Where Everybody Knows Your Name with Ted Danson and Woody Harrelson (sometimes) - Vanessa Bayer
Episode Date: January 15, 2025Emmy-nominated actor and comedian Vanessa Bayer joins Ted Danson today! The Cleveland native talks with Ted about her time in the nation’s first collegiate all-female musical and sketch comedy troup...e Bloomers, her seven seasons on the cast of SNL, overcoming cancer in her teens (including being a Make-A-Wish kid), and more. She also drops a bombshell revelation on Ted, which threatens to upend everything he knew about his life.Check out Vanessa’s podcast with her brother Jonah Bayer, “How Did We Get Weird?”This episode was recorded in 2023. Please consider making a donation to World Central Kitchen, which is on the ground in Southern California providing free hot meals to families affected by the wildfires.Like watching your podcasts?Visit http://youtube.com/teamcoco to see full episodes.
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I was almost your daughter-in-law.
Wait.
Welcome back to Where Everybody Knows Your Name.
For today's episode, I'm talking to a native of Cleveland, Ohio.
Not that that's overly strange or unique.
She's Emmy nominated comedian and actor Vanessa Bear, who is unique. Vanessa was a cast member on Saturday Night Live for seven years, and it's not hard to see why she was such a fan favorite
on that show. Not only is she hilarious, she's joyful, kind, or at least to me, and has a great sense of humor about life,
even though she's had to overcome some adversity
and you'll soon hear all about it.
As I found out, we were very nearly related.
That was not the adverse part.
I think you'll love her as much as I did.
Here she is, finally, Vanessa Bae.
["The Star-Spangled Bae. Hi, Vanessa.
I'm so thrilled about this.
Yeah, me too. Me too. I'm a fan and you're so talented.
And I love this. I don't know about you and your podcast,
and the name of the title is, How Did We Get Weird?
That's our podcast, yes.
So, how did you guys get weird?
And why did you think that'd be a great name for it?
Do you feel like you guys are weird?
Yes, we're so weird.
I mean, who isn't, I guess, but we got into it
because we would sort of always be texting each other,
like, do you remember this thing
from when we were little?
I'm trying to think of an example, like,
when we were little, there was this commercial on a lot
for this wildlife card set where it was a guy,
you got a safari hat and a different card with a different,
the thing that people remember is that this kid
like sees the card and he says,
it's a duck-billed platypus.
Is this ringing a bell for anyone?
I'm looking around the studio and no one, little Lisa's giving...
Where did you get these cards? Where did one...
You had to order them off the TV and you'd get a card.
It was sort of a, it was like a, it aired a lot during like Mr. Wizard and stuff.
So we would text each other and be like,
do you remember this thing? And then we'd both go into these deep rabbit holes of like looking up
all this nostalgic stuff, not because anyone needed us to, just because in our own time we
wanted and had the time to do that. So then we thought, how fun would it be to do a podcast
about nostalgic things that we actually served a purpose
for us to be doing all of this nostalgic research, et cetera.
Is he older or younger brother?
He's two years older.
And so he got me into some,
there's some nostalgic stuff that I know about
that's like a little older than me, not to brag,
but it's kind of a cool, fun fact about me.
Which part?
That you know stuff that pre-
That I know stuff, like, especially we started watching MTV when we were really
young because he loves music and has always been in that world.
And so I know a lot of music that's like two years older than what I should know.
Right.
So wait, growing up, pre-15 when life changed for you.
What was that like in Ohio?
Were you a normal middle-class family?
Yeah.
Your mom and dad, are they still a big part of your life?
Yes, they are. Yeah.
I think we had a pretty normal upbringing.
We were in a suburb and yeah,
I think I just loved hanging out with my brother.
He didn't really wanna hang out with me until we were older
because I was his not cool younger sister.
And yeah, I did like after school theater program
and I was sort of like a pretty typical little gal.
With interests like typical.
Yeah, like I like theater a lot. I'm trying to think of what, which I stopped doing when I was older.
I wasn't as into that in high school or anything. But in middle school I did the after school theater program.
I know I've mentioned that now several times. I don't know.
I really liked reading.
I liked, I loved, I always loved hanging out with my friends
and sort of doing impressions of our teachers
and stuff like that.
So entertaining the troops even early on.
Yes, very much.
And I would say my first impressions
were always my teachers.
And even though I loved school
and I was a very good student,
I found just endless comedy in the way
that my teachers acted and, you know, that kind of stuff.
And did your mom and dad find that funny or was that a...
Yes, my dad was like sort of the comedian
and still is like the comedian among his friends.
Like he was always doing impressions
and stuff for his friends. That he was always doing impressions and stuff
for his friends.
That's where I think I got a lot of that from.
And so it sort of was like,
we were always doing like a bit of a comedy,
an ensemble performance in our house.
Yeah, for me it was my mother.
Really?
My mother, anything creative, she would celebrate and laugh at all my little silly, stupid things,
but just unconditional joy over anything I attempted that was creative.
She hated real guns.
She wouldn't buy me toy guns, but if I carved out of wood a little pistol looking thing,
she would celebrate the creativity of it.
Yeah.
Yes, I had a similar thing where when I was really little,
my mom wouldn't buy me a lot of costumes
and stuff like that,
but I would take curtains and make dress.
Like she would let me just kind of,
in some ways, rip the house apart and get materials and sort of like make my own dresses
and stuff and that was, you know, I mean,
she would let me wear stuff out of the house.
I looked insane all the time.
And then I would, I had really short curly hair.
Like people said I looked like Orphan Annie and stuff.
Oh, you have it on your podcast.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The two, it's great.
I know, it's great.
And it's crazy.
And I would put, my mom would help me tie this really thick yarn into my hair that I
felt like made it look like I had long hair, because it would be around my head and then
hanging down.
And then I would get those like packs of barrettes that has like 20 different barrettes of different
colors and different like designs.
And I would just put all 20 in my hair
and then I would put two kind of near my ears
to look like I had two earrings.
And this is, and my, and just put like,
throw on like a bathing suit and a tutu
and I'm ready for school.
And yeah.
And school would welcome you with open arms?
They would welcome me.
My friend Emily later told me she was scared of me.
I think she probably wasn't the only one.
I'm a little nervous.
But yeah, I would dress like that.
And my mom actually, she was interviewing for a job at the JCC in our community and
it helped her get the job, I guess, because a woman who ran, who was interviewing her had seen me and was like,
Carolyn really lets her daughter express herself and I think that's like a good
quality in someone. Yeah. So actually-
Is that your mom's name?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I guess it, yeah, benefited everyone.
I have to geek out for a minute because I'm almost embarrassed talking to you
because I'm still kind of being the fan for a moment, but you have an
ability. One Saturday Night Live person I know really well and adore is Will Forte.
Yeah.
And you, and if this comparison is odious for you, I'm sorry. I don't think so.
Let me just talk about you, but there's a similarity.
His, your world that you create a character,
the character lives in this world that is insane
and weird and wonderful and just off the charts.
And then you inhabit that world in such a real, genuine way.
I did think you're a great character actor.
I really do.
