Good Hang with Amy Poehler - Maya Hawke
Episode Date: November 4, 2025Maya Hawke has a cup theory she'd like to sell you. Amy hangs with her fellow 'Inside Out 2' castmate and talks about what she learned from playing the character of Anxiety, taking the subway to find ...the right kind of cigarettes, and being afraid of harmonizing. Host: Amy PoehlerGuests: Willa Fitzgerald and Maya HawkeExecutive Producers: Bill Simmons, Amy Poehler, and Jenna Weiss-BermanFor Paper Kite Productions: Executive producer Jenna Weiss-Berman, coordinator Sam Green, and supervising producer Joel LovellFor The Ringer: Supervising producers Juliet Litman, Sean Fennessey, and Mallory Rubin; video producers Jack Wilson, Belle Roman, and Aleya Zenieris; lighting director Caroline Jannace; audio producer Kaya McMullen; video editor Drew van Steenbergen; and booker Kat SpillaneOriginal Music: Amy Miles Walmart.com/shop/giftsVisible. Live in the know. https://www.visible.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This episode is brought to you by Welch's fruit snacks. Listen up, everyone, sharpen those pencils,
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in stores nationwide. Go back to school with Welch's Fruit Snacks. Hello everyone. Welcome to another
episode of Good Hang. I'm really, really excited about this episode with the great Maya Hawke. We had such a
good conversation. We used so many words. And I just love talking to her. And we talk about really
interesting things today. We talk about growing up in New York City and being a kid there. We talk about
her love of magic and wonder and a life of imagination. And we talk about joy and anxiety. The
characters that we played together in Inside Out, too, and also how those emotions interact and
connect in real life. So it was a great convo. And as always, we like to ask someone who knows
our guest, a friend, a fan, someone who has a question that they think I should ask the
guest before we start the podcast. So we are joining with Willa Fitzgerald. Willa is an
actress. She's on Pulse right now, a medical show on Netflix. She will
was in Little Women with Maya Hawk, and most excitedly, she's joining us from Hungary, which I believe
is also where Budapesh is. So, Willa, can you hear me?
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I'm so grateful. Thank you for calling in from there.
and thank you for talking about the great Maya Hawke today.
My delight, my delight.
I know.
Now, tell me how you two met.
We met actually in Ireland doing little women in 2017.
And I mean, we just fell in love, I think.
That would be, it was a love story.
It was a love story for sure.
You both were, she was playing Joe.
You were playing Meg.
What was it like to play Meg?
What did you bring to this Meg?
I feel like my personal mission was to bring a humanity to her
Because I feel like she's often sort of like the
She's like the two perfect sister a little bit
Which is I think why people don't love her and relate to her
And she also feels a little bit
You know, out of our time in the sense
That she makes very classically gendered choices with her life
And so I feel like my personal mission
Was just to like kind of elucidate why we should like Meg
And why we should understand her as like a really kind of relatable
lovely character. And I think we did it. I think we actually, I think we did manage to
pull that off. And here you are, two young actresses at the time joining this production.
I think for Maya, it was her first big production. And what did, well, how did you, what did
you see in each other? How did you become friends? We really just like bonded because I had
already been working, but I was suddenly kind of entering a new phase of my career where I was
getting to do this project that I was like just so excited about. And it was her first
job and she was so excited about it. And we just, you know, we would like go to the, we were all
staying at this hotel together outside of Dublin. And we would like go to the pool together or the
steam room and just like talk about what really excited us about being actors. And we just like really
kind of connected on like an artistic level. And also I think on just a personal level, because I think
we're kind of very opposite people in a lot of ways. I think that we both like learn a lot from
the other person in the way that they navigate the world because it's so different from maybe
the way that we ourselves navigate the world. How are you different? I think that I think that
I'm, I think, you know, the most like reductive two second answer would just be, I think I'm a
very cautious person. And I think Maya is like full of just like a lust for life and a real sort
of like verve that she just is as unafraid in situations that I sometimes feel a little bit more unsure.
I think. Maya does a lot of things, you know? She does. She's on a Broadway show. She performs,
records music with a lot of different bands, including solo stuff. She's, you know, she's writing.
She's acting like she, to your point, it feels like she ventures and is adventurous in the stuff that she does.
What I admire about her so deeply is that she just kind of has this sort of like infinite curiosity and like well of creativity that she seems to.
to be able to draw on. She has like a real, she's really interested in just the world around her
in a way that's like so kind of pure and like limitless. So we're going to get to the question
you have for me to ask Maya, but just before we do, I want to say congratulations on Pulse.
Oh, thank you. I love a medical show. Well, you know, Maya was a big reason of why I took that job.
Ooh, how come? Because she loves Grey's Anatomy and she was the one who made me love Grace Anatomy.
And when I was calling her and I was like, I've got this like possible job, what do you think?
I wanted to talk about it.
And she was like, do it.
Like, I will be the biggest fan of this show.
Please.
Has it been fun to play that kind of part and like get into the jargon and get into the vibe of what it would be like to being in an emergency room?
What's been fun about it?
I feel like it's like it's one of the most, I feel like in those sort of situations where you're like really just playing at a job.
