John Travolta Teary as He Accepts Surprise Palme d’Or Before Directorial Debut ‘Propeller’ Screens at Cannes

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John Travolta touched down at Cannes with his directorial debut, Propeller One-Way Night Coach, at the Cannes Film Festival, where he was given the honorary Palme d’Or.

Festival head Thierry Frémaux gave Travolta the honor. “You said this would be a special night, but I didn’t think you meant this. This is a humbling moment,” said Travolta. “This is beyond the Oscar.”

The film, which is set to debut on Apple on May 29, is based on Travolta’s book of the same name and follows a young aviation enthusiast, Jeff, and his mother as they embark on a cross-country flight to Hollywood.

“When John came to us in the fall, he was very humble and shy with the idea of showing the film as an official selec[tion],” said Frémaux, revealing that Propeller was the first film chosen for the 79th edition of the French festival and calling Travolta “one of the greatest artists of the 20th and 21st century.”

“When you told me this would be the earliest film accepted, I cried,” said Travolta. Frémaux joked, “I was afraid Berlin could have stolen the film.”

The Travolta-starring Pulp Fiction from director Quentin Tarantino premiered at Cannes, going on to win the Palme d’Or. Grease and Saturday Night Fever both played as Cannes beach screenings, while 1998 drama Primary Colors played out of competition and 1997 thriller She’s So Lovely played in competition.

Ella Bleu Travolta, who appears in the film as a flight attendant, was on hand for the screening at the Debussy Theater. Clark Shotwell, Kelly Eviston-Quinnett and Olga Hoffmann also star in Propeller. After the screening, Travolta thanked Prince Albert II of Monaco for being at the premiere.

Travolta, who produced, financed, narrated, directed and wrote the movie, told the audience, “Other people wanted to produce it and direct it. But it was so personal. I don’t know if they could capture it. I just wanted to, at the end of my chapters in my life, give a reflection of where it started for me.”

When asked if he would direct again, Travolta said, “For 55 years, I have watched people do it well. I have watched people do it not so well. I’ve watched mistakes, and I really believe that I can navigate around all of that, but I really feel I would have to have passion about the material.”

The Cannes audience gave Travolta a warm welcome, clapping multiple times during the screening and giving him a standing ovation. Said Travolta, “What a night for me, thank you all for being here and for witnessing my directorial debut.”

Watch Travolta receive his honorary Palme d’Or in the video below.

John Travolta teary-eyed as he is presented with (surprise) honorary Palme d’Or from Thierry Fremaux ahead of the world premiere of his directorial debut Propeller One-Way Night Coach. Wild standing ovation for the actor who has had a number of films here over the years. pic.twitter.com/jv5Xvv5P0F

— Chris Gardner (@chrissgardner) May 15, 2026