, his body directly in the passing lane where Purdy wanted to throw a short pass to Aiyuk, who ran a slant route.
McDuffie got a hand on the pass, which fell incomplete.
Purdy couldn’t even try passing to tight end George Kittle, who lined up in the backfield, because Connor’s blitz forced Kittle to block in pass protection
“Trent has a great feel and it’s so hard to coach,” D’Alesio said. “You try to coach people to time it up the right way, not giving it away too early or with your body language. Trent is just such a smooth guy. He has that feel.”
On 3rd & 5 with two minutes left in regulation, the Chiefs defense came out with 7 defensive backs on the field.
Trent McDuffie generated his 16th unblocked pressure of the season (including playoffs), five more than any other defensive back.#SuperBowlLVIII | #ChiefsKingdom pic.twitter.com/dwwNJYG57O
— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats) February 12, 2024
The situation: Tied 19-19, overtime, 7:29 left, third-and-4 from the Chiefs’ 9
The blitzers: Bolton and Reid
Unsung hero: Jones
Coach Kyle Shanahan made an interesting decision when the 49ers won the coin toss before the start of overtime. He decided to have the 49ers take the ball first. The mission for the Chiefs defense was simple: Just don’t surrender a touchdown.
For their final defensive play of the season, Spagnuolo broke his play-calling tendency: The Chiefs surprised Purdy with a Cover 0 blitz.
Before the ball was snapped on third-and-5, Spagnuolo matched his best cornerbacks, McDuffie and Sneed, on Aiyuk and Deebo Samuel, the 49ers’ best receivers. Shanahan made a small concession: He had running back Christian McCaffrey motion from right to left across the formation before chip-blocking for Purdy.
The secondary — including McDuffie, Conner and safety Mike Edwards — covered the 49ers’ skill-position players just long enough for Jones to get to Purdy, who threw an incompletion.
After the play, two of the 49ers linemen argued as to which of them should’ve blocked Jones.
“Usually, it’s dictated by what we’ve seen on tape protection-wise,” Spagnuolo said of his blitzes. “When I first got in this league, there weren’t that many (pass) protections — and you could kind of dictate it even better. Now offensive coaches do a good job of taking things away.
“Sometimes you think they’re going to protect (the quarterback) a certain way and they don’t. When they do and you get a free runner (at the quarterback), that’s what we’re always looking for.”
Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo is at his best in the most critical moments, and so is his defense. (David Eulitt / Getty Images)
Houston (2024 divisional round)
The situation: Chiefs leading 20-12, fourth quarter, 10:05 left, fourth-and-10 from the Chiefs’ 40
The blitzers: Bolton and rookie safety Jaden Hicks
Unsung hero: Cook
Protecting an eight-point lead, Spagnuolo anticipated that quarterback C.J. Stroud would need at least three seconds before throwing a pass to allow his receiver to get past the line to gain. He blitzed six defenders, which forced a tight end to block George Karlaftis one-on-one. Karlaftis won his matchup with ease and sacked Stroud.
Stroud couldn’t even try a deep pass because Cook didn’t let any of the Texans’ receivers get behind him for a potential completion.
“Everybody is a piece to a bigger puzzle and everybody has to work together for the puzzle to do what it needs to do,” Cook said. “Something that might seem small matters. If I’m in the post, even if I’m not getting action, (my coverage) still is vital for the (blitz).
“Even though I’m not in the limelight, I never asked to be, too. I came here to play ball and get respect. The coaches appreciate that. That’s all I care about. I’m blessed and appreciative of what we have. I just do my job as best I can.”
DEFENSE WOKE UP HUNGRY TODAY 🍽️ pic.twitter.com/JGw5bKEAHF
— Kansas City Chiefs (@Chiefs) January 18, 2025
Buffalo (2024 AFC Championship Game)
The situation: Chiefs leading 32-29, fourth quarter, 2:00 left, fourth-and-5 from the Bills’ 47
The blitzers: McDuffie and Reid
Unsung heroes: Jones and Cook
When he called his game-winning blitz, Spagnuolo knew it would leave an opening on the right side of the Chiefs’ coverage, the area McDuffie attacked from. Allen noticed the Chiefs’ blitz and looked to two receivers, each running a crossing route. But Cook was in the middle of the field, ready to break up a pass or make a tackle to stop the Bills from gaining a first down.