It's kind of like the purest expression of like the childhood family.
of being an actor, where you're like, I am now a doctor and I can now say people's lives.
Like, wow.
Wow.
And I think, you know, like, that's like a really cool thing.
But no, I love it.
I love, I do love learning new things.
And I learned so much.
And I'm also just like a little nerd and, like, loved just going through like the big ass medical
pamphlets that we would get given for every episode and just being like, you know,
oh yeah, like watching like cadaver videos of like the surgeries and being like, wow, medical
school. Do you, when you, I always try to ask people who are on medical shows, when you cut,
do you cut into fake bodies? Real bodies.
That's kidding.
Like, do you ever have to put a scalpel in, you know, I know that there's fake torsos and stuff?
Do you do that? Yeah. No, we had, we had our, like, a prosthetics person was from walking dead.
So our prosthetics were like next level. They were like, we're going to use some old zombies.
We're going to get them in. Yeah, yeah. They're like, we got this.
Okay. So.
Thank you for getting on.
And what question do you think I should ask Maya today?
Do you have any thoughts?
I'm curious whether her sort of lust for life,
her ability to be so interested in the world around her,
was something that she feels is innate to her as a person,
or whether it's something that she feels like was cultivated
either by herself, by her community, by her parents.
And if so, like whether there's a specific moment
in which she, like, recall seeing the world.
world in that way from a young age. You know, what's great about that question is I think people
really reduce the children of actors and artists in the way that they talk about, you know,
what is it like being a, you know, considered a nepo baby? You know, you're in the same profession
as your parents when, in fact, like, what is it like growing up with artists that are parents
and how do they introduce you to art? And also, what is it like being a New York City kid? I mean,
And a lot of people don't know the feeling of growing up in the city and what that's like,
like what you get to see or what you don't get to see.
You know, like, how does it limit you and how does it open you up?
And I think that's a great question.
Really, well done.
You seem like a woman in her 30s who has her shit together.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
I mean, you know, it's all an illusion.
Really, really nice to meet you.
It's such a pleasure.
Thank you so much for the time and for helping me get to know Maya a little more.
I really appreciate it.
So fun.
Thank you again.
Bye.
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Maya Hawk is with me. Maya, I'm so happy to see you. I'm so happy to see you. You know,
we haven't seen each other in person since Inside Out 2 premiere shenanigans.
That movie.
I know.
That movie made people so happy.
I know.
I feel so seen.
What have you had people come up and say to you about that movie?
It's been one of the great honors.
My little sister was asking me the other day.
She was like, do you get annoyed if someone asks you to do the anxiety voice?
Or do you get annoyed?
And it was like, not at all.
I guess sometimes if someone wants me to go put on like an ice cream scoop or uniform,
I'm like, I'm done with the ice cream scooper uniform.
But, and like, but if there was a while where that wasn't true, but with this movie, the, that character, I've had so many people feel so seen by it.
And, like, little kids feel so seen by it.
And, like, it helped them understand their brain better.
And, like, I'll get a call from a friend's parent, like, from, like, a friend of mine who is a parent, not a friend's parent, and be like, hey, would you do a recording?
Like, my kid's going through this hard time.
Would you record something in the voice from my kid?
And I'll be like, sure.
and I'll turn on the little speaker and be like,
hi, oh, I know it's really scary
when parents have to go to the doctor's office
and I know that it makes you nervous
and I, but the thing is you just
take deep breath and trust that your daddy will be safe
and that the doctors are going to take great care of him
and like I, um, and so
I like, we'll do things like that and I don't mind
at all. I love it
because it's so... I know, I feel the same.
I feel like you and I had a couple moments
when we were doing press where we kept looking at each other
like, whoa, this feels so much bigger
than us.
and the response of the movie was so beautiful
and I know that that is very rare
to be in something good
that people like,
that people go to see
that is a good experience.
Those don't always happen.
And that is good for the world.
And that is good, I know.
That's like it's so, so rare
to have it hit all those benchmarks.
It's like a rainbow.
I know. Plus a billion dollars, babe.
I know.
Plus I'm saying, for something that makes a
billion dollars and is good for the world?
I don't think there's anything that does that.
No, it's crazy.
No, I mean, it is so true.
The word billion and good for the world doesn't go together.
Does not go together.
No, of anything.
Ever.
What have you learned about anxiety in the past year, your own or others, because you played
that character?
So much.
And I think with like the joy anxiety relationship, I, it taught me a lot about showing love
to that part of myself
and like allowing other people to see it
so they can show it love
and that that is all
actually a way to calm it down
is like inviting it into the conversation
like looking at what it thinks
and is worried about
and kind of addressing each point
and then asking it a comfortable chair
and saying like okay you're invited
you're not I'm not trying to shut you out
behind a door
Because that, of course, just works it up even more.
Yes.
And so I think in giving, the biggest thing I learned from doing this
and being allowed to be welcomed into the beautiful world of this movie
is to give my anxiety a comfy chair.
Yes.
It's so well said.
And for people listening right now, like everybody is so stressed.
I know.
Of course they are.
Of course they are.
I mean, anxiety might be the defining emotion of our time.
