I did not — I actually didn’t even watch it at all. I watched clips of it later on, but I have been replaying this moment all the time since May, and it’s been emotionally challenging just for me as an individual to be living with it. There was so much excitement coming into this season, so many people saying, “Colby and Teeter, they’re finally going to get together, we’re finally going to see that moment!” I felt like yesterday would have just been too much for me. But of course, the moment that I went online and I started seeing the thousands of responses, I thought, ‘Wow, it really meant something.”
When I actually watched it saw how Taylor eloquently pieced all of this together, it was a beautiful way to go out if you were going to go out. But I was treating it like it was another day at the office. It was like a stress test for me. If you want to do these things, if you’re going to have a long career, you’re going to probably have one or two more of these types of things. So you’re gonna have to be able to handle them with a level of professionalism and class, and that’s what I’m trying to exercise myself in right now. Otherwise, I would probably be crying in every interview.
Have you started to incorporate any cowboy gear into your normal wardrobe?
Not really. As much as I love the cowboy lifestyle, it’s not really Denim’s lifestyle. I dress in a lot of African attire, usually. Occasionally I’ll throw on some cowboy boots. It is funny though, because like anytime I go anywhere, somebody’s like, “Where’s your hat?” Or sometimes they don’t even believe that it’s me because I dress so differently. Just know I took every piece of gear that I’ve worn on that show with me. So the picture that I posted on my Instagram, all that stuff is sitting in my office.
You have your feature debut as a writer and director, “The Forgotten Ones,” set as your next project. What can you reveal about that?
“The Forgotten Ones” is something that we’re very, very excited about. Right now we’re in that kind of weird, tenuous spot about exactly what the distribution looks like. It’s a historical period piece that I’ll be excited to talk about soon, separate from the tragic, tragic death of Colby Mayfield on Paramount’s No. 1 show, “Yellowstone.” [laughs]