Thank you so, thank you so much.
I'm such a huge fan of yours.
That's what I was going for.
Let me just geek out, sorry.
I'm beginning to relax.
I love Cheers.
I just started rewatching it recently
before I knew I was doing this podcast
and you're so great in it.
And also I hope everyone always, I'm such a huge Three Men and a Baby fan.
Thank you.
I mean, you just, you were such a part of, I don't know.
It's, you know, I, and I haven't watched Three Men and a Baby recently, but.
How old are you, man?
I'm 41, almost 42.
Right.
So I was kind of the perfect,
I was on the younger side of the Three Men and a Baby demo,
but I loved it.
And I loved Three Men and a Little Lady.
Thank you, thank you.
I have a list of my credits,
we can just go one by one.
But you truly are a great character actor,
I really believe that.
And I only got to see clips, because I missed for some reason.
What is the name of the show you did on?
Oh, I love that for you. Yeah.
I love that. Yeah.
I can't. Is that over?
We're trying to figure out a way for it not to be.
Oh, yes, you must, because it really is wonderful.
Thank you so much.
I have something that I wanted to tell you,
which is that I was almost your daughter-in-law.
Wait, are you talking Charlie in real life?
Charlie McDowell.
Charlie and I went on a date.
Oh, I love that.
I love this.
And can you, okay.
Let's talk trash.
Can we talk trash?
I know we're, no, no, so we went on a date.
I know we're drinking, are these from Cafe Gratitude?
That's where Charlie and I went.
We went on a, we went on a coffee date.
Right.
I think it went well, okay.
There was, there was some texting after.
Yeah.
And I'm thinking.
Which is a sign, right?
Wait, of course.
For you kids, yeah.
You know, if there's no texting after, then it's over. Yeah. But there was texting after. And I'm thinking... Which is a sign, right? Of course. You know, if there's no texting after, then it's over.
But there was texting after. Okay.
And, you know, I...
We didn't...
I know he's like married now.
And he has a beautiful, very talented wife.
And I know her dad is very cool, but...
But, go ahead. my dad is cool too.
You know what I mean?
And not only does he have a packaging company,
so just to kind of suss out him versus Phil Collins,
like just thinking, he has a package company,
like if you, let's say you buy a CD.
Go on, yes, I'm fascinated.
And you open it and then you decide you don't want to keep it.
Right.
Well, you can't return it because you took out the shrink wrap.
Well, that's where my dad comes in.
He puts shrink wrap.
When we were in high school, he would shrink wrap stuff.
You know, it might be considered a petty crime or whatever,
but he would shrink wrap stuff and we could return it.
Not only that.
Well, take that in for a second before I tell you another cool thing about my dad.
Yeah, no, I understand because that would enamor me
to you right away.
I don't know what Charlie's problem is.
Well, okay.
And again, not trying to talk trash about anyone
or anything, but that would have been your life
had, you know what I mean?
And also, my dad claims to be the first Todd.
The first?
The first person to ever be named Todd.
Do you think that's true, Vanessa?
Well, I support it, um, blindly.
Right.
You know, I do think that his parents had a unique thought of,
you know, Todd is a last name generally.
Let's take this name and make it a first name.
And so I believe that, but it may be other people did. It doesn't matter.
I think he generally is the first Todd.
Did you get a chance to tell us the Charlie? Because I can't believe.
I know that things didn't... well, the thing is, I, I,
I hope it isn't something I did, but I think I, I think things went really well.
And I just, can't you just see like me at all of your family?
Yes.
You know, me and Todd and Carolyn and my brother Jonah and we're coming over
and we're some shrink wrap and we're, and we're coming over. And some shrink rap. And we're some shrink rap.
And we're going, hey, what do you need rap?
We'll take it back to Cleveland and we'll rap it for you.
Hey, do me a favor.
We have to text.
Do you still have his number?
Of course I do.
Of course you do.
And by the way, we did try to see each other again.
Not recently though, please God.
No, not recently.
Thank you.
Not recently.
No, no, no, no.
Take it.
That'll get all over TMZ.
We didn't know, not recently, but after the date we were trying to make plans again.
And it didn't ever happen. Now, how do you know it was we tried to get together?
Well, but it's just a side note.
And I've met your wife, very briefly,
I've met your wife Mary Steenbridge,
and I was like, she would be a great mother-in-law for me.
She would.
And anything cellophane really appeals to her.
Yeah. She's probably buying stuff all the time.
All the time.
She goes, I changed my mind. You're allowed to change your mind.
How am I going to pack it just back up and return it?
It's already been open.
Again, that's where the first Todd comes in.
We tried to...
This is getting a little sad. What? Don't plead don't, don't, this is getting a little sad.
Don't plead with Charlie.
I think that'd be wrong.
Well, no, no, no, no, no.
I'm happy for him.
I'm just saying there was a moment in time when I was basically about to be your daughter.
And I think we were texting once after the first date, again, this is years ago.
This is well before he started seeing his, just to be clear.
I think he was in like Martha's Vineyard with you.
And I thought, what if I get to go there and I get to meet everybody?
Oh, that would have been cool.
That would have been.
We would have had a weekend.
Okay, this is what happens to me when I do banter with a professional and you're a professional
banter, I start to panic.
Really, I get scared like when my sister would chase me around the corner.
I'd be ahead of her, but I'd stop and scream at some point because it was just too much
for my nervous system.
You're too much for my nervous system.
So simmer down, please.
Okay, I'm done.
But I'm glad we talked about it because I think about it not that often, like once a
day. We're immediately cutting a clip and sending this to Charlie.
And Lily Collins, who you would adore.
I'm sure I would love her.
And I'm a huge Phil Collins fan.
Do you think that the three of you?
And Lily Collins fan.
But I'm, I'm, I'm both of them.
Is Todd alive?
He is alive, yes.
Oh, so Todd, Phil.
The thing is, why not invite us to your next?
You are gonna be so kuflutzt
when you get an invitation from the entire family.
You are gonna have to deliver.
I'm gonna have to come bring Todd and Carolyn
and Jonah and his wife
Vicki and we'll all you know we'll bring what tell us what to bring. Now was the
the company of your dad's the cellophane rewrap thing was that is that true? It is
yes. And is it still true? Well there aren't that many CDs. You know they do
all kind they do all kinds of packaging so a a lot of times, do you know what a blister pack is?
No.
A blister pack is, I know this because of my dad, obviously.
It's like, you know when you sometimes buy two-
Oh, and it's got a little bubble blister thing on the-
Exactly, over it.
Like two, one bug spray and you get one free.
You know, and it's on a cardboard backing
and it's got like a plastic thing
over it.
That's a blister pack.
Oh, gotcha, gotcha.
I'm trying to think of other examples that are sort of escaping my mind.
And he has since sold the company, but he goes in several times a week because he loves
it so much.
And there's a guy who he sold it to who I feel is his sort of is sort of the child
he never had because my brother and I, he was like, do you want to take over this packaging
business? And we were like, no. But this guy, you know, loves loves them and they're both
into like fishing and stuff like that.