It's been, it was so fun to work on, on, on those characters together because when the time is very scary like these times, you know, you want to find a way to tune in, check out, help yourself, help other people, like you want to dip in and out.
But when you're just getting someone going like toxic positivity, like this is great, it's like, babe, things are bad.
Things are bad.
Things are real bad.
So anybody listening, I want you to know that we know things are bad.
But also if you shut joy out completely.
Yes.
Like, then you still need to welcome in some.
Like, you're not helping anybody if you shut out joy completely.
Well, there's a beautiful moment in the movie.
And it's such a testament to the work you did as anxiety.
And the work the animators do.
And the work that Kelsey Mann did the director and Pete Doctor.
the producer and all the artists
and Pete the creator
and just all the writers
Meg
when anxiety
does a small little gesture
to let
when Joy is being
finally called back
finally
Riley our characters
finally calmed herself down
on the ice
she's talked to her friends
she's feeling a little bit
like herself she gets back on the ice
she starts skating and joy is being called back
And anxiety does a little, I told you this, like a little genuflect, like a little gesture of like, this way.
Yeah.
For people listening, you can't see what Maya and I are doing, but we're doing a little like, like a little like, your table is over here, ma'am.
Here you go, yeah.
It made me cry so hard.
And I just thought, oh, like the tiny gesture of that is like what we're just, we must try to do during this banana's foster time we're living in.
because that is, I mean, whatever we can do, babe.
Well, and to make room for each other.
Yeah.
And, like, and to make room to get off of our phones,
which we were talking about before we started rolling,
but to get off of our phones where we're just being bombarded by, like,
here's a funny video of a cat.
Here's a video of the apocalypse.
Here's a funny joke that is offensive.
Here's a funny joke that's your humor but would offend someone else.
Here's another video of the apocalypse.
Like, it's, like, to get out of that and into like,
oh, here you and I are.
sitting with each other. We're looking each other in the eyes. We can still do this.
Yes. We can still talk and be and make space for each other. And like, you know, look at the
people around us and that we have to make time to do that even as we make time to try to figure
out what is happening. I agree. And, you know, I kind of experience you as an old soul. Have you been
told that? I have been, there's been some ageist claims about my soul made. You must get this a lot.
People talk, they roll their eyes about people's 20s.
And what's good about being in your 20s?
Oh, what's good about being in your 20s?
I mean, I'm already starting to have more random body pain, but I know I have less than I will have.
So like it's a more pain-free time.
Recovery is faster.
Recovery is faster.
Yes.
So that's good.
I still like, I can still, um,
Yeah, just general recovery, bounce back from things, more quickly, emotional recovery.
Like, independence, you know, it's like this kind of miracle window before insane amounts
of responsibility, but after independence where no one's telling you what to do.
And that's like, that's the miracle of your 20s, right?
Is that like your responsibilities are there, but they're not like usually kids and family, you know, or they can be.
But, you know, yet, but they are, but you have his freedom.
And that's a cool window of time.
And so bounce back.
Miracle window is such a good way to say it, Maya.
Like, you're very wise.
It's true.
It's like if only one can know the time they're in
and appreciate the time they're in, it's hard to do.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah.
Okay.
Speaking of the time you're in,
I want to jump back to little Maya.
Yes.
Because I'm always really interested in what it's like being a New York kid.
I was kind of a sad kid or like set point melancholic, you know,
Like, moody and emotional and homie and, like, I, but a New York City kid is awesome.
Use so much stuff to look at and do.
Like, my favorite place to go was the Metropolitan Museum of Art Temple of Dendor
because of the mixed-up files of Mrs. Basilie Frankweiler.
Do you remember that book?
And the kids, like, ran away for anyone who hasn't read it.
They ran away and they live inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art and they sleep in the Queen's bed
and they steal money from the fountain, and it's awesome.
And I love that book, and I loved going to the Met, and I love going to the Natural History Museum,
and I loved going to the zoo, and there was just, like, so much to do activity-based as, like, a little kid.
And I love that, and so many different ways to express all your weird interests.
Like, I had lots of weird interests as a kid.
I loved, like, dead insects, like the one that preserved dead insects, and I loved going to see them at the Science Museum and they loved rocks.
And there was, like, you know, just so much exposure.
and different kinds of people you could decide to be.
Yeah.
And so much interaction with difference.
And that was so cool and I think so rare
because so many people grow up in these little communities
where it's like everyone feels the same.
But in this city you're like interacting with humanity all the time.
And you get to decide who you are, which is great.
And then you get to high school and it's like being in college for other people.
Like it is crazy.
Yeah.
I went to more clubs between.
ninth and twelfth grade than I have been since.
Right.
Like it was.
There's a lot of pressure for New York kids to be very interesting.
There's a lot of pressure to be interesting, to be adult, to be on the town.
Yes.
There's a lot of that.
Did you ever have like a 13 year old, like I'm in Studio 54 and I don't know how I got here?
Yes.
You did.
Yes.
Or you're just in a club and it's like, I'm little.
I might be too young for this.
I'm too little for this.
Hmm, interesting.
Seemed like a good idea at first.
I'm proud of myself for getting in here, but now how do I get out?
But I love it.
I would do it.
I would raise kids in New York.
