On the dawn of 2023, Zachary Levi was driving extreme.
Following a five-year run as a result of the titular star of the NBC spy caper “Chuck,” the actor positioned himself as a legit fundamental man in film due to the breakout success of “Shazam!” The DC tentpole was a low-risk proposition for Warner Bros. that delivered strong opinions and a $368 million world area office haul in opposition to a $90 million value vary. Nonetheless throughout the run-up to the sequel that yr, Levi ignited a furor when he weighed in vaguely on the COVID vaccine debate. In response to a Twitter one that requested, “Do you agree or not that Pfizer is an precise hazard to the world?” Levi wrote, “Hardcore agree.”
It was the kind of vaccine skepticism that had already dinged the career prospects of fellow superhero stars Letitia Wright and Evangeline Lilly, nevertheless Levi doubled down. The subsequent yr, he endorsed presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — a reviled decide in Hollywood for stoking fears about vaccine schedules and COVID boosters. When Kennedy ended his bid to be the Democratic Event nominee and urged his supporters to pivot to Donald Trump, Levi was uncertain. After a heart-to-heart with Kennedy, he decided to throw his weight behind the particular person most loathed by his showbiz brethren.
For the TV actor who began to stumble as a movie star with such duds as ultimate yr’s “Harold and the Purple Crayon,” his timing for going rogue wasn’t optimum. Nonetheless the wildly daring Levi has even larger plans than securing a spot on the A-list. He’s about to embark on a harmful plan to launch a Hollywood studio in Austin, Texas — by the way in which, a mecca for leisure commerce foes of the jab like Joe Rogan and Woody Harrelson. Whereas Rogan is untouchable as Spotify’s golden goose podcaster and Harrelson will get a go on account of he solely strays from Hollywood orthodoxy on the vaccine concern, Levi is particularly prone; his career was already cooling sooner than he spoke out. And shortly, he may have one different mouth to feed. As we meet at a Brentwood café in March, Levi is days away from becoming a father for the first time. He has merely accomplished prepping for a home begin on the Ventura, California, abode he shares collectively together with his affiliate, photographer Maggie Keating.
“I do know that there are people that wish to not work with me now attributable to my opinions. My workforce has let me know,” he says as he nods throughout the course of Beverly Hills, the place his brokers at UTA are headquartered. “They haven’t given me any specific names, nevertheless there are people who select to not work with me proper now. And it’s unfortunate. I knew that was most likely going to happen. I didn’t make this dedication blindly or casually.”
Nonetheless, his MAHA-friendly flip might very properly be successfully timed in any case. Publish-2024 election, the world is newly acutely aware of the rising tide of oddly heterodox people. And if all breaks Levi’s method, his plans for the long term would possibly resonate far previous Texas. Each method, his standing as persona non grata in Hollywood hardly points to him. Town is bleeding amid runaway manufacturing, viewers apathy and a widening gap between the 1% and the commerce’s rank and file. Supplied that bleak outlook, Levi says, in characteristically impolitic phrases, that he’d considerably select out. “AI is about to be the nail throughout the coffin,” he notes. “And we marvel why L.A. has develop into the Detroit of the leisure commerce.”
As Levi takes a sip from a glass of pink sludge and digs proper right into a plate of pure eggs, the 44-year-old actor is throughout the thick of a $40 million capital elevate to begin setting up a $100 million full-service campus in Austin for his Wyldwood Studios, a spot that may absolutely revenue if Trump follows through on his promise to levy 100% tariffs on producers who shoot abroad. Likewise, the Texas Senate has proposed injecting half a billion {{dollars}} into film manufacturing due to efforts made by Harrelson, Matthew McConaughey and Taylor Sheridan. (The bill was launched by a Republican senator.) Levi envisions a complicated with a pair of 20,000-square-foot soundstages, two amphitheaters, a boutique resort, cabins and a farm-to-table restaurant. He bought the 75 acres alongside the banks of the Colorado River prolonged sooner than he ran afoul of Hollywood convention.
“Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks and all these O.G.s knew it over 100 years prior to now. Hollywood was broken then, and we needed a larger system,” he says of the silent-era legends who primarily based United Artists to bypass oppressive studio contracts. “This commerce is crumbling spherical us. To make sure that us to survive, we have now to have an space for artists that will foster licensed pure human-made content material materials.”