Okay, I'm going to yank us away from this. Okay, okay. Because once again, I'm scared. Okay. Okay, so this is a little vision of your life in there,
pre-15, and you talk about having leukemia.
So is this an okay thing to be talking about?
Of course.
Because I had to inform your comedy.
Yeah.
Well, let me jump ahead before I ask technical stuff,
but I think that if I'm guessing, having not survived something
at age 15, most people don't have to live with the possibility of dying at age 15.
And if you get through to the other side of that, to me, it must be, what the fuck?
I'm going to go for life.
There's nothing holding me back.
I just faced that, got through it.
It must be like being an aristocrat.
You're above some fear because you did it.
You dealt with the unmentionable.
Is any of that ring a bell or not?
Yeah, I think so. I think after getting through that experience, it's funny because I don't necessarily think
about it that way, but I think that what you're saying is correct.
It's like I sort of felt, because I do have, especially when it comes to my career in this
weird way, I have this like almost like I'm living on another planet,
sense of confidence about it.
And I don't mean that I'm egotistical about it, I hope.
But just that-
About what?
About my career and stuff.
It just like in my mind, I'm like,
I always feel like everything is like great and going to be fine because
I think because I went through that thing.
I just, I think I do have this sense of like, I'm going to be fine.
I can get through this like no problem, a little bit type of thing. And I think being sick at that age, it brought out like a lot of characteristics that were
already I think in me, but made them strong.
Like even comedy, I was, you know, like I said, when I was younger, I was already doing
impressions of my teachers and stuff like that.
But then when I got sick, I realized doing that kind of stuff, and maybe I'm going off
topic, but doing that kind of stuff, and maybe I'm going off topic, but doing that kind of stuff
made my friends feel really comfortable
and reminded my friends and my family that I was still the same Vanessa, you know?
Still alive, don't be mourning me.
Yeah, yeah.
And talk to me about stupid school gossip stuff.
Like you don't have to just be like, how are you, you know,
I want to still know I'm still a teenager, I still want to, I'm same and so the comedy and we might as I was saying my dad was really funny and
We were always joking about things and in our house about me being sick too
And the way even like the way if people were being really like sort of pitying towards me
I found that to be funny sometimes because I I think that was easier than it being depressing.
You know what I mean?
But also, maybe not, you didn't think this at the time,
but it's so smart, too.
I mean, if you want to heal, you live in the moment and love and joy
and laughter and humor as opposed to pity, sorrow, fear, or scared.
And if you have to host everybody's fear for you, you know, it would drag you and your
health down.
But being able to defang it with humor was so smart, I think.
Thank you.
Yeah, it was really helpful because, and I think I went into it, I was always sort of
an optimistic person and I think that helped with that too. Like I never really got into a very dark place
emotionally, especially, you know, while I was going through it. And like, it is really,
if you can get yourself there, it is really funny how people treat you when you're sick because like this
great aunt of mine sent me like a bracelet. Like now's not the time. I don't have anywhere
to wear this thing. I had to break it to you. But it's like, thanks for the bracelet.
For your little hospital band.
Yeah, thanks for the bracelet because I'm sick. And people just, it's so funny what people do and say to you.
And also, and this all relates to my show.
And it's when I used to do more standup,
I used to do standup about it,
but the perks you get are like out of this world too.
If you can focus on that and sort of like
bring your mind to that, like being in high school, like all you want to do is come in late, you know?
You don't and you can come in late as much as you want when you're sick.
And they don't, they think it's because you're like throwing up, but you're like, no, no, no.
I just, I'm a teenager.
I want to sleep.
Exactly.
I finally got a TV in my room and I wanted to take advantage of it.
And because you're watching in the morning.
Okay.
And, uh, and it just, I didn't have to do gym class.
That's like the thing.
That's the example that I use for people that if someone's talking to, that's
the, that's the biggest thing that I fit.
I didn't have to keep, imagine being a teenager, you hate going to gym class.
You have to change into the outfit and you have to get sweaty in the middle of the day
and then get right back into your clothes.
I didn't have to do it.
No fun.
Yeah.
How about your folks?
Yeah.
Because I think sometimes being the parent of somebody
who's going through stuff is really hard.
Yes.
Did they ever shared with you how that was for them
or did you see it?
I could see it a little and I knew, you know, I knew they would trade places with me in
a moment and they, but they, it's interesting.
They didn't let me see a lot of their real, they didn't, I think they didn't want to burden
me with like how emotional they were feeling about it.
But I got really close with them and with my mom and I got so close that we would get
stomach aches at the same time and stuff.
She was always around and she was, her JCC job, which I helped her get, she was able
to take a lot of time off and just be with me all
the time. And that was so, we have such an incredible mom to this day because of that.
But I know it was horrible for them, but they were able to have some fun with it too. Like
my dad, my dad would call it dropping the album when he would use it, my leukemia as
an excuse. Like he got, I feel weird because this is all stuff that I've done standup about.
I'm not trying to do my standup to you, but he did get pulled over for speeding once.
And by the way, this was like years after I was done with treatment.
And he said like, my daughter has leukemia and I can't stop thinking, sorry.
And he didn't get the ticket and like he like came
Home and he was like I dropped the Elma like people we would come home with examples all the time left and right and like
Hey, I said you had leukemia and they gave me this thing for free
You know like it was it was I'm sure it was horrible for them
But they were able to get themselves at times
You know when they were with me to that place when I needed it to be yeah
So were you home for a period of time
or would it be treatments that would keep you home,
but you kept doing high school at the same time?
Yeah, so I got diagnosed over spring break of ninth grade
and then I didn't go back to school
for the rest of ninth grade.
I did treatment.
Can I jump in?
Yes.
That moment though, what was that moment?
Probably was not, oh, I'll find a humorous way
to deal with this moment.
Was it kind of stunning or not?
It was so weird to be like,
you're not going back to school for the rest of the year.
I was like, I remember being in the hospital
and being like, that's crazy.
Like I'm not, I guess I'm done for the school year.
But, and I'm not trying to be a comedian
and turn everything into comedy,
but people were visiting me in the hospital
and it was really fun to see them.
And then my brother would,
so my brother went back to school
and as I said, he's two years older,
and he would come home from school
and I'd be like, Jonah, who asked about me today?
And so all the sudden I
Was getting as someone who already liked attention
I was getting like all this attention and I was like, okay this kind of rocks and I went to I
Remember I went to like a football game
And I wore like my new wig that I had just gotten and people people were like, my best friend Gwen, who's still my best friend,
went with me.
And she was like,
it was almost as if she was my security guard,
like blocking people from being able to like say,
like it was just like everything felt like
everyone was so concerned about me.
And of course, you know, I'm focusing on the, whatever,
but everyone was so concerned about me
and I liked that everyone was thinking about me.
Yeah.
You know, as an actor, it's like,
what could be better than everyone being like,
what's going on with her?
Yeah.
And can we jump in to make a wish
because didn't that happen in your life? Yes. I have a crazy
yeah, I went to me because
Just I love make-a-wish and I and I try and and and support them, you know in any way I can
I don't know why I said that but the it's true. Okay, that's why I said it
But I did do a make-A-Wish trip.
