FEATURE:
Spotlight: Revisited
IN THIS PHOTO: Maya Hawke at the Rolling Stone studios, live at SXSW/PHOTO CREDIT: Pooneh Ghana
Maya Hawke
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PERHAPS best known as an actor…
Maya Hawke is an incredible artist who I wanted to revisit. I spotlighted her in 2024, not long before the release of her previous album, Chaos Angel. I love everything about her music. The brilliant album covers, the aesthetics, her distinct videos, lyric-writing and vocals. She is a unique artist that will release her fourth album, MAITREYA CORSO, on 1st May. With tour dates taking her around North America, I do hope that she comes to the U.K. at some point. Many might associate Hawke with her role in Stranger Things. She played Robin Buckley. I will include a recent interview where she discussed that character and her time on Stranger Things. You can pre-order MAITREYA CORSO, as I feel it is going to be among the best albums of this year. The Line of Best Fit were among those to announce news of this incredible new album earlier in the year:
“The record is her fourth album and the follow-up to last year’s Chaos Angel. Written. It was recorded with her regular collaborators Christian Lee Hutson – who Hawke recently married – and Benjamin Lazar Davis, it was tracked over the autumn and winter of 2025 in Woodstock and New York City, with contributions from bandmates Will Graefe, Odessa Jorgensen and Michael Riddleberger.
Hawke has explained that the album is built around a central persona named Maitreya Corso. Described as a “magical misfit”, the character serves as a conduit for exploring themes of ego and creation. “Devil You Know”, written in part between New York and Los Angeles, is about "trying to keep ambition and greed out of the creative process," says Hawke.
Maitreya Corso "is generally is about learning to protect the precious from the poisonous. Protect creation from pride. Protect love from control. Protect collaboration from jealousy.”
The release date for the album coincides with the announcement of Hawke’s first US tour in three years. She's also set to appear alongside Philip Glass, Laurie Anderson and Debbie Harry at the Tibet House US Benefit Concert at Carnegie Hall in Manhattan on 3 March”.
Before I bring things up to date, I want to include an interview from 2024 I did not use in my previous feature. The Talks chatted with Maya Hawke about Chaos Angel and her career. The daughter of Ethan Hawke and Uma Thurman, this is definitely not a case of a daughter of famous actors getting any sort of leg-up. In addition to be an amazing actor who has carved her own path, she is this artist who peruses this passion that her parents are not associated with. I actually think that her music is her greatest talent, though she is a tremendous and versatile actor:
“Maya, would you say your creative work as a songwriter gets easier as you get older and more experienced?
It’s definitely not easier! If anything, the more I do it, the harder it gets. Because with each album, I feel like I’m raising the bar of what I can do. Have you ever heard about that psychological test where they have people take a math test, but first they rate how well they think they’re going to do. And the people who rate themselves the best, do the worst. And the people who think they’re going to do the worst, do the best. What they say about that is that the more you know about something, you more you know you don’t know. When I was younger and I was writing songs, I thought, “Wow, this song is amazing. I’ve just rhymed love and above!” (Laughs) And then you learn more, your bar gets a lot higher, your expectation for yourself gets higher. So the process only gets more difficult — but in a good way.
Apparently something that brings you comfort is craftsmanship — the idea of knowing how to do something well enough that you can do it even when you’ve had a bad day…
I think when I said that I was talking about acting, because I’ve spent so much of my life acting and learning about acting in school, and I feel like I have some level of craftsmanship with it. I can do it on a bad day. I can do it with a broken heart.
After you put out your sophomore album, you said that your only hope from it was just to have the privilege to make a third.
Yeah, and I mean, that has been a really helpful way to think about it, because you can get so caught up in the game of the arts industry. For me, I think working in the arts is like having a bus pass; it can be hard, people have to trust you enough to give you money to make something, but if you can get a bus pass, all you really need is to get it renewed. And sometimes it can be renewed with a demotion, you can make another record, but you have to make it for less money, and that’s okay, too. All that matters is that you can get on the bus, and that you can contribute, you can express yourself. I’m a lifelong learner, and I’m just hoping for the next opportunity to learn something. I see that as a much better God to worship than reviews or popularity or awards. Although, maybe if I started winning some, I would start to see that as a better gauge? (Laughs)
Were you ever worried about crossing into different fields in the way that you have? I think often people can be judgmental about actors who want to start making music, or singers who want to act.
