WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1656 - Mariska Hargitay
Episode Date: June 30, 2025Mariska Hargitay says the new documentary she made began as a search for the mother she never knew. But as she pursued it, she wound up coming to a new understanding of her own truth. Mariska and Marc... talk about My Mom Jayne, the HBO doc about her mother Jayne Mansfield, who died in a car accident when Mariska was only three. Mariska explains why she kept her mother’s story at arm’s length through most of her life, even as she carved her own path of success in Hollywood, and how she ultimately embraced the revelations about her parents. Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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How are you?
What the fuckers?
What the fuck buddies?
What the fuck Nick?
So what's happening on Mark Maron?
This is my podcast folks.
Hope you're doing okay.
Seriously.
Today on the show is very exciting, actually.
I talked to Mariska Hargitay.
Now, a lot of you know her as Olivia Benson on Law and Order.
She's played that role since 1999.
And Olivia is the longest running character
on the longest running American prime time drama in history.
She's won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for that.
But she's here to talk about this amazing documentary
that I found very impactful.
And also just, you know, about learning who you are
through revelations that are either surprising,
either they're informational or they're just,
you know, through your own aging
and experience with your parents, and it's so great.
It's called My Mom Jane,
and it's about her mother Jane Mansfield.
Before I get into it, I'll be at Largo
for a comedy and music show with the band.
Some new people this time,
I'm playing with some new people, try that out. They say that's good to do.
That's Wednesday, July 23rd. Tickets are at Largo-LA.com.
Also, the date of my HBO special, Mark Maron Panicked, was announced.
It premieres August 1st at 8 p.m. on HBO and on Macs.
Okay, now I'll throw to her. I'm kind of sweating out here in my
studio right now. I just got back from New Mexico where I was with my dad for a
day or two, a few days, hanging out in the hometown with some old pals. Saw the old man revelations folks revelations not biblical but those seem
to be abound those abound you know that
book of the New Testament there being
one of the older conspiracy theories it
is sort of disconcerting when those
events seem to be unfolding before our
eyes huh hard not to go mystical
I mean I I imagine though because of those kind of stories the Bible is probably one of the
Foundational forces in the untethering of the human mind from engaging in the mundane truths of the human condition
And current politics, huh? How's this for some quality yammering?
So look outside of processing the
the terrifying excitement of the new wild American authoritarianism, I try to keep grounded folks.
I try to keep grounded in the human component of my current life that is continually unfolding, friends.
You know, I don't know.
And obviously as the unfolding plows along,
it becomes a bit more finite.
That, you know, I mean, there is the infinite unfolding
of the post-life mystery, but I think we can
rest assured it is a forever kind of thing.
Probably an unconscious vacuum of nothingness, but who knows, maybe a little more exciting
than that.
I don't know.
I doubt it, but I don't know.
All right, so here on the ground, my trip to Albuquerque the last few days, you know,
spending time with the old man and friends I've known most of my life.
I guess I talk about this every time I make this trip. I'm not sure
that each time my observations are
that much different, but
you know, I was there with the dad, with the dementia.
And surprisingly, he's remained somewhat stable
in terms of, you know, like knowing me and being able to engage.
You know, pretty well, pretty well. It does seem like the,
it does seem like his past is blurring or melding into like one big event.
Things are not in context, there's not much of a timeline.
And many memories seem to be kind of mashed together,
which makes it kind of poetic.
I swear it's still all the way you look at this.
But there is a baseline to who he is,
you know, that's very intact.
And because there's not a lot of noise around it
in the form of kind of cogent, consistent thinking,
it's kind of easier for me to kind of look at it plainly.
And it's a bit disturbing, but it is revelatory.
Every time I see him, it kind of reveals something
about who he is and was innately. It could be a
cautionary tale, though I'm getting a little old, so it's less a cautionary tale than
enlightening. Because, you know, I mean, a lot of the stuff that I have found in myself
that were his or of him that were negative.
I've tried to kind of get a handle on it.
You know, I'm trying to, I'm trying to kind of put a stop to those if I can.
I actually talk at length about this somewhat in my, my upcoming special, but
it's just, I don't know, it's it's kind of you know just getting to know
him on this level or it's kind of pure you know out of nowhere he this was not
this time I saw him at the last time I don't know if I told you this out of
nowhere he just says well look you gotta you gotta take the consequences or or
make up your own to me that was some sort of amazing key, some sort of amazing puzzle piece.
But you know, the fact that he's got no one to talk to or wants to talk to,
he's got nothing he really wants to do or enjoys doing, you know, he just sits there.
And he was always pretty heady, but he just sits there,
and I don't know what's floating around his head
But you know you ask him. What are you doing? He's like nothing you want to do anything? Nope And again, this isn't just the dementia. This is some sort of core part of his being
And I feel that I mean
I don't know you but as a
Creative person or an impulsive person or somebody who has to put their voice out there.
You know, I mean, a lot of times I've got to force myself to do it because there is
a sort of like, yeah, what's the point?
What is the point?
That's the selfish part of it.
The point is engaging with others.
And I wish he was talking more to people.
I mean, it was kind of good this time because, you know,
when I'm around, he, you know, he'll, you know,
he's impressed with me, he appreciates my mind,
he appreciates my life, you know,
he's kind of surrendered to that, you know,
probably because of age and dimension,
just the fact that, like, I guess I'm kind of impressive.
So a lot of the bullshit that used to give us trouble has kind of you know passed us by and he can listen and he was responding and
he he has ideas you know and if he does he'll repeat them again and again. Like I showed
him the documentary about me and then for three days he's like oh my god what a terrible
thing happened to you. Why'd that lady have to die? Just terrible.
Jesus, Mark, so many terrible things have happened to you.
That guy repeated a lot, which isn't great,
but he was remembering at least.
And sometimes, there's something about some parents,
and my dad in particular,
no matter how proud he is of me
or what I've done with my life,
there's some part of him that thinks he's got suggestions.
And they're not really career suggestions,
you know, just out of nowhere he said,
you know, you should start a company.
I don't even know,
I don't know if there was more to it than that,
I don't know what kind of company that would be.
He feels like I should build my own theater,
and he still hangs on to that, that's an old idea of his.
You should have your own place for this stuff.
And then he got very preoccupied
with getting the documentary out there. You doing everything you
can to make this thing get out there? You doing everything you can? It's like, it's too much. But
he's, he's, he's gotten pretty soft and he's all, you know, pretty fragile, pretty vulnerable. And
even with all the other stuff that I'm noticing
I'm glad that I have this time with them and that I and I take advantage of that
So I'm very excited that
Mariska Hargitay is here this HBO documentary. She directed my mom Jane is
Streaming on max and it's it's really great. It really it really is great. It's quite a life here.
And she found something out and kind of moved through it with her family.
It's just great.
And this is me and Marishka talking.
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So you read the article about my show.
So you read the article about my show. I did.
I did.
I read it with such understanding and perspective, because there's been so many times when I
thought that exact same thing.
Well, yeah, I think it's just a matter of wondering, and I'm sure you've dealt with
this on many levels, that, you know, who are you without it?
