WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1678 - Jamie Lee Curtis
Episode Date: September 15, 2025Jamie Lee Curtis has a career in show business spanning nearly 50 years, but she’s currently having the most creatively fulfilling time of her life. Not only is she just a few years removed from win...ning an Oscar for Everything Everywhere All At Once and then an Emmy for The Bear, she’s also putting her energy into production and development, whether it’s Freakier Friday or the upcoming Patricia Cornwell crime drama Scarpetta or the new film The Lost Bus. Jamie Lee and Marc talk about her very hazy memories of youth, her sobriety, her dislike of rehearsals, and the reason she never reads the comments. 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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all right let's do this how are you what the fuckers what the fuck buddies what the fuck nicks what's happening
i'm mark maren this is my podcast welcome to it what's happening jamy lee curtis is on the show today
she's an oscar winner an emmy winner and she's been doing this since she was 19 years old she says that
she's the most creatively fulfilled she's ever been in her career producing movies like the lost bus and
Freakier Friday. She's also in the new James L. Brooks movie, Ella McKay, which comes out later this
year. And we had a great conversation. Spent a little time hanging out before even. She came to my
house, I would say 45 minutes early. I had woken up about 20 minutes before. I just fed the cats.
I was in the middle of my first cup of coffee walking around my house, fortunately dressed when I saw
her on the porch, waving her arms at me. And I let her in, and she met her in. And she met my
cats and then she sat on the floor she had brought me some beautiful gifts a couple of books
and a nice piece of art from a foundation that she had started that you know tries to help people
with loss and loneliness and she talked about Lynn so before we even get out here I'm crying a bit
and I really was not fortified I didn't have my my light emotional mesh armor on
and it got very connected very quickly before we even got out of my house.
But then she came out here, and what an amazing person.
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I have been out doing the comedy and I've been aggravated and I've been on edge and I've been
not knowing what to do with those feelings.
I forget that this is part of my process.
You know, I get done with a special that took me years to put together.
I very quickly try to let go of that material and then I'm in the kind of a vulnerable
and nervous place of not having anything and having to go up on stage with the limited stuff
and just kind of hammer that out. And it's easy to get to kind of buckle under that fear of
not having anything. And then all of a sudden, the anger comes, the aggravation, the discomfort,
the just edginess. And yet that usually is the fuel. That is usually the launching pad
for me to think out loud sometimes in an angry way and then I got to temper it got to hammer it out
not soften it just give it some form and less angry but it's still it's still got an edge to it
so that's starting to happen which is good though I don't I don't know how propelled I am
I've been having a little a little difficulty with propulsion lately you know why I don't know
it's like what just so what just enjoy your life he said to himself out loud to people listening
enjoy it
I don't know
I just feel like
you know all of a sudden I'm like
I don't want to go to gym
I don't want to cook my dinner
I don't want to try these jokes
I don't fuck it I don't want to
I want a veg
I just want a veg
aren't I entitled
as an American to veg
to do a deep veg
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Oh my God.
What do you want to update on my cat problems?
I'm just trying to accept what's happening.
I've been in contact with Jackson Galaxy.
We're texting.
There's a plan in place.
I don't have a lot of faith in that.
I just want peace in my house.
I'm not feeling sorry for myself.
I'm not a victim.
I just don't deserve to be on edge all the time worried about fucking cats.
I don't know how you guys do it with kids.
At least you kind of know they're going to grow out of something.
I think Charlie's emotionally stunted.
I think he's a perpetual kitten and he's too big and too strong to be that right now.
We took him away from his mother.
Well, he was left under my doorstep.
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spoiled, self-centered, and emotionally stunted.
Sound like someone you know?
Hello, my name's Mark Maron.
But I wasn't taken away from my mother.
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Okay, folks.
Jamie Lee Curtis is here.
She just produced this movie called The Lost Bus,
which I thought was great.
I think Matthew McConaughey,
when he sets his mind to it, is great.
America, Ferrara, is in it as well.
And it's a true story,
or it's based on a true story,
about the campfire that burned through
the town of paradise up in Northern California.
And it's, it's,
I found it completely,
compelling, and it's just great to see great acting, and the guy who directed it, Paul Greengrass, did kind of an astounding job with it.
And because I'm sort of studying a little harder now in preparation to possibly direct my first film, it was very kind of inspiring.
It's a great movie.
I just found it compelling as hell.
The Lost Bus is in Select Theater, September 19th, and streaming on Apple TV Plus on October 3rd, Freakier Friday.
is also still in theaters.
This is me hanging out with Jamie Lee Curtis.
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The Old House had all my books, Chotchkes,
it was like a museum of me.
And this place, you know, I didn't want to...
Richard Lewis.
Richard.
I'm just going to cry the whole time.
I already cried a little bit for Lynn, and he gave me the nice present.
I'm going to speak of him this afternoon.
HBO is making a documentary about him.
As time goes on, my love for Richard Lewis just grows.
He's my Eskimo, by the way.
Yeah.
Oh, he is.
He's a good one.
He's a good one.
When you did the show with him, was he already sober?
No, he was far from sober, way far, like another continent from sober.
Yeah, he was out of his mind.
Yeah, out of his mind on top of being out of his mind.
On top of being out of his mind and terrified.
Yeah.
Because he, you know, he had never done something like that, which required memorization, you know, if I'm sure you knew.
Oh, for the show.
He would have that sheet, those yellow.
legal pad stuff with all the scrawl and everything.
It was his first big acting gig?
It was his first regular.
I don't know.
I actually don't know his biography so much,
but it was his first regular acting gig for sure.
Yeah.
And, you know, it requires memorization.
It requires a lot.
And he was freaking out the whole time?
He, yeah.
Yes.
I just like, you know, out of all the comics in my, you know, as I grew up, you know, I always loved him and I felt we had something similar.
And as I got to know him, you know, as an older guy, like we didn't hang out much, you know, but, you know, he liked me and we talked.
You know, his process is, is the most like mine.
and what we put at stake,
what's at stake when we do comedy is the same
because you're just moving through things.
Yeah.
And it's over repetition.
You're not going up there with set jokes.
You're like going up there like,
all right, I've got this and I'm going to go.
Right.
And then I'm going to take that and then go somewhere.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was, I will tell you that I'm, how old and I have old,
I am 67 this year, 66.
No, I'm 67 this year.
I've only been in the movies.
I've never done a play.
The closest thing to live work I ever did was host Saturday Night Live twice, which was awful.
I'm not a sketch comedian.
It's like it was just uncomfortable and terrible?
It just wasn't, it's not my mati.
It's not my, you know, I'm not, I'm comfortable sort of in life, but it's not what I do.
So there's nothing memorable about any of my appearances on SNL.
But Richard was only a live person, right?
And I, so when you're doing a TV series, you do it live in front of an audience.
And I became like a heroin addict for the audience.
I came, I literally felt more alive than I've.
ever felt in my life
when I got that first laugh
with a studio audience
and it just unleashed me
and it freed me and I loved
it and Richard Lewis
who is live
with a sheet of paper
and some notes for an hour and a half
or whatever however long his set would be
hated
hated the audience
because it wasn't his words
wasn't his words
and his, he hated the idea that there were people watching.
He wanted the audience gone.
And I loved it.
So it was like a perfect, weird combo platter.
Well, it's interesting.
He probably didn't like the limitations of the jokes that he, you know, that he was confined by.
Well, for sure.
And he didn't like our writers.
Oh.
And he early on wanted Larry David.
Uh-huh.
and the head writer of our show didn't want Larry David for whatever reason.
And he was drunk?
Well, no, I don't, I don't, I actually don't think he drank during the work.
Oh, good. Yeah.
I don't think he was drunk.
Yeah.
He was petrified that he wouldn't remember.
So I don't know if you know this.
And I'm about to tell this to the HBO document that's going to be made, but I'm happy to divulge it here with you.
a friend of his, someone who loved him.
Yes.
Richard Lewis taped every single line
he had to say
to every prop
that there was in front of him.
So if you ever see the show,
he always carried around a clipboard.
Well, the clipboard had every line he had to say.
On his desk,
in front of every item
would have been taped lines that he had.
I had to tape
lines on my body for him if it was a if we were doing a pickup and the close up was on him
over me wow i think he was terrified to have to remember yeah it in a very fixed as you said a
very controlled fixed way rather than his way yeah yeah you know i think that just terrified
yeah it's funny with the the lines you know i mean i don't know how you do it you know because
I talk to actors, and there are actors, because I'm fairly new to it.
And there are actors who were like, I read the script a hundred times before I shoot a movie.
Yeah.
And I'm like, yeah, I'm not going to, that's not going to happen for me.
Yeah.
And, but I can remember lines, you know, scene per scene, you know, and know it.
But I had this experience, you know, Danny Trejo.
Sure, of course.
Sober.
Very sober.
Super sober.
Well, in my show, it's very funny.
you know, I hired him to, he played a guy that I was sponsoring.
He played a guy that just got out of the joint, and I was his sponsor.
So that dynamic was not great for him.
Right.
Because he's like, he's that guy.