And that's just so people know,
people think that you have to be terminal to do Make-A-Wish
and you just have to have a life-threatening disease.
Okay, so I fit the.
And I got to go to Hawaii with my family.
But my first wish was actually,
what I thought I was gonna do
is I was really into My Soul Called Life.
I don't know if you ever watched that show with Claire Danes and Jared Leto.
And I had such a crush on Jared Leto and I was like, I think I'm going to try and meet
Jared Leto because you can meet anyone, get anything, or go anywhere.
Those are like the three things you can do.
And at the time, a lot of people, computers and the internet were like really popular
then, and a lot of people were getting computers,
which I was like, I gotta meet someone.
Anyway, so I was like, maybe I'll meet Jared Leto.
And then, and this is kind of an example
of what I was telling you about,
like how it sort of gave me this weird confidence.
As a teenager, I said to my parents,
I actually don't think I'm going to have my make-a-wish be
to meet Jared Leto because I'd rather meet him when we're peers, when I'm older.
Jared Smedley At age what? Did you say that?
Adrienne Leal 17?
Jared Smedley That's brilliant.
Adrienne Leal I know. And then I was presenting at the MTV
Video Awards, like a couple years into my time at SNL, and so was he, and that's where I met him,
which is crazy.
Jared Smed. Fantastic.
Yeah.
You do manifest really well.
I guess so.
Yeah, you do.
I guess so.
So, but then I went to Hawaii with my family and it was incredible.
Where'd you go?
We went to Maui and we, I can't remember the name of the hotel we stayed at, but we
were in the presidential suite and I remember we were like so into the bathrobes and all this stuff.
And we got to like go out to, it was so fun.
It was just great.
And it was great to get that time with my family, you know?
And I remember a limo took us to the airport and I had never been in a limo
before and I was like, this is, this is life, you know?
And do you work with Make-A-Wish?
life, you know? And do you work with Make-A-Wish? I have hosted a couple of their galas and when I lived in Chicago I volunteered with them a bit and so I try
and sort of stay knowledgeable about what they're doing and if they need me
to do something. Yeah. We've done stuff but it's usually because somebody won a
lunch with it's to raise money for that
I haven't but I haven't really hung around with
Well the organization which yeah, I should
Sometimes make-a-wish kids would come to SNL and that was really special for me because I was like, oh my god
That this is your wish and I get to be part of it
And then I would also think like maybe I should have have done this, but I got to work there.
So that's cool.
Okay.
So you got a clean bill of health.
When when I stopped treatment the summer before my senior year of high school and I had a
big end of chemo party at my house and it's funny costume party or party party.
It was just like, tell your friends I'm having it.
I called a few friends that I felt were really connected and I said, invite everybody.
We're hanging in my backyard and we're having an end of chemo party.
And I got my brother's band to play at it.
I think he was in college, so I guess he was home for the summer and his band played outside
and actually somebody called the police
because of like a noise thing which we're we're from a suburb of Cleveland
like it's not like there's like strict noise rules but somebody called the
police and the police came and they thought we were having like an
underage drinking party and boy did they feel bad when they found out what the party was really for. LAUGHS
That's amazing.
Yeah.
Okay, so off you go from high school to where?
Where did you go to...?
To U-Penn.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
That's not in Pittsburgh.
In Philly.
In Philly.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
And theater, anything in there?
Yes. While you're about to hit on something that I talk about almost every day, which is my
all-female sketch comedy and musical parody troupe, Bloomers.
Which I was in this group called Bloomers that was a, I just explained it to you.
You created it?
No.
It actually had been around since like 1975, I think. And it's really funny.
I was just telling some of the story.
I was so, because it was like all these East Coast people
at my college, I was so like not in the know
about anything.
I was coming from the Midwest and everyone, anyways,
so there was this freshman performing arts night
where all the performing arts groups
did a little performance and then they were like,
we really need people to come audition,
like please come audition.
And I took them at their word, okay?
I thought these acapella groups, this hip hop dance group,
they need people.
So I'm gonna try and help them out.
I'm gonna audition.
If they need somebody, I'm here for them.
I should have known when
I, like the first one I went to, there were like a hundred names. And I remember this
one girl who I had met, she was like, what are you auditioning with? I was like, what
are you auditioning with? And she was like, I'm going to sing like a prayer. This is for
this acapella group. And I was like, oh, key. And she was like, what are you doing? And
I was like, give my regards to Broadway.
Because the last time I had auditioned for anything
was like middle school theater.
So I was like, this is what you audition for.
It's a singing group.
You have to do like a classic Broadway hit.
Yeah.
So I auditioned for that.
I auditioned for this group that John Legend
either was in or started called Counterparts.
And I think I did either give my regards to Broadway or never fully dressed without a smile
from Annie, you know, and everyone's doing like current pop songs. But I'm like, this is okay.
I'm auditioning for all these groups being like, they need people. So I'm helping them out. Then I auditioned for bloomers, which was the comedy group, which in my mind I had been like this is probably
the right fit for me anyway, but I was thinking if I have to do multiple groups because they need people I will.
But anyways, they didn't. But bloomers I
auditioned for and we had to do all of this
improvise all this stuff and everything and, it was like the first time I ever was like, Oh, I can do something other
than be good at studying in school.
You know, all my friends growing up were really athletic and I was like, what must
it be like to have like a skill like that?
And with comedy, then we were, you know, we got to write sketches and do sketches
and all this stuff and it was so, it was like, it almost in some ways
took my focus off of my schoolwork because I was like,
I'm still gonna, you know, pass my classes
and do all that stuff, but this feels like
this is where my life is going.
I had that.
I faked my way through.
I was a daydreamer.
I think now I realize that I can read and enjoy a book, but if I have to retain it,
I don't do as well as if you tell me something.
I will retain it listening better than reading.
So school was never easy for me
and I faked my way through it.
I was always the imposter that somehow got through.
Even to the point where I got into Stanford.
Wow.
But the first day I was like,
not only do I not know what that professor just said,
I don't know what the student said
who was sitting next to me.
I was just so out of it that when I did find acting,
it was like my whole life made sense.
Yeah.
I moved my station wagon with a sleeping bag in the back
to the theater and never left.
It was like, ah, and I still have that same feeling today.
Yeah.
Thank God, because I would not,
I don't know what I would have done.
It's such a nice feeling,
is it to just be like,
yeah, you get it.
And it feels so nice to be doing,
to be able to have found the thing
that like makes you happy and that you understand.
Can you see that in college, that when you joined the group, the beginning of you in
Saturday Night Live, were you starting to do that kind of work, that kind of character?
Yeah, it was, we were writing sketches and performing them, which is exactly what you
do at SNL.
And if you don't think that anyone I worked with at SNL doesn't know about bloomers, you're wrong. I talk about bloomers so much.
Was it well known as well?
