SmartLess - "Octavia Spencer"
Episode Date: August 23, 2021We are blessed by our guest Octavia Spencer this week. Octavia is an Academy Award winning actor, producer, and author, and the first black actress to receive two consecutive Oscar noms. But ...we love her because she's an absolute joy to be around... and because her germ management skills are completely in-line with ours. Wipe down your surfaces & seat-back buttons, recline and relax, because we're at cruising altitude here on Air SmartLess.Please support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, just another cold open for the show here, huh?
Maybe it'll be interesting this time.
I don't know.
Maybe you guys can say something.
Well, if you keep your mouth shut, it will be.
Go ahead, Will.
It's not supposed to be interesting.
It's just an amuse-bouche.
Oh, I speak French.
My name's Will.
Amuse-bouche.
I'm from Canada, so I knew two languages, you stupid ass.
Oh, well.
Can't wait for your next visit to Canada.
Hope you like bricks in the face.
Welcome to SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
Would people be interested or repulsed at all
if they looked at your search history, either one of you?
Do you guys get creepy on the internet?
Do you get sort of like, well, I can kind of anonymously check
out this subculture.
Do you guys do any of that?
We should read our search history on an episode.
Huh.
That would be nice.
Actually, the other person should read it
so that you can't self-edit.
That's true.
Mine is pretty benign.
And mine is a lot of Wikipedia holes
that I go on that you'd be astonished at.
You'd be like, wow, is this guy bored?
Mine is about world events and how I can help
and reach out to hundreds of millions of people
and offer my advice and my experience in life.
Jason, I'm guessing, by the way, you looked at it.
I'm guessing yours would be soy sauce near me.
Is that true?
No, why do we always talk about my puffy face?
It's probably my fault every morning.
You guys, let's get to it.
Sure.
Do you guys get nervous when it's not your guest?
I'm a little nervous.
Are you serious?
I get nervous when it's my guest.
No, I always get a little nervous.
Who is this going to be?
Oh, you're going to be so excited.
I love her.
Nervous is probably the wrong word.
No, no, no.
This person.
I'm guessing it's her.
This lady is a phenomenal actress.
I've been a great admirer.
Meryl Streep.
Who?
Meryl Streep?
No, it's just about.
Or just as popular and successful.
I've been a great admirer of hers for a long time.
She got her start in the business
with an acting role in A Time to Kill in 1996.
No way.
You know I loved her in Hidden Figures
because it was about NASA.
Coincidentally, we both had roles in the international.
Smash it.
Win a date with Ted Hamilton.
She is an Academy Award winner, has co-starred, guest starred,
and most importantly, starred in a Kajillion hit projects.
But you absolutely know her and love her
for making that shit pie in the help
my girlfriend Octavia spent.
Octavia.
I just worked with Octavia.
And didn't we have fun?
Oh, yes.
And what was the movie again?
This was Thunder Force with our good friend Melissa McCarthy.
And it was a super hero type of thing.
It was so fun.
So fun.
We have not worked together.
So hello and nice to meet you.
So nice to meet you.
I'm a fan.
I'm a fan.
Well, wait till you meet him.
I'm a fan of yours.
My god, I mean, we're so delighted to have you here.
Yeah, this is so great.
You know, we shared the same publicist Octavia.
And I'm always asking her, we know who she is.
What's Octavia up to?
Would you ever want to hang out with me?
And I ran into you at a charity event quite a while ago.
And I was just like, I couldn't believe I was meeting you.
I've been a fan.
You couldn't believe you were at a charity event.
Yeah, exactly.
Did you pull in to ask for directions somewhere?
Yeah.
She looked like she had a GPS that was working.
Well, it's so nice to have you here.
Thank you.
It's good to be here.
I want to start right at the very beginning.
You come from a huge family, like me.
And wait, how huge is huge?
Seven.
Good.
Wow.
I'm so jealous.
Seven kids.
That's just sounds.
I immediately think about all the family holiday gatherings.
And there's just people running around everywhere.
Is that am I right?
That is quite accurate.
And even more people now that people have kids.
Right.
Yeah, I would love that.
You look like it's a stressful experience.
Yeah, let's get into the dirt.
Who do you wish was not there?
Who would you like to no longer come?
Yeah, let's go there.
Oh, that's great.
Let's go around the horn.
If you could go back, let's name family members
we would not like to ask.
Let's start on your mother's side.
I want to talk about something that's so interesting to me,
though.
You started in casting.
Wow, really?
And so I want to know lots of things about that.
I want to know, does it make you better an actor?
