Beth Dutton is not the nurturing type, unless you count grudges. The world has been brutal to her, and she has responded in kind. Thatâs one reason Kelly Reillyâs cutthroat Yellowstone character is so appealing to fans of the series. She betrays no weakness and is impervious to everything. It only hurts sometimes, when itâs love and happiness ricocheting off her.
Thatâs why viewers of the modern Montana Western have been obsessing over a scene in the final episode of season four, in which Beth passes through a barn on her family property and is greeted by Carter, a homeless, orphaned kid she brought to the ranch and has been protecting like the child she never had. âMorning, mama,â he says, while cleaning a stall. âHey, babyâ¦â she replies reflexively. Then she halts, and the dim smile ices over.
âYou canât call me that,â she says. âItâs not true.â Thereâs no reason she has to rebuff the boy, but she canât live with that word being applied to her. âYou lost your mother, kid. You donât get another,â she says. âI lost mine. Same goes for me.â The final cut comes as sheâs leaving: âCrying doesnât help.â
She may as well have been speaking to the heartsick viewers who have been yearning for Beth to receive some comfort, love, and compassion. For four seasons, they have watched her battle self-destructive demons while valiantly fighting for her father (Kevin Costner) and their familyâs legacy. Carter seemed like a well-earned reward for Beth, and it stung to see her reject him so coldly. Fans have been debating about exactly why she did it ever since: Maybe she was trying to protect him because she knows her life is in danger? Maybe it was just self-defense because she does care for him? Or could they be wrong and she is actually just that mean deep down.
These are all hard possibilities to accept. Itâs hard for the woman who plays Beth too. âI mean, I find it heartbreaking. I do,â Reilly says, speaking to Vanity Fair after a day of shooting season five of the series. âI found it very emotional to read that, and I sat with it for a minute.â The infamous âmamaâ scene may not give the audience what they want, but Reilly feels it is still true to Beth.
âIt was absolutely the correct response for this character because letâs just be real for a second. Heâs just come into their life. Heâs been there for maybe two weeks. She canât just suddenly go, âIâm going to be your mother.â That wouldnât be truthful. Heâs lost everything. Sheâs taking him in. Sheâs cooking for him, she wants to look after him. I think Beth has huge motherly instinctsâhuge. Itâs all over the show, actually, but not in a way that women are supposed to be mothers, right? Itâs not softly, softly. This is not Disney.â
âLots of people want to ask me why isnât Beth just bringing that boy to her bosom and mothering him,â the British-born actor adds. âWell, what she says to him is actually the most honest thing she can. Itâs hard to say it to that beautiful little lip-quivering face of that boy. It was heartbreaking to have to say to him: âYou lost your mother. You donât get another.ââ
The outpouring of analysis about why it happened may simply be a sign that it hit the audience in a meaningful way. âThereâs so many things going on in that moment, which is what makes it beautiful writing. It makes it a pleasure to be able to try and act all those notes,â Reilly adds. âThatâs what I love about my job. I get to be able to try and do that. And it pissed a lot of people off. They really wanted Beth to just soften and say, âYes, baby, come here!â and have a happily ever after, but thatâs not Taylor Sheridan and thatâs not our world.â
Sheridan, the cocreator, showrunner and writer of nearly every episode of Yellowstone, takes an equally tough-love approach to his loyal viewers. âI donât have any idea how it was received. I donât follow any of that stuff,â he says when asked about the fan speculation about the Beth âmamaâ moment. âI don't do social media. I write these for us. And I think just because an audience wants something, it doesnât mean the right thing to do is give it to them.â
Many of those theorizing about why Beth would reject the boyâs term of endearment seem to forget how loaded the word âmotherâ is for her. As a young girl, Beth was blamedâcursed, evenâby her dying mother for causing the horse-riding accident that fatally injured her. âShe can take on a role that is somewhat similar, but I donât think Beth thinks of herself as a mother,â Sheridan says. âHer only experience with a mother is her mother and, and her mother was pretty tough.â
Beth has been replacing every part of herself with steel ever since, so anything that might soften that armor must be pushed away. âPeople are like, why is she so tough? Why is she so mean? And Iâm like, well, what are you talking about?â Reilly says. âThis is a woman who had to survive so much. How is she going to survive that by being weak-spined, by being gentle? Gentle will kill you. Gentle will bend that flower and take its leaves off it and it will be done. To find that strength isnât always pretty.â
If keeping Beth true to her roots means holding the audienceâs expectations at armâs length too, then so be it. That may even be why Yellowstone viewers feel so passionately about the show, and love Beth in particular: Itâs challenging. It demands rigor. Savagery is one of its dark delicacies, as with Succession and Ozark, but when true bonds of trust and loyalty are forged, itâs also deeply satisfying.
Thatâs what Beth has with Rip (Cole Hauser) who also came to the Dutton Ranch as a troubled young man, her brother Kayce (Luke Grimes) and their aging pater familias. Sheridan suggests she may also have been holding out on the boy deliberately. âBeth is mistrusting of motives, generally speaking,â Sheridan says. âBut sheâs extremely affectionate with Rip and with Kayce and her father. Carter hasnât fully proven himself yet, and it was a pretty rash decision to have this boy live with him. Beth can be extremely impulsive and make a decision at the drop of a hat. But the interesting thing about her is she stands by the decisions. She sticks with it. So, could Carter earn that from her at some point? Yeah, maybe.â
Itâs a testament to Beth that viewers crave happiness for her in a show where that outcome seems unlikely for almost anyone else in this tragic story of a family undone by its own power. Viewers are drawn to her even though she is one of the most ferocious figures in the show, cutting a swath of destruction to forge a perimeter around the Duttonâs imperiled land. Maybe sheâs appealing because she so rarely unleashes that ruthlessness for herself.