It was not. It's much more well known now because I've talked about it so much. But
it was the only, there was an all male. Now they, anyone who's like in an, I guess they
say like underrepresented gender can be in it. So you don't necessarily have to identify
as a woman to be in it, but there was this, but at the time it was the girl group and
Mask and Wig is the male, is like the male group at Penn and they had been around for
over a hundred years and they wouldn't let women in and so they were the really popular group and we were sort of the
group that was started in the 70s that was like gaining momentum and I do
think that me getting on SNL was a real was helpful to the popularity
although they're also like when I see their shows are so much funnier
now than ours were. I mean we love doing it and I think we were really creative and stuff but
some of the stuff that I wrote during that time was bad. Did some of it though, did you pull it
out of your little, I'll pretend like this is brand new, but did you take stuff that you wrote?
Yeah, I mean I well before I got on SNL and I don't know how many people actually read it,
I submitted a writing packet and so much of it was bloomers stuff.
I'm trying to think if anything, there was this one sketch that we wrote where,
in bloomers, that I guess that I wrote that was like a show
and tell thing in a classroom and I played this little boy Austin who had
this rock anyways it was sort of like similar to the bar mitzvah boy character
that I was working on. Which I just devoured for like 24 hours. That's so nice.
That's so nice. So fucking good. And the same basic bit.
Yes, yes.
Over and over again and it killed me each time you would
slightly annoyed, ignore the question
that was just asked you.
You know what's funny is that my brother's friends
who saw me doing it on the show were like,
even friends of his that were not childhood friends
were like, you're doing an impression of Jonah.
And I didn't even realize it.
And what I thought it came from was more,
every weekend in seventh grade,
we had a bar but mitzvah to go to.
And that's what I based it on was like,
that all the boys were too young to be so formal
to the point where they didn't know where
to put their hands and like that's where some of the stuff I would try and do is like if
they had to push up their glasses they'd be like, like they just, like they just like
don't know how to, it's so formal for them.
They're just too young.
Whereas the girls mostly were like performing their hearts out and doing great.
Did you have to, how did you get into Saturday Night Live? Did you audition on
your own or were you asked? Did somebody see you?
Yes. So, I did a showcase at I.O. in Chicago, which used to be called Improv Olympic.
I did a showcase there.
I had to audition for the owner, this woman Sharna, and I auditioned.
I had actually, well, to back up, I got, a year before I got on SNL, I got weirdly focused
on it.
Like before that, I hadn't, I knew I loved SNL,
but I hadn't like really envisioned myself on it yet,
or maybe I had, but like I wasn't that focused on it.
And so then about a year before I got on,
I took this class with this director, Matt Miller,
who basically you would come in and you would do like
a series of characters and impressions
for like five minutes in front of a class and then he and the class would
give you notes on on it and then and basically one thing that he taught us
which I thought was such great advice was like at SNL that the the cast writes
so it's not enough to just have a funny character the character has to be saying
something funny because then they know you're a good writer too.
So I did this workshop where I did these five minutes
in front of this class and I got notes.
And then you just come back two weeks later
and you put yourself on, he puts you on tape.
Doing the same material.
Doing the same material, but by this point,
hopefully you've worked on it for two weeks
with the notes he gave and the class gave
and you've gotten, and you've improved it.
So I did this five minutes and then I came back and I did and I remember my like Miley Cyrus was
part of it because I remember watching SNL and being like I can't believe no one's doing an
impression of her. She's so popular. She has and I love Miley but she has such a distinct way of
talking and how are people not jumping all over this? This feels like, you know, you know, so
anyways, I did like a couple impressions and characters and then I gave this tape to
the owner of IO and the agent that I had at the time with my five minutes on it and I
didn't hear anything and then I remember following up and the agency that I was at at the time was like oh we don't have their info do you
have it and I remember being like this is bad. But then a year later they...
And where are you New York or no? I'm in Chicago. I'm sorry I didn't explain. I was in Chicago.
Right, right. Which is where I moved after college because I interned especially
when I interned at Conan during college. Our mutual boss. Our mutual boss. I found that a lot of the
writers and the creative people working there that I thought were so funny had
started in Chicago. So that's why I moved to Chicago after college. Even though I
had interned in New York for two summers and my parents were like, maybe moved to
New York where we've like, you've made all these connections and we've kind of helped you out
while you do these unpaid internships.
It was unpaid at the time, but probably now you have to pay people.
Make a fortune.
Make a fortune on internships.
But so I moved to Chicago and I was in Chicago and I made this tape and I gave it to people,
nobody did anything with it. And then the next year SNL was coming to Chicago,
which they do every summer to scout people.
And they come to, I think they do Chicago, New York and LA.
But Chicago is like a, which is incredible.
It's so great that they do that every year.
But anyways, so they were coming to Chicago
and I auditioned for the owner of IO
and basically did exactly what was on that tape.
I mean, I just rewatched it and did,
and she put me in the showcase
and I did this SNL showcase in Chicago
that like Lorne and a bunch of the writers had come for it.
And it was this cool thing they used to do
where they didn't ever announce
the SNL showcase, but people in Chicago kind of knew about it. And there would be like
a line around the block to go see the showcase.
Oh, that's brilliant. So they watched you in action.
So it was like them, but also an audience of, and actually I didn't get in the first
night. It ran really long because people were supposed to stick to five minutes and they didn't.
And so I got pushed to the next night and which was first for a second.
I thought I got pushed to like next year, but then they added a second night.
And my one of my best friends, Kitty, couldn't get in the first night because the line was too long.
And she got in the second night and I got to just just basically look at her the whole time I was auditioning,
which was so special.
But yeah, so I did this show, Kate.
I did like five minutes for this roomful,
in this theater that I was very comfortable in.
And that was so fun.
And then like a week later,
I found out that they were flying me to New York
to do like a screen test.
And I basically did a lot of the same characters but I added a couple. On the
stage? Yeah, on the stage. And I remember it made me laugh so hard. It's so funny my friend and I
just rewatched Wayne's World and you know in Wayne's World how there's the
thing where he talks about how they go like four, three and they don't say two.
And they, I remember the stage manager did that.
And I almost started, like, I was so,
I was in like a really good headspace for it.
Like, I was pretty relaxed if that was making me, yeah.
Yeah, and I remember they put me in Andy Samberg's dressing room
when I was waiting to audition,
and I was the second to last person to audition of the day.
And I was, my friend told me to bring music, and I was the second to last person to audition of the day.
And I was, my friend told me to bring music and I was like listening to music.
I was just like, I was like, how am I attitude about it?
And I do think that some of this came from what we were talking about of like me being
sick and getting through this stuff.
I was like, how many people get to do this?
Like I'm just going to enjoy this, you know, even if I don't get into the cast or whatever, just the fact that they flew me to New York to do this
audition is so incredible. Like, I have to just enjoy it and, you know, be
present for it. But what you're saying, pardon me, is to me like a superhuman
quality, you know, that alone will get you so far in life, I think.
I really do.
I have to say to myself, before you and I sat down, this is a privilege, Ted.
This is a privilege.
Don't miss it by being nervous or too self-aware or whatever. I, I, you know.
That's not normal is what I'm saying.