“He gets us in the right position to win games,” Cook said. “He dials them up in critical situations. When the play comes into the huddle, we’re fully confident in what we can do.”
McDuffie and Reid were able to generate immediate pressure on Allen because the offensive line was most concerned with blocking Jones, who lined up across the left tackle.
“Honestly, whenever Coach Spags calls a blitz, I’m usually pretty confident, especially late in the game,” McDuffie said. “You never know what side (of the defense) the blitz is coming from. Guys may say, ‘They’re going to blitz,’ but you don’t know which way it’s coming.
“I heard the O-lineman actually check the protection the other way. Right after that, I was like, ‘We got them.’ It was a good feeling.”
Spags’ shining moment ✨
His disguised blitz call led to a 4th down stop @Chiefs fans will never forget#NFLTurningPoint on ESPN+ with @LRiddickESPN pic.twitter.com/Ja9tqmpPYW
— NFL Films (@NFLFilms) January 30, 2025
(Top photo of Trent McDuffie blitzing Brock Purdy in Super Bowl LVIII: Michael Reaves / Getty Images)
Culture
In Her New Memoir, Siri Hustvedt Captures Life With, And Without, Paul Auster
Siri Hustvedt was halfway through a new novel, about a writer tasked with completing his father’s unfinished manuscript, when her husband, the novelist Paul Auster, died from lung cancer.
Continuing that story in his absence felt impossible. They were together for 43 years, the length of her career. She’d never published a book without his reading a draft of it first.
Two weeks later, in the Brooklyn townhouse they shared, she sat down and wrote the first two sentences of a new book: “I am alive. My husband, Paul Auster, is dead.”
“It was the only thing I could write about,” she said.
She wrote about her feelings of dislocation: how she vividly smelled cigar smoke, even though Auster had quit smoking nine years before; how she woke up disoriented on his side of the bed and got into the bath with her socks still on; how she felt a kind of “cognitive splintering” that bordered on derangement. She had lost not only her husband, but also the person she had been with him. She felt faded and washed-out, like an overexposed photograph.
Those reflections grew into “Ghost Stories,” Hustvedt’s memoir about her life with and without Auster. Partly a book about grief and its psychological and physiological side effects, it’s also a revealing and intimate glimpse into a literary marriage — the buoyant moments of their early courtship, their deep involvement in each other’s work, their inside jokes (“I’ll have the lamb for two for one”).
She also writes publicly for the first time about the tragedies the family endured several years ago, when Auster’s son, Daniel, who struggled with addiction, took heroin while his infant daughter Ruby was in his care, and woke up to find she wasn’t breathing. He was later charged with criminally negligent homicide, after an examination found that her death was caused by acute intoxication from opioids. Soon after he was released on bail, Daniel, 44, died of a drug overdose.
A few months later, Auster started to come down with fevers, and doctors later discovered he had cancer. He reacted to the news as perhaps only a novelist would — lamenting that dying from cancer would be such an obvious, unsatisfying ending to a life marked by so much tragedy.
“He said so many times, it would make for a bad story,” Hustvedt said. “It was so predetermined, almost, and he hated predictable stories.”
Tall and lanky with short blond hair, Hustvedt, who is 71, met me on an April afternoon at the elegant, art and book-filled townhouse in Park Slope where the couple lived for 30 years. She took me to the sunlit second floor library, where Auster spent his final days, surrounded by his family and books. “He loved this room,” Hustvedt said.
“I’ll show you his now quiet typewriter,” she said, leading me down to Auster’s office on the ground floor, which felt as tranquil and carefully preserved as a shrine. A desk held a small travel typewriter, an Olivetti, and next to it, his larger Olympia. “Click clack, it really made noise,” Hustvedt said.