Yeah. And it's not so much an identity thing,
but it is sort of like too much time to think,
like are you ever gonna,
like I don't really know what's gonna happen
without this thing,
because it's a big part of my social life,
in the sense that I talk to people twice a week,
and they're pretty thorough and deep conversations, some of them.
So there's that.
That's what resonated with me the most is the deep conversations because I thought,
sorry to interrupt, but when I read, when I listened to your podcast with your ex-girlfriend, Moon.
Oh, wow.
I know, it was a crazy one.
Do you know her?
I don't.
Oh, oh.
But I was on a plane and I was listening to it
and I thought, I love that we're going there.
I love that we're just going in
because it's so human and I thought,
when you go through that sort of cycle with somebody,
it's so fulfilling, right?
To have a real connection with somebody.
Yeah, oh yeah.
And then I thought, wow, that's gonna be the change for you.
Where's that?
Well, yeah, it's interesting.
Well, with her, there was nowhere else to go.
I mean, it was all very surprising
because we had been through some stuff
and we never really talked about it.
Yeah.
So that was, yeah, I mean, she's an astronaut of that stuff.
She'll go there.
Yeah, clearly.
She lives there. Yeah, clearly.
And, but I think that was a unique one,
but all of them seem to be connected.
It's a very odd thing,
because I talk to people,
and then after I talk to people here,
I'm always like, are we going to be friends?
Is that, yeah.
I get that.
I'm like that.
Yeah, really?
Very much so.
So much so that I thought,
maybe that's what I need to do next,
is a podcast.
Yeah, well, just because I like going in
and getting in there.
Yeah, jump on board.
Yeah, maybe I should take over for you.
Yeah, you wanna just come here and do it?
I can't.
Yeah, I watch a doc, you know.
Yeah, of course I did.
It was like great.
Thank you.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
The whole thing is crazy.
And how you put it at an end,
like it's taken you this long to put it all together. I feel, truly feel like I've been preparing for this moment for my entire life.
To put the doc together. Yeah. Well, I mean, I mean, you're real showbiz.
No, look, at the real deal, like pedigree and everything.
But it's true. It's kind of amazing how much about your mother that I, you know, I didn't know.
It's not my time, it wasn't your time.
And you really don't realize her position in culture and in show business and kind of what she went through.
And then like being the legacy of that, but not having any relationship with her.
It's just, what was it like to like get in there
and really research her?
How did you even do that?
I just jumped in.
I've been, my best friend always says about me,
I'm the kind of person that's ready, shoot, aim.
Like I just, if I'm gonna do it, I just do it.
I go, that's how.
From early on though, you knew she was your mom, right?
Of course.
And you, you know, it seemed like when you discussed it
that you had mixed feelings about it
as you got old enough to understand.
Well, not only mixed feelings,
as I said, I separated myself.
That's why it's funny you said your pedigree.
I grew up in...
You said it. Did I say it? Yeah, yeah. All right, okay. Well, I grew up in, did I say it?
All right, okay.
I'm getting older, I can't remember who said what.
But I grew up in such a non-showbiz environment.
Really?
My stepmother was a flight attendant,
my dad was a builder.
And we had-
Mickey?
Mickey.
Mickey.
He built houses guy I just talked
to somebody used to go to his plant store that's my brother that's your
brother okay so he still got that yeah yeah but the point is is that we had
such a normal existence right and very much away from Hollywood even though we
lived you know we lived up in the bird streets and yeah up to Haney and stuff
but we never we just didn't have showbiz friends.
My parents weren't really friends with actors
or producers or writers in the business really.
And so I just had a very normal existence.
But wasn't it kind of hanging over you?
It was, very much so hanging over me.
I mean, this icon hanging over me
that I really wanted no part of.
Pete Slauson Why do you think that?
Debra Larson I was, I just think it was too much.
Pete Slauson Yeah.
Debra Larson It was embarrassing.
Pete Slauson Really?
Debra Larson Yeah.
Pete Slauson I mean, like –
Debra Larson The sex symbol part of it. You have to understand,
I went to St. Paul the Apostle grade school, and then I went to Marymount High School.
And the Catholic schools?
My whole life.
Very much Catholic.
Very much.
Okay.
And so it was just too much and I wanted, it's a very interesting dichotomy because
I grew up with this like longing, right?
To look like my mother, have a normal mother, or have somebody,
you know, in my school we had like mother-daughter things,
and even high school we had father-daughter things.
So it was just sort of like an absence.
Always.
Yeah.
This absence, this longing, and so.
And then when it was defined in photographs and films
and in culture, you know, the absence
that represented your mother was something you didn't want to have anything to do with. That what was absent was offensive to you somehow.
A little bit, yeah.
Hmm.
Yeah.
And...
So I very much identified with my father.
Sure.
And I wanted to be like him in every way.
Mickey.
Very much so. He was...
Solid guy.
Solid as a rock. Very much so. He was...
Solid guy.
Solid as a rock, committed human, focused, determined, anything in his life he set out
to do.
He did it.
Athlete, champion mentality.
Well he was like a very, I mean he was sort of in show business.
Yeah.
He was started out, you know, he did a lot of like be
westerns and, you know, Rome and stuff like that.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Little things, you know, air in there.
Like the spaghetti westerns.
The spaghetti westerns.
And wasn't he a big bodybuilder
before bodybuilding was happening?
Yeah, I don't know if it was before bodybuilding,
but when he came over to America,
he went to Indiana and found he was so enamored with weightlifting and bodybuilding
and then he said, I want to try it and they said, you're too old and he said, you're too
old.
And then he went on to become, you know, Mr. America, Mr. World and then Mr. Universe in
1955.
It's crazy.
It's crazy. It's crazy. And then like, okay, so when do you start to, like at what point did you know that you
were in the car with Jay Mansfield, your mom, when she died?
I mean, when did that make sense to you?
I don't know that there was a time I think I always knew it because of my scar
yeah and it was just part of the lore right I think that we always talked
about that you know that we were in the car with her and we survived right but
you but you didn't there was no you were three I don't remember it. Yeah. No, of course I don't remember it.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't remember any of it.
Not here.
Yeah, in your body.
Yeah, I've had a whole journey with that.
Really?
Yeah.
Specifically, like did you do EMDR and stuff?
I did EMDR.
I've done a lot of things.
I've done a lot of trauma work.
Yeah.
And I've done something called somatic reprocessing.
How does that work?
Oh, it's amazing actually. It's a thing called internal family systems and there's a guy
named Richard Schwartz, but there's several amazing therapists that do this work. And basically,
therapists that do this work. And basically, it is a process where you learn to listen to your body and you let it speak to you. And you understand the parts of yourself.
Like I remember being in therapy, you know, one time and just going on and on about how
great things are. I said like, at the end of the session, I was like talking about all
this great stuff. I just went from that to like, then why do I feel like such a loser?
And then she said, well, that sounds like it's another part talking. And I sort of went, what?
Or there was times when I'd be in therapy and all of a sudden I would almost fall asleep.
I would say, I'm sorry I'm so tired, I'm not a great sleeper.
And I said I didn't sleep well last night and I just, you know, I don't sleep well and I'm really tired.