And also, as you're doing it, as you were doing casting
and had a voice in choosing maybe if an actor got a part,
what's it like knowing that their livelihood depends
on choices that you guys discuss behind closed doors?
I mean, it's a big decision to cast or not cast
somebody in a role.
Well, let me clarify.
I never really got to participate in saying who got a job.
I was like a reader, and I got to learn
through the casting process.
But it was one of those things you can't teach.
You can teach auditioning technique,
but there's a difference in actually being in the room
and watching what actors do.
But it was different, though, because I worked in the Southeast.
And then when I moved out here, things
that we did in the Southeast kind of didn't go,
because we took props and auditions.
That's taboo.
Oh my god, I actually gave a friend.
I was like, you need to go in there.
When I worked in the Southeast, all over Virginia, Florida,
Alabama, all across the.
And people would come in if they were
going to be a waitress in a scene.
They would have their little notepads,
or they would have a little phone.
And so I had a couple of friends who were like,
you worked in casting.
What should I do in this audition?
And Tate Taylor, I'll never get over it.
He was, I think, testing for a job.
And I said, you've got to stand out.
You've got to stand out from everybody else.
You should take a phone.
And this was before we had cell phones.
I had to pull out one of the phones that had the.
With a cord on it?
Like a corded phone.
No, it was a long antenna.
So we took it out and literally pulled out the antenna
and started the, you know, did his test, poor thing.
And then he got a phone call.
He got a phone call right in the middle of the audition.
He got a phone call as he was walking to his car.
And I learned then never to never give anybody any pointers.
You must have seen so many.
Being a reader, I've done that before as well.
I remember once I helped out a casting director years ago
on, what was that movie that it was Richard Geer in?
Edward, Primal Fear.
Primal Fear, I auditioned for that.
Well, they had a big, huge casting calls in New York
and Chicago and everything.
And so you obviously auditioned for that.
And I helped in the Cato Cole in New York.
But you must have seen some horror story auditions before.
Do you have any, because I'm going to take this,
I'm going to take a page out of Sean's,
one of his books in the back that he hasn't read.
And say, what was your worst casting nightmare
that you were witness to?
Oh man, the worst.
We're just saying bear it, like cringe worthy
where you just felt like, oh gosh,
I wish I was in here right now.
Oh gosh.
While you're thinking of one, I have one.
I played the piano for auditions for musicals
and I played the piano for Annie, right?
For all the kids coming into audition
and I had to play tomorrow over and over again, right?
And there's a song called, I know I'm going to like it here.
Do you know that song?
I know I'm going to like it here.
And you hold the beat, right?
And this girl comes in and she stands there
and she goes, she actually counts the numbers
under her breath while she's holding the note.
So she goes, I know I'm going to like it here
to see her high six, seven, eight.
Oh my God.
She must have been like six years old.
Bless her.
So fun.
Bless her.
God, I wish I would have seen you back then, Sean.
What, just let me know, what was the hair strategy
when you were playing piano in auditions?
Sure. So my hair strategy was just to cut
as close to a bowl as I possibly could.
You had a bowl, a bowl cut?
Absolutely.
Oh my God.
How much were you giving to the company
that Depp, that made Depp gel?
How much money of your money did they get?
Oh no, L'Oreal spritz, L'Oreal spritz all the way.
And what about Moose?
What happened to Moose?
Where did Moose go?
Moose didn't hold, Moose didn't hold.
It didn't, did it?
Not Moose bit.
Wait, so, so, so, so we've gone through the hair thing.
So then, so you're working in casting, what's the moment?
Is it one of those great miracle stories?
Are you reading and the director is there and says,
hang on a second, the reader is the best actor
we've had in here today?
Is that what happened?
Please tell me as that's what happened.
It made me want to act because on most of the jobs
that we worked on, whenever we were doing the smaller roles,
the director would say, you know,
I want somebody with a personality or like Octavia.
So I would always get offered these parts
and I would politely turn down.
Wow, sure.
Because I was a professional and I couldn't mix it up.
And that just makes them want you more.
Well, exactly.
That's what Jason, Jason, what do you call that?
Yes.
Sexy indifference.
Sexy indifference.
Sexy indifference.
So I'll bet you having seen everyone come through the door,
it made you feel a little bit more confident
each time you were on the other side, right?
Because, you know, the imagination goes to a place
where like everybody is better than me in general in life.
But then when you see people come through like,
oh, well, I can compete with that, you know?
I wish more actors could be on the other side
and see that you're plenty talented.
I have to tell you that I would recommend it.
But now with everything being the way that it is,
people are putting themselves on tape
and won't ever get that experience.