Auster rose to fame in the 1980s thanks to postmodern novels like “City of Glass” and “Moon Palace,” which explore the mysteries and unreliability of memory and perception. Hustvedt gained renown for heady and cerebral literary novels that include “The Blazing World,” “What I Loved” and “The Summer Without Men.”
They were each other’s first readers, sharpest editors and biggest fans. They even shared characters — Auster borrowed Iris Vegan, the heroine of Hustvedt’s 1992 novel “The Blindfold,” and extended her story in his novel “Leviathan,” published the same year. (Critics and readers assumed she had used his character, not the other way around.)
“We were very different writers and always were, and that was part of the pleasure in the other’s work,” Hustvedt said.
Friends of the couple who have read “Ghost Stories” said they were moved by Hustvedt’s loving but not hagiographic portrait of her husband.
Salman Rushdie, who visited Auster just a few days before he died, said Hustvedt’s vivid portrayal of Auster — who was witty, warm and expansive, always ready with a joke — captured a side of him that was rarely reflected in his public image as a celebrated literary figure.
“He’s very present on the page,” Rushdie said. “They were so tightly knit, and Paul was Siri’s greatest champion. They were deeply engaged in each other’s work.”
Hustvedt was 26, a budding writer who had just published a poem in the Paris Review, when she met Auster, 34, after a reading at the 92nd Street Y. He was wearing a black leather jacket, smoking, and she was instantly smitten.
They went downtown to a party, then to a bar in Tribeca, and talked all night. He was married to the writer Lydia Davis, but they had separated. He showed her a photo of his and Davis’s 3-year-old son, Daniel. They kissed as she was about to get into a taxi, and he went home with her to her apartment on 109th Street.
Shortly after they began seeing each other, Auster broke it off and told her that he had to return to his wife and son. She won him back with ardent, unabashed love letters that she quotes in “Ghost Stories”: “I love you. I’m not leaving yet, not until I am banished.”
In 1982, a few days after Auster’s divorce, they got married. They were so broke that guests had to pay for their own dinners.
Their writing careers evolved in parallel, but Auster’s fame eclipsed Hustvedt’s. She often found herself belittled by interviewers who asked her what it was like to be married to a literary genius, and whether her husband wrote her books.
“People used to ask me what my favorite book of Paul’s was; no one would ever ask him that,” Hustvedt recalled.
When Hustvedt complained about the disparity, Auster joked that the next time a journalist asked what it was like to be married to him, she should brag about his skills as a lover.
The slights persisted even after Hustvedt had established herself as a formidable literary talent. “One imagines that will go away, but it didn’t,” she said. She’s sometimes felt reduced to “Paul Auster’s wife” even after his death: At a recent reading, a fan of his work asked if she took comfort in reading his books in his absence, as if the real loss was the death of the literary eminence, not the man she loved.
She felt the weight of his reputation acutely when Auster died, and news of his death spread online just moments after he stopped breathing, before the family had time to tell people close to him.
The shadow Auster’s fame cast over the family became especially pronounced when scandal and tragedy struck.
In “Ghost Stories,” Hustvedt details a side of Auster’s personal life that he closely guarded: his relationship with Daniel, whose drug use and shiftiness was a constant source of worry. As a teenager, he stole more than $13,000 from her bank account, her German royalties. In 2000, Auster and Hustvedt learned that Daniel had forged his transcripts from SUNY Purchase after he had promised to re-enroll; he hadn’t, and kept the tuition money.
After each breach of trust, she and Auster forgave him.
“I have to leave the door open, just a crack,” Paul said about Daniel, Hustvedt recalls in “Ghost Stories.”
She writes about rushing to the hospital in Park Slope, where Daniel’s daughter was pronounced dead: “It’s the image of her small, perfect dead body in the hospital on Nov. 1, 2021, that forces itself on me.”