And I was. And then she'd go, no, I think that's your sleepy part.
And at first you're like, excuse me, my sleepy part?
But then every time we would talk or get close
to something, it was almost like a narcoleptic
where I would, and I have a lot of energy
as you can see, I would all of a sudden be just
zero to 60 like, I'm sorry, I'm too tired.
And I would feel like I was gonna fall asleep.
And you know, it was, she explained to me
that it was a part of myself that was
protecting. So when I started having all these physical things happening, it was very clear
that we are so complicated. And when you, when you say to somebody like, part of me totally
understands what he did, but the other part of me wants to kill him. Like those are real parts.
So I started honoring that and understanding myself and understanding how important integration
is. And it was life-changing.
To integrate to the different parts of yourself.
And also to bring the trauma into the present so it's not re-triggered in an unidentifiable
way.
Exactly. But also not live in these extremes, but we have to live in the gray.
You can't like, I'm the greatest person in the world.
I'm total loser.
Yeah.
Here's the thing.
I can do it.
Yeah.
No, no.
And you should.
And you should.
It's part of my job.
But for me, not so much.
Yeah.
No, but when you just learn like, I'm this person and I've had this trauma and sometimes
I'm good at my job and I do great things and I've had this trauma and sometimes I'm you know
Good at my job and I do great things and a great friend and a great mom a great wife and then other times like
Not so much and I'm just a regular person sure and so once you sort of go oh
Yeah, comfortable there like right in the middle sure in the gray
life starts to get
More peaceful and we have more internal space.
Yeah.
And so that's what this...
Integration.
Integration is everything.
In the somatic...
In the somatic field.
Yeah.
And that really just changed my life in such a big way, as did the making of this film.
Right.
But like, so like, it would kind of manifest itself as exhaustion or a blank spot.
Or, for example, I don't like being in tight places or being trapped.
I don't do well being trapped. And, you know, those are things that now I can reason with myself
or talk to those parts of myself or just have the space.
I like to liken these parts, like little children
that need a little attention.
And that's all it is.
You just go, I hear you, I'm with you,
I have room for you.
And you know what, I'm okay now, you're good.
You don't have to like panic. Yeah, you got to self-parent.
Yes. And if as soon as you give like a kid, as soon as you honor what they're saying,
they calm down. And that is, if I could give one thing to the world, to people that have
experienced trauma, that's what I would offer.
And I guess that on some level,
because it kind of comes full circle in the documentary,
that the fact that Mickey just showed up,
like you had a family.
Oh, yes.
And it was grounded,
and this thing was going to be in your pre-memory.
Because it seems like in another situation, psychologically you could have been really hobbled.
For a long time, if you didn't have the family and the support, do you know, after that loss?
Yeah, I had the family and the support.
And these siblings. You had all these older siblings. How great are they?
They're great. No, but don't you in love with every single one of them cuz I am well, there's a lot of both sides
I'm trying to identify them all there's there's my older sister Jane who's from from Jane's first marriage
Yes. Yes, then there's Mickey my older brother who owns the plant shop, right? Then there's Zoli
Yeah, and my next brother who was sort of the heart and who carried the trauma and sort of walked us through what happened
And Mickey's his dad too. Yes, right and then there's another one. There's my little brother Tony the one who said
He's the one with the blue eyes and the blonde hair. Yeah, I don't want to carry it. Yeah
Yeah, he's not that much. He's only in with the blue eyes and the blonde hair who said, I don't want to carry it. Yeah, yeah.
Remember?
He's not that much, he's only in it for a few beats.
Yes, because he and I did not grow up together.
He, after my mom died, went to live with his father.
What's that guy's name?
Matt Simber.
Yeah, I think I played him in a show, kind of.
The show Glow, the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling.
Oh, that's funny.
Yeah, like I-
Six degrees, baby.
I know, yeah.
That's crazy.
Yeah, it was kind of a bunch of different characters,
but he was at the beginning of that.
He was the guy that made Glow, the original Glow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I never saw that.
It was on Netflix, it was pretty funny.
Oh, okay.
It was kind of a sweet show.
Oh, good, okay.
It was on for a few seasons, but I realized that it was,
because I played a kind of a sweet show. It was on for a few seasons. But I realized that it was, because I played a kind of a down and out filmmaker
who was brought in to manage and direct
this gorgeous ladies of wrestling.
Oh wow, okay.
Yeah, well they live, he lives in Las Vegas.
Okay.
So-
Are you close with him though?
You know, it's interesting.
He's my brother and I love him so much.
And we both love each other and we didn't grow up. Right, it's interesting. He's my brother and I love him so much. And we both love each other and we
Didn't grow up right, right, right and we're you know, we see some things differently, but I
Mean, we're not close like Mickey and Zoli because I wasn't raised with him
We don't have shared perspective sure at all. Yeah, and like he said in the movie
Yeah, you know, he doesn't didn't't feel very connected to my mom and stuff.
So, but yeah, I love him.
He loves me and he's the sweetest and.
So how old was he when it happened?
He was like one?
He was one and not in the car with us.
Right, and they were done.
Yeah.
So all three of you were in the back.
Mickey, Zoli and me. Yeah. Yeah. Oh Thank God. Yeah. So all three of you were in the back. Mickey, Zoe, and me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
So in moving through this story, when you started acting, you were very young.
Yeah.
When I started acting, I was in high school, and I went to, as I said, all girls, private,
Catholic high school.
And it's such a beautiful story.
And this is so, I was more of like an athlete.
I was on the swim team and cross country and,
and then my English teacher who was a nun,
sister Margaret suggested to me that she thought
that I should try out for a play because I was chatty and I was extroverted
and she was like, how can I channel this?
And so she said, Mariska, I think you should,
Maria rather, I was Maria in high school,
I think you should try out for the play.
And so I did.
And I got, it was a French farce called,
Salad Days and I had a blast.
And then my senior year, I tried out for the play again,
and it was a serious straight play,
you know, called Women's Work.
And that's when I fell in love with it,
and that's when I decided to apply to,
I applied to SC and UCLA, I ended up going to UCLA
and became a
theater major. It's so crazy. It's so crazy because before that, zero interest
in being an actor. And I mean zero. If you would have asked me, I wanted to be a
French diplomat because we traveled so much as a family and I loved languages
and I loved, I wanted to connect people.
And I wanted to, I also thought about being an interpreter and again connecting people.
And then I found acting and fell in love with telling stories.
But it's like it's genetic.
Yeah. Crazy.
It really is. I mean because, you know, there are certain families of actors.
Yeah.
You know, like the Baldwins and Skarsgard and like...
Fondas.
Yeah, the Fondas and Barrymores.
I mean, we could...
But there is something, like, I can't really put my finger on it, but there is something about someone's ability to hold the screen.
To hold the screen. But also to need to do it, right?
Yeah. But also to need to do it, right? I remember my acting teachers were like, if you don't need to act, if you don't need to do it, don't.
And I remember that really resonated with me.
Because it is so hard and it's so hard to begin
and there's so much rejection,
it's so much that if you don't need it.
And sometimes it's boring and horrible.
