Taylor Russell: When I say that, people are like, “Huh? Dolly Parton?” I chose it because it’s so different, but it kind of fits in the way that things are jolty in this movie, and things that don’t seem like they belong, actually do. Towards the end filming it was really hot in Ohio and we were just driving on highways for so long and Dolly Parton feels like such an inherent, vital staple of American culture and life. She’s always felt like she’s been there, even before she was born. She just feels like America to me. I had never heard that song before, but it came on the radio, and the lyrics just lifted me up in a way that felt so accurate for where I was at that moment. In that plague of feeling like an other. Towards the end it felt like a superpower. The whole song deals with her being this wild little flower in this garden and feeling the need to be let free from that garden and allowing life to happen to her. Which is, I think, where we all want to get to, but yeah, it’s a very tender song to me for that reason.