The shock of Ruby’s death, followed by Daniel’s arrest and overdose, was made even more unbearable by the media frenzy. Auster and Hustvedt were hounded by reporters, and made no comment.
“We were not in a position to speak about it when it happened, it was all so shocking and overwhelming and trying to deal with your feelings was more than enough,” Hustvedt told me.
But she felt she had to write about Daniel and Ruby in “Ghost Stories” because their lives and deaths were a crucial part of the family’s story, yet had been reduced to lurid tabloid fodder, she said.
“It would not have been possible to write this book and pretend that these horrible things didn’t happen,” she said. “I also didn’t want the horrible things to overwhelm the book, and that’s a tricky thing, because it’s so horrible, you feel it has to be there, but it isn’t the whole story.”
Before he died, Auster told Hustvedt he wanted that story to be told.
“I didn’t feel that I was betraying him,” she said.
Auster and Hustvedt’s daughter, Sophie Auster, a musician who lives in Brooklyn, said reading her mother’s memoir was painful, but she also felt her father’s voice and presence in its pages.
“Opening the book was extremely difficult for me, but you just sink in,” she said. “She doesn’t let you sit in the sorrow for too long. There’s a lot of life and a lot of joy.”
Hustvedt found it strange to write “Ghost Stories” without sharing drafts with Auster, her habit throughout her career. But often, his voice popped into her head.
“I kind of heard him in my ear, saying things like, ‘That’s a wavy sentence, straighten that thing out,’” she said.
After finishing the memoir, Hustvedt went back to the novel she’d been working on when Auster died. She realized she had to rewrite the first half entirely.
Culture
In ‘Rocky Horror,’ Luke Evans Finds His Ballad of Sexual Liberation
There’s a Hollywood action star, standing in silhouette at the top of a creepy manor’s staircase, dressed in a corset and jockstrap, thighs fitted into fishnets and hair secured under a wig that could have been scalped from Charli XCX.
“I’m just a sweet transvestite,” the action star, Luke Evans, croons, suggestively caressing his nipples. “From Transsexual, Transylvania.”
Evans, 47, has taken on the role of Dr. Frank-N-Furter in “The Rocky Horror Show” on Broadway, which opened last month at Studio 54. He has lost almost 20 pounds since performances began at the end of March, he said, and he relies on a small can of oxygen to power through a production in which he barely leaves the stage. Every night, he grabs his blond dachshund, Lala, who waits in his dressing room, and returns to a rented apartment in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood, covered in glitter. At one point, after Evans discovered glitter in her poop, Lala took a brief intermission from the theater.
“It’s mental,” Evans said of the demands of a Broadway show. He has been giving eight high-octane performances a week as a mad scientist who sees himself as a prophet of sexual liberation. It is a role made famous by Tim Curry in the 1975 film version. (Curry also performed in the original production in London in 1973, and the show’s subsequent runs in Los Angeles and New York.) About a week into joining the Broadway production of “Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” the rapper Megan Thee Stallion was hospitalized in March for exhaustion.
But the physical strain of running across the stage in patent leather boots with five-inch heels has garnered him a Tony nomination for best performance by a lead actor in a musical. It may also do wonders for how the world sees Evans. For the past two decades, Hollywood has frequently cast him as an action hero. “I was somebody who could drive a bus, or build a wall, or kill a dragon,” he said.
Well, it was a little more glamorous than that: He has starred in billion-dollar global blockbusters including the “Fast & Furious” franchise and “The Hobbit.” But it is no less confining for an actor who thinks he might have something more to offer audiences than pistol whips and fisticuffs.
A Belated Start
“My career started at a breakneck speed,” Evans told me one morning on the patio of his Chelsea hotel as Lala gently snored in his lap. “For about eight years, I felt like I didn’t breathe.”
