For Xavier Beloved, landing a role on HBO’s new comedy series Rooster was not simply another credit to add to his résumé. It was, by his own account, the kind of moment that makes the years of work feel worth it a full-circle experience wrapped in nerves, gratitude, and a growing sense of purpose.
Beloved plays George Heitman, a college athlete at Ludlow College whose imposing physical presence is balanced by a quiet, compassionate interior. It is a pairing that gave the actor room to do something he had not been asked to do quite so fully before: slow down, go inward, and let the audience in.
The series, led by Steve Carell and produced by the prolific Bill Lawrence, is the kind of project that carries weight before filming even begins. For Beloved, who grew up watching Lawrence’s work on shows like Scrubs and later found himself drawn to Ted Lasso, stepping into that creative world felt almost unreal.
What it was like working with Steve Carell
If there is one thing Beloved wants people to understand about working alongside Carell, it is that the experience was far warmer than intimidating. The two-time Emmy-nominated actor carries an energy on set, Beloved has said, that makes the people around him feel at ease rather than overshadowed.
Carell’s approach staying present, listening closely, and reacting honestly in each moment gave Beloved something to lock into. Early on, Beloved defaulted to a more formal address, the kind of instinctive deference a newer actor might show a legend. Carell quickly put that to rest, making clear that on this set, everyone was on equal footing. That small but meaningful gesture helped Beloved settle in and find his rhythm.
It is the kind of collaborative environment that does not always exist on major productions, and Beloved has been candid about how much it shaped his performance.
What Rooster is actually about
At its center, Rooster follows Greg Russo, a successful author who accepts a writer-in-residence position at a college where his own daughter is on staff. The premise sets up a layered exploration of reinvention, generational friction, and the unexpected turns that mid-life can bring.
The ensemble cast around Carell includes Charly Clive, Danielle Deadwyler, Phil Dunster, John C. McGinley, Lauren Tsai, and Connie Britton a group that brings both comedic timing and dramatic credibility to the project. Produced by Warner Bros Television, the series is built as a character-driven comedy with enough emotional texture beneath the humor to give it staying power.
Why this role hit differently for Beloved
What Beloved has taken away from Rooster goes beyond the exposure that comes with an HBO credit. The role pushed him toward vulnerability in a way that pure performance technique cannot manufacture. George Heitman required him to access something more personal, more unguarded and in doing so, expanded what Beloved believes he is capable of as an actor.
That kind of creative stretching is rare, particularly early in a career, and Beloved has spoken openly about the impact it has had on how he now approaches storytelling.
A message audiences will feel
Beyond Beloved’s personal journey, there is something in Rooster‘s premise that speaks to a wider cultural conversation. The show quietly pushes back against the idea that life operates on a fixed schedule that success, reinvention, and second chances are only available to the young or the earlyarriving.
It is a theme that lands differently in an era when that pressure feels louder than ever, and it gives the series a resonance that extends beyond its comedic surface.
For Beloved, Rooster is a beginning. His portrayal of George Heitman brings a grounded sincerity to the series, and early attention around his performance suggests that this debut is only the first chapter of a much larger story.