Beyond, Beyond.
All that trailer time?
I mean, who can handle that?
I mean, come on, I got shit to do.
Totally.
But you know, the thing is about the trailer time,
you can be very-
If you can.
I'm very like, I'm multitasked.
No, I can do a get a lot done.
I choose to like go look at food.
Oh yeah.
And then be like, what the fuck is happening out there
Yeah, how long could this take? I?
Was called in here at six. It's 330 and I haven't worked yet
What are they doing, but I'll tell you something after be you know being on a show for this long
Yeah, you know since the early you know you like you're like the longest running character on any show ever is it a crazy
It's crazy. No, it's so nuts
And you know you were saying that at the beginning
because your big decision to take a break,
or step away, and I was thinking,
I can't remember what year it was.
I think it was year 23 or 24.
I was at a party and I was talking to my friend,
Juliana Margulies.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And she said, so what are you doing?
And I said, I think I'm done.
This was season 23 going into 24. She goes, I said, I think I'm done. And she goes, so what are you doing? And I said, I think I'm done. This was season 23 going into 24.
She goes, I said, I think I'm done.
And she goes, why?
And I said, well, I just don't want to be a one trick pony.
And she looked at me and she goes, well, Mariska,
I think that ship sailed.
And we had such a laugh.
She goes, you might as well go until 25.
And we had such a laugh about that because,
but now I'm so, I mean, I have been,
I'm just so in love with this show and what it does
and how it affects people.
And for me, like I get to go deeper every year.
Sure, and also-
And find new stuff and work with new actors.
As you find it in yourself as well.
As you find it in yourself as well. As you find it in yourself.
I mean everything changes.
After this film, I feel so different or new
and I have all this new space.
I kind of can't wait to see what I do on SVU next year.
Does that make sense?
Of course.
I mean, you know, look, as we grow, and also I think you keep growing as an actor, and
I think that, you know, part of the maintaining engagement with it is that you can make different
choices and that you have, that's the only thing you really have control over as an actor.
That's right.
Is that like if you have more depth, then you have more tools, and then there's a challenge
to see if you can go there.
Which is so exciting.
I remember one of my favorite directions I've ever gotten in my career.
I mean, and there's been several, because I've obviously had the pleasure of working
with so many amazing directors. But one time I was doing a scene
and Tom DiCiccio was the director.
And he asked me to do something
that felt so foreign to me.
I said, Tom, that's not really my character.
I just feel like it's opposite.
He says to me, Mariska, but what if she did that
today?
Hmm.
And it was like, because I'm Mariska, but I do
a lot of uncharacteristic stuff all the time.
Yeah.
And in the character of Olivia Benson, I was
like, this is how it is.
Yeah.
And then I'm like, we all have bad days.
We all have days where we're like, I'm out, I'm done.
I don't care.
And it was so expansive.
The direction was such a gift.
And so now I really entertain anything.
And then you just figure out why that's happening today.
But I love that because it gives you permission to go into different arenas.
Sure.
Not get locked in.
Yeah.
So anyway, that's very exciting.
And not be predictable.
Which is, you know, the enemy of all creativity.
Well, yeah, but that's also why anyone wants to stop anything.
That's right.
And when I say, exactly.
And then when I say, like, people go, what's your goal today?
I said, to surprise myself.
Surprise myself, please.
Please, God.
Please, God, help me surprise myself.
So when you start doing this in high school,
that has to be where you take into consideration
your mother.
Yeah.
Right?
I mean, like when you start acting,
when you realize like, I wanna do this,
I have to assume that whatever sort of resentments or wherever you had her in your mind, it must
have shifted a little.
No, it wasn't that linear.
No?
No, no, because—
You just thought I'm just going to be an actor, you didn't connect it with—
No, of course, no, I'm sorry, maybe I didn't understand the question.
No, I wanted to do it, and I loved acting, and I felt a connection there of what she loved, what I loved, what is this thing.
But then I think that's when I decided
that I wanted to do it differently.
That's when I sort of went, I'm gonna be serious
and not, you know, a sex symbol and sort of steered away
from that kind of thing.
It was like comedy, I want to do comedy, I'm funny, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Sure. But I mean, the whole idea of a sex symbol changed a lot too since she was around.
That is true.
I mean, that was, it seemed that when Jay Mansfield was around, that, you know, sex symbol was part of most of the job
for a certain type of actor who was stunning,
is that you're going to be maneuvered that way.
And I have to assume that when you were doing the doc, that to find your mother's struggle
towards the end must have been kind of devastating.
Utterly devastating.
I mean, it's heartbreaking.
It's devastating with how women were treated.
Right.
How women were put into a box.
How women were, how she was, dismissed.
I mean, you see in the film, and that is what,
that has been the gift of this movie.
Yeah.
To understand what she went through and how much it was
like God just sprinkled archival on me that I couldn't believe the gems that I found that
I had no idea.
How did you find all that stuff? Because she was an innately talented person
with a fairly broad potential
that was packaged as sort of a Marilyn-esque person,
but obviously had her own thing that was even bigger
than Marilyn in a way.
In a way, yes, very much so.
In terms of her impact,
because Marilyn, she, like, the. In terms of her impact, you know, because Marilyn, you know, she, like,
the struggle of both of them,
like of Marilyn being sort of, you know,
taken seriously in the face of her glamor and her beauty.
And I don't think, you know,
it seemed like Marilyn had a little more opportunity
to do that than Jane.
But being put in a box.
Yeah, totally.
When you're in your early 20s and not knowing
that there are options.
And I think about my own career.
And I think about when I started out,
when I would walk into a room in a casting office.
And they'd go, oh, I was expecting a blonde.
And I'd be like, well, I guess you were wrong.
Or walking in and having people go,
you need to change your name. And I'd say, you change your walking in and having people go, you need to change your name.
And I'd say, you change your name.
Or they'd say, you need to get a nose job.
And I'd go, you get a nose job.
That all happened?
All of it.
And it was so great because my dad,
and because everything he told me about what happened to her,
I wasn't having it.
And I had learned young, don't put me in a box.
Don't even try to put me in a box.
And so that was my sort of superpower is when they did, I was like, yeah, no, that's not
happening.
Right.
But also because of that, you know, you had reasonable expectations in terms of, you know,
because somebody like Jay Mansfield, it's like so many people are trying to run money
through her.
Yeah. it's like so many people are trying to run money through her. And, you know, they were not going to embrace anything
that she wanted to do to expand her potential.
It's like this is how you make money.
Period.
It's almost, it's bordering on prostitution.
Yes, and originally they were sort of building her up
and creating a star to keep Marilyn in line.
But they were like, this is the box,
this is where you fit, do this or you're done.
That's what they did to her.
So now I understand that.
That's what the gift of this film has been
is to, and really reclamation of reclaiming her,
understanding so many parts of her
and understanding what she was dealing with culturally
in the times and in her family.
And also for me, because I spent so much time
with my grandmother, understanding the sort of
you know, Southern social mores, right?
Her mother.
Oh yes.
Yeah.
Very strict and very presentational.
Yeah.
Which I grew up the opposite.
Like my parents, my grandmother used to tell me
how to answer the phone.
