Returning to Acting After Six-Year Hiatus with ‘The Rivals of Amziah King’

On the first day shooting “The Rivals of Amziah King,” Matthew McConaughey walked onto the set and asked, “Is anybody else nervous except for me?”
The cast and crew let out a collective laugh. “Alright, alright, alright, I just wanted to make sure I wasn’t the only one,” the actor said.
But McConaughey wasn’t joking. He felt creaky returning to the screen after six-year hiatus, during which he wrote a memoir, “Greenlights,” recorded voice roles in films like “Sing 2,” spent time with his family and kept lower profile. “I needed to write my own story, direct my own story on the page,” McConaughey says of his time away.
It’s not where I grew up, but I know of these people and these places and these kind of characters that live in the middle of the country,” McConaughey says. “This group of people in southeast Oklahoma where the film takes place know the Constitution, they know the rules they are living by, and they’re not looking for or getting approval from the rest of the world. I understand them.”
“I wanted an actor with the type of personality where he could just hang out with them for hours,” he says. “It had to be somebody so disarming, who would just do their thing inside this world I was trying to evoke, and who could be comedic in a dramatic movie. There aren’t many people like that.”
McConaughey says that making “The Rivals of Amziah King,” which plays at SXSW on March 10, helped him rediscover his love for his profession.
“I remembered a couple of things,” he says. “One, how much I truly enjoy performing. Two, I remembered McConaughey, you’re pretty damn good at this. And three, I remembered that acting is a vacation for me, and what I mean by vacation is that when I’m performing, it’s my singular focus. When I walk out the door in the morning, my wife says, ‘go kick some ass. I got the kiddos. We’re good.’ That’s vacation. Because I’m not multitasking. I’m not compartmentalizing. I’m fully focused on finding the truth of my character.”
He thinks that writing the book, based on pages of diary entries to assemble poems, prayers and remembrances, also improved his acting.
“The memoir was extremely honest, it forced me to be honest with myself,” McConaughey says. “It cleared up things you’ve been thinking about for 35 years. And it makes you realize that’s kind of who you are, Matthew. Let’s admit that and shake hands. That gave me even more trust in myself, because there was less to maybe hide about myself. I had shared it. So that’s made it easier for me to be honest as an actor.”
That honesty extends to “True Detective,” the twisty anthology series that helped kick off “The McConaissance” when it debuted on HBO in 2014. After teasing the mystery of the Yellow King, it’s continued for three more, intermittently successful seasons, the most of recent, “True Detective: North Country,” aired in 2024 and starred Jodie Foster and Kali Reis.
“I watched, I saw it, there’s a lot about it that I appreciated,” McConaughey says. “My favorite season — and I feel like I can say this objectively — is Season 1.” He’s picking up steam here, sounding tickled by his own admission. “I happen to be in that one, so I thought that was incredible, incredible television and a great series. I watched it weekly, like everyone else, on Sunday night, and that was an event for me. And I got to sit back and enjoy that. I loved the water cooler talk on Monday morning. Even though I made it, I sort of forgot what was going to happen next. It was one of the great events in TV.”