Speaking with an depth that belies the hippie-speak, Levi stays to be additional of an Aaron Rodgers than a Roger Stone. Truly, the 6’3” Ventura native who likes to sing (consider his “I See the Delicate” duet with Mandy Moore in “Tangled”?) and focus on his “plant remedy journeys” isn’t exactly a MAGA prototype. In 2020, he solid his ballot for Marianne Williamson throughout the Democratic presidential main. In 2016, he voted for Libertarian Event candidate Gary Johnson and urged his social media followers to not pull the lever for Trump on account of he didn’t care “about one thing nevertheless vitality.”
“I was not a fan of Trump’s Trumpiness,” he explains of the particular person he’s not at all met. “I didn’t like a complete lot of those personal points, the methods during which he carries himself a complete lot of the time. I understand people’s aversion. Do I really feel your complete package deal deal is someway glorious? No. Truly, most people who voted for Donald Trump acknowledge a complete lot of the imperfections in all of it. No particular person was saying, ‘That’s the Orange Messiah.’”
Levi has a particular Messiah; he describes himself as a nondenominational Christian and non secular at that. For these anticipating Wyldwood to churn out conservative-minded fare like The Every day Wire is doing from Nashville, suppose as soon as extra. Levi says that he’s aiming for content material materials nearer to “The White Lotus” than “The Chosen.” Options of his values match neatly into Hollywood: When requested why he as quickly as spoke out in opposition to gay bullying at an Anti-Defamation League awards ceremony, he explains: “I’ve conservative views, and I’ve additional liberal views. And regarded one among my additional liberal views is that notably rising up throughout the arts, I’ve had gay buddies my full life, and I’ve not at all, even inside my spirituality, seen it as this issue that we have now to be frightened of or scorn or bully or one thing. I like my gay buddies, my gay neighborhood. Jesus wouldn’t bully anybody on-line or in every other case on account of they’re gay.”
Although he sees flaws in Trump and has certain left-coded leanings, Levi seems to have alienated an enormous swath of the commerce. Nonetheless he’s open to the idea that he’s unsuitable about all technique of points. “It’s good hubris and folly to suppose that you simply’re incapable of being bamboozled,” he says. “We’re all in a position to being bamboozled. I could very properly be getting bamboozled correct now, inserting my perception into leaders that I helped to get elected.”
For a self-described Hollywood pariah, Levi has a great deal of backers.
“He’s merely a particularly passionate specific particular person. He’s truly good. He has good instincts,” says “Chuck” co-creator Josh Schwartz, who has remained buddies with Levi as a result of the gathering wrapped in 2012. “He’s truly entrepreneurial, by means of making an attempt in path of the long term. I’m not even solely constructive what’s occurring in Texas, nevertheless I do know he’s obsessed with the way in which ahead for the commerce, significantly throughout the face of these technological uncertainties.”
Joshua Gomez and Levi on NBC’s “Chuck”
© NBC Widespread, Inc.
Director Man Moshe was working with Levi on the upcoming thriller “Lodge Tehran” as his star confronted rising criticism for his COVID vaccine views.
“To me it was a very brave issue he was doing. And I said that to him after we have now been filming. And I
seen what he was going through. Clearly, you’ll have the option to consider there’s a complete lot of voices in your head everytime you’re in Hollywood in his place. And for the file, I’ve taken the vaccine, as have my
youngsters,” Moshe recollects. “He’s type of a disrupter in a fashion. He’s talking about a complete lot of points. He’s talking about AI, properly being, politics, Hollywood. And he’s tough us to interact in a big and thoughtful dialog about these subjects versus having an computerized for or in opposition to response. We used to applaud this once more throughout the day.”
Others actually really feel conflicted about their relationship with Levi. Robert Duncan McNeill, who directed some 20 episodes of “Chuck,” has maintained an in depth friendship with Levi although their politics are seemingly at odds. McNeill, who dubs himself left-wing and sees Trump as a severe menace to democracy, usually wrestles with the dichotomy.