The marathon began in 2010 when Evans began the transition from a career on the London stage to one in Hollywood as a dependable Adonis. He played the sun god Apollo in a campy 2010 remake of “Clash of the Titans,” and within the next four years, he earned a promotion in the Greek pantheon (playing Zeus in “The Immortals”), drove expensive cars (playing the villainous Owen Shaw in the “Fast & Furious” series), learned archery (playing Bard the Bowman in “The Hobbit” movie trilogy), and became a vampire (playing the title character in “Dracula Untold”). His career seemed to be hitting a peak in 2017 when he received positive reviews as the meathead Gaston in the live-action remake of Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast.”
These days, Evans is looking ahead to the next 10 years. He has released music, built a clothing brand with his boyfriend, Fran Tomas, and developed properties across Europe, including in the places where he splits his time, Lisbon and Ibiza. He talks often about refusing to dwell on the past, but the past certainly informs his decisions.
Becoming famous in his early 30s left him feeling that he had limited time to make his mark in Hollywood. “This business is all about objectivity,” Evans said. But even as his star ascended, he was looking over his shoulder at the younger stars of the “Twilight” films.
“They were porcelain and perfect. They glowed,” the actor said. “I would never have been cast. Maybe as some haggard, old half-wolf.”
Even a decade later, nobody would describe Evans as haggard. The director of the “Rocky Horror” revival, Sam Pinkleton, prefers to think of him as a “shape-shifter.”
“He contains multitudes,” Pinkleton said. “One of those is a giant dude who can kick your ass, and the next minute he is kitty-cat purr.”
“I remember Luke talking a lot about how he wanted to transform with this role,” the director added, saying that Evans was considered for the part early in the casting process. “He realized that he could do things with this role that he was never allowed to do.”
Evans now has a chance to redefine himself in portraying Frank-N-Furter. And knowing more about his back story is likely to enrich the performance that audiences see onstage.
In his 2024 memoir, “Boy From the Valleys: My Unexpected Journey,” Evans describes being born in Wales on Easter Sunday and being raised a Jehovah’s Witness. His father was a bricklayer and his mother a homemaker; the family lived in a working-class neighborhood. Because of the strictures of the family’s religion, Evans was frequently bullied as a youngster and often felt excluded from typical childhood pleasures: Jehovah’s Witnesses do not celebrate Christmas or birthdays, so there was no singing carols or going to birthday parties for Evans. He described himself as having been exceedingly thin at the time, and struggling with his sexuality.
“Looking back, I didn’t stand a chance,” he wrote.
But in his memoir, Evans is reluctant to blame others for his own hardships. One of the rare exceptions is discussing a neighbor, whom he blames for the death of one of his childhood cats, Tigger. It appeared to have been shot with a lead pellet. “Anyway, I own his house now,” Evans wrote. “And any animal can come and go as they please.” (Evans told me he bought it as a rental property to provide extra income for his parents.)
At 16, Evans left home and started dating an older man. He eventually moved to London with a boyfriend who encouraged him to pursue a career in theater and he went on to build a successful résumé in the West End through the 2000s, starring in productions like “Taboo,” “Avenue Q” and “Rent.” His parents gradually accepted his sexuality, though that came at the cost of being shunned by their community of Jehovah’s Witnesses.
“It took a long time, a lot of conversations and a lot of patience from both sides for us to understand we were on different journeys,” Evans said. “It was not easy because the religion wanted my parents to cut me off, to have nothing to do with me.”
He does not believe in God anymore. “It was something I believe was created by man, and, over centuries, it became a way to control the masses.” But about five years ago, he did get a tattoo on his left thigh. You can see just a glimmer of it through his fishnets in “Rocky Horror.” It’s a quote from Corinthians: “Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails.” For Evans, it’s the story of how, in his family, love won over everything else.
‘Absolute Pleasure’
Questions about his sexuality came up during the height of his movie career. “I wasn’t hiding, even then,” Evans told me, acknowledging that he may have lost roles because he refused to hide. “I had to do it,” he explained. “I had to walk so that the future generations of gay actors could run.”
“I play straight more than I play gay,” he said. “Why the hell not? I’m acting. I can do anything.”