I think it's awesome, an awesome way to grow up.
To your point, there was an independence.
You took the subway, you walked around, you kind of figured out life.
What were some memories of that time when you felt like adult or grown up?
Ooh.
You know, a moment where you had like an adult.
moment. Well, I realized in high school that I could cut class. Yeah. And that like the, that there was like
no real ramifications to doing it. And so I started like just doing my own thing like during the
day. And I brought, I, high school I experimented with smoking cigarettes, which you shouldn't do
and is bad. Very, very bad. Very, very bad. Do not do it. You look very cool. Don't.
Yeah, don't do it. Don't do it. Don't do it. But you look cool. Yeah. And I, but I couldn't buy
cigarettes because I was a kid. And so I would occasionally like walk around to try to bum
cigarettes off people. This is what I'm talking about. This is what I picture a New York kid
doing. But I went to school in Brooklyn Heights. And the only people who smoke in Brooklyn Heights
are like construction workers. And they smoke Newports. And I hated Newports. So I would take
the subway to, this is a ridiculous story, to the East Village. So I could bum Marlborough
Golds off of, because people in the East Village smoke Marlboro Golds, like outside McNally Jackson
bookstore. And so I would like take this, on my free period, my lunch break or whatever, I'd
be like, I won't go to math today. I'll just like take a double free period and I'll go, take
the subway to Greenwich Village or the East Village and Bama Marlboro Gold off some like intelligent,
like handsome man smoking outside of a bookstore. Some documentary filmmaker. Yeah, some documentary filmmaker
or, like, sipping a cafeteria.
And I was like, I am a grown-up, and this is an adventure.
Oh, this is exactly the kind of story I picture.
Just getting on the subway for a cigarette.
Because you have a preference, a neighborhood-based cigarette preference.
It's really ridiculous.
I mean, during that time, there was probably a sense of you when you knew deep down, even in high school, like, I'm not going to worry so much about math.
I'm going to be an actor.
Yes.
I know what I'm going to do.
When did you know you were going to be an actor?
You know, when did you feel like...
I'm going to really make this my job or my life.
I knew I was going to be like an artist of some kind.
I think I was, I mean, I think I was really afraid of being an actor because my parents are both actors.
And I got to see that, you know, they were as successful as one as I could ever have dreamed to be in that profession and still had so much job in security and stress and highs and low moments.
I was like, I don't know if this seems fun.
And, like, and, you know, I had experiences of, like, going to school and, like,
trying to leave my house with, like, an umbrella because there was some article out and
there was paparazzi around the house.
And I was like, this seems, eh.
Yeah.
Like, I don't know about this.
Yeah.
And so it wasn't until, like, 11th grade where I realized that there was nothing else that
I was good at and liked.
Yeah.
And I was like, you know, like, I.
I just, I like this.
I am good at it.
I feel like this is my community.
Like the other people who like this, I like them.
And they put up with me because they'll put up with anyone.
You know, that's great about the theater community.
They will put up with anyone unless you're mean.
And so I would just like found my home.
And I was like, okay, I'll figure out that other stuff.
This is what I want to do.
Okay, this is a great, that's a great segue into our.
do this thing at the beginning of each show where we talk to people who know our guests.
Oh, no.
Yes. And just to talk well behind their back. And it always kind of helps me figure out if there's
questions I should ask my guest and also to get to know the guest more. And we talk to
your friend Willa, Fitzgerald. She's the best. She's the best. Now, you two met on the set
of little women in... Still the greatest experience of my life. Wait, tell us why. It was my first
professional job. I had to drop out of school to do it and I was really worried about it and
was like, oh, whatever. I get to Ireland. We're in this town called Dunleary. I've just never had
an experience as positive. It was the four sisters and the guy who played Lori and we fell in
love with each other. And we were staying at this seaside hotel in this port town. And it was the
Royal Marine was the name of this hotel.
And it was like walking distance from this farmer's market and these restaurants.
And we just loved each other.
And, you know, it's gone for me now.
I'm already so old.
I can't stay awake forever.
But do you remember when you were like 18 and 19 and you just didn't need to sleep at all?
Like somehow I could work a full 14-hour shooting day and then be like, should we go out?
Yeah.
And then like, you know, and then I'll learn my lines and then I'll go to sleep for two hours.
And then go back to her.
I don't know how we did it.
But it might have just been the wrong.
joy of how in love with each other we were
like we were going to set on the days
that we weren't working and being like I have a note you should
try this in the next scene we just
it was just like acting acting it was just like acting
we love it and we love each other
and we're all
sisters sisters and it's the ocean and like
we did a moon spell where there was a full moon
and we bought crystals from this guy
in town and we put the crystals in the moon
and then we went skinny dipping in the port
and it was freezing and it was like
just happy
it was happy
fun that's how
so fun. I mean, she was taught, I mean, she adores you. And she was talking about exactly that,
like how you all connected so fast. And she was saying that there is this, you have this lust
for life. And that, um, one of her questions was, do you feel like that's always been innate? Like,
it's kind of what we're talking about, nature versus nurture. You're the, you know, you have,
you're the daughter of artists. You're looking at, you want to be an artist. Do I want, look, do I want, look, do I
want the life of an artist. What does that even look like? But there is always like this little
thing inside all of us from the minute we're born anyway. Like did you always feel like you had that?