Yeah.
And she would give me line readings and I'm not kidding.
She would say, this is what I was supposed to do.
Hello, whom I ask is calling.
One moment please.
And I would go, why are you talking like that?
People don't talk like that.
But so if that's what she did to me, imagine how my mother was raised to be so deferential
and kind and whatever anyone wanted.
That sort of presentational thing as opposed to going, the way I was raised, it's like I would argue with my dad
and go, dad, I gotta tell ya, I couldn't disagree more.
And my dad would say, tell me if I'm wrong, Rush.
Tell me, and I go, but here's the thing, you are, why?
And let's have a discussion.
Right, that's a generational thing too.
Totally.
And it's also lucky you were in California.
Yes, yes, yeah.
And I mean, but also your grandmother seemed to support your mom's violin playing.
Totally. Oh.
And everything.
My grandmother was a, I was a school teacher and she played the organ and the piano.
Yeah.
No, she was amazing.
Did she get to see you act?
Well, how about this story? So my grandmother, when she moved to California,
I used to go visit her every weekend.
She lived up in Ventura.
And I-
Were you guys taking care of her?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I had gotten ER.
Yeah.
I was so proud of myself.
This was hands down the biggest thing that I ever did.
And it was like launched my career. And I said to her, Dan Mama, I called her,
I said, I got this role on ER, it's a number one show,
it's a big show and the best actors.
And she said, when are you gonna get married
and make something of yourself?
And I remember going, wow.
When are you gonna get married and make something of yourself? And then it's sort of all, I understood it all in the moment.
And I was, because my dad used to say the opposite, Merzka, you need to find out who
you are and where you're going and then decide who's coming with you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're not going on somebody else's ride.
Yeah. Get the right people around you, that kind of stuff.
So the messaging from my father and from my grandmother were diametrically opposed.
Well, I mean, some of that is probably generational and old thinking.
And also, like, you know, they never understand acting.
Oh, no. It's frivolous right but the fact that her daughter was Jay
Mansfield's crazy that she still thought that way I know but I think she really
struggled with it she wanted her to be a musician right well getting married
didn't necessarily help her all the time and she did it enough right exactly
right but maybe that's why she kept doing it. Yeah. It's because that was in her
head. Right. That all these pieces that I got to figure out, that I got what I learned, were,
it's been the greatest gift of my life. This is what I mean about integrating all these pieces,
you know, because I had sort of exiled her and her story. I wanted no part of it. I was like,
Dad, you're my guy. I'm following your path. And this is what I'm doing. And so I really
excised this. So to reintegrate her and understand her and love her and go, I get it.
I get it.
And also the fact that it's tragic,
obviously a lot of it, not just the car accident,
but that when you really, and you spend a lot of time
putting her career into context for yourself.
But as somebody who's an entertainer,
the point that she hit, where just to maintain a livelihood,
she had to do this nightclub act,
which could not have been further from something
that she wanted to do.
What she wanted to do. And five kids.
And she was a cultural icon, and then she was on the other side of it,
and couldn't get a shot to do something different
because the business wouldn't let her.
So she's relegated to being, you know, part of a nightclub act.
It's so tragic. It's so tragic.
It's so tragic.
But I imagine on some level that the live show
and that people were happy to see her.
Yes.
And she was living up to their expectations
in sort of a clown-like way, right?
But I mean-
That's painful for me, but I'll tell you something, people were happy to see her and out of all
my research that I've done and all the gifts that I've gotten from, whether they be letters
that people wrote me, they had an interaction, or even the books, everyone said, and I mean, everyone said she was so kind and so fun and loved people and children and babies
and animals. And so she had this like, she was such a lover. And again, the kindness is what
But kindness is what really resonates for me. So now after this film, like before as I excised her away and said, here's how we're different,
we're different, we're different, we're different, now I get to see, this is how we're the same.
This is what I got from you.
And I'm so grateful and so proud.
And proud of her work ethic. Yeah.
And proud of her determination and proud of so many aspects of her.
How about the fact she just got up from Texas and moved to LA?
It's all crazy.
What?
Yeah.
Back then?
Yeah, to have that drive.
To have that drive and go, I'm doing it.
And those two things that she was living with like and how you were talking about
These different parts of ourselves was the you know the ethic of your grandmother
You know to to you know pursue you know discipline and discipline
But also this sort of like you got to find a man or you're nothing
Yeah, but she was able to leave that first man, but I guess that just stuck in her head the man thing
Yeah, and needing a man, but also, but not just needing a man for my grandmother,
but don't forget losing her father at three.
Yeah.
That leaves such a hole in your heart, losing her father at three. And how do we replace
that? I will say to you, that kind of trauma,
soul injury, you never get over that.
No.
You never get over that.
And, you know, I know that a lot of my trauma,
it was very difficult for me to express
because it was pre-verbal, right?
Yes, right.
So I remember feeling trapped.
And so was hers then.
Right.
So I think about that so much and that longing
and wanting a dad, especially for me,
who I can't express to you the love, security,
and confidence that I got from my father.
Like feeling loved and knowing that's my guy and
he has got me.
Solid guy.
Solid as a rock.
It's like, it's so fortunate.
I know, I know, I'm very aware.
Believe me.
I used to say, I was reading some old interviews and I said, everything good about me is from
my dad.
I used to say it all the time because I just remember him being at my swim meets.
And like the investment, or doing gymnastics every night
in the living room, TV room, before dinner,
teaching me how to do a back bend and a back flip
and splits because he was, you know, physical champion.
And he understood that there was no no, you just do it.
Yeah, and also the fact that he was really in love
with your mother.
Like nobody's business.
I know, it's brutal.
It's just so brutal.
That kind of love.
I also feel like I found my soulmate
and the most amazing husband
because of that love.
Because I knew what love was, I recognized love,
how much he loved, and I feel so grateful for that.
And the heartache of it, and also like in,
you know, in relation to what is revealed ultimately
you know, in relation to, you know, what is revealed ultimately, you know, about your life, your beginnings, that, you know, that that love was big enough to include you to
the point where, you know, he wouldn't hear otherwise.
Because it wasn't true to him.
Yeah.
Didn't matter.
Didn't matter.
It didn't matter that he, but this is what I mean about his focus.
Like, there was no telling him that he was too old to become a weightlifter.
Yeah, sure.
In terms of that, and by the way, that's what it takes, I believe, to get anything done.
But I understand him now because he just proceeded as if.
And now I look at it and I go, how lucky am I?
Well, I mean, what's...
I mean, but really.
Yeah, I know.
It's insane.
Yeah, totally.
And that's why I have this love to give.
That's why I wanted to share it.
That's why I want to invite people.
That's why I wanted, you know, look at it like an invitation.
That's why I was, I was, you know, people are like,
oh, the movie's so brave.
I was like, mm, yeah, sure.
And the only way out is through.
So if we're not doing that, what are we doing?
Yeah, and it just, the combination of the love for your mother
and then, you know, the unconditional love for you,
you know, it was just so big.
It was real and unusual.
Yeah.
But what's fascinating is that you really didn't know.