âShe cares about other people's happiness more than her own,â Reilly says.
Beth is also relentless. âShe refuses to surrender,â Sheridan adds. âI think that thatâs one of the reasons so many people are inspired by her. She will not allow herself to be a victimâand stands up for those who have become one.â
âSheâs a very liberating character,â Sheridan goes on. âSheâs the only character Iâve ever written that can say or do anything, no matter how shocking or offensive or out of place. And she owns the consequences, if there are anyâ¦. Sheâs a ton of fun to write, and Kelly has embraced that. She embodies that recklessness.â
One thing Beth does need for herself is conflict, Reilly says. War is her natural habitat.
âSheâs so good at it, thatâs all sheâs ever known,â the actor says. âLook, theyâre not peaceful people. All theyâve known is how to fight. The same with their ancestors who fought for the land. Theyâre still fighting for it, defending it, and Beth is savage and brilliant. For her to just sit on the porch and contemplate life and read Walt Whitmanâ¦I donât think that's going to happen anytime soon. Maybe thereâs a spin-off one day where we see herâme as an old ladyâbut at the moment, thereâs too much to lose.â
That loyalty is at the core of Bethâs appeal, and maybe Yellowstoneâs overall success. Itâs certainly not the purity and virtue of the main characters that wins people over; itâs that we are brought in close to characters who push others away. âItâs basically the mob now, running Montana,â Reilly jokes.
âThese characters can be heightened and heroic even if theyâre doing things that are potentially, I donât want to say evilâ¦â Reilly says. âWeâve watched the mob and we love them. We love The Godfather, right? We love these characters who are taking out the bad guys because we are on their side. We have a glimpse into their world. And I think the Duttons have stepped into a little bit of that heroic gangster role.â
Beth remains their most lethal assassin, demolishing the Duttonsâ opponents legally, financially, and sometimes emotionally. This past season, the environmental activist Summer Higgins (Piper Perabo), who was also romantically entangled with Bethâs father, got a taste of her wrath. Beth manipulated her in a way that not only served the Dutton Ranch, but also landed the woman in prison. Itâs hard to look at such power plays as strictly business; itâs also personal. âShe plays dirty,â Reilly says. âShe has one endgame and that is to win. And if thereâs someone to get that done, itâs her. At the beginning of season five, which Iâm not allowed to talk too much about, sheâs actually in her most powerful place.â
Is it difficult to bring a character with so much turmoil to life? âItâs not a walk in the park,â Reilly admits, then quickly adds: âI get energized playing her. She gives me a lot of strength, a lot of backbone that I didnât know that I necessarily had. Sheâs gotten me through some things also. Actually, Iâm not going to say that. It sounds so wanky, so Iâll leave that bit out.â
Itâs not that she puts a lot of herself into Beth. Itâs that Beth draws things out. âYou think youâre playing something outside of yourself and then you discover, yeah, that element is already in me. Iâve just maybe buried it or don't want to look at it,â Reilly says. âThe biggest thing that Beth is made up of is grief, I think. And who doesnât know what grief is? So I relate to some things in her and understand them and I find the way theyâre executed are really truthful and powerful.â
Sheridan said that he likes to have as many scripts as possible ready for the actors at the start of each season so they can see the full arc of what theyâre playing. With Beth, he describes a constant collaboration between himself, Reilly, and the hair and makeup artists and costume designers to craft a fearless figure who is constantly trying to destabilize the world around her.
âShe looks at a board meeting, or she looks at a negotiation as warfare,â Sheridan says. âShe weaponizes herself for those things anywhere that she can gain an advantage. Sheâll dress in what one would consider a little risqué for a nightclub to go to a business meeting. She does it to intimidate. She does it to off-put, she does it to challengeâwhether itâs a male or a female that she sees across the table from her. Then youâll notice that when sheâs on the ranch, she dresses very differently. She dresses comfortably because sheâs at ease and sheâs extremely confident.â
One thing Beth will never do is pander for approval. Thatâs what sets her at odds with her buttoned-up other brother, Jamie (Wes Bentley). âDespite himself, he wants it so bad. He wants success and to be loved so bad,â she says. âAnd Beth finds that so repulsive.â
Donât expect Beth to seek the audienceâs love either. âShe's polarizing and I think they all are,â Reilly says. âIn our show, itâs almost like [Sheridan] keeps everyone on their toes a little bit because you can be really behind a character and then they do something that you absolutely hate or find shocking. You get that real conflict with where your loyalties lie.â
Affection for Beth endures because she is aspirational. Even Reilly wishes she was that fearsome.
âTo have that inner fight, for right or wrong, for whatever it is, I find that admirable. I find that a character that I want to stand behind, or to have stand with me,â she says. âWe can go, âOh, my God, thatâs awful what she does. She destroys people. She}s unkind, sheâs ruthless,â but when sheâs standing in righteousness, it is the same amount of power. Itâs the same amount of big dick energy.â
Reilly rethinks her phrasing. âMaybe you shouldn't use that,â she says, then decides itâs fine. (It certainly sounds like something Beth would say herself.) âYeah, use it. I donât mind using it because itâs trueâ¦. Itâs just a shortcut to try and to express the feeling of someone who inhabits themselves so fully that itâs uncompromising. Itâs audacious.â
Just donât call her âmama.â Thatâs offensive.
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