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Tag: julia louis-dreyfus

  • “She’s So F–king Funny”: Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Michaela Watkins’s Sister Act

    “She’s So F–king Funny”: Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Michaela Watkins’s Sister Act

    In a standout episode of CBS’s The New Adventures of Old Christine, Matthew (Hamish Linklater) panics at the realization that his sister, Christine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), and his girlfriend, Lucy (Michaela Watkins), look distressingly alike. The scene turns into a surreal nightmare as Christine and Lucy, in matching red-and-white tennis outfits, start behaving identically before his very eyes—and it’s sold by the chemistry between Louis-Dreyfus, then a two-year veteran on the sitcom that won her her first best-actress Emmy, and Watkins, a Groundlings alum in her biggest screen role to that point. It was the first time they’d ever worked together. And the whole bit was Louis-Dreyfus’s idea—a chance to let the up-and-comer play a little. “There’s no ego with Julia,” Watkins says. “It was the happiest, most nontoxic, inviting workplace.”

    This was 15 years ago. Since then, Watkins has led a show of her own, Hulu’s Casual, and collaborated with Louis-Dreyfus repeatedly over the years: as a guest star on Veep, in a small role in the Nicole Holofcener film Enough Said, and now, taking on a meatier part as Louis-Dreyfus’s sister in Holofcener’s new movie, You Hurt My Feelings. Like an implicit callback to that first time they worked together, Louis-Dreyfus and Watkins play actual sisters, but this is no multi-camera sitcom. In true Holofcener form, the richly naturalistic comedy finds the humor in life’s most painfully honest beats, the inciting incident being when Louis-Dreyfus’s novelist overhears her husband (Tobias Menzies) saying he doesn’t like her new book. What follows is a gorgeous, understated meditation on love, honesty, and the white lies that can keep us going. 

    In their first interview together about the film, Watkins and Louis-Dreyfus reflected on how their sisterly bond developed, and how it translated into the careful realism of You Hurt My Feelings.

    Vanity Fair: I wanted to go back to when you both met on The New Adventures of Old Christine. Julia, what was your first impression of Michaela?

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus: I had an immediate positive response to Michaela because she’s so fucking funny.

    Michaela Watkins: This is awkward because I’m sitting right here.

    Louis-Dreyfus: Just put a napkin over your head. [Laughs] But yeah, her angle on material is unique, for real. Her cadence in speaking, her interpretation of dialogue is its own thing. She made me laugh like crazy. And we bonded pretty quick, right, Michaela?

    Watkins: Yeah. Can I give you my experience of working with Julia? Because at that point, it was more the infancy of getting to work in television. I had worked with a few people and there was such a clear, distinct line between the lead cast and then guest performers and everything: Thou shall not cross. And Julia was the funniest person in the world—and the warmest, and the coolest, and the most grounded. So I thought, is this just me? Am I kidding myself? But what you see is what you get. She’s not going to shut you down. She’s my hero.

    Louis-Dreyfus: Hey, that’s enough. Don’t say anything more.

    Watkins: No, no. Hold on. I want to say one more thing: The best joke wins. 

    Tobias Menzies and Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

    Jeong Park

    How does that dynamic translate to a movie like this, which is very funny, but definitely not a sitcom. It’s a very honest movie, so how did you find that shift working together?

    Louis-Dreyfus: Easy, to tell you the truth. The tone shift was something we were both very comfortable with. We both understood from the get-go what the tone was. Michaela and I have worked with Nicole before, and you know what? “Best joke wins” applies to this one too. Not that it was chock-full of jokes—I mean, it’s definitely a funny movie, but it’s a different tone. But having lunch with our mom, that was all improvised. It’s playing tennis—back and forth, back and forth.