Right.
And he had a lot of lines.
He's way that guy, by the way that guy.
God bless him.
And he had a lot of lines.
And, you know, he wasn't feeling well that day.
And we had to tape cue cards.
We had a scene in a car.
Yeah.
You know, and the lines were, we had to take.
them all over the place.
And at some point he goes, I haven't had this many lines in my entire career.
And he looks at me, he goes, they hire me for my face.
That's fun.
By the way, I think there are great actors who like to have cue cards.
I think there are great actors who wear earwigs and have the dialogue fed to them so they can interpret it.
on their own
I am
this is not me
like
I'm not making it a pejor
like
I don't care
what anybody does
honestly I don't
I don't care what your
plan
I've recently heard
that there's an act
because of the internet
which is as you know
our favorite thing
there have been actors
who I've recently seen
say they write
their dialogue out
but only the first
letter of the words
Yeah.
And that's how they remember.
And I just do it like on my own in repetition.
Yeah, right.
And but I, but I just do, I don't say the words to another person.
I don't work with a scene partner.
I don't work with a coach.
I don't work with somebody to feed me.
I just, so like for instance on, there's the bear.
Yeah.
There was an entire episode.
that was just me and Abby.
Yeah.
It's great.
You did great on that show.
It's fantastic.
But, thank you.
But the work, the words are so amazing.
And Donna is in that episode, particularly, you know, Abby's giving birth, sugar is giving or is in labor.
Yeah.
And Donna just starts talking about all of the children's birth stories.
So there are these beautiful monologues about.
memory of these experiences and they they aren't linear and they kind of pop off all over the place
but it was so beautiful and for me learning them it was I it was the writing was so great yeah that
you want you don't want to miss a word because they're so powerful yeah and I'm I've been
lucky that the times I've had to memorize something in a big chunk, has been great writing
versus having to memorize something that's awful.
Yeah.
And then I'm sure it would have been much more difficult.
Well, it is, it's strange with, because I'm a performer and a writer to a degree, and then
when you do, when you have to do that work and you don't like the writing, it's tricky.
Yeah.
Are you confrontational?
No, please.
Oh.
Am I confrontational?
Hardly.
I'm like the, I'm a, no.
Team player?
Oh.
I'm, I'm head cheerleader.
I'm, I'm not confrontational.
In fact, I recently did a piece of work and there was a moment where I felt someone was out of line with another person.
And to this day, I'm.
still angry that I didn't step in and go, hey, hey, hey, what are you doing? Why are you doing
that? Back it up a bit, you know, step away from the vehicle. Like, what are you doing? I am not
confrontational on almost any level. Yeah, I think, well, with the acting, it seems that like if you have
lines that you don't think are true to the character you're playing, it becomes really
hard not to be like, what the fuck are you doing?
I one time, I had not done a few, obviously, a few movies, and at one point, TNT was going
to do Wendy Wasserstein's The Heidi Chronicles for television, and they asked me to play
Heidi Holland and I remember Wendy Wasserstein had to approve me. So we went to breakfast at a
hotel where, you know, we talked for 20 minutes about whatever it was we talked about. It was fairly
quick to dive into whatever it was we were doing. And then I remember she looked across at me
at one point and went, okay, okay. And I said, okay, what? She goes,
okay, you can do it.
Yeah.
And I didn't realize that actually it was an audition.
Right.
But the reason I'm telling you it is in the middle of the Hyde Chronicles,
the Hyde Chronicles is about the women's movement in the 60s.
And she's an art historian.
And at one point she's invited back to her girl's school to give a keynote at a women's luncheon,
a girls' school luncheon, women, where are we going?
That's the title of her speech.
And Heidi is so disgruntled and so confused by where we are as women.
And this was when she wrote it.
And she goes on to talk about, it's sort of a rambling monologue where she talks about going to the gym.
First of all, she talks about what you assume her.
life is like, which is like this sort of tiger mom whose daughter plays violin and, you know,
who's gluten-free and whose husband stups her on the kitchen table when the children first
gone, you know, like this fantasy of what women do in today's world.
Yeah.
And then she talks about going to the gym and how all the women at the gym were just talking
about a shoe and these are the best shoes.
and this is the best pair of jeans and blah, blah, blah.
And just the sort of pre-instagram messaging of branding.
Branding.
Yeah.
And how this one's cheating on that one's husband and this one moved, this one out of the way for a job,
and how this woman stole a job from another woman.
And at the end of it, she gets very emotional.
And she says,
I thought the point
was we're in this together
I thought that was the point
she's really frustrated
the reason I tell you this is
I'm a movie actor
I'm offered to do this
what was a play Joan Allen
originated the part on Broadway
you know and in the middle
of this play is this
what six minute monologue
of this woman's free association
about her day
and I decided
I needed to know that monologue locked before I ever rehearsed one day of the of the TV movie.
And so I learned it.
And so the day of the table read, we were at the Wilshire e-bell theater.
We were sitting around a table.
We were reading this script.
We all had our scripts.
And then when it came to that speech, I closed my script.
And I remember somebody looked at me like, what the fuck is she doing?
And I gave the monologue.
And for me, that is how I work.
So that's why I told you that story.
Just simply, I need to know it in order to be able to live it.
Yeah.
If I'm looking for it, if I had to be looking for a line right now, I wouldn't be in it.
And being in it is my only gift.
I don't have discernible gifts.
But my gift is I need to be in it.
Yeah, with you.
Yeah, right.
Here.
Yeah, yeah.
And if I'm looking for something or if I'm feeling like I'm not in it, then I'm terrible.
Yeah, and that's like what's tricky about, I've noticed that, like, I had to do my first movie where I really had a lead.
And there were definitely times where I was rationalizing that, like, if I'm looking for it, it looks like I'm thinking of what to say.
Yeah, far.
Right. I understand.
There's an immediacy to it.
I know.
I just worked with James L. Brooks on a movie that he wrote and directed.
How is that?
Well, so the first day I met him, he asked me to play this part.
It's a beautiful part in this movie.
It's called Ella McKay.
It comes out in December.
It's a family dysfunctional comedy, dromedy.
And, you know, it's James Lof looking Brooks.
And I go to his house and we sit in his living room.
And I said, just so you know, I don't like to rehearse.
I said, because for me, I'm trained to basically be prepared for my work.
Yeah.
So be it that I did horror movies, be it I did television, I am loaded.
Yeah.
Like I show up.
I am fully loaded to go.
Yeah.
Whatever it is.
Yeah.
I will never not know a line.
I am ready to go.
And he looked at me and he said,
oh, I love rehearsal.
It's the best part of the whole process.
And I was like, oh, well, this is going to be interesting.
He said, why don't you like to rehearse?
I said, because I feel like you're wasting.
If something happens, it's movies, right?
You've got a camera on you.
Roll the freaking camera.
Like, let's go and let's rehearse on camera.
Because what happens if something magical happens in the rehearsal?
And he said, but that's why you rehearse.
We had this wonderful thing.
And so the movies finished, it was a beautiful experience challenging because of he likes to do it a lot.
He likes to explore it a lot.
And I'm not used to that.
I'm used to exploring it twice.
Yeah, right.
And then moving on.
And he said, so we were doing a thing with people who had seen the movie, and I kind of brought that story up.
They said, how was it working with Jim?
I said, oh, that's amazing experience.
I love him.
By the way, I love him.
Yeah.
Like deeply.
Yeah.
But I said, but, you know, when I first met him, he and I kind of looked at each other, and I said, I don't like to rehearse.
And he said, well, all I do is like to rehearse.
And Jim said, no, no, no, no, that's not what you said.
You said I don't like to be directed.
And he, I don't think I said that, but I think that's what he was saying.
That's what he heard.
Which is, you just want to do what you want to do.
Yeah.
And up to this moment, you've gotten away with it.
Uh-huh.
But not with me.
Because I'm going to direct you.
And it was that experience.
experience for me.
Was it good?
Yeah.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I've talked to...
Different.
Yeah, I've talked to directors.
A lot of them think like you do.
Like, you know, I hired the actor to do their job.
I'm not there to train them.
Well, it's a different interpretation of the word direct.
Yeah.
Jim Cameron did not direct the performance.
Right.
He's so visual.
I mean, you have to remember, true lies.
Yeah.
He wrote it.
It's freaking funny.
Yeah.
There are jokes.
The jokes land.
Yeah.
He's like a comedy writer.
Yeah.
In secret for a guy who has such respect for a more serious, more deeper, darker,
yeah.
Big, giant vision.
Yeah.
He wrote some really funny jokes in true lives and landed them not only.
only in the writing, but in the directing of it, because, you know, you can screw up a joke if you don't shoot it properly and cut it properly and go to the reaction shot.
You know, so he, I loved that about him.
But, you know, there are people who don't interject that much.
I'm somebody who likes, like, I want you to say literally, faster, slower, cold, or hotter.
Yeah.
I even like a color.
And here's an example, which you will totally get.
Maybe, or maybe not.
Maybe we'll think I'm an asshole.
I doubt it.
During the bear, it was the Christmas episode, the Fish's episode.