In the movie, you explore your sort of feeling
of a slight alienation from your other siblings or
That you were it works. I was gonna say that's another statement. Yes, that's right. And that you know, I always felt different
I always knew there was something different, but I didn't know what and you didn't really
think to pursue it until you were in your late 20s or like because the whole the the one thing about
you were in your late 20s or like because the whole the the one thing about the fucking movie that
Kills me is that the head of the Jane Mansfield
fanclub is the person how great is that it's the best it's so perfect you can't write it no I know
But like the information was out there. That's you know what I say. This is the miracle of this Yeah, I feel because as as I felt in my life. Yeah, this is my story to tell
Yeah, I feel so grateful to like God and the universe. Yeah, that it's somehow
miraculously
Protected me and that when again the information was out there
Yeah, how did how did it not come out?
After every interview I've ever done,
all I do is talk about my dad,
that some journalists or reporters went,
well, actually, I did a little research,
there's this other piece, and I sit there and I go,
this is the gift that was given to me.
There's been so many gifts from this movie.
So the gift is that you didn't have to know about it until you were ready to me. There's been so many gifts from this movie. So the gift is that you didn't have to know about it until you were ready to know.
Yes, but also that I got to tell the story, that I wasn't embarrassed or humiliated and
that I needed, when I did find out, that I needed to keep it private, that I needed to
honor my father. I was so worried that it would embarrass him or dishonor him because of what
he had said to me.
So when did you, like, not to interrupt you, but in terms of like the hiding it. So the
course of events, well, I think that oddly, and it's not the same culture we live in today,
that enough time had passed between, you know, Jane Mansfield's passing and, you know, her
cultural relevance that, you know, that information that was so important to you was sort of
insulated in kind of a film nerd community. It wasn't, you know, but you were rising as a
star too. But, you know, yet it didn't come out because I don't know that people were as
fascinated with Jane anymore. So it kind of worked in your favor.
Completely. And then all of a sudden I went, what? This isn't my, I didn't do
anything wrong.
No, but how did you, what was the moment of mind-blowing realization?
You know, it's an issue about being ready.
It was during the pandemic.
After I made my first documentary,
I Am Evidence, about the backlog of untested rape kits.
And I fell, I just love the medium of documentary storytelling.
It's my personal hobby, it's what I do
when I have extra time.
And after I did that, of course,
everyone said, are you gonna do a doc on your mom? Are you gonna do a doc on your mom? And after I did that, of course, everyone said,
are you going to do a doc on your mom?
Are you going to do a doc on your mom?
And I sort of went, nope.
And then during the pandemic, that was in 2017,
it came out, and then during the pandemic,
here I was at my house.
And as everyone did, I cleaned the basement
and cleaned out everything.
And I found these boxes of letters
that were written to me, fan letters,
that were written to me about my mom,
about people sharing a story about her,
about saying I knew your mom.
And you hadn't read them?
No, I used to get these letters and put them in a box.
Well, you kept them.
I certainly did.
So once I read them and I started getting
these pieces of information, it was one of these things
where I like went, I'm ready, I'm ready.
But you had known since you were like 30.
Oh, I knew at 25.
At 25 is when Saban.
The fan club guy?
Who said, do you wanna see a picture of Nelson?
And then at 30 is when my friend, who I went to UCLA with, my good friend, said, I got
two tickets to Atlantic City.
Where Nelson, what's his last name again?
Sardelli.
He was playing.
Now this is, the assumption at that time when you were 25 was, I think you should look into this because I think this is your dad, your biological dad.
Well, I knew it was.
At 25.
But before that.
Second, I saw his picture.
I knew.
On a cellular level, I knew.
And that's at 25.
At 25.
And then I sat with it.
I didn't know anything about him. And then I just sat with it for five years and had my own like breakdown and identity
crisis.
Yeah.
What did that look like?
Not good.
Yeah.
I mean.
I felt like untethered.
You were lied to?
I was lied to.
I was angry.
I was, it would bring too much pain on the rest of my family.
And when I, as I do in the movie, I went and told my dad and confronted him. was it would bring too much pain on the rest of my family.
And when I, as I do in the movie, I went and told my dad
and confronted him and he denied it.
And then I saw that he was more upset than I was
and more, so I just, out of my love for him, said, okay.
I never spoke of it again, but it lived in me.
And then-
When you went to go see him-
My boyfriend at the time hired a private investigator
and found him for me.
Because what I was really interested-
Sardelli.
Yes, but what I was really interested in
was whether or not I had sisters.
That's all I cared about.
Well, this is after, so you went to go see him
in Atlantic City.
But I had heard from the private investigator.
Oh, that was then.
That he was an entertainer in Vegas and also worked in Atlantic City.
Yeah.
That I had two sisters.
So I was like, ah!
And then I went to Atlantic City.
And I met him.
And it was my favorite moment where I said, he came out and I said, hi Nelson,
my name is Mariska Hargitay.
I understand you knew my mother.
And he just looked at me with like,
awe, shock and awe and disbelief
and like a miracle had just transpired.
And something that I didn't say in the film
that I remembered after, which is so beautiful,
is the first thing he said is, how's your father,
Mickey Hargitay, is he okay?
The first thing he asked was about my father.
And I wish I'd put that in the film, but I didn't
remember it until later.
Yeah.
And then he, you know, as I say, he grabbed my ear
and he just started crying. And then we went to a, as I say, he grabbed my ear
and he just started crying.
And then we went to a diner and we stayed up
till five in the morning and talked.
And he told me everything.
And that's when I said to him,
let me explain something to you.
I have a father.
I don't want anything from you.
And I don't want a father.
I have one.
So just be clear.
This was just about curiosity. And you made your choice and father. I have one. So just be clear, this was just about curiosity
and you made your choice and it was the right one
and we're good.
I just wanna meet my sisters.
I want my sisters.
Did you know at that time the depth of this choice?
No.
You know, because I don't know when you did
that interview with him.
That was the first interview that I did for the film.
How about that?
It was either May or June of 2023.
So, so recently, God, you're so lucky he was alive.
Yeah, I did that interview and that was my first one
and it was like, and so I got to ask him
all those questions.
Well, I mean, just the weight,
like the weight of the two heartbreaks, you know, the never-ending
heartbreaks of Mickey and Nelson, right?
So you're...
Never-ending heartbreaks of Mickey and Nelson, that's exactly right.
That you know, Mickey, you know, stepped up and compartmentalized it to the point where
it didn't matter.
No, it was like denial. Compartmentalize to the place of denial and Nelson's
guilt and so.
Oh my God.
Can you imagine that?
And he has two, three beautiful daughters.
And so he.
But that choice.
The choice of like, you know,
look, she'd just been through this thing.
She was in a car, her mother was killed. And, you know, what am she'd just been through this thing. She was in a car. Her mother was killed.
And, and, you know, what am I going to do now?
She has a family.
Why?
Like to live with that and not step up to confuse your life.
I can't even comprehend that decision.
It's crazy, but it's, it's beautiful.
It was the right thing.
That's the beauty of this film. And I lived my whole life thinking, he didn't claim me,
he didn't know about me, he didn't care. How does he not care? I couldn't comprehend why
he didn't care, so I felt unloved, unclaimed, unimportant, and like a mistake
that he was ashamed of.