That's so nice. I mean, I don't always, I'm not always that way. It's just, I think,
I wonder if it is because I was sick and sometimes I had to sort of almost trick myself into being
like it. I think I, I do have this ability to when I need to, I can put myself there.
Into that head space, I guess.
Okay, so you were there, you enjoyed it.
Yeah.
People laughed?
That was the thing, it was like,
everyone had told me that no one's gonna laugh,
don't take that personally.
And then, and I heard the audition before me
and I remember this woman was like singing a song parody,
which we did a lot in bloomers, but I didn't choose to do that in my showcase.
And nobody was laughing.
And I remember being like, she's doing fine because nobody laughs and it's fine.
And then I went out there and I just wasn't expecting laughter.
And then after I did my first character, everyone started laughing and I couldn't believe it.
But I just sort of kept going. And they kind of, there was one character, one or
two that they didn't laugh after, but they kind of were laughing throughout
the thing. And then I don't know if this is, I don't mean to, this was just
such a crazy thing that happened was a friend of mine, Amy Phillips, who I've known forever.
She was there too. And she, when I came out of the audition, because basically it was like,
once people were done auditioning, they could watch the rest of the auditions on the monitor.
But I was second to last, so I couldn't really, and I didn't even know that existed,
but I wasn't going to come out of my dressing room and watch. I was, you know, and so she said to me, she said, she said, everyone clapped at the end,
Vanessa.
And I was like, they did?
And she said, yeah, everybody clapped.
And I didn't, I still to this day, don't remember that happening.
But when she told me that I was like, oh my God, yeah, I didn't know.
It was, it was, It was an amazing experience.
But also I was like we were talking about.
I was in such a specific head space
that I think I was just floating or something.
I don't know.
I do sometimes think that there's a part of us
that knows when something big is happening, you know, some version of it
and that it's going to all be okay and this is where I'm supposed to be.
How long before you got verification that you were brilliant and you're going to...
So then they flew me back a week later or so, like about a week later to meet with some
of the writers and Seth.
I think they kind of-
Was Seth the head writer?
Seth was the head writer.
And I think they kind of try and make sure you're not insane or hard to work with because
you spend so much time together and so many comedians are.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So they flew me back and I had some meetings and stuff and then I met with Lorne and I
remember that's where I met Taryn Killam who's one of my closest friends and who I
love and it was so funny.
That's the other thing that's really special about SNL and probably a lot of acting jobs, like a
lot of shows and stuff that you've done is like, it brings people together that are from
such different backgrounds.
Like again, I'm this sort of like Midwest, you know, I don't know anything and Taryn
is there and he lives in LA and his wife is on How I Met Your Mother at the time.
And people are like, how's your wife doing?
How's her show or something?
And I'm like, I live in Chicago and I like, you know,
I love Starbucks or whatever.
That wasn't a good example, but you know what I mean?
I'm like, his wife is on How I Met Your Mother. I'm just like, okay, like a little out of my league and
But he he's one like he it's just like it we're so close and we come from it's like it brings people together
That I think wouldn't have met otherwise is what I'm saying
But anyways, I waited I think two two and a half hours to meet with Lauren in the waiting room outside of his office
with Taryn for part of the time, you think, two, two and a half hours to meet with Lorne in the waiting room outside of his office with Taryn for part of the time.
You know, like, we, and it was just, you just,
I think there's a lot of waiting when you do that show, you know?
It's a lot of, you're there all the time and oftentimes it's, you know,
just waiting for something and I think they're sort of also testing you
and making sure that you can...
Fit in.
Yeah, you can handle it.
You don't get like.
Life is too short.
Yeah, yeah.
So, I met with Lorne and he was talking to me about how the show hits you like a wave
and then you recover and he's using all these sort of like, and I don't know, I'm like,
am I high? You know, like, and at
one point I remember he asked me, do I have any questions for him? And I'm like, and I'm
such a huge Chris Farley fan, I mean, and I was like, maybe I have a Chris- and I'm like,
I'm not, I don't know how to ask, like, I don't want to bring up, I don't know how to ask. Like I don't want to bring up, I don't know what I would ask.
Yeah.
So, and then I'm like, there's so many things in my mind.
There's so many things I want to ask him,
but nothing is like coming together.
So I said, I think I said like, I'm sure I do,
but I can't think of anything now or something.
I'm sorry, that story didn't have a great ending.
But so that's what I said.
And then he said, well,
we'll let you know in the next 24 hours.
Okay. So my parents-
And you're still in the same head space as you were when you auditioned.
Yeah, I think so. Pretty much.
I'm just like, this is all incredible.
Yeah.
And this is about a week after I auditioned.
I'm back in New York, maybe two weeks. But so he's like, we'll let you know in the next 24 hours. So, so 24 hours
go by, my parents stay awake for the entire 24 hours, which is so sweet. And they're like,
it's been 24 hours, my parents and I'm like, it's going to be longer. I'm like, it's, I'm
not, I'm not saying that I got it. I'm, but I was like, it's gonna be longer. I'm like, it's I'm not I'm not saying that I got it
And but I was like based on how everything has gone up till now. I
Don't think I don't think that this is a reason to think that I didn't get it and then like a week later
One of the producers called me and she said
She said how are you doing? And I said, I'm I'm still
Exhausted from that whirlwind trip
to New York, but it was so fun meeting you and seeing everybody.
And she said, well, I hope you aren't too exhausted
to come back to New York
because we'd like to hire you as a cast member.
And then I said, what if I said I was too tired?
Because I had like no filter, you know?
I was so excited and there was just silence on the phone. And then I was like, I'm not, I'm not too filter, you know, I was so excited and there just silence on the phone.
And then I was like, I'm not, I'm not too tired, you know.
And then what was so crazy was I was so excited and they said like, please don't tell, she
said please don't tell anyone because we're going to make an official announcement about
it.
But she was like, we'll let everybody know, like we'll let the press know soon or whatever.
So again, I'm living in Chicago and I have to move to New York and it's a week passes.
They still haven't said anything to me.
Finally me and my friend Paul Britton have both been hired and we both have to leave
Chicago and without telling anyone why.
But some blog picked it up and broke the news
and we still had to deny it.
But everybody knew, it's so weird that they're,
like in the middle of the year,
just getting up and leaving.
But then we couldn't, it was so weird
because we couldn't say anything.
And it was getting to the point where like,
I told my parents, I swore them to secrecy
because I had heard sort of horror stories about cast members telling people too early.
And so I mean, nothing horrible had ever happened, but I was so warned.
My agent in Chicago was like, you cannot tell a soul, tell your parents they can't tell
me.
I had family members calling my parents being like, it's really like in a lot of the trades
that she's hired. And I'm living in New York in this time and my parents have to be like,
well, you know, that's the trades, you know, like they, my parents have to tell like their
family members because I was like, you cannot tell anyone. Yeah. It was crazy. It was crazy.
Just a month of kind of lying to everyone close to me.
Just a heads up, if we become close friends as a result of this podcast, do not tell me anything.
Don't want me, unless it's really genuinely personal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But if it's like good news, nah. I'm out the door screaming it to the rafters.
Well, that's the thing is like, it was such good news that I was like,
people are going to want to talk about it.