I-O. was shadowing Chris Storer because she knew she was going to direct episodes in the next season.
Yeah.
And that episode, she's not in it because it's a flashback to the family.
Yeah. And so she was on set, shadowing Chris. And we were in a tiny house, crowded with crew, crowded with a lot of actors. So there was virtually nowhere to go. And so I was sitting on the stairs. And I remember she came and sat next to me. We had this lovely talk, you know, while they were setting up somewhere, doing something. And, you know, we were talking.
about process.
And this was the Fish's episode.
And by the way, I'm coming in blind.
I don't know one person.
Yeah.
Not one.
On the cast, you mean.
Anybody.
Yeah.
I didn't know Chris.
Storer, the director.
Yeah.
I had just met him the day I got there.
Right.
He and I texted twice.
Right.
Seriously.
Yeah.
That was it.
Yeah.
So you fly to Chicago.
You're in a hotel by yourself.
And then they pick you up.
Yeah.
And they bring you to set.
And you're walking around going,
hi, I'm Jamie.
Hi, I'm Jamie.
Hi, I'm Jamie.
Hi, I'm Jamie.
me and then you do action and then action sort of and so she and I were sitting on the stairs
and I was saying about like process and I said you know I'm one of those people I like somebody
to whisper in my ear I don't like to be shouted at across the stage I want you to come up and whisper
in my ear a suggestion I said you know pace it up slow it down right give it a little more heat
to give it a little thing.
And I said, I mean, I would even like if somebody just said a color to me.
Yeah.
The one word, a color.
And then I will interpret the note.
It takes a poetic director.
And so we do, so we shoot in the kitchen.
It was pretty insane and beautiful.
But again, fast.
Yeah.
Or fast.
Yeah.
In about a half an hour, 40 minutes, we've done that whole kitchen.
I mean, it's all handheld.
You like that, though?
I love. Are you kidding? I was I was unleashed. I loved it. But I mean, it's, it's, but then like the next day we did the dinner table. Because it was a set because we had to drive a car into it. With Malaney and Odenkirk and everybody. Oh yeah. Yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah. And it's a big table. A lot of people. And Bernthal.
Oh, yeah. And, you know, they're going to get a big fight and then I'm going to drive a car into the room.
And so it was a separate day.
It was a separate set.
It was actually built on a sound stage because they had to because they had to the car gag.
And, you know, we did this big.
You never know where the camera is because it's all handheld.
We did that scene.
I think we did it twice.
It went as pitch, you know.
And it's, again, beautifully written.
Yeah.
Painful.
Yeah.
violent and we did two takes of it
and then they had to reset because they had to
fix all the broken plates
and at one point I-O came over and whispered
in my ear
purple
she said
purple
and what she was saying is
you've done red
and you've done orange
give me purple
and what she was saying is give me the
wound.
Uh-huh.
A purple is a bruise.
It's not anger and it's not rage.
Right.
It's pain.
Mm-hmm.
That's the take they use.
So, for aspiring actors, for uninspiring actors, for uninspiring actors, for old, tired, I'm
done actors, it doesn't fucking matter.
None of it matters.
I don't give a shit if you write every line.
I love actors who work with coaches and they do deep, deep backgrounds.
I don't care.
I read the script once.
I never read it again.
I learn my lines.
I show up and do the work.
That's JLC.
Yeah.
So what's interesting is I have to assume that in your childhood,
having grown up with two actors, you know, big actors,
and growing up in a Hollywood that was so much different.
Yeah.
That your earlier memories of what the job was like has to be different.
I have no memories.
None.
None.
I have no memories.
My childhood memories are smells and sounds, and I'm tactile.
Like I've already probably put my hands on you twice.
Yeah.
I'm a little handsy.
Yeah.
I have zero memory of show business.
Really?
I grew up on a dirt road in Benedict Canyon in a house.
My parents were divorced.
I was three.
I think if we ever visited, we were dressed up alike, me and my sister Kelly.
Yeah.
And we made the obligatory half-hour appearance on a set.
Yeah.
And people took pictures of my parents with us.
And then we were shuttled away.
I have zero memory, there's no process, there's no reminiscence, there's no nostalgia, there's nothing.
Huh.
My memories are the smell of eucalyptus trees.
In Benedict Canyon.
In Benedict Canyon on a dirt road.
The smell of chlorine in a pool because we had a pool and I love to swim.
I have a tactile memory of cold upholstery because I, you know,
I know I've, in my dotage, have kind of made this joke that, like, I wish concerts were midday.
Yeah.
Like, I guesshry about why can't Coldplay do a matinee?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, started at noon.
Yeah, why not?
I would go.
So we could all enjoy it.
So we could all enjoy it rather than start it at nine.
By nine, I'm asleep two hours.
So, but my memory is, I think I was that way, Mark, since I was a little girl because my memory is falling asleep.
restaurants and being carried to the car and the memory I have is the feeling of the cold
upholstery in the back seat of a car and me asleep.
Do you think like it's like trauma?
Of course.
Yeah.
Of course.
But trauma, like everybody has trauma.
No, I know.
But I mean, life is trauma.
But at some point you wake up and have memories, don't you?
No.
The memories don't, like they don't start at like 10?
Nothing. Well, yeah. But, you know, I have very few memories of my youth. Very few. Very, very few.
And I guess that's most people if you really think about it. You have events, maybe.
Yeah, I don't. I don't. I don't. There are, I am, I am a censorial person. So I have bionic hearing.
But were your parents cold?
I can tell you that my mom was a beautiful, charming, sweet woman who had a lot of joy, but also a lot of sadness.
And I'm not going to say cold.
I mean, she just wasn't yummy.
She wasn't sort of a yummy person.
She was a lovely person.
I had a beautiful life with her.
Don't get me wrong.
And Tony, of course, I didn't know because they divorced and he got, you know, Tony left Janet for a 17-year-old girl.
I'm going to dare say she was 16 when they met, 17 when they worked together, and he married her at 18.
So Tony Curtis left Janet, who was in her 30s with two daughters, for a 17-year-old girl.
Right.
And he married her and had children right away and had another life.
And so my youth, there was none of this conscious uncoupling.
Right.
It was war and awful and betrayal and public and hateful, hateful between my parents.
And, you know, again, when you talked about being confrontive, I was the ultimate good girl.
I kept my mouth shut.
You're going to go one way or the other.
Either you're going to be fuck you or fuck me.
Yeah.
And it was the opposite.
Yeah.
But I am censoral.
So I am telling you, I have like acute hearing.
Like, it's creepy.
Like to the point where it's annoying?
Well, it's crazy.
I'll say, oh, you know, a package just arrived.
I'll say, what?
Yeah.
I'll say, oh, yeah, a truck dropped a package over the fence.
How do you know?
Oh, I heard it.
Do you have that thing where you can't be in loud places?
Yeah, I'm not great with loud noises.
I have incredible olifactory senses.
I am more smell attuned to time and place.
Sort of the verisimilitude of a place and time is through my nose.
Did you ever, like, were you ever able to find some, I mean, because we're both sober and there's this process of this.
were you ever able to you know find a place of forgiveness for tony oh fuck yes yeah oh of course
when did that happen oh i i i mean forgiveness i mean he just wasn't there he just didn't factor
yeah i mean in a weird way yeah he just didn't factor right he was never there he just
wasn't ever there and the existence of him was there because of course he was famous so people
were attached to him yeah i wasn't attached to him at all but i will tell you in answer to
was she cold or what were they cold yeah my mother was cool tony was yami yeah but yami went away
really early.
Now,
yummy,
he was
yummy when
he was
with you
when you were
a child
yummy.
Zero
consistency
for that
yummy,
but I know
it was
yummy.
Charming.
So,
actual memory
I have,
at one point
Tony Curtis
now was married
to his
third wife,
a woman
named
Leslie Allen,
a model, had his first son with her.
He was doing, so it was at his career when he was doing a TV series with Roger Moore called The Persuaders.
I don't remember that.
It was sort of a James Bond.
They were paired kind of detective-y guys.
And it was with Roger Moore.
Yeah. Another charmer.
My sister and I went and visited in this summer to London.
How old were you?
I was 12.
Yeah.
And then he rented a house in Sardinia.
And he had a convertible Rolls-Royce.
Uh-huh.
Tony Curtis loved cars.
And the car was driven to Sardinia through a ferry so that he could have his car because we were going to be there a month.
Yeah.
And we were visiting him.
It was the longest we ever spent with him.
And I remember when we landed it at when we got to the house, none of the bags were there because they were in the car being driven.
we had flown and you know Leslie and my sister Kelly were making house and we were renting a house
so they were you know making house and the baby was with the nanny and I remember Tony said
I want to go for a swim and I said I'll go and he and I walked down this sort of craggly path
to the ocean we were on the coast of Esmeralda in Sardinia and I remember
remember, we both took off our clothes.
I was wearing undies.
He was wearing those white dude undies that you guys wear.
Tidy whiteys.
Tidy whitties.
You know, and we dove into the ocean.
And I remember the feeling that I was the brave one.