That's what I felt.
And it was a hard way to live, I'll tell ya.
It was just a hard, sad way to live.
From 25 on.
And then it's like fortuitous that that was
the first interview,
because it reframed the whole project for you.
The whole thing.
And the project has been gift after gift after gift
after gift with all my siblings,
everyone that I interviewed.
And one of the most beautiful things about this film,
this experience, I mean, listen, I'm not gonna lie,
it was a bumpy ride, obviously.
This is anything, two things can be true at once,
and it was painful.
But one of the things that was so beautiful was when I flew to LA and I
asked, you know, I went to my family, each one of them, and I met with them and I
asked them for their blessing to make this film. And then I asked, you know, my
stepmother, Ellen, who, you know, raised me. And obviously she had reservations and concerns, but what's so beautiful is that she and
I have gotten so close in this process. She was so generous, so kind, didn't hang onto anything,
just said, gave me carte blanche in the house, said I'll answer anything. Yeah.
Photos, files, everything.
I mean, it was such a bonding, a thing that here you go to your stepmother, you say, I
want to make a movie about this person that even she couldn't get away from, this icon,
this legend.
Yeah.
That it's hard when you're married to somebody
and then their love was.
She knew.
She knew.
And she had room for it.
Yeah.
And it's pretty magnificent.
So I just give her so much credit
and I'm so grateful to her.
Yeah.
For so much.
Yeah.
But also the gift that she gave me while I made this film. credit and I'm so grateful to her. Yeah. For so much. Yeah.
But also the gift that she gave me while I made this film.
It's stunning.
It's beautiful.
It's stunning.
And also it's crazy that your grandmother knew all along.
How about I'm all you have?
Yeah.
Who says that to a 12-year-old?
Yeah.
But you didn't know the meaning of that.
No, but I knew it wasn't good.
Very perceptive kid.
I was like, what the?
Sam Hill.
She meant family.
Yes.
But she looked at me, like I said, and she goes,
I was talking about my dad, my dad is my life, my dad, my dad, my dad.
And she goes, I'm all you have.
And maybe a couple of Rob Roy's in, if you know what I mean.
Sure.
But ultimately, you did have your brothers,
you did have your father.
I mean, you did, like-
I think she meant as a parent.
Yeah, I think so.
Because in the summers, as I say in the movie,
we would go to Europe every summer,
and then there was always like two weeks,
or three weeks when I'd have to go to Colorado or Texas,
and when my brothers didn't come, and I went, what?
And I just felt so isolated.
Like, do my parents not like me?
Like, they wanna be alone with the boys.
Why would they?
But that's weird,
because they were still her grandkids.
I know, that she liked me the best.
Right.
She really did.
The boys were too hyper for her.
You know what's also weird in thinking about the film
is that like, I believe,
and you found that footage of Nelson Sardelli
on Ed Sullivan. How great is that? It's great, because like, he was, you Sardelli on Ed Sullivan like you know, how great is that?
It's great because like, you know, he was you know, the Ed Sullivan or Mike Douglas. Oh, maybe it's Mike Douglas
Yeah, but but either way, you know
He was you know in the world of that second tier of entertainers that were everywhere that were working that were
You know, they may not have gotten the life they wanted but but they were, you know, entertainers and they worked. And how gorgeous is his voice?
Yeah, it's great.
He's major.
Yeah.
That man can sing.
Yeah.
But like the one other thing about the movie
and you capturing that relationship
through archival moments is I think your mom had a great time.
Without a doubt.
Without a doubt.
How about Nelson and I, how about that I look more like him than his other daughters?
That's the joke.
I look exactly like him.
But also here you look like your mom a lot.
Yes, I know I look like my mom.
I'm a perfect mixture.
Yeah.
It was like, it was so profound, you know, that you could find this true kind of like tragic, but elevating human story.
Because when you, when he is able to, you know, release to you the reason why he made
the choice he did, you know, and, and all he could do is wait for you
to find him, really.
That's all he could do, which was the most loving act.
And that's why this movie is like,
I understand every single person's point of view.
And that's what I wanted to sort of show
the three dimensionality of each person,
their feelings, the complexity of the decisions
that they made, and then knowing that makes me,
it just healed my heart.
It just healed my heart.
It healed mine.
Oh, thank you, Mark.
I hope that, by the way, I hope that.
I hope, I so hope that is my wish for the movie
because I believe that there's such,
universality comes from the specific, right?
So this is a movie about my mom and my family.
But I hope that it resonates with everyone
and I think that it will because you leave there
just thinking about your own family.
But also you leave there like realizing like, okay, if you think about this story happening
in the culture we live in today, that, you know, the possibility of that being framed
as something sordid and something, you know, click-bite worthy, well tabloids were around
then, but I mean, you got so lucky, you know, because that could have polluted your whole
perception of the thing and made your own sense of self even more damaged. And it didn't.
Exactly. But I also thought that I was from like, you know, going to Catholic school,
I thought I was from like a dirty affair.
I know.
And now I've learned they loved each other.
It seems that way.
Like, I came from love. I came from love.
And you brought up in love, too.
I was brought up from love. And you brought up in love too. I was brought up in love.
It was just so lucky, but like, you know,
I think my point is that it's so easy to minimize something
like, oh, she's the, you know, the out of wedlock child.
To make it sorted is so easy and so lazy and so destructive
that the nuances of this situation,
which you sought to find, were insanely human and incredibly difficult.
But it's so fortunate it wasn't.
And you saying that is so right on
because I spoke to a few people, some business people,
some older people, and I told them about it,
and they go, oh no, don't do that.
Don't tell that story.
And this one guy who loves me and is a very smart guy,
but he goes, yeah, I don't want people to see you like that.
That's what he said.
And I went, a child out of wedlock, whatever.
And that's when I said, oh, you don't get it.
You don't get it.
And it was so, I left, we had dinner, and he said that to me.
And he's very protective of me, he thought.
Yeah.
I mean, he was.
But he just didn't get it.
And I went, guess what?
You're who I'm making the film for.
Yeah.
You are who I'm making the film for.
So you'll go, boom.
Did he?
He hasn't seen it yet.
He's Kelby there, though.
And I know that's what he'll do.
Actually, he doesn't have feelings, so he might not. But anyway.
Yeah. I'm telling you, man. Like, you know, when Nelson Sardelli tells you why, it's fucking crazy.
And how about Nelson Sardelli waiting for 30 years out of respect for me. And by the way,
I know that people called him.
I know that there were people trying to call
and get this story.
And he said, no comment.
And he honored me and my dad.
And that's why in that movie, when he has that like
total Sicilian mafia moment, he goes,
I will never embarrass you.
Never.
And I went, oh.
I'm gonna cast him as like a mafia king on SVU.
But it was so, I love that I'm Sicilian.
I think that helps me play Olivia Benson.
I'm serious.
I'm sure.
Because when I go there and I'm like,
where did that come from?
I got it.
But the fact that he honored me and my dad in that way
is such an act of loving and
generosity.