I think that was very true in the nineties, that was the era for that kind of judgment. But I feel like we are in kind of a new era, I hope so anyway. I think the world is in so much chaos and in so much pain, that actually now enthusiasm is the move! It’s way cooler to see a movie and love it. It is stupid to hate things! There’s not enough good stuff anymore to really be that judgey. There are so many things that I feel make me like an unlikable cultural character, that singing to the mix… Whatever! People are going to say shit. But it makes me happy, so whatever.
I think that full-on belief in what you’re doing is how the best musicians think about their work, though. Do you also think that way when you’re working on a film where the dream is not entirely yours?
I’ve done parts in movies where I didn’t believe in the dream. I have! It’s not fun, I hate it. But I’ve done it. It’s usually more about me than it is about the project. So with my music, I try to facilitate a space where other people feel like they can believe in the dream. I want everyone working with me to feel a sense of ownership over the record as a whole. Because as an actor when I’m on set, I’m saying the words that the writer wrote, I am being directed in the vision of the director. But it’s my song too, I am putting huge parts of myself into the characters that I play. And I wanted to facilitate a space for that in the record making process so that the instrumentalists who came in were actors in the play called Chaos Angel”.
PHOTO CREDIT: Greg Swales
I do love where MAITREYA CORSO stems from and what inspired it. The Buddhist concept of a future, compassionate teacher. Spirituality and self-discovery. Chaos Angel also has spiritual connotations, though something a little more disordered. The title suggests movement and a voyage, but something more centred and calm. Maybe reflecting Maya Hawke’s life and career. The New York-born multi-talented recently wed musician Christian Lee Hutson. Detouring slightly, I feel that it is important to also discuss Maya Hawke’s acting. It feeds into her music and I feel the disciplines are interlinked. I do want to draw from a recent interview with Vogue Hong Kong. Maya Hawke discussed her role in Stranger Things and the affect it has had on her:
“In a world where everyone is constantly told to “just be yourself,” Hawke finds freedom in the opposite. That willingness to stretch and reshape herself has shaped her acting journey, including her breakout role as Robin Buckley in Stranger Things.
Introduced in Season 3, Robin quickly became a fan favourite for her wit, humour, and unflinching honesty. “I had a great acting teacher at drama school who gave me this piece of advice: don’t let your habit be your only choice,” Hawke says. “I think, a lot of the time, the Duffers wrote Robin inspired by my most nervous version of myself, which was, you know, the young woman who was on the show for the first time joining in Season 3. I was so nervous around them, and then I think they really wrote Robin inspired by that nervousness.”
But instead of feeling boxed in, Hawke saw it as a chance to grow. “I think it really allowed me to learn how I was coming off to people, and reflect on my desire to come off as less nervous. I tend to have more options in my bag of tricks than sort of just buoyant enthusiasm; I wanted to have a more grounded sense of myself and my behaviour at work, and a more diverse bag of tricks as an actor, and I really learned that through the way the Duffer brothers’ writing style works.”
As Robin evolved on screen, so did Hawke, who wasn’t afraid to throw out the script when inspiration struck. Her willingness to embrace the weird and unexpected gave Robin a life of her own, often resulting in some of the show’s most delightfully offbeat moments. One of her favourite unscripted bits came during Season 5.
“My favourite [improvised moment] that made it into the show was in Episode 5. I’m sitting in the kind of lobby area of the radio station with an ice pack over my eye. And I’m trying to explain something to Brett Gellman, his character, and in the middle of my sentence, I just stop and go hi to him,” she recalls. “I remember that on the day, I was really just trying weird stuff […] Thank you to Frank Darabont for keeping it in.”
When asked about a potential Stranger Things spinoff for Robin, Hawke’s imagination runs wild. “I’ve always thought a really fun spinoff would be her having to come back to Hawkins and become a low-level traffic officer under David Harbour. Robin and Hopper, as a duo that should never be, would be the most fun, weird duo option of different vibes,” she quips. I would love to watch Hopper be really annoyed by Robin all the time. I think they would play off each other nicely.”
This philosophy of creative play extends beyond the screen. In 2025, Hawke took a leap by making her off-Broadway debut in a revival of Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice at the Signature Theatre. “I had never done a professional play before and was extremely intimidated by the task,” she admits. “I never could have imagined what a rewarding, educational, and community-building experience that would be and feel like. It’s paid off in dividends that I never would have expected.”