So you just can't tell anyone.
So I think I told my best friend Gwen and my brother and my parents,
and that was it.
Who was your first skit partner that made it on the show?
I'm trying to think of something that I wrote.
Uh-huh.
Um.
Oh, no.
First off, did they just start putting you in?
Yeah.
I was the first line of my first episode.
It was like Jason Sudeikis and Kristen Wiig were in something, and it was like a political
thing.
I truly don't even remember what it was about. And I open the door and I say, like,
so-and-so is here to see you.
But because it was the first line of that season,
I open the door and everyone cheers.
And then I say, like, so-and-so is here to see you.
And it's so...
I had friends in Chicago who were, like,
doing viewing parties and stuff.
And they were all like...
Because I also, I told everybody before,
I said, I might not be in the show at all.
They keep saying, you might not be in the show.
You might, and I opened the door
and I'm the first one to speak.
And all my friends like afterwards were like,
we were like losing our minds.
We couldn't believe like first thing out of the gate,
you were speaking.
It was so exciting.
And I think that they did it on purpose.
And I wonder if they do that a lot
at the beginning of seasons,
if they have like a new person say the first line
Yeah, because it's like so much applause and it's so exciting. Yeah to start
Yeah, and were you super nervous or just I was really nervous. I was really nervous. I was so excited though
Yeah, one quick question doesn't sound I think I know the answer to this but I know several people who?
Came out of Saturday Night Live that almost had post-traumatic stress as a result.
Some people, it's made for them.
I'm sure Tina Fey did not, Seth Meyers,
a lot of people didn't, it was made for them.
Where do you fall on that line?
Because it is the pressure. Yeah.
It's not only be funny.
It's not only you're going to be live be funny,
but there's a competition to get on in the first place.
Yes.
Even if you love your castmates, you're in a competition.
Yeah.
I mean, I think I'm lucky in that I left on really good terms and I was able to leave on my own terms, which
is sort of a hard, and what I feel was like the right time.
Like I stayed for seven years and that was our contract.
And then, you know, I remember I told Lorne that I was gonna
leave like around March and I don't think he... I don't know, like he was like...
I think he sort of was like, okay, but I don't know that he fully thought that I
was really gonna leave and... And you were a big hit. Well, I mean, you were. That's so nice. You never feel that way or maybe some people do. No, but in the press you were a big hit.
I mean, you were.
That's so nice.
You never feel that way, or maybe some people do.
No, but in the press you were a big hit.
In the audience you were a big hit, whether they told you that or not.
Thank you.
That's so nice.
It's true, right?
So you were leaving as a valued member.
Thank you.
I really was like, in my mind,
I like couldn't envision another season.
I just couldn't, I couldn't see it in my head.
I just didn't exist or something.
And I was like, I wanna leave while I still have so much
love for this place and everything.
And so I told Lauren I was leaving and then, you know,
as the weeks were passing and everything, I like got together like I was leaving and then, you know, as the weeks were
passing and everything, I like got together like gifts for like I was like I have to get a good
gift for everybody. And there was almost a writer's strike that year. And they were able to
work it out. But I remember being like, and you know, I want the best for the right, I stand with the WGA and everything, but I remember being like, oh my God, if there was a show
that like we did and then we went on hiatus and we wouldn't have come back from the hiatus
and I was like, oh my God, if that was my last show, I won't be able to give everyone
their gifts. And I've really thought hard about these gifts. I mean, I guess they can
send them the gifts, but can you, but no, but I'm glad that WGA
got what they wanted that year,
and we were able to go back and,
and it broke in the press or something
that I was leaving, like really,
like the week of the last show.
And I wasn't gonna say anything
because I knew that Lauren didn't really want anyone to,
you, it was like, I didn't going to say anything because I knew that Lauren didn't really want anyone to... It was like... I didn't want to like... You know, I had such a great relationship with...
I felt like with the show and with Lauren and I didn't want to like jeopardize any of that.
And then I remember I was on my way to the last show that I was ever doing.
And I was of course running late, which I always was but anyways
I was on my way to like, you know the Saturday afternoon the last show and our publicist
Texted me and she said Lauren said it's okay for you to put out a statement if you want to and she said and he
never says that and so I
Posted this thing that was that Colin J had, Colin Jost would always write,
the last show of the season,
he would always write these like joke sketches
and we would do them at the table
and they were always like so funny
and they were, they included like the stage managers
sometimes, it was just like this sketch
that would just never get on.
But he had written this sketch
that was a parody of the song, Always a Woman,
and he had this phrase in it that was about me that made me cry. But it was like, it was
about, we've heard about bloomers and we know about Gwen's, my best friend, and Jonah, and
we've heard her talk about leukemia and leukemia again, and like there's all this stuff.
And I put like, I posted like a photo of that
and I said like something about leaving.
And it was so special for me to have my last show
where the audience knew it was my last show.
That was like, it was like something
that I didn't really realize would have been so special.
And I remember Tom Hanks was there
and I think it was his idea.
He like hoisted me and Bobby Moynihan and Sashir hoisted all of us up.
And we like got like a standing ovation, like after the good nights were over
and like walked us out on everybody's shoulders.
Oh, that's fantastic.
Yeah. And it was like, it felt to be able to get that kind of closure was like incredible.
Have you done dramatic parts?
I've done, I didn't.
The first real dramatic thing I got to do was I did an episode of that show Love.
I don't know if you ever saw that.
I didn't, but I, yeah.
And I'm blanking on the name of who was actually directing the episode.
That's so rude.
But Judd Apatow was like, he was a producer on that show and he was there and kind of
helped direct it too.
And that was really nice.
And he sort of said something to me like, I know this is like your first kind of heavy
thing like this and I wanted to be and he was really helpful with it as was the director
who's Michael Lewin,
the director Michael Lewin was as well.
But that what, I like doing that stuff,
and in my show, I love that for you,
even though it's a comedy,
and we wanted it to have like laugh out loud jokes in it,
there was some heavy stuff in there too.
It wasn't broad, It was very real and funny
Thank you very much. Yeah, so I so I like and I think I think it was my friend John early who said like
like every
comedian just wants to
prove that they can cry on camera like it's sort of like
You you sort of get this chip on your shoulder of like, I can do drama.
And I remember I got, yeah, anyways,
I like doing that stuff as well,
or I liked proving to people that I can cry on camera.
The mistake always is to immediately make a huge switch,
you know, right after standing out live. Lady Macbeth.
Yes.
You know, no, no, wait, wait.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Do it a little slower than that.
Yeah.
I find people like you, sorry, that's a non-complimentary thing to say, but if I see you on camera,
I am excited because I know I'm about to laugh and I'm going to be laughed and startled and
surprised I won't see it coming. So I'm very
excited. When you then take that baggage and do a serious part it's very dangerous. You have a
quality of danger because even though you're in the story and you're being real to the circumstances, there's a sense of, is she gonna be funny or not?
That even though you know she's not,
there's a tension there that I think is really interesting
when really innately funny people choose not to be funny.
Yeah, yeah. In a part.
