Walton Goggins Just Made Some Pretty Interesting Comments About His Experience Filming “The White Lotus”
Walton’s confession comes after Jason Isaacs made a series of eyebrow-raising comments about his time on set.
April 6, 2025 · 4 min · 738 words · Clayton Young
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In an interview with theGuardian, 61-year-old Jason described filming the show in Thailand as “theater camp, but to some extent an open prison camp,” adding at the time: “You couldn’t avoid one other. There are tensions and difficulties, I don’t know if they spilled from on-screen to off-screen, or if it would have happened anyway. There were alliances that formed and broke, romances that formed and broke, friendships that formed and broke.”#
“I can’t pretend I wasn’t involved in some off-screen drama…” he went on. “There were times when things were not quite so fond. I was in some ways used to it, but within a couple of weeks my wife [who was with him on set and used to be an actor] went, ‘Some of these people are fucking mad.’ I said, ‘No, it’s just a bunch of actors away on location, love. You’ve forgotten what it’s like.’”#
And in a conversation with screenwriter and producer Jonathan Nolan forCultured, Jason’s costarWalton Gogginshas reflected on his own experience on theWhite Lotusset — and admitted that his arguably intense acting process received a mixed reaction from the other actors, with some not understanding his choices.#
In the interview, Jonathan asked Walton if he has a “philosophy” for his “approach to acting.” The two worked together on the 2024 TV seriesFallout, and Jonathan added: “I love to come over and connect on set, but there are definitely times when I think,Nope, he’s fully in it. Especially on [the set ofFallout], when you’re under 20 pounds of prosthetics. Is that distance something you carry into every role?”#
“If I had to call it something, it would be ‘reverence,’” Walton replied. “It’s not like I’m doing anything new — plenty of people I admire do it. It’s not method, it’s not ‘a way.’ I believe storytelling is a kind of religion. It’s its own god. I wouldn’t wear sweats to church; I’d show up looking ready to be saved. In any spiritual practice, the posture is: ‘Whatever you have for me, I’m prepared to accept it.’ I feel the same way about working in film.”#
“I’ll say this. Someone I worked with onThe White Lotusdidn’t fully understand my process,” Walton then confessed. “My character — Rick Hatchett — he’s isolated. So during filming, I was isolated. I liked mirroring that, but it was emotionally difficult. Then, a few months intoThe White Lotus,Falloutpremiered and started to take off. One day, this actor I was working with — nice guy, good actor — came up to me and said, ‘You’re brilliant inFallout. Please tell me you had a good time making that.’”#
“I just stared at him,” the star continued. “Because he didn’t get it. I don’t care how good you are — if you don’t understand that there’s a world beyond the script, if you don’t give yourself over to it, then you’re missing something profound in this work. This is the drug. I said: ‘No. I play a guy who’s lived for 200 years and seen the worst of humanity. Every day was fucking horrible.’ He just stared back at me like: ‘OK, wow.’”#
“So, I lean into that. The people I look up to lean into that. And this guy — again, great actor — just couldn’t understand. ‘Why would someone do that?’ I thought,Why wouldn’t you?” Walton concluded. “I bring that level of seriousness to everything I do. Comedy, drama — I take it all seriously. How many of these chances will I have? I want to squeeze as much life experience as I possibly can out of each one.”#
This isn’t the first time that Walton has detailed the extreme lengths that he has gone to when taking on a character, with the star having a similarly dedicated approach when he landed the role of transgender sex worker Venus Van Dam in Season 5 ofSons of Anarchy, which premiered in 2012.#
Walton was still working on Quentin Tarantino’s 2012 movieDjango Unchainedwhen he was cast, and started getting into character immediately. Speaking during an appearance onWired’sWeb’s Most Searched Questionsseries, he recalled: “I bought a pair of high heels while we were doingDjango Unchained, and I walked the streets of New Orleans after wrap, at, like, midnight, every night for the better half of a month, just to get used to it. If you can walk in high heels on cobblestone streets, you can walk in them anywhere.”#