Some kind of lust for life. And her question is, do you think it was innate or was it nurtured by
the environment that you were in or both? I think both. Yeah. I think I've like always believed in
magic and always believed in love in a really intense way. And I think that that was nurtured in me
from a really young age like my you know my parents are magical and like my mom like you know was this
magical creature who like you know would come home from work and she was like looking fabulous but
she'd take everything off and immediately put on like a big velvet skirt and gardening gloves and
go outside and like teach me how to like pull up stinging nettles to make soup
and the soup would be a witch's potion
because it was good for you
and like she just had this magic to her
and my dad would be like
we're going to water color together
and we're going to make a masterpiece
and like I'll do this blue
and you do red and we'll see what we create
there was just this imagination
fostered in
in me from a really young age
and I just
like I believed
I was really lucky
to get that kind of love
and that kind of exposure to
seeing the world as a place where magic is possible.
And I just, it's like the luckiest thing ever to have that happen.
And I think it, like, I always think about it as like the Harry Potter.
You know in Harry Potter how when his mom dies, she puts a spell on him that protects him from
dying with love?
I kind of remember.
Okay, you kind of know this.
I've read all of them out loud and I still.
Harry Potter's mom protects Harry Potter with a magical spell.
Because, of course, the mother always has to die.
She always has to die for the kids.
kid to be on an independent adventure.
In every single story.
Yeah.
There's actually a whole theory about that, but it would set aside.
Yeah, about children's stories and then you have to kill the parents in children's stories
because that's how children become the unfolding of their own story, right?
They become little adults because they're, God forbid.
The mother live long enough to see her child succeed.
Yes, God forbid.
But I always feel like that period of time in my life where my parents, what my parents did
and gave me this magical spell.
Like love, love spell where, like, you know, then there were other different hard times in all of our lives, but that early magic's protected.
Oh, my God.
And they do say that, like, from, like, one to five or one to three, like, is so much, I mean, it's a lot of pressure on young parents, but because that time is so important.
But, like, so much of your belief system about the world and how you feel and if you feel safe and your attachment style is form.
like so early. And are you, I mean, because I've, I've sensed from you both introvert and
extrovert. This is true. Oh my God, I got it right. You got it right. So what, tell me about
that. How have you figured that out? Okay, I see myself as having three cups. There's the
extroversion socialization cup, the alone time cup, and the with one other person having an
intimate conversation cup. And I need all three cups to be somewhat full to be functioning.
Yeah. Like if I've had too much parties, work, like not a no alone time, and just these two cups are full, oh, I'm gesturing and this is audio.
That's okay.
The people, you're making, you're gesturing cups.
I'm gesturing cups.
But the, you know, if I'm, then I really feel bad and I need alone time.
If I've got too much alone time and not enough socialization, I really feel bad and drained.
So I'm always trying to like look at my schedule and my life and be like, am I getting
enough friend time in one-on-one?
Am I getting enough alone time?
And am I getting enough like energizing social outside in the world, going to see a concert,
going to see a play, going to something.
Like, I need a little bit of everything.
I love the Cups idea.
I do something similar where I think about a refrigerator
and I think about magnets.
And then I, in the best day ever, all five magnets are on the refrigerator,
but I try to get three.
So it's like work, motherhood, friendship, you know, spirituality, wellness,
some kind of care.
And what's my favorite?
magnet a relationship so it's like if you can get three out of five it's like today I was a good
partner today I did like some good mom stuff and I worked a little bit or it's like no today I took care
of myself today I met with friends and today I you know gave my kids some good advice whatever is the
magnets that you can put on there very rare to get five yeah but you don't want to go too long
without having a day that has like you don't want to leave one of them you get a dusty magnet
You don't want to get a dusty magnet.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We could go, we could, you and I could sell the cup and magnet.
I was just thinking this.
We could write books.
We could make, we could make these magnets.
We could do separate podcasts just about this, and we could make billions of dollars.
And it would be good, another good billion.
And it would be like, with me today is my lock.
She's, of course, the adventure of the cup theory.
She brought me that theory when I was working on my magnet project.
I didn't know.
We've got cups and magnets.
We're touring the world.
from 20th century studios and the director of prey predator badlands welcome to the most dangerous planet in the universe
this friday everything in this world is trying to kill you you are prey until you become the predator
experience it in imax m3d we might not be alone in this hunt
Badlands in theaters Friday, get tickets now.
Okay, you've finished Stranger Things, it's done.
What was it like when it's, that's a rap on Maya Hawk, a series rap.
I know you can't tell us anything, but I do hope you tell us how it ends.
I will, of course, I will.
Great, thank you. You can tell me off the air.
But what was it like hearing series rap?
Well, I want to hear what it's been like for you, like what it was like for you on Parks.
You know, it's, I think for people who don't know, right, so if you're an actor on set, you get, like, that's a season wrap on Maya, like season four, all right, and you get your last shot.
And often people will kind of clap and stand around and say stuff.
But series rap is a big deal.