I was the one who didn't have her bathing suit because it was in my suitcase, but I didn't care.
Yeah.
That he saw in me in that moment.
Like, that was the bonding moment of my entire childhood with him, was diving off a rock into the ocean in Sardinia and the look on his face that that was his girl, you know, that I was his daughter and I was just like him.
Ah.
Did that stick?
No.
Well, no, and yes.
Whatever, fuck.
I don't care.
But ultimately, when do you decide to pursue acting?
Oh, that was, I was an accident.
Really, it's a boring story.
Yeah.
I'll give you a 30-second version.
I went to college.
I had no business in college.
My mother was the most famous woman who had ever graduated from the college,
University of the Pacific in Stockton, California.
Stockton.
Yeah, baby.
My mother was from her said.
She went to, at the time, College of the Pacific.
She was a genius.
She graduated in three years at 16.
My mother was really bright.
I got in there with my C-minus average and 840 combined SAT scores because they wanted me, really, because my mother was the most famous alum.
And I was in college.
Had no business in college.
You do it, though, you know.
Go to college.
You do it, but I had no business in college.
And at that Christmas, so this is 1976, I came home.
from Christmas, and a girlfriend of mine
was in the same college. She lived in Beverly
Hills. She had a tennis court
and there was a tennis teacher named
Chuck Binder
who taught tennis
on her court. You know, this is
what you do. In Beverly Hills, yeah.
But then you give lessons
to the family whose court it is for free
but you can use the court to teach
other people. That's how the game
works. That's how tennis guys get by.
That's how they do it. They don't have a
court of their own. So they use the court
It's their friends. Anyway. And when I came home at Christmas, went over to my friend's house. Chuck was there. And he said, hey, Jamie, I'm managing actors now. I'm managing a woman named Karen Lamb, who was the sort of Heather Localear of her time. Very beautiful blonde. She was married to Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys.
Oh, another troubled guy.
But a beautiful woman, actress, she was in a lot of TV movies. He said, I'm managing actors. You know, they're looking for names.
Nancy Drew at Universal, you should go up for it.
And I went, oh, okay, had no idea, drove to Universal.
No acting experience.
None, please.
But I was cute.
I was brown-haired.
Yeah.
I was.
Nancy Drew.
18.
Yeah.
And, you know, whatever.
And I didn't get the part.
But he said, you know, they really liked you.
I said, well, that's great.
He goes, you should stick around.
I was like, yeah.
Yeah. But it's, again, I told you just a lot of the story. The college I went to allowed you the month of January to do one class, like a concentrated month of study.
Yeah. So I called the drama department and said, hi. If I stay in L.A. and try to get jobs as an actor and go to acting class and dance class, can I write a paper that would qualify me for credit for the month of.
study, breaking into show business, I'll go to class every day, blah, blah, blah.
And they said yes.
So for the month of January, 1977, I went to auditions.
Chuck sent me out for things, blah, blah, blah.
I took acting classes, dance classes.
A man named David Craig who taught you to sing and act.
I can't sing for anything.
And that was terrifying.
I took a commercial acting class, Peggy Fury, who was a serious acting teacher, who had narcolepsy, and she would fall asleep in the middle of class.
And I remember I did a Tennessee Williams scene, and I'm not Christopher Guest.
I don't do accents just without studying them.
And I remember I did a southern accent in the scene, and I remember at the end of an acting class, then the class,
is allowed to opine about what they thought.
And I remember somebody raised their hand
and said, I thought it was fine
except your accent was bad or something.
And I remember, I remember crying.
And I remember going home thinking,
what the fuck am I doing?
Why do I give a shit?
What that person thinks?
Like, this is an acting class?
Yeah.
This is supposed to teach me?
Yeah.
What did I learn?
Yeah.
He's just got your feelings hurt.
I got my feelings hurt off.
I mean, it was awful, so I never went back to that class.
Anyway, and by the end of that month, Chuck said,
you know, they still have contract players at Universal.
Contract players back in the day were actors they kept in a group that they would use.
They would pay them every month.
But then they would use them in small parts in movies and TV shows.
and the hope was once you signed a contract that you would pop.
Then they had you for a small amount of money, but they could exploit you as a big star.
Were your parents' studio players?
Of course.
My mother, very much so.
So, he said they still have a contract system.
In Versal, I auditioned for the contract system to a woman named Monique James, who was the West Coast version.
There was an East Coast version, a woman named Eleanor Kilgallon, and their job was to find talent and pull them.
That must have been towards the end of that system.
It was almost the exact end, but two years into it before it ended.
So I auditioned, and at the end of my audition, I said to her, this is, I'm me.
I don't know anything.
I said, excuse me, this was really fun.
Thank you so much.
I'm going back to college in two days.
So I need to know if this is going to happen kind of soon because I'm going back to college on like January 28.
Right. And they called the next day and said I had got a contract with Universal and I quit college and became an actor.
So it was the last thing I thought I was going to do.
And now all of a sudden I was paid $235 a week.
as an actor, as a contract player.
But is that interesting that despite it being the lesson you thought you would be doing,
that you entered the system that your mom was in, in a full arc?
And I'm going to hit the point of the arc.
My godfather is Lou Wasserman.
Lou Wasserman was the chairman of Universal.
So, you know, I remember Lou Wasserman calling my mother saying,
I just heard that Jamie is become a contract player.
Uh-huh.
Now, you've known me an hour.
Yeah.
Maybe 45 minutes, 48 minutes.
Yeah.
I'm this person at 17.
I'm this person at 7.
Yeah.
I'm this person when Ray Stark,
who was a very close friend of my parents,
who produced The Exorcist, called my mother and said,
will you let Jamie audition for Reagan in The Exorcist?
And my mother was like, no.
But I'm this person.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So whatever this person is, that's now successful as this person.
Yeah.
I was still this person.
Yeah.
I'm the same exact person.
I guess there's a core thing that doesn't really change in us if it doesn't get beaten out of you one way or the other.
Yeah, far out.
Yeah.
So now you're in the game.
Now, but then I became an actor.
But then I got fired.
So then I got put onto a TV series.
I did a TV series called Operation Petticoat, which was a remake of the movie that Tony Curtis and Carrie Grant starred in.
Right.
Now it was a TV movie.
I played the part opposite Tony Curtis's part.
It's a little weird.
And I did that show for a year.
It turned into a TV series.
It was a movie turned into a TV series.
Did it for a year.
Got fired.
They fired.
So the premise is, of course, it's a Navy sub during World War II.
five army nurses get on board, right?
Because they're stranded in some atoll somewhere.
And now hilarity ensues because, you know,
five army nurses on a Navy sub with 13 guys, right?
Yeah.
So the premise is cute for a movie.
Because at the end of the movie, the women get off.
Yeah.
Well, on a TV series, they never get off.
Yeah, that's right.
So every scene was like, every scene we go,
Captain, excuse me, hi, when are we getting off the ship?
Yeah.
Anyway, they fired 11 of 13 cast members, but kept the premise of the fucking show, as if the premise of the show was the good thing and the actors were back.
Right.
As if the idea that we could get off as soon as that docked, we would be off.
We're army nurses.
We're not supposed to be on a Navy sub.
And instead, they fired me.
I thought my life was over, Mark Maren.
I thought they were going to drop me from my contract because contract.
Because contract system, they do every six-month options.
It's not your option.
It's theirs.
So every six months, they decide if they're going to keep you and if they're going to renew your option.
It was awful.
I thought I was going to lose everything.
I now was going to have to go back to college.
How old were you?
19?
19.
Yeah.
20?
No, I was 19.
Yeah.
And during that, I was fired.
I was feeling shitty.
And that was when.
Chuck Binder called me and said
they're making this little low budget
horror movie in Hollywood
I've put you up for a part
you should go audition
and I did and that was Halloween
so if I will tell you
had I not been fired
from Operation Pettycoat
I would never have made Halloween
and then they canceled Operation Petitote
like two weeks into the next season
of course and that was
and that was then
the beginning of my life
of the real thing
yeah now do you remember
Like, did you watch, like, your mom and psycho or...
No.
Or anything?
No.
A, I'm a scaredy cat.
I just not have zero interest of being frightened.
But did you watch your mom act in anything when you started acting?
No.
Really?
How do you watch your mom acting?
I don't know.
I don't live that life.
I know, but there was no repetition.
Yeah.
There was TV.
Yeah.
Or a movie.
I didn't go to movies.
Yeah.
My mother was in.
Yeah.
Right.
And occasionally.
movie would be on TV. I never saw any of the work my parents did for a very, very, very long
time. Yeah, it's interesting because, you know, like anybody else, you're not going to, you know,
my dad was a doctor. I'm not going to go to the hospital. And people think, you know,
that Hollywood on some level is so much different, but it's not in some ways. Well, the only
difference now is the internet, which allows a daily, you know, now, well, and I'm going to
bring something up with you just because it's front of mind. Yeah. Um, Charlie Christ was
killed two days ago. Kirk. Yeah, Charlie. I'm sorry. Kirk. Kirk. I just call him Chris. I think
because of Christ. Yeah, yeah. Because of, because of his deep, deep belief. I mean,
I disagreed with him on almost every point I ever heard him say. Yeah.