Now, Hawke is set to venture into The Hunger Games universe as young Wiress in the prequel The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping. The character, introduced in the original trilogy as a highly intelligent yet mentally fragile District 3 victor, required Hawke to thread a delicate needle.
“The most difficult thing about playing Wiress is that the only Wiress we see in the movies is a Wiress in the aftermath of a massive plot point from Sunrise on the Reaping,” Hawke explains. “This experience during this book informs when you meet Wiress in the later films and books, and she, you know, is pretty nonverbal and really struggles to communicate—that’s the trauma response to her having been tortured at the end of Sunrise on the Reaping.”
For Hawke, the challenge lay in balancing hints of Wiress’ eventual breakdown with the woman she was before surviving the Games. “Mags and Beedee are also tortured, but don’t become nonverbal, so there has to be something about Wiress that is already dancing on the edge of the line of her mental health, where she could have such a stark, different, stronger reaction to the same experience that her friends and coworkers have,” she explains. “So, figuring out how not to foreshadow what happens to her too much, while also indicating“You’re a clown.” For Maya Hawke, those three words from director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson on the set of Do Revenge opened the door to a new dimension of her craft. why it might have happened to her in a more extreme way than her friends, was definitely the most difficult needle to thread”.
A couple of things to wrap up with. Speaking with Rolling Stone last month, she chatted about singing with Sadie Sink (her Stranger Things co-star), that celebrated show, and her new work. Rolling Stone state how “Hawke goes deep on her fantastic new album, May 1’s Maitreya Corso, her grief over the end of Stranger Things, her new movie, Wishful Thinking, and much more in our deep-dive new interview”:
“As Stranger Things came to a close, Maya Hawke says she was flat-out “scared” about the future of her career. But it’s already clear that she couldn’t have had less to worry about. Her fantastic fourth album, Maitreya Corso, due on May 1, is a major step forward, a quirky, cozily organic, unceasingly melodic collection of Aimee Mann-worthy pop. She also stars alongside Lewis Pullman in the high-concept romantic comedy Wishful Thinking, which just premiered to critical praise at SXSW, and already moved into a new franchise, filming next year’s Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping.
When Hawke sat down at the Rolling Stone Studio, live at SXSW, she went deep on all of it, plus ambition, creative anxiety, Taylor Swift’s influence, and the voice in her head that’s never satisfied. Some highlights follow; to watch the whole interview, press play above, or go to Rolling Stone’s YouTube channel.
The album’s title comes from two very different sources — the Beat poet Gregory Corso and the Buddhist concept of Maitreya. “This is the first time I’ve ever spoken about this record to anyone, and I really probably should have made up my mind about what I was gonna say,” she says. “But I come from a lot of different worlds and philosophies. Corso is a reference to Gregory Corso, and Maitreya is a reference to the Bodhisattva — this idea of new beginnings, this combination of the divine spirit and the human spirit. I was looking for a name of a fantasy heroine to go on this journey that I felt like the record was, and that felt right.”
Hawke doesn’t hesitate to cite Taylor Swift as an influence. “I think she inspired a generation. She made a generation of young people listen to music and think, ‘Oh, wow, my life could matter. My feelings could matter. The details of it could matter.’ And of course it’s a Blakean thing, the minute particulars — the more specific you make something, the more relatable it actually is. But I was hugely influenced by her. I’ve been listening to her music my entire life. You could start any song from any word and I would be able to know where you were and finish it, probably.”
On the new song “Lioness,” Hawke sings about watching “Sadie talk to God through the lav mic,” and she confirms it’s about her costar Sadie Sink. “I was actually talking about working on Stranger Things,” she reveals. “There was a day where I was really grumpy and not feeling inspired. And I came into set as a background player in a scene she was in, and I remembered how magical acting is. I just watched her pick a spirit out of the universe and make the whole room quiet and speak truth and turn something from a game of playing pretend into something extremely authentic. It was a kick in my butt — bring it every time, every second. Don’t get lazy for one second. When I was at drama school, I used to complain — 80 percent of the day is magic, but 20 percent is total bull honky. And then I started working, and I was like, ‘Oh, whoa, 80-20 is a high percentage of magic.’ And that was a moment where I was like, ‘You are shrinking the ratio. You are losing touch with the magic. It’s not the art that’s depressed. You are.’ I think she’s the greatest actress of our generation.”