“I like Zach dearly, nevertheless I don’t want in any method for our friendship and my feelings about him as a human to be an endorsement of his politics on account of I vehemently disagree with them,” McNeill says. “Nonetheless he’s an unusual pal in my life. He usually might be additional of a bleeding-heart liberal than I’m, which shocks me. Zach walks the stroll in a complete lot of strategies larger than me.”
Not all of his former colleagues actually really feel warmth and fuzzy about Levi — significantly Laura Benanti, who starred reverse him in 2016 on Broadway in “She Loves Me.” When their fellow solid member Gavin Creel died in September of a unusual type of most cancers on the age of 48, Levi urged in an Instagram submit that COVID vaccines might need carried out a job. That prompted Benanti to lash out. “I not at all favored him,” she said of Levi in a podcast interview.
And though his “Shazam! Fury of the Gods” co-star Rachel Zegler didn’t determine Levi, she posted on Instagram after the election: “May Trump supporters … not at all know peace.” That doesn’t change his feelings about her.
“I’m a sort of people, clearly,” he says, referring to his private vote for Trump. “Nonetheless I really feel that we’ve acquired to acknowledge that a complete lot of events people’s selections are predicated upon the unhealthy data that they’re being fed continuously. So must I hate her on account of she’s downstream of all of these voices that are telling her that he’s Hitler and the people who vote for him are Nazis? She’s a extraordinarily gifted woman, and I do suppose that she wishes the best for the world deep down.”
In any case, filming every “Shazam!” movement photos was joyful, and Levi stays to be talking about his “Shazamily.” Nonetheless a altering of the DC guard from Walter Hamada to James Gunn and Peter Safran meant that the sooner regime’s titles have been dumped into {{the marketplace}} in 2023 with little promoting. That slate included “The Flash,” “Blue Beetle,” “Aquaman and the Misplaced Kingdom” and the “Shazam!” sequel. All of them underperformed. “Fury of the Gods” pulled in merely $134 million off a $110 million value vary. When a reporter requested Gunn about Levi’s Pfizer submit, the DC chief responded: “Actors and filmmakers that I work with are going to say points that I agree with and points that I don’t agree with. And that’s going to happen. I don’t have a list of points that anybody must say attributable to what I really feel. And also you perceive, I can’t be altering my plans regularly on account of an actor says one factor that I don’t agree with.” Nonetheless, Levi isn’t bitter and blames the reporter for attempting to utilize Gunn to publicly shame him.
“I’ve recognized James for a extraordinarily very very long time, and I contemplate that he was doing what he needed to do to have the ability to reply these inquiries to the best of his capability,” he says. “I didn’t actually really feel like he threw me beneath a bus or one thing. I really feel that James was answering truly, in step with how he feels, as he must.”
As for whether or not or not or not he would come once more for a third outing, Levi is emphatic: “Utterly. I cherished having fun with the place.” Nonetheless are there any plans? “No idea. It’s all successfully above my pay grade,” he insists.

Jack Dylan Grazer and Zachary Levi in 2019’s “Shazam!”
©Warner Bros/courtesy Everett C
And though lots of his closest commerce buddies hail from the “Chuck” days, having fun with the nerdy American Bond took its toll.
“It was gnarly. It truly broke me in a complete lot of strategies bodily and mentally and emotionally,” he says. “We’ve got been averaging like 16 hours a day the first season. Sitcom is the best schedule on the earth for an actor. I indicate, you barely must work. It’s implausible. Nonetheless single-camera or episodic television is definitely most likely essentially the most grueling schedule in all of Hollywood as far as I’m concerned.”
The “Chuck” grind moreover prevented him from beginning his superhero career even earlier. Once more in 2009, Kenneth Branagh solid Levi as a result of the charismatic warrior Fandral in “Thor.” Then NBC ordered six additional episodes of “Chuck,” and his schedule wouldn’t permit the “Thor” manufacturing. (He wound up having fun with Fandral throughout the subsequent two “Thor” outings.) In hindsight, he thinks NBC might need made the scheduling work.
“The place there’s a will, there’s a fashion,” he says. “I really feel that Hollywood is so succesful as soon as they really want to find out points out; as soon as they see the value in any person, then they’ll.”