But I believe he was a man of faith, and I hope in that moment when he died that he felt connected to his faith, even though I find what he, his ideas were abhorrent to me.
Yeah.
I still believe he's a father and a husband and a man of faith, and I hope whatever connection to God means that he felt it.
My point is
Yesterday was 9-11
I know there is
video of his assassination
I know people who've seen it
yesterday
we watched again
these images
of those buildings coming down
we don't know
Well, we're talking about analog digital.
We're talking about a childhood where it was like I had famous parents who were in the movies, but I never saw the movies.
I didn't see the images.
I didn't, I would have to, how would I ever see them?
We didn't have DVDs.
We didn't have VHS.
We didn't have, they didn't put them on TV.
Today, we as a society are bombarded with imagery.
So we don't know what, we don't know what.
the longitudinal effects of seeing those towers come down over and over and over and over again.
Or watching his execution over and over and over again.
We watched the Zabruder film, by the way, my birthday, November 22nd.
I'm associated with this awful day of someone being assassinated.
on television.
But it's, as you know,
this Bruder film
is the only
visual document
that moves
that shares
that horror
of what happened.
But here we have
now these images.
All the time every day.
And we are
inured to them
and we are numb to them
but they are in there.
We don't know.
We don't know
enough
psychologically about
what that does
what does that do?
That kind of...
I don't ever want to see
this footage of this man being shot.
I didn't watch it.
I think it diminishes
the depth of humanity.
But if that's the case,
then is that the reason
why we're all feeling
this lack of humanity
because we are just saturated
with this image?
These images.
Well, I think our engagement
with the technology
has become,
It's totally, we've adapted to it, and it's taken over a good part of our mind.
So I think that when it comes to depth or understanding human experience in a visceral way, it gets numbed.
Yeah.
Well, I'm, I'm worried.
Yeah, there's nothing not to worry about.
I'm worried, and I am buoyed when I hear that schools are forbidding phones that
that people, you know, are trying to limit the amount of the Internet that use it for the tool
that it is, research, or, you know what I mean?
It's funny because me, I use the Internet primarily when it comes to, like, looking at things
to, like, did anyone like that talk ahead with Jamie Curtis?
Do you actually look that up?
Well, no, no, I don't look it up, but, like, my engagement with it is usually around what I've
done to see if people saw it to get that sort of feedback. That's, that's my dopamine. It's
not watching assassinations or watching news over and over again. Yeah, see, and I'm the exact
opposite. Oh, it's really like, it's validation. It's not, it's not for me to disengage.
My favorite line from the Heidi Chronicles is when Heidi goes to visit her best friend from
college, Susan, who's now a TV executive. Right. And she goes and they have a scene in her
office. And then as she's leaving the secretary or executive assistant,
You can't say secretary.
Yeah.
The executive assistant, as Heidi walks by, says,
Ms. Holland, do you need validation?
And it's such a play on words about what you're talking about,
which is, is that the internet,
is that what the internet has done has made us all desperate for validation?
Because it certainly has poisoned young people into that idea of trying to get the most amount of,
of likes.
I did it with air quotes.
You can't see them.
And what does that mean?
My secret of the internet, Mark Meran,
and I'm happy to share it here with you.
And maybe it'll be what I leave.
For me?
For you.
To work on?
Yeah.
Don't read comments.
None.
Like I have a, like Christopher Guest,
his movie opened today or last week or whenever the fuck this is.
And, you know, New York Times.
gave it a wonderful review, really funny.
That's good.
Well, you can read that, right?
That's not a comment.
No, but he doesn't, he doesn't read any show business journalism.
Nothing, not journalism.
You know what I mean?
Sure.
He reads nothing about show business.
Not even a critic, he respects?
Nothing.
Nothing, nothing.
He doesn't, he doesn't read anything that has to do with show business.
Okay.
But that's his firewall.
My firewall is I put out into the internet.
Yeah.
What I think and feel.
Yeah.
But I decide, I say what I need to say, and then I don't need to see what you think of what I said.
Sure.
And I have, but I, by the way, I've gotten into a lot of trouble because, of course, the portal is open to a lot of people with a lot of anger.
And I've had a lot of friends call me and go, hi, how are you?
No, this is the voice I get.
Hi.
How are you doing?
Yeah.
And I go, I'm great.
What's up?
Yeah.
Oh, just checking on you.
Yeah.
And I'm like, because why?
Oh, the comments.
And it's something I've either put out politically or something, whatever.
Yeah, I don't read that stuff.
I do like, the reason I like criticism, if they're smart people, like for my last special or whatever, I like to hear thinky people's insight into what I'm doing because it kind of.
of broadens my understanding of what I might have done to somebody else. And it makes me think.
It actually helps me because, you know, my parents didn't do it. So, you know. Yeah. Yeah, my parents
didn't do it. My mom was really, my mom did say be yourself. My mom did recognize
something and and was always hoping that I mean she knew I was funny yeah because I've been this
person's but you know that wasn't the sort of opening salvo of my creative work was me being
funny right so like I guess like after all the like because you had a big movie career
and do now yeah but I mean this is how is how about fucking that I know it's crazy well that's
insane Mark Merritt I mean you were you were you were
huge and then like it's not like you disappeared or anything but but but now you're bigger than
ever yeah in a totally different way you know what it's such a rare fucking thing isn't it and it's
beautiful and and uh i'm i'm i'm i'm leaning in in every possible way when did the when did the
the drugs happen and how did that drugs happened because what year are we talking well drugs
happened. Well, it's funny because I actually
had, I brought
it because I'm going to talk about Richard Lewis later
today. And so I brought
in fact something to show
them, but I'll show it to you when I leave
because it's in my car.
So I dabbled.
So I dabbled,
you know, obviously. When you're a kid.
Let me say this. I grew up
in a house where alcohol
was in those push,
those decanters.
Yeah.
That pushed out of full
shot.
Yeah.
They had silver tops.
Yeah.
They were pretty glass containers,
bourbon, scotch, vodka, whatever.
And you pushed the top and it measured out a shot.
Yeah.
I grew up in a house with that.
So when I was a teenager and you had that, so you'd get a Coke.
Yeah.
And you'd go over to the vodka one.
Yeah.
And then you'd hit the shot of vodka because you were with your friends and you're like,
hey, let's go.
Look at this.
Yeah.
And, you know, so there was a little of that.
It was a little dabbling of that.
of that. There might have been a quailute or two in my
in my sordid past. But again, it was all pretty easy.
Cocaine, obviously in the 80s became a thing. I knew
I was an addict. I knew that when I say an addict,
an addict is you are addicted to the feeling. You know,
addict has such a bad word. But the truth is, if you just look at the word
addiction, you're just, you like the feeling. You want to, again,
and again. Yeah. And I knew I needed to do something. And I went, I called a woman.
So you, but you got, you knew you were out of control. I was never out of control,
Mark Marion. But you knew you had a problem. I knew I had a problem. I was never out of control.
But this wasn't when you were a teenager. It was. This was me when I was in my 20s. But I also
knew that I was never out of control. That was sure. I was a high bottom, like Everest bottom.
Yeah. So I remember I called. I can't remember who she was a,
I think she's no longer here.
She wrote a book called You Can Never Eat Lunch in This Town Again.
Oh, yeah.
I remember that book.
I can't remember her name.
I don't either.
I called her because I knew she had stopped, she had gotten sober or had stopped cocaine.
I remember I asked her, like I called her.
I called her.
Did you know Carrie Fisher?
Briefly.
Yeah, yeah.
Briefly.
But I never, that wasn't who I called.
Anyway, I called this woman.
and anyway she gave me like the name of somebody
and I got off of that pretty quickly
and then she wrote a fucking book
and in her book she actually wrote
you know I was so surprised when my phone rang
and I thought it was Tony Curtis
because he had a big drug problem
and it was his daughter like I was like bitch
are you are you really
yeah anyway I was mortified
luckily nobody read it
I don't remember her name.
Anyway.
But then, and then I was just, you know, I was a dabbler.
I just was.
So that didn't do anything.
You didn't.
No, I'm saying I liked.
Yeah.
I was, I'm fun.
Sure, I get it.
Yeah.
I was a fun person.
So let's have some fun.
Yeah.
And I had a plastic surgery when I was very young in my 30s.
It's too long of the story.
Sure.
The DP on Perfect said that he wouldn't shoot me one day because I had puffy eyes.
eyes. And so right after that movie, I had under eye surgery. And they gave me Vicodin.
Okay.
And that began a sort of 10-year dabbling of opiates. And...
You got out before fentanyl, that's good.
Well, I would be dead. Mark, I wouldn't be here. There's no way to be here.
I got out before fentanyl is the great... That would be the title of the book that I'll never write.
Anyway, my point is, here's how I got sober.
I had an incident with my sister, my older sister, where I had pocketed hers because she had visited and she were a pill popper all day.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Vika clock.
It's like wine o'clock.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, no.