Evans prefers to think of himself as someone who drives toward the future without dwelling much on the past. It’s a trait that he recognizes in Frank-N-Furter, who hurtles dangerously toward a utopian vision of “absolute pleasure.”
“The past is important, of course, but you can’t read too much into the past,” Evans told me.
“People keep trying,” I said.
“But the present and the future is something you can have a say in, if you so choose,” the actor said.
“Is that a survivor’s mentality?” I asked.
“Possibly,” Evans laughed. “When I was younger and I had to leave home, I had to stop thinking about my past, because my past didn’t want to have anything to do with me. In fact, my past sort of stopped when I left home and left the religion. I lost everyone, all my friends.”
A similar psychology runs through the actor’s performance as Frank-N-Furter, a drag queen’s answer to Victor Frankenstein — if the good doctor had a penchant for sleeping with his monsters.
“There is joy but also danger in Frank,” Evans explained, “because he is a speeding train.”
If the Jehovah’s Witnesses demanded a life of invisibility, and Hollywood demanded a life of rigid masculinity, then Broadway was offering Evans a path to total exposure. It was as Frank-N-Furter says: “Don’t dream it. Be it.”
By the time Evans reaches the show’s hedonistic peak, the parallels between the actor and the character become impossible to ignore. There is a joy in seeing Evans — once a boy who could not celebrate his own birthday — now presiding over the birth of Rocky, the musical’s golden Adonis. He embodies the doctor’s lustful jinx as a man making up for lost time, delivering a version of the character whose occasional glimmers of warmth are singed with rage and regret — two emotions that Evans has spent decades trying to evade in his own life.
“There is a menace to him,” Evans observed of his character, “that sits just under the surface of glamour and charisma. But there is also something very naughty, powerful and subversive.”
Culture
Book Review: ‘From Life Itself,’ by Suzy Hansen
Admittedly, Americans seem to have a soft spot for books about faraway places that end up reminding them of themselves. Hansen’s, though, is in many ways too rich and complex to provide an easy parallel. Erdogan often gets lumped in with other 21st-century strongmen, but on migration, for example, he has taken an idiosyncratic tack. “Unlike Trump and Orban,” Hansen writes, referring to Hungary’s then prime minister, “Erdogan had seen the Syrians as part of his vision for a greater Muslim Turkey, rather than brown invaders of a white Western country.” His approach to immigration also allowed him to play a kind of power broker on the world stage, collecting European Union money to keep the Syrians out of Europe.
Much of what Hansen found in Karagumruk surprised her, too. Residents would complain relentlessly about their new Syrian neighbors while providing them with generous aid. She spoke with countless Karagumruk residents while necessarily directing our attention to a few. Ismail, the longtime muhtar, or neighborhood councilman, speaks lovingly of the city’s old cosmopolitanism and happens to be part of the same midcentury generation as Erdogan. Ebru, a real estate agent, resents the Syrians for getting European Union money and tries to unseat Ismail. Huseyin, a shop owner, defends his Syrian neighbors from a violent mob. Murat, an “Islamic fundamentalist barber,” pledges his fealty to Erdogan, whom he calls “the most democratic person in the world.”
Erdogan, for his part, emerges from this account as a ruthless autocrat who rose to power through undeniable popular support. He was a poor boy turned soccer player turned mayor of Istanbul. In his first several years as Turkey’s prime minister, he improved the health care system and civil infrastructure, bringing measurable benefits to people’s lives. But then came the corruption and oppression, and the gutting of state institutions, where loyalty was now favored over expertise.
In February 2023, when massive earthquakes tore through Turkey, killing more than 50,000 people, the cost of such depredations was laid bare: “Erdogan had so centralized power around his person until he rendered Turkey a country that no longer worked.”
Still, he won the election that was held later that year, with 52 percent of the vote. Hansen sees some hope at the edges: principled people who navigate their way around obstacles, finding the seams in the armor, “whatever pathways within institutions hadn’t yet been obstructed, whatever avenues of freedom remained open to them.” But improvisation doesn’t add up to an effective opposition.
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