Rose Byrne
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It reminded me actually of kind of Lucy and Ethel and I Love Lucy as far as the physicality of it.
Or maybe you're both Lucy as far as how over the top.
I mean, we stand on the shoulders of those women, you know, of those, like Carol Burnett, like they're just on a pedestal.
Kristen Wiig, you know, the physical comedy of those performances.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, I mean, John Cleese, these are the people I,
put on pedestals, Maya, Rudolph, you know, just brilliant physical comedians.
So we've definitely pushed that side of things, which has been very fun.
How does performing in a Broadway show, eight shows a week, how does it compare to shooting a movie?
You know, even like something so kind of adrenaline pumped as your last film, If I Had Legs, I'd Kick You.
I was just wondering how it feels differently, those different kinds of performances.
No, it's a great question.
Something I'm sort of wrestling with because it's kind of a little bit hard to describe in any erudite fashion.
But it feels we are trying to reach the back row, you know, so it's a physically it's just bigger.
It is a bigger experience.
And then to sort of to perform in a bigger arena like that and to still remain truthful in that sense of like.
I felt like I was screaming when I first got up because we're not wearing mics either.
There's mics on the stage, but we get up there and I'm like, what?
You know, hello, Jane, you know, starting to yell.
How do I translate that in a way that still feels authentic?
But the theatricality of that, leaning into that too.