But it totally demystified what happened in the room for me.
So I, but I would say to anybody
that can help cast a student film
just to see what different actors do.
Cause here's the interesting thing.
When it's written out in the breakdown in the script
and all of that, people come in
and a lot of people make the exact same choice
because it's worded that such and such does this.
We're looking for a 30 to 40 year old
who is this heights and weight or whatever this look.
And it has to act this way.
Southern and sassy.
I think they have to fulfill that
instead of just bringing themselves.
Bringing their unique quality.
Make a choice.
Make a choice.
And I find myself sometimes like thinking,
you know, when I'm reading something now
to make sure to make choices that it may be a,
it may be a wrong choice,
but just to have something completely unique
that no one else will do.
And that you own, that you're able to execute.
Yeah. Now, when is the last time you auditioned?
Oh man.
It's been, I feel like every day is an audition honestly,
but it's been, it's been 10 years.
Yeah.
I'm going to start making choices like, you know,
like imagine like a scene where you got to deliver
some bad news, but I'm going to just like, like,
well, we just got the report back.
It looks like, you're not going to make it.
Honestly, no, it's different.
It's different.
I used to sing, there's a song from Les Mis.
Hold on.
That's called empty chairs and empty tables
where my friends are dead and gone.
And I used to sing it with a huge smile on my face.
So wait, Octavia, you said,
casting made you want to start acting.
You had no interest before that.
And you just got that as a job.
Or what was it like as a kid?
Well, I'd always wanted to be a producer, honestly.
And I love acting, but, you know,
I'm from a very practical household.
And my mom would have been supportive had I just said,
I want to be an actor.
But, you know, she really like wanted me to be a doctor
or a lawyer and I'm a germaphobe.
So I knew doctoring was not in my future.
Because everything anybody came into the room with,
I would probably, did I get it?
Are you, oh my God.
I love catching, so.
That's me.
Sean's got it.
Sean, just got it.
Just you describing it.
Just describe it and I would get it.
Yeah, you are talking to a couple of world-class germaphobes
here with me and Sean.
Those guys, not me, not me.
Yeah, yeah.
So Octavia, what's, tell me your,
let's open up this germaphobe thing.
What is, because I've got an answer for me,
we'll go around the horn.
What is, what grosses you out the most?
What will you not do because there's too much germ potential?
I'll start with mine so that you know what I'm
kind of talking about.
I will never walk barefoot on a hotel floor.
Wow, that's good.
Ever, never.
Oh gosh, I will never go to very famous theme parks.
You won't even enter the grounds?
I don't think I need to go.
Got it.
It's aggressive, Octavia.
You know, I will never sit on a plane.
Nice.
Wiping, and I've been doing this for years.
Wiping everything down.
So definitely the headrest, right?
Yep.
The headrest, anything that my hand has to touch
has to be wiped down.
You know, the seat back button,
you got to really get that one too.
Oh yeah, that's a touch point, touch point.
I will never, I will never have a Gaspacho soup
in October, like after October.
No, very, very smart.
I won't do it.
Not a lot of people know that one.
No, no, and even if I'm in the South of France,
I won't do it, even if it's warm.
No, what you got to do is you got to do,
because it's cold, so all the bacteria can live.
What you got to do is you got to do hot.
No, it's just more out of a sense of decency.
Now, so I wiped down the plane,
I wiped down the planes, the seats too as well.
That's kind of a newer thing to me.
I remember like January, 2020,
I flew to London right before the lockdown,
and I went back and I looked at my search,
we were talking about search history before,
I looked at my Amazon order history,
and I had ordered masks in January, 2020,
I was so nervous about everything coming,
that I was seeing on the news,
and I had to fly to London,
and I wiped my area down, and I wore a mask,
and everybody looked at me like I was crazy,
like look at this nut job, I'm like, I don't give a hell.
And we will be right back.
Well, I wanna go back to now,
you did all of this work before the thing
that really catapulted you, which was the help,
which obviously 75 years later, you were amazing,
but just incredible.
Let us be the first to congratulate you on that.
Yeah, exactly.
Thank you guys.
We've been waiting, you were incredible,
you were absolutely incredible though.
Sean's right.
I love that, I love that movie.
Absolutely great.
But you did a book tour with the author, Katherine Stockett,
is that her name?
Yes, yes.
And I read that she didn't feel comfortable
reading passages from the book
when it came to the African-American characters,
so she asked you to come along,
and tell me what that was like,
and is that how you got the role?
Because again, you were again reading,
somebody else's words or something.
Yes, yeah, well it's very interesting
because I met Katherine through Tate and-
Tate's the director, yeah.
