We collect cookies to analyze our website traffic and performance; we never collect any personal data. Cookie Policy
Accept
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Kaitlyn Dever was Hollywood’s best-kept secret. These days are over now
Share
Font ResizerAa
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Follow US
NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Kaitlyn Dever was Hollywood’s best-kept secret. These days are over now
Kaitlyn Dever was Hollywood’s best-kept secret. These days are over now
Entertainment

Kaitlyn Dever was Hollywood’s best-kept secret. These days are over now

Last updated: June 16, 2025 11:33 pm
Editorial Board Published June 16, 2025
Share
SHARE

Kaitlyn Dever is aware of the phrases to the “Bob the Builder” theme music. She’s singing it — we’re singing it — which isn’t one thing I anticipated when getting ready to speak together with her once more after we took a deep dive into the season finale of “The Last of Us.” However then, even probably the most meticulous analysis had failed to show up that Dever’s father, Tim, voiced Bob the Builder, in addition to one other icon of kids’s tv, Barney the Dinosaur.

“I know, right?” Dever says, laughing. “Barney the Dinosaur. Crazy.”

Is it a attain to assume that’s why Dever is having such a blast proper now in Australia capturing “Godzilla x Kong: Supernova,” the most recent entry within the Monsterverse franchise? In spite of everything, this isn’t her first rodeo with a dinosaur — even when this time round, the creature isn’t purple or huggable and even tangible, only a green-screen dream.

“I want to meet Godzilla,” Dever says. “I just don’t know if, outside my imagination, I ever will. But that’s OK. My imagination is a powerful thing.”

Dever is house in L.A. for a number of days, taking a break from filming, having fun with time together with her dad and her youthful sisters, anticipating her return for good in July when she’ll have sufficient time for, amongst different issues, a meal or three on the venerable Valley Mexican restaurant Casa Vega. She’s experiencing critical taco withdrawal proper now.

If you happen to’ve had even an informal relationship with tv or motion pictures within the final 15 years, Kaitlyn Dever, even when you don’t assume you do. As a youngster, she received her begin taking part in the gun-toting, pot-growing Loretta McCready on “Justified” and Tim Allen’s daughter on “Last Man Standing.” She then starred reverse Beanie Feldstein within the thrilling, humorous 2019 coming-of-age comedy “Booksmart,” now a part of the teenager film canon, after which gutted viewers portraying a sexual assault survivor in “Unbelievable” and an opioid addict on “Dopesick.” Earlier this yr, she shined as a cancer-faking Australian wellness influencer within the restricted collection “Apple Cider Vinegar.”

1

2

As Belle Gibson in "Apple Cider Vinegar."

1. As Abby in “The Last of Us.” (Liane Hentscher / HBO) 2. As Belle Gibson in “Apple Cider Vinegar.” (Ben King / Netflix)

All that was a prelude to her flip as Abby Anderson on “The Last of Us,” taking part in the younger girl who killed Joel (Pedro Pascal) to avenge her father’s demise. Dever seems in solely three episodes of the present’s second season, and in two of them, she has only one scene. However when you measured an actor’s work by the facility emanating from transient display time, Dever could be the tv season’s MVP.

“I remember feeling like we were capitalizing on a quasi-secret that shouldn’t be a secret,” says “The Last of Us” co-creator and showrunner Craig Mazin. “It was the same feeling I had with Bella [Ramsey]. You can’t wait to watch the reaction when everyone finally sees it.”

Kaitlyn Dever in a black dress leans against a reflective window.

“My imagination is a powerful thing,” says Kaitlyn Dever, talking of performing reverse a green-screen dream of Godzilla within the upcoming “Godzilla x Kong: Supernova.”

The second season served as a curtain-raiser for each Dever and her character, ending in a reset that can now observe Abby by the warring factions and fungal-infected hordes of postapocalyptic Seattle, bringing her again to that second when she meets Ramsey’s Ellie once more.

Each Mazin and Neil Druckmann, co-creator of “The Last of Us” sport, are virtually salivating on the prospect of spotlighting Abby, as it can pressure viewers to reckon with their reactions to her killing Joel.

“Our challenge now is to make you question whether you hate Abby at all and maybe make you start to love her and then be confused,” Mazin says. “Where are my loyalties? What is the concept of a hero? That requires an actor who can inspire those thoughts without sweating, and we have that in Kaitlyn.”

“That’s the experiment of the story,” Druckmann provides. “What if Abby isn’t so horrible? I’m thrilled to watch Kaitlyn bring her version of Abby to the screen because I think people can already see the force she brought to the show in such a short period of time.”

That Dever did all this amid the shattering grief of dropping her mom, Kathy, to breast most cancers is one thing that, 15 months later, she nonetheless can’t fairly fathom. Dever flew to Vancouver three days after her mother’s funeral. Her first day on set was the scene during which Abby kills Joel.

“When you have a moment like that with an actor, you are immediately bound to them,” Mazin says. “I would stand in front of a bullet for her.”

For Dever, all the things about that day is a blur, and when she lastly watched the episode this yr, it was like seeing it for the primary time.

Kaitlyn Dever.

“Grief does a really interesting thing with your brain,” she says. “It messes with your memory.”

