âGreat Newsâ star Andrea Martin is having a major career moment
More than four decades into a prolific career in film, TV and theater,
Currently in production on the third season of the caustic
For someone who won a Tony four years ago for fearlessly flying on a trapeze in âPippin,â off-stage Martin is endearingly self-effacing and excitable. Over eggs and coffee at a cafe on the Upper West Side, where sheâs rented the same apartment since the early 1970s, Martin discussed her love of the circus, her Armenian roots and the possibility of an âSCTVâ reunion.
Whatâs exciting for you about playing Carol?
What a great role model Carol is! Working for the first time at 60 â good God. You have to really be uniquely open to life. Itâs inspiring, I think. Carol has no filter and sheâs certainly not politically correct. Thereâs something very refreshing about being like that. She just is such an open book and so enthusiastic. It forces me to be in the moment. Thereâs no second-guessing with her. Iâm really acting when I play it. Thereâs a lot second-guessing that goes on in this head.
Are you a hands-on parent?
I understand what itâs like to want to hang out with your kids more than any other people you know. Fortunately for my kids they live in L.A. I have two sons, 33 and 35. My oldest son has a child and I have done everything within the willpower that I have as a human being not to say anything about the way theyâre raising their child. And by the way, I donât need to. Theyâre doing an amazing job. But the instinct as a mom is to say something.
Speaking of professional challenges, you learned the trapeze for âPippinâ despite a fear of heights. What was that like?
During the shooting of âClub Paradiseâ with
The only time I allowed myself fear was every night weâd rehearse before the show. I was just me as myself, and it was harder to hold on to the fantasy."
â Andrea Martin
You also studied mime when you were younger. What led you to do that?
I studied at the Sorbonne in college and I loved it so much I went back to study mime with Jacques Lecoq. I would never joke about mimes, but I guess theyâve gotten bad press. I hate everybody now! People should go back and look at Emmett Kelly, Jean-Louis Barrault, Buster Keaton. Hello, Charlie Chaplin? Mime is like physical comedy. There arenât many people who can do it well.
Itâs interesting you say Carol is inspiring. I think a lot of people would say the same of your career. What are some of your influences?
Two books have been kind of transformative for me. âYounger Next Year,â which is all about how there is no reason medically, psychologically why you canât stay healthy and fit if you work out six days a week, which I do anyway. And âWhen Breath Becomes Air,â which is the most beautiful, life-affirming and yet sobering look at mortality. Itâs really changed my outlook on life. Why spend the next 20, 30 years worrying? First of all it doesnât do anything, but youâre addicted to it if thatâs all you've done all your life. [Laughs.] Iâm going to come across as Marianne Williamson.
Do you watch much TV?
Iâm a news junkie. I watch a lot of CNN. I shouldnât because I get depressed. Honestly, every bit of television pales compared to reality. It has become a form of entertainment for me. I also watch a lot of reality on TLC. âInterventionâ I love.
What about âHoardersâ?
I could literally talk about every episode. I watch âMy 600-lb Life.â Look, the reason I watch [these shows] is at the end you believe thereâs going to be some redemption. I donât know if itâs voyeurism. I donât know if itâs just that part of me that wants people to succeed or the immigrant mentality. When you grow up Armenian in Portland, Maine, you always feel a little like the underdog. Iâm rooting for people to succeed.
Was that mentality a large part of your identity growing up?
There was a strong sense of having the expectation from my parents to succeed, and with that generation, the necessity to assimilate. What that does it detaches you from your own culture. Itâs a kind of schizophrenic upbringing.
Did you have to discover your cultural heritage later on?
I discovered it in 1992 when I was writing a one-person show called âNude Nude Totally Nude.â Halfway through writing it I realized I knew nothing about my roots. What the heck is going on here? I better get to Armenia and figure it out. I didnât understand the history. I didnât understand the innate sense of sadness that my grandmother, who lived with us, had. I didnât understand the solitude that she needed. So it was eye-opening. I do a lot of work with Armenian organizations. Itâs really given me a larger sense of purpose.
You wrote a memoir, âLady Parts,â a few years ago. What was the process like for you?
I feel accomplished and proud to have written it. But it was hard. Iâm not good on my own. I like to toss around ideas. Thatâs why improv was so great for me. I like exploring. Iâm just the old school, summer stock mentality. I wrote it in the solitude of my own head. I could access the non-needing-applause part of me and the real authentic part of me. I gave the book to Nathan Lane, whoâs a really close friend of mine whoâs a voracious reader. He gave me an honest appraisal of the book. So then I just kind of let it go until I got on Amazon and read the reviews. That was lethal. That was bad.
Do you see the influence of âSCTVâ on todayâs comedy?
The thing about âSCTVâ is we did it in a vacuum, so we werenât aware that it had any impact until many years afterwards. Tina [Fey] and Amy [Poehler, executive producer of âDifficult Peopleâ] â they worked at Second City. That generation of brilliant comedians, there are so many fans â
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