    Watkins: It was really fun. I would say the “best joke always wins” was still 100% because I would maybe mutter something and you’d be like, “Huh?” And then I would say it a little louder, but only for Julia’s benefit. [Laughs] And Julia would be like, “Well, why don’t we just do that?” And then same with if Julia felt like saying something, then it was such a gift every time. In Nicole’s script, you can’t tell what would be improvised anyway, because it’s so natural. And I instantly felt the sister thing as so familiar. Julia shows up as a whole sister. My job is the easiest thing in the entire world.

    David Canfield

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  • Biden awards National Medal of Arts

    Biden awards National Medal of Arts

    Biden awards National Medal of Arts – CBS News


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    President Biden on Tuesday awarded several artists the National Medal of Arts. Recipients included Bruce Springsteen, Mindy Kaling and Julia Louis-Dreyfus

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  • Julia Louis-Dreyfus Reacts To Her Son’s ‘Dynamite’ Sex Scenes

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus Reacts To Her Son’s ‘Dynamite’ Sex Scenes

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus managed to stay in supportive mom mode when asked about her son Charlie Hall’s raunchy scenes in “The Sex Lives of College Girls.”

    The “Veep” star appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” on Tuesday and spoke about her 25-year-old son’s role in the HBO Max series.

    “That’s a racy show,” Kimmel noted.

    “It’s a very racy show, yes,” Louis-Dreyfus agreed.

    “Do you watch the show in fear that you might see something you haven’t seen for a while?” Kimmel asked.

    “Well, I mean, I did watch the show. And I think he was, you know, really great,” she replied. “I mean, he was adorable. He was fucking some girl in a library,” she quipped, laughing, “and I thought it was, I thought it was, uh … dynamite.”

    The “Saturday Night Live” alum has two sons, Charlie, 25, and Henry, 30, with her husband of more than three decades, Brad Hall.

    In the last few years, Charlie Hall has landed several film and TV projects, including “Sweethearts,” “Big Shot,” Single Drunk Female” and the Netflix feature film “Moxie.”

    Louis-Dreyfus said last year that her son was “really digging being an actor and he’s really good.”

    Her latest comments about him start at the 7:30-minute mark in the video below.

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  • Julia Louis-Dreyfus Says ‘Devastating’ Criticism From Father Still Hurts

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus Says ‘Devastating’ Criticism From Father Still Hurts

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus said her father’s disapproval during her first season on “Saturday Night Live” still stings decades later.

    Louis-Dreyfus was a 21-year-old Northwestern University dropout when she made her debut on the show in 1982. She had no live TV experience.

    Hoping for encouragement from her dad after her appearance in a sketch on the popular show, financier Gerard Louis-Dreyfus delivered anything but, his daughter told Variety. (She declined to reveal the specific performance.)

    “I remember him saying something really negative to me. He didn’t handle it properly, and he wasn’t gentle. His complaint was that I was too big, too broad. I was devastated by that,” she said in an interview posted Tuesday.

    She wasn’t about to validate his assessment, true or not.

    “He was such a narcissist, I didn’t even consider that,” she said, laughing. “And I say that with love in my heart.”

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus and her father, Gerard Louis-Dreyfus, in 2014.

    Mike Pont via Getty Images

    Her father died in 2016. Louis-Dreyfus thrived in comedy despite the reproach.

    Dreyfus parted ways with “SNL” in 1985 and established career-defining roles as Elaine Benes on “Seinfeld” (1989-1998) and Selina Meyer on “Veep” (2012-2019).

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus (center) performs a skit with Tim Kazurinsky and Mary Gross on a 1982 episode of "Saturday Night Live."
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus (center) performs a skit with Tim Kazurinsky and Mary Gross on a 1982 episode of “Saturday Night Live.”

    She recently appeared in the hit movie “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” too.

    In the Variety article, she also discussed her experience with breast cancer after being diagnosed in 2017. She is in remission.

    “Nobody has ever been happier to go back to work,” she said. “It confirmed for me the critical importance of my friendships with the people with whom I work and, of course, the love of my family and friends. It distilled down what was most important to me in my life.”


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