Honestly, Dever, 28, didn’t need to depart house after her mom’s funeral. She didn’t assume she may do it. It took her father to remind her how excited her mother was when she received the a part of Abby. “I realized there’s no part of me that couldn’t not do this,” Dever says. “I had to do it for her.”

Saying that she “won” the position isn’t completely correct. When Mazin and Druckmann requested her to drive to casting director Mary Vernieu’s Santa Monica workplace in 2023, Dever went in pondering it was going to be an audition, very similar to the one she had with Druckmann years in the past when there had been speak about turning the sport right into a film.

“He couldn’t believe it,” Dever says. “He had played the game and loved Abby, so this was huge.” She remembers all the things about that day, together with the “really big cookie” they gave her when she left. “I think only just now have I been able to process that it actually happened,” she says, smiling.

Dever stands 5 foot 3 and bears little resemblance to the tall, muscular model of Abby seen in “The Last of Us” sport. Imposing, she just isn’t. And that makes her work on “The Last of Us” all of the extra exceptional.

“Abby is so intimidating because of her strength,” Dever says. “And that comes from her dark and very sad past and how long she has been thinking about killing Joel. That’s the energy I was hoping to put across.”

Does Dever contemplate herself a powerful individual?

“Mmm-hmm, yeah,” she solutions instantly. “When I think of strength, I think of what has brought you to this moment, how much you’ve been through and how have you gotten here. It’s more emotional, what I consider strength.”

A couple of minutes later, although, we bump into her kryptonite. Dever has two youthful sisters, Mady and Jane. She and Mady have been making music collectively for years and simply launched a six-song EP, “I Think We’re Lost,” recorded underneath the banner Devers. It’s lovely people pop that includes the sort of intuitive harmonies that solely siblings can pull off. However, for some time at the very least, you’ll most likely solely hear it on streaming companies and never in a live performance setting. Dever hates performing in entrance of individuals.

“When you ask if I have strength, I don’t have strength in that regard,” she says. “It’s so scary. Maybe I’m working up to it. I don’t know. My sister is so confused by the nerves that I have. She doesn’t share that nerve thing with me. She’s like, ‘You literally perform in front of people for a living.’ But with acting, I’m playing a character. Onstage with music, there’s nothing for me to hide behind.”

However on the subject of songwriting, Dever doesn’t need to cover. The final a number of weeks, she has been pulling out her acoustic guitar and writing songs about her mother for an album she plans to dedicate to her. She writes throughout her downtime making “Godzilla x Kong” — there’s a variety of downtime on a film like that — and has give you seven or eight songs, every taking part in off core recollections. Most of them are upbeat and completely happy as a result of that’s the sort of music that her mother listened to and beloved.

“Everyone used to say that she was like a 17-year-old stuck in a 53-year-old body,” Dever says, laughing. “She had a very youthful quality to her that was magnetic. She approached life with a lot of humor and just wanted to have a good time.”

“And I have to sometimes remember that,” Dever continues, “because as much as I love the challenge of doing serious stuff and find playing those types of characters therapeutic, there’s a place for a Godzilla movie, you know?”

06/17/25 Envelope Cover of Kaitlyn Dever

You Might Also Like

Contributor: Frank Gehry wished to point out you the whole lot you may grow to be

11 fascinating Frank Gehry buildings in Los Angeles

Commentary: A plea to Netflix’s Ted Sarandos: Do not screw up Warner Bros. and HBO

Cinemas and unions sound alarms over Netflix-Warner Bros. deal

All the key Warner Bros. properties set to go to Netflix in watershed deal

TAGGED:BestKeptDaysDeverHollywoodsKaitlynsecret
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
Popular News
If You Must Point Fingers on Inflation, Here’s Where to Point Them
Trending

If You Must Point Fingers on Inflation, Here’s Where to Point Them

Editorial Board June 13, 2022
Silvana Estrada Arrives With a Devastating Album About Heartbreak
Nvidia gives Omniverse Blueprint for AI manufacturing facility digital twins
Invoice Madden: All people’s blissful Pete Alonso is again with Mets, however Polar Bear wants huge season
How Biden Is Handling Student Loan Payments Amid Inflation

You Might Also Like

10 iconic Frank Gehry buildings that reworked their environments
Entertainment

10 iconic Frank Gehry buildings that reworked their environments

December 5, 2025
Frank O. Gehry, the architect who modified the civic panorama of his adopted hometown of Los Angeles, has died
Entertainment

Frank O. Gehry, the architect who modified the civic panorama of his adopted hometown of Los Angeles, has died

December 5, 2025
The 5 guidelines that guided the making of ‘The Secret Agent,’ based on its director
Entertainment

The 5 guidelines that guided the making of ‘The Secret Agent,’ based on its director

December 5, 2025
The 25 finest albums of 2025
Entertainment

The 25 finest albums of 2025

December 5, 2025

Categories

  • Health
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Art
  • World

About US

New York Dawn is a proud and integral publication of the Enspirers News Group, embodying the values of journalistic integrity and excellence.
Company
  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • Accessibility Statement
Contact Us
  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability
Term of Use
  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices
© 2024 New York Dawn. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?