And on a show like yours, which has been such a long journey for you and for everyone involved.
And there's been strikes and there's been COVID in the middle of all of it.
And everyone's gotten older and grown up.
and everyone's been watching and watching and watching.
Yeah.
A good AD will make sure that that series rap
means something, that people are there and they're there for you.
And, like, it's just a big moment.
Matt and Ross, who are amazing, wrote scenes
that seem to have some connective tissue
for the characters and for us.
And on this last day of shooting,
we got to film these scenes
that had this beautiful connective tissue.
And I actually think I learned something about acting that day
and being present in your own emotion as a person
and the emotion of the character
and allowing those two wires to connect.
And my life has been changed as an actor.
The way that I act has changed since that series rap day.
And it was so emotional.
I cried all day long from beginning to end,
in these, like, kind of crashing waves.
And I just love, I love everybody on that show so much.
And it's been so, it's shaped me so much.
And we've been on such a long, complicated journey together.
You started when you were, what, 19?
I started when I was 19, which is, like, you know, lots of them started at, like, nine
and have been doing it for 10 years.
And I've been doing it for seven and started at 19.
So, I mean, I got nothing on them.
But it's funny that you've been on a show for seven years and you still think you're the new kid.
Exactly.
That's crazy.
I do.
I do still think I'm the new kid.
But it was really emotional and I don't know if I'll ever have another experience like it.
Yeah, I mean, congratulations on that show.
Thank you.
Your work is so good.
That show is so great.
And it really, I mean, just to, you know, I'm sure you can feel the anticipation growing.
I can't even imagine the press junket you're going to have to do when this show comes out of like, it's going to be bananas.
of how you're going to be talking about.
Like, that show feels like, I don't know,
that the audience has been through it with you, too.
Like, it feels like the audience has also been through it.
Yeah.
I guess is the only way to say it.
That the kids on the show and the audience
have not had an easy couple of years.
No.
And there's something about it
that feels very cathartic about the end of it.
Yeah, and I don't even know if I'm right about this,
but I've always seen the upside down
as a metaphor for depression and anxiety
and in some ways of like your teen years
it's really hard to be a teenager
and the like
the hormones that get released
the new emotions
so that get released
of depression and anxiety
and self-awareness and self-consciousness
it's like a hard period of life to survive
and I've always seen the upside down
as like this you know portal
that opened up
but to all those emotions for these young people
and, like, navigating one's way out of it
and through community and bravery and friendship,
it's really emotional.
And, like, you know, the allegories
to what's going on in the world right now are plentiful.
And it means a lot to me to get to be a part of something like this
because it's really a once-in-a-lifetime thing,
these, like, adventure stories and these hero stories
about kids and groups of kids grow up with this. You know, they grow up simultaneously with you
and it's, I'm so grateful. I just, it's such a special thing to get to be a part of.
That's so awesome. And you and your friends like Joe and Sadie are like doing music,
you're on state, you're all doing a bunch of things together at the same time. Can I talk about
your music for a second? Yeah. Because I would be curious your relationship to, you're such a,
you're such a talented and multi-talented artists who can do a lot of things.
very well. And like what I imagine for you, what I picture in the future is us hearing you
writing and directing and producing and doing so many things as well as acting in music. But
right now you're, you have two very big careers in what are, it sometimes feel like very
disparate ways of participating in the arts. It's like if acting, acting is one kid and music is
the other. Who's my favorite kid? Yeah, who's your favorite kid? Well, okay, the way I like to see,
First of all, I don't know is do a good job balancing.
I don't have a favorite kid.
I love creativity and I love storytelling.
And I see them as completely connected.
And like if there was an outlet in the wall with two plugs,
it's like different lamps that you plug into the same power source is how I feel about it.
That said, I'm a much more trained actor than I am a musician.
And I'm a much more confident actor than a musician.
Walking on to set or on to stay, like, you know, a rehearsal period is where I feel confident and comfortable.
And I feel like I know the rules and I know, like, I like it there.
And I feel really grounded.
Music is really scary.
And it's like, it terrifies me.
Performing live terrifies me.
Writing terrifies me.
What people are going to make of my lyrics terrify me.
Like, it's all really scary.
So it's the same power source.
One of the lamps is like a scary Halloween.
lamp that I like don't totally know how it works and the other lamp is like my favorite
bedside night light or something that's like this is my comfort zone and if you want to listen
to Maya's lamp workshop you need to go to the Beverly Wilshire you need to go to cups and
magnets cups and lamps and magnets cups and lamps and magnets no it's so true and we've got a whole product
line just to put out just a manifest just for a second for fun do you ever uh like do you ever
think about writing a musical no do you think about writing a musical but but but that's not
what you were going to say. Oh my god, but what musical do you want to write? I don't know.
Yes. Okay. Okay. So great. Write that. Okay. But do you ever have like a, a fantasy of
being on stage singing and singing with someone who you like, you know, deeply? Like, do you have a
an artist whose voice, musical artist whose voice you fantasize about harmonizing with and singing
with? Alive or dead? You know, I, I have a lot of different people.
that I love.
I am terrified of harmonizing.
You are?
That's the only thing that I can kind of do.
Really? It really scares me.
