Inspired by Joel and Ethan Coen’s 1996 snowy, gothic hit film, Fargo is among the most celebrated TV series of the last decade, spanning five seasons of original stories. Sag Harbor Cinema will host a special screening of the first episode of the series’s second season — set in 1979, in a small Minnesota town starring Kirsten Dunst, Patrick Wilson, Jesse Plemons, Jean Smart, Ted Danson, Cristin Milioti, Nick Offerman, and Kieran Culkin.
To purchase tickets, please click on your preferred screening time below.
The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Fargo’s visionary creator, Noah Hawley. Hawley is the Writer-in-Residence at the 2025 Steinbeck Writers’ Retreat.
In celebration of the second installment’s 10th anniversary, Hawley returns to the acclaimed premiere episode, offering fresh insight a decade after it first captivated audiences.
In collaboration with Steinbeck House, the screening is underwritten by Steinbeck House Sag Harbor, Inc. and The Michener Center and made possible by the Town of Southampton’s Community Preservation Fund.
Tickets are free with registration.
Award-winning Noah Hawley is one of the most accomplished auteurs and versatile storytellers working in television, film and literature today. Over the course of his more than 20-year career, Hawley’s work as a novelist, screenwriter, series creator, showrunner and director.
As a best-selling author, Hawley has published six novels: A Conspiracy of Tall Men, Other People’s Weddings, The Punch, The Good Father, Before the Fall and Anthem, which garnered acclaim as one of the most ambitious novels of 2022. In addition, Fargo: This Is A True Story, a companion book to the first three seasons of the series and authored by Hawley, was released by Grand Central Publishing.
Hawley began his television career as a writer and producer on the hit series Bones in 2005, going on to create, executive produce and serve as showrunner for ABC’s My Generation (2009) and The Unusuals (2010). Upcoming from Hawley is Alien Earth, the highly-anticipated original FX television series based on the iconic film franchise
Most recently from Hawley and his 26 Keys production banner was the fifth chapter of his quintessential FX anthology series Fargo, for which he serves as executive producer, writer, showrunner and director. The five installments of the hit series have been nominated for 70 Primetime Emmy Awards and won seven.
John and Elaine Steinbeck first rented a waterside cottage in Sag Harbor in September,1953. As he wrote to his friend and agent, Elizabeth Otis, “I couldn’t be in a better place … I take great comfort from this wind and from the ocean. I didn’t know I missed it so much.”
Sag Harbor attracted Steinbeck in large part because of its seaside location, solitude, and strong resemblance to Monterey, California where he spent his early years.
In 1955 the Steinbecks bought their home on Bluff Point. “This is fabulous boating country and fishing country … I really love it out here,” John wrote to Webster F. Street in July, 1955.
Steinbeck relished being part of the local community of fishermen, factory workers, and merchants. He often joined in conversations about village concerns at the Black Buoy and other gathering spots. In 1963, Steinbeck helped start the raucous Old Whalers Festival, wrote its “manifesto,” and was its first honorary chairman.
Steinbeck was a keen observer. In the words of Sag Harbor writer Tom Clavin, he “began to view his surroundings [Sag Harbor] as a setting for writing. The area both inspired his creativity and he saw in it elements that could be intertwined with his longtime themes.”
In 1961 Steinbeck published The Winter of Our Discontent, a novel that tackles themes of social change and moral laxity in a small seaside town reminiscent of Sag Harbor, and some say, its local residents. But as Steinbeck writes in his epigraph, “Readers seeking to identify the fictional people and places here described would do better to inspect their own communities and search their own hearts, for this book is about a large part of America today.”
In 1962, during the height of the Cuban Missile crisis, Steinbeck was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, in large part due to this novel. The Nobel Committee acknowledged that The Winter of Our Discontent was the book that convinced them. Steinbeck “holds his position as an independent expounder of the truth with an unbiased instinct for what is genuinely American, be it good or bad.”
Steinbeck scholar, Susan Shillinglaw, contends that from 1960, when he composed this novel, to the end of his life, “Steinbeck stood as America’s moral compass.” His trilogy of Sag Harbor books include Travels with Charley (1962), which begins in the cove where he wrestles with his boat during Hurricane Donna; and America and the Americans (1966), essays illuminating Americans’ virtues and lapses.
John Steinbeck died in December, 1968. Elaine Steinbeck, one of the first women Broadway stage managers (Oklahoma, 1943), remained engaged with the Sag Harbor community as an early supporter and trustee of Bay Street Theater. She died in April, 2003.
*John Steinbeck letter to Elizabeth Otis, April 6, 1958