Tombstone Star Kurt Russell Returns to Westerns with New Yellowstone Spinoff
The next installment in Taylor Sheridan’s Yellowstoneuniverse just received some major casting news. The Madison is set to premiere sometime in 2026 on Paramount+ and will be set following the events of Yellowstone Season 5.
In the newest development, Deadline reports that The Madison has cast Kurt Russell as a series regular. Russell, an Emmy and Golden
Globe-nominated actor, is no stranger to the Western genre, having starred in the classic 1993 film Tombstone as Wyatt Earp. Russell also, early on in his career, appeared in two episodes of the Western series Gunsmoke.
Nestled among the picturesque seaside towns on France’s blustery northern coast is an unsuspecting place called Deauville.
The chocolate-box suburb, around a two-hour drive from Paris, is no ordinary Normandy beach — for nine days of the year it’s the beating heart of American culture in the unlikeliest of places.
Here, U.S. flags hang proudly outside every shop and restaurant, gaggles of fans wait outside the luxurious five-star L’Hôtel Barrière Le Normandy Deauville hoping to catch a glimpse of Pamela Anderson (one of this year’s honorary recipients), and names such as Clint Eastwood, George Clooney, Sharon Stone and Nicole Kidman line the town’s notorious boardwalk, adorned with the hundreds of stars celebrated over the last 50 years. Forget Cannes, Venice or TIFF: this is the Deauville American Film Festival, and it’s the chicest event on the calendar.
The next installment in Taylor Sheridan’s Yellowstoneuniverse just received some major casting news. The Madison is set to premiere sometime in 2026 on Paramount+ and will be set following the events of Yellowstone Season 5.
In the newest development, Deadline reports that The Madison has cast Kurt Russell as a series regular. Russell, an Emmy and Golden Globe-nominated actor, is no stranger to the Western genre, having starred in the classic 1993 film Tombstone as Wyatt Earp. Russell also, early on in his career, appeared in two episodes of the Western series Gunsmoke.
Nestled among the picturesque seaside towns on France’s blustery northern coast is an unsuspecting place called Deauville.
The chocolate-box suburb, around a two-hour drive from Paris, is no ordinary Normandy beach — for nine days of the year it’s the beating heart of American culture in the unlikeliest of places.
Here, U.S. flags hang proudly outside every shop and restaurant, gaggles of fans wait outside the luxurious five-star L’Hôtel Barrière Le Normandy Deauville hoping to catch a glimpse of Pamela Anderson (one of this year’s honorary recipients), and names such as Clint Eastwood, George Clooney, Sharon Stone and Nicole Kidman line the town’s notorious boardwalk, adorned with the hundreds of stars celebrated over the last 50 years. Forget Cannes, Venice or TIFF: this is the Deauville American Film Festival, and it’s the chicest event on the calendar.