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Kurt Russell And Goldie Hawn Choose Colorado Over Hollywood Noise

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Kurt Russell’s latest interview is less about celebrity and more about a very specific kind of life choice. The actor, who is still working on Taylor Sheridan’s The Madison, says he and Goldie Hawn prefer Colorado to Los Angeles because it gives them the kind of life they actually want: quieter, family-centered, and far from the usual Hollywood churn.

A Different Kind Of Home Base

Russell says the appeal is simple. Hawn likes Colorado. Their son Wyatt and daughter-in-law Meredith Hagner live there with their two boys. That means the family can spend real time together instead of only seeing each other around premieres or award shows. Russell also says he would like to be there even more because the pace of life feels different in a way he values. It is not a grand philosophical answer. It is a practical one: Colorado lets them live more normally.

That matters because Russell and Hawn have spent decades in the center of American entertainment without ever fully buying into the idea that they needed to live like it. Their long partnership has always had a reputation for independence. The new interview just makes that plain again. They are not chasing the Hollywood version of success. They are choosing the version of life that works for them.

The Aspen House, The Family, And The Quiet Routine

Russell also said in a recent Wall Street Journal interview that their property in Old Snowmass near Aspen is his favorite home that he owns. That is a revealing detail. It suggests that the emotional center of their lives is not a red carpet or a studio lot. It is a place where family can gather, where the scenery is wide open, and where the day-to-day pressure drops a few notches.

It helps that the family is already built around that rhythm. Wyatt Russell and Meredith Hagner have made Colorado part of their own life too, which turns the state into more than a retreat. It becomes a shared home base. For a celebrity family, that is rare. Most are split across cities, schedules, and publicity cycles. Russell and Hawn seem to have made a different bet: keep the center of gravity somewhere calm.

Hollywood Still Shows Up, Just Not As The Main Event

None of this means Russell and Hawn have disappeared from entertainment. Far from it. Russell is still acting in Sheridan’s universe, and the family still turns up for major Hollywood moments when it matters. The clip notes that they joined Goldie Hawn’s daughter Kate Hudson at the Vanity Fair Oscars after-party after Hudson’s awards-season run for Song Sung Blue. That is the right balance. They remain part of the industry, but they are not ruled by it.

The family appearance also underlines how multi-generational this Hollywood story has become. Kate Hudson has her own career and awards buzz. Russell and Hawn are still cultural names on their own. But the bigger point is that they show up for each other, not for the machinery. That makes the family look less like a celebrity dynasty and more like a working support system.

Why This Story Resonates

The reason this interview lands is that it offers a counterpoint to the usual celebrity narrative. Most Hollywood stories are about expansion: more projects, more exposure, more pressure to keep moving. Russell is talking about subtraction. Less noise. More time. Fewer obligations to the machine. More room for family. It is a kind of success story that does not rely on constant visibility.

There is also something very Kurt Russell about the whole thing. He has always projected a grounded, almost unbothered confidence. Even when he is in blockbuster mode, he reads as someone who knows the difference between show business and actual life. This interview fits that image exactly. The lesson is not that fame is bad. It is that fame should not be the whole structure of a life.

Goldie Hawn appears in the story as the partner who shares the preference, not the accessory to it. That matters too. Their relationship has lasted because it seems built on mutual agreement rather than performance. Colorado, in that sense, is not just a location. It is a reflection of how they have always done things.

The Real Takeaway

The headline is not that Russell and Hawn are hiding from Hollywood. They are not. The headline is that they have built a life where Hollywood is optional. They can still go to a Vanity Fair after-party, still support Kate Hudson, still work on major projects, and still return to a home that feels separate from all of it.

That is a stronger celebrity story than the usual one. It says the most enviable luxury is not fame. It is freedom from needing fame to define your daily life.

For a couple that has spent so long around movie sets, awards buzz, and tabloid attention, that kind of balance feels like the real prize. The work can still be exciting. The public moments can still be fun. But the center stays somewhere quieter, and that choice says a lot about what they value most.

Sources

YouTube transcript

Wall Street Journal interview reference

Fox News Digital interview reference

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