It's crazy.
And that my sisters, my sisters lived with the secret. My sisters, that's not fun being
a secret.
His daughters.
His daughters. But can you imagine they were like, okay, these are the rules, I get it. Yeah, yeah, it is kind of profound that it went on,
that he waited until you eventually found out
or was ready, yeah, because, oh, we both knew early on.
Oh yeah, we knew.
And certainly it didn't make your life any easier,
but geez, the relief of resolution and the burden lifted
to get that piece of information.
Is he still around still?
Oh yes.
Yeah.
Oh good.
He's around and we were texting yesterday
because he checked in with me.
He goes, how do you feel?
How do you feel now that it's out?
I had asked him how he feels now that it's out
because everyone's calling him and texting him
and news journalists and everybody wants to interview him.
And he said, I feel great.
How do you feel?
He said, and I said, well, I wrote back to him,
some things are worth the weight, the weight.
And then, and also the weight.
W-E-I-G-H-T.
And it sort of was like the whole thing.
Both weights, they were worth it.
And now he and I have this such beautiful love
that he's proven to me through the truth,
through telling his story.
And now we obviously have this biological connection,
but he, it's so profound to me what he did
and what he sacrificed.
As a parent, I can't imagine,
I can't imagine making that choice for someone,
it's so hard and he did the right thing.
Yeah, such a specific and heightened circumstance.
You know.
So heightened.
So it was quite a noble act of love
and everything has been reframed.
Everything has been reframed for me.
And after all this work, you know, through the movie
and through your personal experience, you know, through the movie and through, you know, your personal experience,
I mean, what is the most difficult,
it would seem to me that the most difficult thing
to really kind of wrap your brain around
is Mickey's position till the death.
No, because I understand him.
And I'm grateful for that.
And that was his, what's the word, like he solemnly swore, he made an oath to me, to
himself.
And to me, I get it.
That's who he was. And I know that he's looking down at me going,
we're good.
And that's why I wanted to make a love letter to him
with this movie, and that's what I think it is.
I think that is true.
I guess for me, I'm just,
I'm wondering about, you know,
cause you know, the commitment that both these men made
to themselves, it was a lifelong commitment.
You know, in honor of you.
It's staggering. It's staggering.
It's crazy.
Oh.
And, you know, Mickey's decision to take it to the grave is kind of, you know, I know,
you know, you understand it and I understand it.
And I guess that for a guy like that,
there was no other way.
And you know what the irony is, is I get that now,
but I grew up, my mother died,
it's serious abandonment issues.
And then when this happened, I felt so unloved.
When you found out about Nelson?
Yeah.
I was lied to, betrayed.
Yeah.
I felt unclaimed, so unloved.
Yeah.
Because I didn't understand the whole story.
And to, when you have those feelings inside,
you know, all those feelings of imposter syndrome,
abandonment is a rough one.
I'm not gonna lie, abandonment is just a rough one
to get over. But that's all attached to the original trauma
of the car accident.
Yes, but then how things can switch with the truth.
Yeah, what a relief.
What a relief, but it's for me like it's a miracle.
It's like I was, my assessment was so far off.
Well, how could you know any different?
Right, because you're a kid
and you think your mother dies, it's your fault.
But on some level, those feelings are valid.
Of course.
They're all valid.
They're all valid.
And they're all real.
And two things can be true at once.
That's right.
Several things can be true at once.
But the fact that I have this devotion of these two men, true devotion, that, I mean, you're lucky if you have the devotion of one person. So
that I had these two fathers. And so that's how I look at it now, is that I have two fathers,
that I have two men that loved me, you know, in a paternal way. And the same thing with
the mothers, that I have two mothers. That was the other thing is that I didn't feel
that she loved me.
Who, Jane?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, how could you know?
But also I just, I thought she was too busy for me.
I thought I was, you know, when I say that in the movie,
if you see me holding my bottle,
I clearly was like, I got this people.
I don't do it myself.
And-
Right, but all that is in ret all that is through
You know you in terms of feeling loved
The memory of it actually being the time that you have with her is gone
I mean you can't access that so you can only project this stuff. Yeah, you know, that's why it's also a commentary on
Memory. Yeah, and what we remember and what is real and what is not
real.
You know, this is, you know, people say, why did you make this movie now?
Because I was ready.
Yeah, because it's time.
Because it's time.
Well, it's a beautiful thing, this movie.
Thank you. And it's a real human drama
that ends in a way that you could never imagine
and it's freeing for so many people, you know.
Oh, thank you.
That a beautiful thing to say.
Yeah. I hope so.
Well, it was great talking to you.
You too. Okay.
Thank you.
["The H.B.O. Documentary"]
Unbelievable. Great story. Great person. The HBO documentary she directed, My Mom Jane,
is now streaming on Macs. Hang out for a minute, folks.
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So five years ago during COVID lockdown,
I got a chance to talk to another Law and Order
SVU cast member, Ice T.
That was episode 1145.
I was in Barcelona, Spain on a honeymoon,
and at some point, must have been earlier that year,
and we went to the aquarium, me and this woman.
And you were at the aquarium in Barcelona, Spain,
with one of the kids and a wife,
and you were just looking at the fish.
Does this make sense?
Do you remember doing that?
It makes absolute sense.
So I'm walking behind you
because you're reading off the information cards
and you're reacting to what's in the tank.
And I was like, we got to follow this guy
because this is the best tour I've ever been on.
And you know what though, when you travel.
I was probably on tour.
Yeah.
I've never gone to any foreign country just to hang out.
Yeah.
I've always gone because I was on tour or something.
And, um, if you don't take advantage of that trip and go see some sites,
you know what I'm saying? You lose your mind.
So I was in I'll tell you another funny story.
I was in Ireland.
I love Ireland. Ireland. Love it.
I like it. It was cool.
Yeah, I like every place I go because every place I go, I got a fan base.
So I go from the hotel to people that love me.
So it doesn't I don't I go right for the hotel to a group of people that can't wait to see me.
Yeah, I'm always going to love like you like always fucked up there.
I'm like, I'm not even there long enough to know.
I'm I'm just there for the love. And then I'm out. I'm out.
So we went to a zoo.
Yeah. And a fucking gorilla almost tried to kill me.
Right. Like we were we were me and Ernie C were looking at this gorilla
and it was a big plexiglass thing.
Yeah. It was maybe a 40 feet away.
And the gorilla took one look at me.
I might have been the first black person it saw and it beat its chest and it came and
it rushed and it tried to hit the glass.
Blam!
I'm like, oh my God, that glass wasn't it?
That gorilla would just kill me.
So I almost died by gorilla in Ireland.
Go check that out right now on whatever podcast player you're using, Ice-T, on episode 1145.
And if you want every episode of WTF Add Free, sign up for WTF+, go to the link in the episode
description or go to WTFPod.com and click on WTF+.
And a reminder before we go, this podcast is hosted by Acast.
Now I'm going to try to, I've been doing actual songs lately because I want to get in the
habit of trying to learn things
So now I'm gonna clunk my way through this one so
uh so
so So So So So So So Boomer lives, Monkey and Lafond, the cat angels everywhere.