Julia Louis-Dreyfus
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They really were. I mean, you really kind ofโI mean, I think I even heard you say, we were Lady Gaga before there was Lady Gaga, the way you would come out and present yourselves, right?
Right.
Right.
Yes, of course. Yes. In your memoir, you talk about having low self-esteem as a child, which we discussed. And you didn't consider yourself beautiful, which I find astounding, by the way, because you are truly a beauty.
Yes, of course. Yes. In your memoir, you talk about having low self-esteem as a child, which we discussed. And you didn't consider yourself beautiful, which I find astounding, by the way, because you are truly a beauty.
If this is quiet, I mean, honestly, I cannot. I think you look spectacular. You could go to the Academy Awards looking the way you do right now. Thank you, honey. What do you mean that you learned it lately? You said, I've learned lately that what you look like doesn't really matter.
If this is quiet, I mean, honestly, I cannot. I think you look spectacular. You could go to the Academy Awards looking the way you do right now. Thank you, honey. What do you mean that you learned it lately? You said, I've learned lately that what you look like doesn't really matter.
Yeah, it can be exhausting, right? It is exhausting. And you have this musical instrument, and that blessing is the one that, I mean, let's face it. That's my life, yeah. That's your life. The music is my life. That is your life.
Yeah, it can be exhausting, right? It is exhausting. And you have this musical instrument, and that blessing is the one that, I mean, let's face it. That's my life, yeah. That's your life. The music is my life. That is your life.
When you were with the Bluebells, the group was you, Sarah Dash, Nona Hendricks, and Cindy Bird's song, and then Cindy left, right? Cindy left to go with the Supremes. To join the Supremes in 1967. Uh-huh. At the time that that happened, did that shake your confidence?
When you were with the Bluebells, the group was you, Sarah Dash, Nona Hendricks, and Cindy Bird's song, and then Cindy left, right? Cindy left to go with the Supremes. To join the Supremes in 1967. Uh-huh. At the time that that happened, did that shake your confidence?
Yeah, it's just the way she went about it maybe was a mistake on her part.
Yeah, it's just the way she went about it maybe was a mistake on her part.
Have you had conversations with her subsequently and come to a peaceful place? I've had conversations with her and Diana.
Have you had conversations with her subsequently and come to a peaceful place? I've had conversations with her and Diana.
That's a done deal. That's finished now. You started going to therapy, I think you did, around the time that Cindy left the group. Is that right?
That's a done deal. That's finished now. You started going to therapy, I think you did, around the time that Cindy left the group. Is that right?
Oh, after the group broke up.
Oh, after the group broke up.
Yeah, I get it. I mean, I think endings are very difficult. They can be really difficult for me, too. I mean, not that I had a fabulous girl group, but, you know, when jobs end, particularly longstanding jobs, that can be a ground shift, can't it? It's scary. It's scary. It's scary. It's totally scary.