I think it's, I find it just mesmerizing
to watch people like that.
Like you.
Yeah, that's so nice.
I mean, it's, it's an interesting, it's, I, it's, it's all, it's an interesting thing
to try.
I, I like, um, my favorite thing is doing, I guess, well, I guess one of my favorite
things is doing dramatic stuff
that's funny.
Yes.
Because it feels like, I don't know, but it is, it is, there was a hard thing of like,
yeah, exactly what you said, like you don't want to like come right off of SNL and be
like, guess what, I'm, you know, playing this.
Lizzy Bourne.
One, one thing that I think is, this is different.
The thing that I can't do is I auditioned, kick a table and take out a gun and like,
go like, that's not really what it is.
The hardest thing I did in my career was CSI.
Oh yeah.
So hard.
I love the actors.
I love the writers.
I loved, you know, being able to keep a house I owned.
I loved everything about CSI,
but the acting was the hardest thing
I've ever done in my life,
because there's no room for humor.
And if you take any possibility of humor away,
I'm just, I'm dead meat, I'm horrible, I'm not good.
And you have to be like,
where's the forensics or something?
Yeah, yeah.
If I had to say vaginal tear or blood splatter,
I would just shoot myself.
Oh my God, oh my God.
And you can't tell,
usually if you're gonna improvise a little funny,
it's at the end of the scene.
You can do a little hook at little funny, it's at the end of the scene.
You can do a little hook at the end, it's amusing,
but you couldn't because that would make people laugh
and forget the information about the mystery
that the audience wanted to have.
So it was a hard job, not because of the people.
The people were magnificent.
It was just a hard form for me.
Of course, yeah.
Yeah, I'm not good at it is what I'm boiling about.
Well, I'm sure you were great on it, but that feels.
Thank you, but no.
I did this movie once with Belle Pauly.
I don't know if you know her.
She's this young, very talented, very cool actress.
And we were in this movie together
and I was supposed to play her cool older
friend who she worked with and I was like supposed to be like giving her advice about
like yeah it's like sex and drugs you know what I mean like that kind of a thing and
it it even when I watch it now it plays so false of like this girl who's like one of the coolest people in the world and like just like
hip like just just absolutely like the I'm trying to give you an example of how cool she is. She's
just like this like tiny beautiful she's um always wearing anyway she's so cool and the way that I'm
talking about you the way that I'm talking about her show is how not cool I am.
But yeah, for me to be like,
you just get, you have to get out and do drugs and drink alcohol.
Like, like it's just, that's the kind of thing I'm saying to her at this party.
And I'm like, I don't care about like having sex.
I'll do it whenever I want and stuff like that.
And the way I'm doing it to you is a bit,
but it's also how I come off in this movie.
And she has to act, like, I'm sure that's hard acting
for her too, where she has to be like, uh-huh,
like not Vanessa, I can't remember my character's name
is, but being like, yeah, okay,
you're really teaching me a lot.
Like that was probably the most challenging thing
I ever had to do was act like I was cooler
than Belle Pauly and give her advice on how to be cool. I always say to writers, it's like because by now I've been around long enough that I bring so much
baggage from being on television that it's like if you want me to be something different, you're
going to have to write me doing something. So if Ted is sitting next to you at dinner
and all of a sudden Ted picks up a glass of water
and throws it in your face, then laughs and say,
I'm sorry, I just had to do it, and gets up and leaves,
I will be forever different to you.
You will always flinch a little bit.
So you need to write that in so that you can be Vanessa.
You can be everything about who you are.
But if all of a sudden you go around the corner and do something horrendous and keep being
Vanessa, you get to be dangerous Vanessa just by the doing.
Right.
All right.
Silly questions.
Yes.
Magic wand.
Five years from now, creatively, what would you like to be doing?
Um, uh oh.
That was a serious question.
I thought you were, I know I was laughing because if you hadn't said creatively, I would have said
in your Martha's Vineyard home, hanging with the fam.
No, I've already, we're inviting you by the way.
You will get an invitation for Thanksgiving.
Thank you so much.
I'll go to Cleveland first and see my family, and then I'll fly from Cleveland.
Okay.
It's pretty close, actually.
It'll be an overnight.
Okay, perfect.
Five years.
Wait, sorry.
The question was, where would I be creatively?
Yeah, do you have dreams that you haven't done yet?
I would love to still be doing my show.
I would love to be working on that. I would love to still be doing my show. I would love to be working on that.
I would love to...
Your show, I mean, I love that for you.
I love that for you.
And...
And that's a possibility?
I hope so, I hope so.
And I would love to, I would love to in general
just keep being able to, this is such a general answer but just
be creating things that I think are really funny and being part of things
that I think are really funny I know and and interesting and I like you were
saying about acting I love doing comedy and I love it so much it's so fun I get
so much out of it. Even doing
this podcast with you, like, I'm leaving here. I feel like I'm part of the family. I feel
like I'm just like, you've lifted my day. Like, it's so fun to get to work with funny people
and talented. I just want to keep doing that. I'm giving you the most general answer. No, my answer would be the same.
First off, that was very sweet and means a huge amount.
What about to me?
Seriously.
I'm telling you, I was just watching Cheers,
and I was like, this is the best show.
Also, I got to do some episodes of Will and Grace,
and I got to work with Jimmy Burroughs.
Jimmy Burroughs, oh.
I mean, what an absolute,
but you're just part of this, like,
you just, you're so great on Cheers.
And I genuinely love Three Men and a Baby,
but I haven't seen it in a long time.
But I remember when you're all singing,
good night sweetheart.
But there's no reason to do, thank you.
I let all of that in,
even though I'm pretending to brush it off.
And I will dine off it later. There's no reason to do a podcast unless you get to
celebrate that person you're sitting with and laugh and have a good time and figure out what
it's like to be her. Not that I've quite cracked you yet, but this has been-
Over family dinners and stuff. Yes. this has been amazing and I really really appreciate it
I really it was such an honor to get to do this and I had a fantastic time
That was me talking to the great Vanessa bear
That was me talking to the great Vanessa Bear. Thank you so much for talking with me, Vanessa.
You are welcome at the family reunion anytime.
That's it for this week.
Hello to Woody, and special thanks to our friends at Teen Coco.
If you enjoyed this episode, please send it to someone you love.
Subscribe to us on your favorite podcast app and rate and review on Apple Podcasts. We'll have more for you next week, Where Everybody Knows Your Name.
You've been listening to Where Everybody Knows Your Name with Ted Danson and Woody Harrelson
sometimes.
The show is produced by me, Nick Leal.
Executive producers are Adam Sachs, Colin Anderson,
Jeff Ross, and myself.
Sarah Federovich is our supervising producer.
Our senior producer is Matt Apodaca.
Engineering and mixing by Joanna Samuel
with support from Eduardo Perez.
Research by Alyssa Grawald.
Talent booking by Paula Davis and Gina Bautista.
Our theme music is by Woody Harrelson, Antony Genn,
Mary Steenburgen, and John Osborne.
Special thanks to Willie Nathere. We'll have more for you next time, where everybody knows your name.