Date: ThursdayDec 12

Drew Starkey and Daniel Craig for Variety Magazine

Drew and Daniel were on the cover in the November 6th issue of Variety Magazine! They talked all about Queer, including the audition process, rehearsals, and much more. Check out the outtakes and scans in our gallery! You can read an excerpt below, and the full interview in our press archive.


Welcome to the world of “Queer.” Guadagnino, who pushed tennis-as-sex metaphors to thrilling heights earlier this year with “Challengers” and gave the world Timothée Chalamet fornicating with a peach in 2017’s “Call Me by Your Name,” returns to the big screen with another big swing. “Queer” is based on Beat Generation writer William S. Burroughs’ novella, published in 1985, which fictionalizes the author’s own experiences of recreational heroin use and his sensual love affair with a discharged serviceman. (In the era the book and film depict, to be gay was perhaps the more dangerous of the two experiences.)

Craig, in his first film outside the James Bond and “Knives Out” franchises in seven years, plays William Lee. On the run after a drug bust and enmeshed in a hard-drinking and edgy crowd at one of his regular watering holes, Lee encounters the beautiful and aloof Eugene Allerton (Starkey), with whom he comes to share both painful intimacies and, well … substances that were once visible in the film’s opening sequence.

There are universal aspects to “Queer” — the struggle to be truly vulnerable, the experience of falling in love and battles with insecurity. But a gay audience will likely find it particularly striking: It’s a film that’s utterly unafraid to depict both the literal fact of sexuality and the inner turmoil that leads many to use sex to escape. “I’ve been in the characters’ world before,” says the singer Omar Apollo, who plays one of Craig’s other love interests (and who, unlike Craig and Starkey, is openly queer). “You’re in a hotel, the guy’s sitting down … I feel like I’ve been there before.”

The film’s first cut came in at three and a half hours. “I’d love people to see it, because there’s other things going on,” Craig says. But even whittled down to a (relatively!) slight 135 minutes, “Queer” is capacious, making room both for a frank depiction of male sexuality and for touches of surrealistic fantasy. It’s at once as direct a documentation of gay love as anything on-screen since 2005’s “Brokeback Mountain” (pushing much farther even than Guadagnino’s “Call Me by Your Name,” which panned away from its key sex scene) and a joyful-yet-melancholy ayahuasca journey.

And it’s a turning point for both of its leads. For Craig, post-Bond and in the middle of his run as “Knives Out” sleuth Benoit Blanc, it’s a test of his star power. “Queer” isn’t designed to be a blockbuster — indeed, it’s about as risky as a film can get. (A24, which picked up the title earlier this summer before film festival season, will give the movie a limited theatrical release on Nov. 27.) How many of Craig’s fans — and how many awards voters — will join Craig on this trip? And for Starkey, it’s an introduction: After showing promise as bad boy Rafe Cameron in Netflix’s teen drama “Outer Banks,” he gets the opportunity to share the screen with a movie star — and to prove he can more than hold his own.

Together, the pair have crafted a love story every bit as distinctive as the Zendaya-led throuple in “Challengers.” “At its very core, there’s a deep love for each other,” Starkey says. “It’s their souls, beyond language, beyond their bodies — and beyond Allerton’s ability to communicate that.” Thwarted by social taboos and by their own limitations, Lee and Allerton connect fleetingly but intensely. The sex scenes that they share will likely unsettle Gen Z audiences, who have made clear that lovemaking in movies is better left off-screen.

Variety
Date: TuesdayJan 07

Drew Starkey for WWD Magazine

Drew was also on the cover of WWD Magazine last month, specifically in the December 18th digital issue. Still part of Queer promotion, he mostly talked about the movie, navigating stardom, and much more. The full interview is available to read in our press archive! Also visit our gallery for the outtakes and scans.


The pressure to capitalize on his Hollywood moment and fling himself at everything was never going to be Drew Starkey’s style.

“I’m not a good multitasker at all,” Starkey says. “I like to have a singular thing to focus on. A lot of my peers are really good at juggling a lot of different things at once, and I’m like, ‘how do you do that?’” he adds.

“It is nice to put almost all of your energy into one thing, and really experience it fully. That’s the only way that I know how to work, and that’s how I like to work.”

Since August, the 31-year-old has been laser-focused on “Queer,” his new film costarring Daniel Craig (who is now Golden Globe nominated for the film), Jason Schwartzman, Lesley Manville and Omar Apollo. The project, which reunites director Luca Guadagnino with his “Challengers” screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes and costume designer Jonathan Anderson (of Loewe), is based on the 1985 book by William S. Burroughs and follows an American expat living in Mexico City in the 1950s and his relationship with a younger man new to town.

Starkey’s global tour for “Queer” kicked off with the film’s premiere at the Venice Film Festival, with stops at various other film festivals, premieres and Loewe’s Paris Fashion Week show (he’s a new face of the brand, along with Craig). It’s a big undertaking for the actor, who has managed to stay largely out of the limelight despite a star status on the ascent for a few years now.

“I was a bit nervous going into it that I wouldn’t be able to handle it,” he says. “I get very overstimulated pretty easily by attention and a lot of people, but it’s been good having Luca and Daniel and Jonathan and all these great people. Us being together throughout all of it has made it really, really light and really fun.”

He’s come into the experience with a new sense of clarity after one of the busiest periods of his career. Last year, after wrapping “Queer” he headed straight to Charleston to shoot “Outer Banks,” only to be grounded by the SAG strike days later.

“It was the first time I’d really had a long break, and I was like, ‘I don’t know who I am.’ I did a lot of soul searching this year and found ways to be a little more comfortable with myself, not attached to work,” he says.

That included a week and a half of solo backpacking in Yosemite and Sequoia National Parks, along with a renewed focus on journaling.

“I am a person who really does need to give myself solitude — it’s a reminder of like, ‘oh, right, there’s an outward communication that I need to tune into a little more,’” he says. “I get so wrapped up in a creative process sometimes that I need to talk to myself more.”

His role in “Queer,” as a mysterious, quiet young man named Eugene Allerton, first entered his radar when his agents told him Guadagnino was interested in meeting for breakfast.

“I was like, ‘what the f–k?’” he says. “And then I sent in a couple auditions and we just talked about it for a few months. It was organic. I’ve never had a process like that before. I just felt like I was getting to know Luca and he was getting to know me.”

WWD