In the long run, the “Chuck” positives — the continued (nevertheless usually refined) friendships — outweighed the negatives. There’s moreover the fandom, which Levi says has solely grown as a result of the gathering’ preliminary window on broadcast TV as a result of it finds new devotees on streaming.
“There are followers who’ve adopted me through my full career,” he says, “followers who current up for conventions and events and have been pleading for additional ‘Chuck,’ additional of a ‘Chuck’ assortment or a ‘Chuck’ movie, which I’ve been attempting to make since sooner than we even accomplished the gathering on account of I really feel it’s worthy.”
In some strategies, the “Chuck” experience helped crystallize his plans for Wyldwood. Whereas promoting the gathering throughout the U.Okay., he caught a glimpse of a additional sustainable work custom.
“It was just like the place every couple hours we’re stopping for a tea, and the day was manageable and there wasn’t as loads stress,” he remembers. “And I was so conditioned to the American issue. I’m like, ‘Tick-tock, guys, what are we doing?’”
Points will doubtless be completely completely different at Wyldwood, he insists, with “8- to 10-hour days. And if we have now to shoot two additional weeks to have the ability to make up these hours, then we’ll shoot two additional weeks and decide it out throughout the value vary.”
Even sooner than he grew to turn out to be a father, he began to see the necessity of getting a work-life stability. Quite a lot of weeks after our café meeting, we reconnect over Zoom. Levi is now formally a father to Henson Ezra Levi Pugh. “Ten fingers and 10 toes and easily truly strong and acutely aware correct out of the gate. A dreamy little boy,” he says.
All through our meeting in Brentwood, Levi talks about not desperate to go his private unhealed trauma on to his son, “which is what occurred with my dad and mother and their dad and mother and their dad and mother sooner than them.” (His dad and mother divorced when he was 6 years outdated.) And that’s the impetus for a Wyldwood setup that will encourage solid and crew to keep up their very personal home items intact all through productions — not exactly the norm throughout the commerce. As early adopters, the Levi family will keep in Ventura until July after which head to Texas to raise Henson. Nonetheless Levi will maintain a foot in Los Angeles and is assured that he’ll proceed to work throughout the Hollywood system as he pursues his Wyldwood imaginative and prescient. For one issue, he says there are numerous commerce figures who voted for Trump for quite a few causes.
“I do realize it to be true on account of I’ve gotten messages from heaps of people who I gained’t determine nevertheless who’ve been very grateful to me for taking the stand that I took,” he says. “And likewise they’d inform me, ‘I want to do that, nevertheless I’m so afraid.’ And I’d inform them, ‘Concentrate, you’re in your journey. I’m on my journey. You’ve acquired to keep up trusting God. And do you have to actually really feel compelled to step out in that method, then do it boldly and know that you simply simply’re going to be OK. And do you have to don’t actually really feel that conviction however, then don’t. It’s all good.’”

Rendering of Levi’s Wyldwood Studios in Austin, Texas
Courtesy of Wyldwood
For an extra issue, there are some executives who, regardless of their very personal politics, are eager to work with experience they as quickly as believed have been reckless about COVID measures. Wright, as an illustration, is mounting a comeback and currently made her directorial debut with the fast “Freeway to the Moon.” Levi believes she not at all must have endured the town’s chilly shoulder. “I even have a complete lot of respect for her,” he says. “They tried to smear Letitia [after she questioned the COVID vaccine], after which actually they go, ‘And he or she’s a Christian — actually she’s wacky.’” Although Lilly says she is stepping away from showing, Dennis Quaid, who stumped for Trump, is working steadily. And Ice Cube, who poohed-poohed the vaccine all through an interview with Tucker Carlson, merely acquired employed by Warner Bros. to jot down down and star in a model new “Friday” movie.
“Whereas there are some people who might select to not work with me anymore, there’s plenty of individuals on that facet of the political spectrum who’re way more inclined to hire me and to want to do enterprise with me on account of ‘I would really like some people who voted one different method,’” Levi says after which pauses, contemplating of present conversations with decision-makers. “They see that what I did was at good menace. They often have been like, ‘You notice what? I give you a complete lot of props for that on account of that’s not an easy issue to do.’ And I’m going, ‘I respect that.’”



