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From the first episode, you really see how Tim [Jonathan Bailey] is less experienced than Hawk [Matt Bomer]. Now I've got to get out of here, and you're not getting anything else out of me. [both laugh] I think the folding came from Thomas's book, but how it was directed is a Dan question.
DM: He was asserting his dominance over Tim.
He's setting up this dom-sub relationship right off the bat. In the first sex with the trick he picked up, Hawk is aggressive during and skittish afterward. When Hawk goes cruising at the public toilets in Lafayette Park, he's compelled to do that. After the two men share the soup, and a conversation about Tim’s past sexual experiences with a priest, Hawk goes in for the kill.
After both men finish, Hawk immediately shuts down any prolonged connection, giving Eddie a fake name and leaving.
They're both really seasoned actors, and once we had the choreography down, then they'd bring these grace notes to it. Sex.
After hooking Tim up with a gig in Senator McCarthy’s office, Hawk shows up at Tim’s lowly room in a boarding house. It's a very dangerous thing. So when he runs into Eddie again, you really get to see that play out.
You also don't rush through the scenes of foreplay and how it establishes power dynamics in sex.
And for me, it's like Christmas morning. He flaunts his manhood while casually getting out of the shower nude in front of Jim Parsons. We made a point of rehearsing as much as we could, which was really valuable. Tim is happy to take orders from the handsome Hawk, but by the end of the first episode, the emotional bond the men are reluctantly forming threatens to upend the delicate balance of power between them.
Fellow Travelers is a show about the intersections of forbidden love and coveted power.
When a character does something, you need to understand the decision that he's making and how the story led him there. Matt never looked hotter than when breeding a number of hungry bottoms (including Jonathan Bailey) in this basically hardcore gay drama series. Which is perfectly fitting for the show’s themes and its story.
He was previously the Entertainment Director of Hearst Digital Media, and before that a Senior Editor at GQ. Raised in Vancouver, Canada, Nojan graduated from NYU with a master’s degree in magazine journalism. It's Washington; these are political people engaged in political theater.
Well, wherever—or whoever—it came from, it was an example of the way the show doesn't skip foreplay or depict it in a brief, rote way.
I think the answer is yes.
I think the answer is yes.