It was like an afternoon, eight afternoon.
Anyway, and I also read Esquire.
So I don't read Esquire.
I don't get Esquire.
It was in a doctor's office.
It had Jerry Springer on the cover.
I have it in my car.
It was January of 1999, and I opened this magazine, and there was an article, Vicodin, my Vicodin, by an author named Tom Chiarolla, who was outing himself, his family, his editor, and friends, by writing this article.
And the opening of the article was, I don't know where my children's birth certificate.
are. I don't know where my marriage certificate is. I don't know where the deed to my house is,
but I can tell you where every Vicodon is hidden in my house. And then he described,
there are two in the left toe of my cowboy boot in the closet, blah, blah, blah. And I remember
reading it, and I thought, oh, wow, that's me. I'm secret. I, like, it's, and then I went to a
girlfriend of mine, who I thought was sober, wasn't. She told me that she also was addicted to
them. She gave me the name of a doctor. Yeah. And then that day, I got sober. That night I got
sober. I just woke up that next morning, realizing that she was going to be dead. I'd be at her
funeral. I'd have blood, her blood on my hand. Did she die? No. Oh, good. No, sober and great.
And where does Richard Lewis factor in? I just hold up. Mark Merrin, you're so pushy.
Or I would be dead and she'd be at my funeral hugging my kids with blood on her hands.
That was the split.
I had two children.
That day I called Richard Lewis, who I knew was sober, who I worked together with on anything about love, but I knew he was sober.
And he said, stay where you are.
And he called somebody and a woman, because I was afraid to go into a public room as a very, I was afraid to go into some recovery meeting.
by myself because I was a public figure
and he called someone
who is also a public figure
who was sober
and she called me
and met me in a meeting
that was 2,399.
I've been sober since.
I love those stories.
If there's one thing in sobriety
taught me in terms of conversation
and in terms of listening
because I really think that
the idea of one alcoholic talking to another
being the core of the program
is a lot to do with what happens here sometimes.
Yeah.
And I think that recovery over time taught me how to be an empathetic listener because, you know, once you lock into recovery and it becomes a priority and, you know, someone's going to tell their story, you know where it's going to go, but it'll get you every time.
Yeah, sure, sure.
It's like, you know, just like what you said, Richard Lewis called the woman and like I feel like my eyes welling up, you know, because that's exactly right.
You know, because that's where it happens.
Yep. And you're like, help is on the way.
Help is on the way.
That's why when we first met in the hall of your house with your cats.
Yeah.
And you told me that you were sober the same amount of years, but a few months past me.
Yeah.
I said to you, that's my hand in the dark, reaching out, and that you felt a hand in the dark of somebody who was a little sober before you.
Yeah.
Who was sober reaching her hand out.
That's how it feels.
Yeah.
When you're in the dark of addiction and you think you're alone and somebody reaches out their hand and you don't know who it is and you grab it and you know that they're going to pull you into the light.
Yeah.
That's.
Well, mine was a woman who I was in love with and I was kind of reluctant to get sober and but I held on to her for as long as I could and that didn't work out.
But I do, she did get me.
Awesome.
And she went through a lot of shit with me.
But, you know, she's okay.
I'm okay, I think.
We don't speak.
But I think she's okay.
But that hand thing, the little piece you gave me, what is that that foundation?
Okay.
I'm actually closing it at the end of the year.
So again, right before COVID, I, like, if I had heard about Lynn and you and I were friends, I would have written you a letter.
And I would have said, you know, I would have said something about loss and about strength.
And then I would have said at the end of the letter.
my hand in yours, Jamie, which was just my way of saying to people all the time,
I'm not with you, I'm not going to be there with you,
but you know what it would feel like to have my hand in yours.
I'm sending you that feeling.
And I thought one day, and it was before COVID,
I thought I collect these little sculptures by an artist named Anne Ricketts.
I often give sober friends her little feet, she has little feet,
And I send them to my sober friends and say, be where your feet are.
Yeah. And as a little reminder, trudging the path.
And I called her and I said, if I create a company, will you create a sculpture of two hands holding?
She said yes. I was going to sell them on Instagram.
Right.
I thought I would just sell them and give money to Children's Hospital.
Yes. Angeles, long story short, it turned out it became a foundation.
I became, it became a much bigger company. We had a lot of products.
And for five years, and then COVID hit.
So that was before COVID.
Yeah.
And then in March of 2020, COVID hit.
Yeah.
And we launched the company right in the middle in August of that year.
And so it's a company that offers comfort items to people in times of crisis.
And there was no bigger crisis in the world than the pandemic.
Yeah.
And so our little company became a very successful company.
Well, that's nice.
It was like it caught me off guard this morning because, you know, you came early.
And I was like, like, I have a very short but specific process leading into an interview.
And, you know, I blew it?
No, no, no.
I busted up.
It's not, it's just me kind of getting into a mind.
And I just, you know, woken up and I'd fed my cats.
And I was on the phone with my friend Jack, who I haven't talked to a while.
And then you were just waving your hands in front of my door.
On front of your door early.
Like that 45 minutes.
But then you come in and we're loaded up.
We sit on the floor.
You give me a gift.
in remembrance of Lynn, and, you know, usually I can kind of keep it together, but like, I'm like, oh, if this is happening before we even get out there, I don't know what's going to happen.
Well, I didn't even know what out there meant, to be honest.
No, no, but I'm just telling from you. The feelings, I think it's more about, you know, you feel like, you know, you can think about loss and you can think about the experience of it and the loss itself.
But, you know, at some point, you feel like you have the feelings a bit under control, you know, and then they're just right there.
And I appreciate you, you know, being there for that and making me have that.
Good.
It was grounding somehow.
That's good, because I know this, you're ending this part of your life.
Yeah, it's another loss.
Soonish.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
That's the same, my hand in yours.
Yeah.
And wherever the universe takes you.
Yeah.
you can always call you you can actually i'm one of those people so but for you you know when
you do everything everywhere all at once and you win an oscar and then like you know all of a sudden
you were like the the elevation of you and your being uh which is purely you i mean that must
have felt uh i don't i can't even imagine no you can't neither can i i i i i i i i
still can't what the best part of it is it was pure yeah like the best part was didn't expect it
oh yeah I remind people I remind people because people once something takes its form and starts
get elevated through marketing through everything it elevates to a place where people
assume a lot about it yeah I remind people we made that movie in January
of 2020
in 38 days
in Seamy Valley
in an abandoned
office building
that was the
countrywide
savings and loan
building before
the market
collapsed and
that building was
like gone
like in a day
they pulled all
the computers out
and left this
campus
and it has
changed hands
six times
they shoot
movies and
commercials there
all the time
and in
38 days
a $12 million
movie called everything everywhere all at once
about the multiverse
was made.
There wasn't a person involved in that movie
that assumed anything other than
it was kind of weird and cool.
Yeah, maybe it'll get out there.
It would get out there.
And I did it for three reasons.
I did it because it was shot in Los Angeles.
If that movie had been shot anywhere else
I would never have been in it.
I did it because they paid me a little money enough to pay cash flow.
And mostly I did it because Michelle Yeo was going to be in it.
And I was going to play her girlfriend Nemesis.
And I thought it was cool.
Yeah.
I thought she was cool.
I always thought she was an amazing woman.
And she was going to star in this weird movie.
I didn't understand it.
My young Paduan, who works with me as a development executive at my now very successful company, is named Russell Goldman.
And when I walked in and said I'd been offered a movie by the Daniels, he said, you've, like, without even blinking, he said, oh, my God, you have to do it.
And I was like, really?
He goes, oh, my God, they're geniuses.
Yes, did you see Swiss Army Man?
Yeah.
I said, I did, but I didn't.
I mean, I appreciated it, but he goes, they're geniuses.
Yeah.
Turned down for what?
They're geniuses.
And it turned out to be true.
I credit Russell Goldman.
And in terms of, like, you know, I know you've been pretty.
public about, you know, just being you, letting it all hang out.
Yeah, baby.
And, you know, you seem to get a lot of attention just for that, that like a woman of a
certain age owning it and not having any insecurity about it.
I mean, then I would be, that sounds saintly.
I'm not a saint.
No, I know, I know.
We are not saint.
make choices um i'm i understand uh i look in the mirror i i i know what's there i know what's
not there and i know how to how to um you know look it i did i i we just did freak your
friday yeah we had a wonderful summer we actually you know had a really how she doing
fantastic i you know it's weird like i you know i i just for for some reason with lindsay
low hand i i feel for her and and i was i'm very happy no i'm very you feel really happy no i feel i feel
like i feel that some like i like i only pick up pieces of it but it was always like i hope
she's going to come out of it she is in a great she's in a great life good she has a baby yeah
uh she has a two-year-old but that's one of those stories she has a beautiful husband it's one of those
she has a very strong family unit i just want i'm glad she's good that's all she's awesome my point was
Yeah.
We, we, you know, the movie was really successful.
And then they did, uh, they did an evening.
Freaker Friday?
Yeah.
And we, and, you know, the movie came out, went around the world, did it all, had a great time.