I am not a good harmonizer,
and it scares me.
So what about forget the harmony?
But just singing with, a back and forthy.
I like, I would love, I would love to,
I would love to sing with Joni.
I mean, I would have to do like a harmony,
like a one-note harmony while she danced all over the place.
but I love Joni.
I mean, this morning I was listening to Judy Sill a bunch,
and I love Judy Sill, and I love Joni,
and I'm obsessed with Adrian Lanker,
and I am obsessed with Taylor Swift,
and I'm obsessed with, I mean, I just love...
You love singer, female singer-songwriters.
Yeah.
I love songwriters.
I just think they're so cool.
Yeah.
And it's like almost that fantasy is more like
to get to write a song with someone.
Yeah.
Not like singing it and performing,
it is less the dream. It's like writing a song with someone that would be the dream.
Ooh, I love, okay. And speaking of writers and artists, you have worked with in the, in, in, in,
films, you've worked with really talented, uh, distinct voices, Wes Anderson, um, Bradley Cooper,
Quentin Taritino. That, that experience of getting on a set with someone who feels like
to have a very strong sense. Do you like that? You like that? You like,
like being in someone's simulation, basically.
Do you like jumping in there?
Yes.
I find it extremely fun and really relaxing.
Yes.
You were in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood with like five actors.
You were all playing Manson.
Manson-ish people.
Manzan-esque.
And did your mom give you, Uma Thurman is your mom?
Did she give you any advice about working with Quentin?
Keep your shoes on.
Keep your shoes on.
Keep them on, baby.
And you're going to try to get...
Keep a mom, baby.
Keep them on, keep their shoes on.
Perfect advice.
Perfect.
Did she come to the set?
No.
Yeah, it's weird to have your parents come to set.
Yeah.
I know.
It's just, I don't even like...
Or I don't even find it weird.
The shoes just wasn't in town.
Well, I don't like anyone...
Well, we're New Yorkers.
It was L.A.
Right.
She's like, I'm not going to L.A.
No.
I have too many things to do here.
I've been to that set.
Because I was a set kid.
I think it's the best place on earth.
Okay, tell me about sets you were on when you were a kid.
Oh, oh, so many.
I mean, one of the most memorable ones was the set of my super ex-girlfriend because I got to get into the flying suit.
And there's a movie that my mom did.
It's really good and really funny.
But she was a superhero, and so she flew in it.
And I got to be, like, I got to get into the thing and, like, fly across this studio.
And I, but really the thing I remember about sets is they all blur together except I love crafty.
And I loved the, it was like this safe little world where I could be alone.
So, like, no one needed to be watching me.
I could walk over to Crafty and take cookies and M&Ms and gummy bears and get them and I could go watch the stunt people practice.
And then I could go watercolor in the trailer and I could go to the costume shop and help them sew.
And it was just like Disneyland, basically, where I was independent and left alone and allowed to explore and allowed to just like park my butt at the monitors and watch take after take after take.
And it's really where I fell in love with acting was backstage at the theater and on set.
And so I think it was the most fun thing ever.
What always shocks me is when I invite people to come to set that they don't want to come, and when they come, they get bored.
I'm like, what do you mean it's Disneyland?
And they're like, you just did the same scene nine times from one direction and then move the camera and are doing it nine more times.
How on earth is this like Disneyland?
This is so interesting.
I'm the exact opposite.
People want to come to set because they seem like it's interesting.
And I say it's not.
It's boring.
Well, it's very true. And I will say one of my favorite things in the world generally is to be not busy around a busy person. So I still like to go with people to set because it's where I'm the most to peace because all my cups are getting filled. I'm not alone. And there's tons of exposure to people if I want it. But I can be totally alone and not busy and just like reading my little book somewhere and it's fine. So it's got this like social, not social privacy.
all these different things all at once
and it feels so good to me
it's like such a nice way to spend time
with someone as like five minutes
when they have a break
hi how are you
that was cool that was good
goodbye I'm reading my book again
like it's I love it
so I think there's something I really love
about visiting other people on set
and having visitors on set
when they feel like I do
and you brought up the cup system
and just once again for 5999
you too can learn Maya's cup system
it comes with a workbook there is a we do a in-person you have to watch a seven-minute video
before a paywall it's gonna be in Reno yeah November 15th we're very excited um okay and then
the the other question I wanted to ask you is because you know you played anxiety the world
is anxious you're really in touch with those feelings and you take great pride and I think
in being part of like a big discussion about it what do you
listen to watch, read, how do you make yourself laugh? Like, what are you getting, where are you
getting your joy from? Where am I getting my joy from? Well, recently I got a lot of joy from
the fourth-wing book series. It's fantasy, it's like romantic, fantasy, dragon college, basically,
a dragon war college. And that was my escapism of choice. I, unfortunately.
You said so many things just now.
Okay, so say again, it's called...
The Fourth Wing is the name of the first book.
And it is a Dragon College?
It's a war college for Dragon Riders in a fantasy universe.
It's romantic.
It's very sexy.
I've been looking for a new...
Fantasy is my new...
I never thought it would be a genre I'm into.
I'm so into it.
I'm so into it.
I felt the same way.
I'm so into it.