Hawke got permission from Sink before putting her name in the song — and says she sometimes asks permission even when she doesn’t name-drop. “It’s a weird feeling to be written about,” she says. “I’ve had it in my own life from people that I love, who didn’t name-drop me but wrote about me. It can feel exposing and vulnerable. And also, Miley Cyrus said this — feelings enter your body and that’s not who you are. To write a great song, sometimes you wanna zero in on a singular feeling. And really, that’s just a moment. If you write a really angry song about somebody you love, you wanna be like, ‘Hey, just so you know — I’m not angry at you. I was angry at you on a day that was really inspiring and created this thing. Do you feel OK about me sharing that with the world?'”
The first single, “The Devil You Know,” is about the “gremlin” of ambition, and a wake-up call Hawke got when someone asked when success would ever be “enough.” “The only time it would ever feel like enough is if it was too much,” she says. “If it started to impede my ability to be anonymous, to be free. And I don’t want that. The only thing that would satisfy the gremlin in me is the ruination of my freedom. So I’ve gotta go talk to the gremlin and figure out a way to make a deal. That’s the devil in the song. The gremlin who’s like, ‘More. You must do better. This person is more successful than you.’ You’ve gotta talk to that guy and be like, ‘OK, how can we work something out?’ This jealousy isn’t helping me. It’s not making me a better artist.”
Hawke started as a lyricist and was initially afraid to get into the music side of songwriting, in part because she was intimidated by the extraordinary musicians around her. “I just didn’t think I was any good,” she says. “And this is where great fortune meets its own complications. If I hadn’t met people like that, I probably would’ve made demos in my room and put them on YouTube. But that wasn’t the hand I was dealt. I was dealt a hand where it was like, ‘Hey, come over, I’ve got the greatest guitar player in the world here who wants to write a song with you.’ That’s a really intimidating environment to be like, ‘But maybe what about this?’ It took a while and a lot of encouragement to think my idea was worthwhile — not because it was better, but because it was mine”.
I am going to wrap up with an article from People. They got an exclusive, as Maya Hawke teased some plans for her summer. I do wonder if she will extend her tour run and visit the U.K. and Europe. No doubt there will be new acting projects. I am curious if we will get surprises relating to MAITREYA CORSO and any surprise appearances and collaborations:
“Speaking with PEOPLE in an exclusive interview at the premiere of her latest film project, the sci-fi rom-com Wishful Thinking, at SXSW on March 12, the 27-year-old Stranger Things actress teased her summer plans.
"I wish I could tell you, but I can't," Hawke explained. "But right now, I'm really looking forward to putting my record out and doing a little tour, but that's more spring. I'm really looking forward to this movie.”
“For the full summer, I wish I could tell you, but I can't," she reiterated.
Asked if she just didn't know what her plans were yet or if she had something top secret in store, Hawke said simply responded, “Secret.”
In Wishful Thinking, Hawke stars alongside Lewis Pullman as a couple who go to therapy together, only to find that their relationship is affecting the world around them.
The cast also includes Randall Park, Jake Shane and Amita Rao.
Before SXWS, Hawke tied the knot with Christian Lee Hutson on Feb. 14.
She has been with the musician since 2023, and a few of her Stranger Things costars attended the wedding, including Finn Wolfhard, Gaten Matarazzo, Caleb McLaughlin, Sadie Sink, Natalia Dyer, Charlie Heaton and Joe Keery.
Hawke's parents, Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke, were also present at her surprise New York City nuptials. The Inside Out 2 voice actress and Hutson, 35, both wore Prada outfits for the ceremony.
"It's awesome. I cannot recommend highly enough dating your friends. It's the best. They know you, and as a human being who has dated other people," she said about her relationship during an appearance on the Zach Sang Show.
She also has some additional projects on the horizon, including playing Wiress in Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping and a starring in a leading role in a psychological drama film called Lucia, but it's unclear if her summer secret ties into either of these”.
A hugely talented and wonderful artist whose voice I absolutely adore, her lyrics and what she puts into her songs is so powerful and potent. She is a wonderful songwriter and someone who I hope releases a lot more albums. Two years after I previously spotlighted Maya Hawake, I wanted to revisit ahead of the release of MAITREYA CORSO on 1st May. I feel that her fourth album will be one of 2026’s absolute best. This is an artist that I hope to…
SEE live one day soon.
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Follow Maya Hawke
PHOTO CREDIT: Greg Swales
Official:
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