Did well?
Oh, it did great.
Oh, good.
Came back.
And they were like, we're going to do one more event where all of the audience come dress like your character, dressed like Tess.
Yeah.
And you're going to come and, you know, greet the theater at the L. Capit.
tent theater in Hollywood.
And this is like four weeks into the release of the movie.
I was like, okay, super fun.
I'm going to come in character.
So I pulled out my wig, pulled out the clothes that even though everybody else loved,
I really had struggled with, and, you know, belted it up and kind of toddled out on stage
and did my thing.
And then went backstage and they said, just do a little quick video to the fans thanking
them for their support.
Right?
Social media.
Yeah.
Somebody with a camera.
Yeah.
A phone.
A phone.
Yeah.
I'm sitting in a chair.
I'm like, hi, everybody.
It's Jamie Lee Curtis.
Thank you guys so much.
I'm so glad it was the comedy hit of the summer.
We loved making it, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah.
What I didn't know, and I could show you, but I won't show you on a podcast because no one will see it.
But there was a video of me where I'm a little busty.
Let's just put it this way.
Like packing serious heat in this video.
from the angle it was shot at, right?
It's a Disney movie.
Yeah.
And it literally became the biggest thing for me of the summer
in the sense of like people coming up to me going like, holy.
So when you talk about sort of fearlessness, physical fearlessness,
for me, it's it's just being the kind of who I am where I am in the moment
or using something of a character to accentuate maybe something that's not so good about.
Yeah.
Whatever.
Yeah.
And it was hilarious to me that the thing that actually got the most attention.
Was this a little thing.
And it was like an afterthought.
Like it was like the last thing I did in the movie was say thank you to the fans.
And the next thing I knew, it was all about my boobies.
And it was just like, whoa.
Okay.
Thank you, Internet.
You read some of those comments?
I didn't read any of them, but I just was told that it became a bit of a thing.
So when did you start producing?
Listen to you.
Oh, you got very serious.
Well, because, like, I watched that movie last night, the Lost Bus.
And I know whatever that journey was, I got to, I got it, I had no idea what it was about.
You know, I get these things and I'm like, all right, I want to, you know, do my due diligence and watch the project.
And I appreciate that.
And first of all, what a menacing.
difficult movie it is to watch when you live through these fires.
And, and, you know, fortunately, I was not affected by it, but, you know, the way it's captured by the director, was it Greenway?
Paul Greengrass.
And this feels like, in a way, a smaller movie for him, you know, because it's so intimate.
So, for the listener, I have wanted to produce things for a long time. I'm an idea girl.
I write books for children that are very, very successful.
That's great.
I've been trying to get filmed books and ideas for quite a long time.
But you can't do it with, I mean, it's very, very hard to do ever, even when you have a company behind you.
Yeah.
So if you don't have a company.
To get it born, raised, and distributed.
Yeah.
And there are many steps in that process.
So over the years, I have tried to buy the rights to a book, develop it, but I never could get lift off.
It could never take flight.
They always died on the vine.
But I kept trying.
I'm an idea girl.
I think of ideas all the time.
And I made the Halloween movies with Jason Blum.
And I didn't know it was a trilogy because he didn't mention it.
Yeah.
No one mentioned it, not even David Gordon Green.
They did not mention to me that it was a trilogy.
Right.
But we made the first one in 2018, and it was very successful.
When that movie came out was the same time as the Paradise Fire, the Paradise Fire, the
decimated the town of Paradise, California, was November 8th, 2018.
So it was right after the Halloween movie had come out.
Right before your birthday.
It was ripe for my birthday.
But it was also, I'm in California.
Yeah.
And it was the deadly.
wildfire in California history.
And I was aware of it, for sure.
But at the same time,
when the 2018 Halloween movie came out
and was successful,
and then I found out
that they were doing a couple more,
I went to Jason Blum and said,
hey, Jason Blum,
I have a lot of ideas.
How about you give me a deal?
How about I get a first look deal with you,
and you give me a small amount of money
for development,
so that I can pay a development
executive. And he agreed. Now, Mark Merritt, Jason's a good business man. And that made good
business, right? He wanted me to continue to do that work. Did he believe in me as a producer?
No. Does he now? Yes. Did he give me that because it was good business and I was going to
continue with the company?
Yes.
I guarantee you he wasn't like, oh, this is going to turn into something.
And almost immediately, I brought them the Patricia Cornwell's Scarpetta books.
So I'm friends with Patricia.
I found out that the rights to her book series has never been brought to screen in 30 years.
I brought it to Blumhouse and we bought it and started developing it as a TV series that
comes out next year for Amazon, starring Nicole Kidman as Scarpetta and me as her sister, Dorothy.
Something I never thought I'd be in.
I thought I was just going to produce it.
But right away, something I brought Jason turned into something quite big.
And clearly, I brought them three other things.
There was a TV show that was on a year ago called The Sticky, which was about a Canadian maple syrup heist.
That was a show, The Comet Pictures.
produced. So all of a sudden, I think Jason started to pay some attention to me. In August
of 21, I was in Sun Valley, Idaho. I was reading the Washington Post, and there was a review of
Lizzie Johnson's book Paradise, the story of the American Wildfire. And it was a review of her book.
And then there was a sidebar of a story pulled from the book of a school bus driver named Kevin McKay.
And a teacher named Mary Ludwig, who saved the lives of 22 students, trapped on the bus for eight hours.
And it was kind of a sidebar.
Yeah.
And I said out loud, well, that's the movie.
I was with Chris in the kitchen on August, on the 20th of August.
Yeah.
And I explained to him, he was like, what?
I said, oh, and I told him the story.
I said, well, that's the movie.
Yeah.
Of course.
Yeah.
And then the next day, I didn't do anything.
And the next day, I was driving to visit my sister Kelly.
Mm-hmm.
And I listened to Scott Simon on NPR, weekend edition.
He said, hi, it's Scott Simon.
My first guest today is Lizzie Johnson, the author of Paradise.
Lizzie, you know, the story that really got me was the story of Kevin McKay and Mary Ludwig.
And I pulled my car over on the side of the road, and I called Jason Blum.
And I said, I am about to send you two links, one to an NPR, one to the Washington Post.
I want to buy that book.
I want to make a movie.
I believe it will be the most important thing either one of us ever do in the movie business.
And he said, okay.
And he agreed.
We bought the rights to the book.
I tracked down Lizzie Johnson's agents.
He said, I need to make sure that there's a story here that I need to send it to some rights.
The day he sent it to Brad Inglesby, Brad Ingallsby called him and said, I'll write it on spec.
And within 36 hours, we had the rights to the book.
We had a writer who was going to adapt it.
And, you know, within a month, I had contacted Mary and Kevin and made an alliance and began the process of producing a movie.
So they were involved.
Well, of course.
We're telling their story.
or a fictionalized version of their story.
It's fiction based on truth.
Right.
But that's how the movie came together.
And then Paul Greengrass, then Apple came on board.
Then Paul Greengrass, who was the, I had two directors on my list.
I'm a producer.
I had two directors.
Paul Greengrass, it's a wild other swing in the other direction.
Ang Lee.
Did you ever see the Ice Storm?
Sure, of course.
Okay.
It felt his ability to tell an American story like the Ice Storm, I felt he could do a great job with this story of this real-life human, this Kevin McKay, bus driver, and Mary Ludwig, this teacher and these children in the midst of the fire.
I knew that the center of the story had to be those people because you could never tell that big a story.
As it turns out, Paul Greengrass can tell that big of a story.
But the interesting thing is you're saying it's a big story, but he was on top of people all the time.
And it was like a genius thing.
But that's his gift.
His background is documentary filmmaking.
But it's like right from the beginning, you know, you're watching it.
And like fucking McConaughey, when he sets his mind to it, man, he's the fucking best.
The best.
Okay.
So I think he's like Gary Cooper.
I think he's like Henry Fonda.
Yeah.
I think he's like a quiet old Western star.
Yep.
It's stoicism and strength and deep humanity.
Yep.
In a close-up.
Yeah, that's right.
And the camera is on his face, his eyes.
And he's so, he really inhabits stuff, man.
Because like right at the beginning, you know, it's on him.
Like the shooting, it's, it's, it's, I can see the documentary part of it in the way it's cut and stuff.
Sure, sure.
But the choice to make it about people and to.
be that close to them.
That's the story.
Right.
It's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, I understand it's a big story, but, you know,
because of the way he shot it all the way through, you are living in their skin.
But that's why I knew.
Yeah.
That's the movie because I knew that was the way in to tell a story of this magnitude.
And, but it, but it's a, but it's a, it's a human story.
It's a magnitude story, but it's really about a guy saving a bunch of kids.
Yeah.
and the interesting thing about the way he shot it is that all the stuff that he deals with
when he's shooting people you know you're like a foot away yeah and then when he shoots the
fire it's a monster and it is a monster totally and as we as you mentioned at the beginning
of this part of conversation i live in the pacific palates uh you live uh in glendale which is
adjacent to Pasadena, Altadena, and the Eaton fire.