Have you read the name of the wind?
No.
Oh.
Okay. Patrick Rothfuss, R-O-T-H-F-U-S-S. Rothfuss. He wrote a book called The Name of the Wind.
Okay.
And it is a series. It's part of the King Killer Chronicles. And it's a fantasy novel. And it's basically just like it's just a story of a child who grows up in and how he becomes like.
this king killer it's cool but it's very like school to train to get to the thing I love I give
me a training sequence I love make me into the person I was always meant to be I know I love it
to force me to do it right oh my gosh I love that because what do you like about the fourth wing
what did you like it just like there's incredible hardcore training sequences there's a very
hot
guy who's like he's a rebel
and like maybe he's bad
except obviously the bad guys are actually the good guys
and the good guys are the bad guys and you have to figure that out
and it's awesome and he
like trains her because he's like you
their lives get wed together spoilers
and like he's like you have to live so that I can live
and so he's like do sit-ups and she's like
okay and it
really it really works
for me is all I can say
do sit-ups
Do sit-ups
You got to have a strong core
If you're going to fight those dragons
Those dragons go right for your core
You got to
Yeah and she's like
Stabbing him with knives
And he's like
Yeah good job, good job
Good job, good job
You know it's amazing
Do you read or listen
I read this
I do both
I do a lot of audiobooks
But I've recently been trying to get back
Into paper books
Yeah
And so that's been bringing me joy
I love that.
I watch piles of TV.
I love comedy.
Recently, I loved the studio.
That was really fun.
So funny.
It wasn't Han.
So funny.
I mean, the choice, the sartorial choice is not alone.
But the incredible.
The way that character is so ridiculous.
And my buddy Ike is in that, who was so great too, that episode where he kept getting thanked at the Golden Globes.
Yeah.
And Scott was thanking him.
It's just so extraordinary.
Fucking stupid and funny.
Also, the old school Hollywood party.
where Zoe Kravitz is like, old school Hollywood means there's drugs in the food?
I love that what really got me.
That's not touching me.
She was so good in that episode.
Yeah, so I've been doing that.
Do you, would you ever like, I mean, I guess, you know, Stranger Things is like, it's a new, it's like current fantasy.
I mean, that's fantasy.
Yeah.
But would you ever want to?
Yes.
Okay.
Great.
I don't need to finish it
Because I think
I think that what I'm getting
Like really don't need to finish it
Because what I'm getting from our convo today
is like story, adventure, fantasy
The kind of bigness of life
Is like what energizes you
Like you're excited about the next
Like you're really looking for
You have like a really big capacity
For big, swirly ideas
I really love them
I mean, not to mention that, like, almost all of the best fantasy is about humans banning together to take over fascist regimes.
Like, it's just a general theme of fantasy and, like, about the little guy rising up.
And I really, and I think that's partly why it's, as a genre is kind of exploding right now.
Like, people, like, romantic and fantasy people are really, it's like always at the top of the bestseller list these days.
And I think it's because community, it's always about like a unlikely band of maniacs and different people from different places that find each other and come together to try to build a new world that works better for them than it used to.
I just want to say that, like, getting the experience of talking about Inside A2 with you and getting to know he's been so great.
And I hope we get to make another one.
I would really like to, I mean, I would like to do anything with you that would be so wonderful.
But I really hope we get to make another one.
Because I want to see more of anxiety and joy learning how to work together.
I know.
And they have the same physical symptoms.
And look, they get things done, okay?
They get things done and they're excited.
Some emotions like to chill out, lie in the couch, and those are important too.
But anxiety and joy are going to, like, keep things moving.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, they are.
I'm so happy that you came today.
I'm joyful that you came today.
I was anxious about it.
No, I wasn't actually.
I was just excited.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for coming, Maya.
Thanks for having me.
I love you and love seeing you.
I love you so much.
You're the best.
You're the best.
I would do something with you even with our real flesh and blood bodies.
Okay, yeah, we can do that too.
I mean, I prefer animated, but it's just a lot easier for me in terms of hair and makeup.
Also just the pajama pants aspect.
But if you do make a fourth wing movie, I will play the dragon, the body of the dragon.
I would not be in charge of making it.
Here's hoping.
Here's begging the world.
I will be, I will donate my body.
body to be the dragon. I will donate my body to dragons. Thank you, Maya Hawke. That was such a great
conversation. I loved it. And for this polar plunge, I just want to talk about books, because we
talked a little bit about books and how they are bringing us joy. And I want to mention again,
a fantasy book that I love. It's called The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfus,
eagerly awaiting the next book, sir. So chop, chop. So check it out. And, um,
you know, get your dragons on.
You can't ever have too many dragons.
But thank you everybody for listening to Good Hang.
And bye, see you soon.
You've been listening to Good Hang.
The executive producers for this show are Bill Simmons,
Jenna Weiss-Berman, and me, Amy Poehler.
The show is produced by The Ringer and Paper Kite.
For The Ringer, production by Jack Wilson, Kat Spillane,
Kaya McMallin, and Alea Zanaris.
For Paper Kite,
Production by Sam Green, Joel Lovell, and Jenna Weiss Berman.
Original music by Amy Miles.