I live on the skirt, outskirts of the Palisades fire, and, you know, we just moved back
into our house after eight months.
We were out for eight months after the fire, but we have a house.
We have, we did not lose our history.
We did not lose our family history.
And we both know too many people.
So it is a, the tragedy, of course, is that.
Here, we made this movie a year ago.
We were editing the movie when in January of this year, these fires happened in here.
But in the middle of 2021 to now was Lahaina, where we watched an entire town burn.
People taking shelter in the ocean because it was the only place they could.
In our movie, people take shelter in a lake.
I mean, which is harrowing.
Yeah, that's a hell of the scene.
And again, right up on the people.
So my instincts as an actor are my same instincts as a producer.
I know a good story.
I know what I can bring to it, and what I got to bring to it is the humanity, which is I got to go to Kevin McKay and Mary Ludwig, who've become friends of mine now.
These are people who I will know for the rest of my life because I'm the bridge.
See, I'm the one to extend my hand in sobriety saying, trust me.
me. I'm safe. Right? Yeah. And I'm also aware that we're about to tell a fiction. And I'm going
to be the one to help them understand that it's not a documentary. We're not making a doc about
their experience. We're making a film. And how they feel about it? I think they're both very
proud that how they're represented and what the movie says and does honors their experience,
even if it's not the exact experience.
Just for your listeners, because it's sort of fascinating to me, Kevin McKay and Mary both
had a weird connection to me.
So Kevin McKay, when I first called him, said, you know, Jamie, we have a weird connection.
I said, oh, really?
What is it?
He said, you know, when my mom was dying, because his mom is dying, when the fire hit, his mom died, I think, a couple months later.
But she was ill.
Yeah.
He said, the last good time I had with my mom was going to see Halloween 2018 in a theater.
We both loved Halloween, and we went out to dinner, blah, blah, blah.
And we went out to, and that was October 19th, 2018.
Then the fire was November 8th.
And then I think she passed, you know, soon after that.
So he said the last happy time I had with my mom was that.
And so that bonded us.
You know, we had a good, I felt like we had a good level of trust.
But then Mary Ludwig, the school teacher.
Yeah.
I'm speaking to her.
She was more hesitant.
America Ferrara plays her.
Yes.
And I said, you know, we were talking.
At one point, she said, you know, we have a weird.
connection. And I said, really, what is it? She said, my father dated your mother. Now, I was like,
really? My mother was from what we talked about at Stockton and Merced. And Mary's father was a Marine,
and he went to the University of the Pacific where my mother went. And he dated Jeanette, Helen Morrison,
my mother's name before she was discovered and changed her name and became Janet Lee.
And she said that, you know, her father was a really strong man and she hadn't seen him cry much in his life.
And she said, I remember very specifically the one of the few times I ever saw him cry was the day that Jeanette Helen Morrison died.
and so I have now two strangers
who are feeling very connected
to just the circumstances of life
who I'm extending my hand to saying
can you trust me
and I'm sober as you know
so as sober people
we say what we mean
we mean what we say we don't say it mean
and we are trustworthy
I want to be trustworthy
and so I felt as a producer
that was my main job was to make sure that the real part of the story melded into the fiction and that both could be supported.
How did you get Matthew to do it?
Do you love it right away?
I think Paul Greengrass, I think he read Brad's script and Paul Greengrass is a master filmmaker and creates a sense of, I mean, the born movies he directed on.
It's just urgency and of vibrance.
And I think Matthew recognized both the stoicism of Kevin,
and he knew that the guy directing it was going to give it that pulsing energy.
But it's a stoicism based in barely keeping your shit together.
But that's a hero, right?
Like that's the definition.
Ultimately, it's every story.
everybody has a story.
No, I just, I thought it was just great.
Yeah.
I mean, I, because I, a lot of times when I do these interviews, I got to watch something.
I do not know, I do not know what I'm getting into.
You know, I knew it was about, I knew the basic story.
I didn't do any research on it.
I just sat home last night by myself at 11 at night and watched that movie until one in the morning.
And then I'm early.
Yeah.
And, uh, no, no.
But, uh, it's, it's really competitive.
And it's a rare thing where you know that it's going to end good, but I already knew that.
But the movie was still just, you know, menacing and human and intense.
And I knew it's going to be okay, but I'm like, oh, my God.
But, I mean, we're almost every movie we know is going to be okay.
I mean, even in a Halloween movie, you know, it's going to be okay with me.
I guess, I guess.
But, like, I felt the urgency, you know, like, and I felt, and because of, you know,
our own fears of fires and the reality of fires.
It was, you know, visceral to me.
Because when you imagine, and like you were living close to it, the worst that can happen.
And it doesn't.
And then when you depict it in a movie, you know, the worst it can happen.
And do it with such details.
It was impactful.
Yeah.
And what was also as a producer, something very important to me is that we as a production team, Apple, Matthew, America.
Paul, Jason Blum, myself, that Brad Inglesby, that we also leave something of memory.
And so we also joined together and are completing the memorial.
It's going to be called Hope Plaza.
It's going to be a place in paradise for people to gather, to honor the first responders,
to honor the 85 people who lost their lives, to honor the community that is today thriving and surviving in a beautiful way,
The way, if you, I mean, I'm sure you've been into Altadena and you've certainly been in the Palisades.
Yeah.
It's awful to see the amount of destruction.
And then you also see the vibrancy of new life.
Yeah.
Coming back.
You know, I live in the mountains in Idaho.
You, you, when you burn through old growth, it creates, the heat actually creates,
new. It opens something new. So, yeah. Great job. Far out. Great talking to you. Oh, it's it. That's it. Okay. So fun. I love, by the way, that you have this mid-century modern ashtray that most people would have like displayed out. Yeah. Kind of like as an objadar. Like some sort of beautiful thing. And yours is filled with what? Stuff. Like, see, I'm a girl. Shotgun shell. Empty plastic shotgun shells.
My hand sanitizer buttons.
Here's some ear.
But I'm telling you, this at a garage sale is, you know, 300 bucks at garage sale.
Oddly, that ashtray was given to me in my early sobriety by a guy who was in the rooms with me, a Vietnam vet, and it had a lighter that matched it.
Wow.
And I don't, I think he might have given it to me for an anniversary.
I think his name was Paul.
and yeah that's a that's a sober representation and I hadn't really thought about that in a while
yeah but I've been staring at it you need some of that hands on it I'll give you a box I'll give you a box no babe babe I'm
seriously I'm I just it was there and it's that lavendery one yeah peppermint I know whatever thanks for
having me here Mark Merritt I'm sorry I'm not Christopher guest what he's talking about just because I know
he wants to come on the show but are you guys going to be in town is he in town I'm going to give you his
number you call him just do it direct to him okay
Don't try to do through other people.
Well, it was great talking to you.
And you.
I've admired you for a long time.
Well, I love you.
And thank you for the gifts.
And we are sober.
And we are sober family.
Yes, we are.
I just started going back to the secret meetings.
I was a little out of it for a while.
You know what?
You're going to have my number.
Okay.
Goodbye.
What a great person.
What a fun conversation.
I love her.
The Last Bus is in theater, September 19th,
and on Apple TV Plus on October 3rd.
Hangout for a minute, folks.
Swiped is a new movie inspired by the provocative real-life story
of the visionary founder of online dating platform Bumble.
Played by Lily James, Swiped introduces recent college grad
Whitney Wolf as she uses extraordinary grit and ingenuity
to break into the male-dominated tech industry,
paving her way to becoming the youngest female self-made billionaire.
An official selection of the Toronto International Film Festival,
the Hulu original film Swiped, starts streaming September 19th,
only on Disney Plus.
$1 plus tax for a smooth, small, premium roast coffee at McDonald's?
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at participating McDonald's and Canada prices exclude delivery.
Hey people, Tracy Letts will be back on the show.
He's one of the guests I actually became friends with after he was on the first time.
And you can listen to that initial appearance on episode 888.
Now, see, now I'm hurt that like, you know,
none of the people that you know who have been in here have called you and said,
oh, Tracy, you got to go over to Mark's house.
Nobody's done that.
In fact, it kind of goes the opposite direction.
And I go, why hasn't Mark had me on?
He's that all my friends on.
Did you say that?
Yeah, sure.
I've been trying to get you on a long time ago.
But I'm a fan of yours.
I, you know, it goes back.
I like what you do.
I feel like I know you.
I don't know why that is.
You're one of those people.
We're roughly the same age.
We are.
Did you?
We've had a long, slow, steady climb.
I think, you know, you've got a Pulitzer.
So there's a big difference in our success, right?
I'm hosting a podcast out of my garage and you have a Pulez.
Yeah, but you're on like three television shows and...
Yeah, but you're in movies.
I mean, come...
You just...
I'm not going to do this with you.
Because you won.
You won that one.
That's episode 88 with Tracy Letts available for free on whatever podcast platform you're using right now.
And a reminder before we go, this podcast is hosted by ACAST.
Here's some simple acoustic thing.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We're going to be able to be.
Thank you.
Boomer lives, monkey and lafonda, cat angels everywhere.