Oh, through Tate Taylor who wrote the screenplay
and directed the film, who's a personal friend.
Katherine, I think the help was starting to like,
become like a little wildfire and catch on,
and she was very smart in that she knew
that it would have been kind of weird to do the dialect.
And it was during pilot season guys,
and she paid for me.
I'm like, normally you don't miss pilot season,
but I thought, I love this character, I love this book.
And I just said, you know, I'm gonna go do this.
And we drove around on her book tour for like three weeks.
Wow.
And it was like we were the band driving into town.
That's so cool.
Yeah.
It was so fun.
How unusual that, and how cool.
And then, especially considering what it turned into,
and then turning into this great film,
and to incredible acclaim,
what a great piece of that story for you
to be able to really be a part of the process so early on.
Oh, it was important.
The other thing that people probably don't know
is that the help was made into a radio play in the UK.
And because of my association with Katherine,
and because I had done the book on tape,
they asked me if I would come and do the radio play
which I'd never done that.
And I did.
It was very interesting.
It was very interesting to do a radio play.
That doesn't sound positive.
That doesn't sound positive.
No, no.
Let's hear about that.
It was fun.
But when all you have is the audio,
and people don't get to see you,
I was just so used to people seeing me,
that I thought, am I going to convey this?
So it was like just over exaggerating stuff,
and oh man, I...
It is a weird thing.
Welcome, by the way, welcome to our world.
People are so happy that our podcast
that they don't have to see us anymore.
It turns out that our audience has been exhilarated
to not have to look at us.
Well, Octavia, you work so much.
What is it that you are not able to do
because you're working all the time
that you wish you had more time to do that is not acting?
I literally, and the one thing that the pandemic
made us do is take time,
but I didn't actually get to take the time
that I would have liked to with my family in Alabama.
I have nieces and nephews,
and I feel with your friends,
if you're on the road so much,
and I know all of my friends, first children,
it's in these past few years that they've had second kids
that are growing up and have personalities.
I feel the same way about my nieces and nephews.
So it's making me take time
to really just spend more time with my family.
Yeah, that's interesting.
You do do that.
I can identify with that,
that idea that your friends have a kid,
and you go, that's so great,
and you can get to know the kid.
And by the time they have the second kid,
you're like, yeah, I already gave attention
to your first kid.
What do you want?
Now you want equal?
You want me to get equal?
I don't have that kind of time.
What are you talking about?
No, wait, but Octavia,
now that you've lived in Los Angeles for many years,
do you miss the more, I'm guessing what you're saying,
like quieter, simple life that was Alabama?
And do you ever see yourself going back there
when you retire, which I hope you never do, but.
Well, I have, since my family's era,
I have a home there,
but I'm also building a home in another Southern state,
just because I miss a lot of trees.
I miss my, I miss the surroundings.
So, since my friends are in this very rural area,
it's kind of our retirement enclave.
It's so weird.
I'm building a house there,
just so that I am surrounded by.
I get it.
What we all run away from
is what we run back to eventually,
and I miss that.
What are you running away from?
Well, I ran away from trees.
I wanted more buildings and cars,
and now I was like, I want trees.
Yeah, yeah.
Sean, what are you running away from?
Myself, everywhere I go.
Got it.
Is that why you've removed all the mirrors in your house?
Yeah.
Yeah, did you not know that well?
No.
Took them all out.
I want to talk about going to the Oscars.
So when you went to,
was the help the first time you went to the Oscars?
Yes.
Yeah, and you won, which is great.
And what was it like when you first got there?
Like, there are people who have gone so many times,
and what was your perspective
of the first time you went there
and drank it all in and looked around?
Was there anything funny about it that you noticed?
Like, that's so weird that they do that,
or I didn't know they did that, or anything like that.
You know what was really calming and wonderful
is that I got to be invited to the Oscars
along with one of my oldest friends, Melissa McCarthy.
And Jessica Chastain had become a very close friend.
And then Jim Rash and Nat Fax,
and I knew them through the growling.
Jim Rash is the best.
I love Jim.
I love those guys.
And Nat.
Sean, you don't like Nat Fax.
No, I love them all.
No, we got it.
Go ahead.
I love Jim and Nat.
I like both of those guys a lot.
I'm on the record.
I'm on the record of saying I love both of them equally.
Well, we got to go together.
And it was just important because it kept it all real.
And it was funny.
We'd all see each other and go, oh my God, they let us in.
So it was, can you believe it?
Oh, man.
But it made it so relatable
because it was all of our dreams.
And we got to be there to experience it with each other.
And then I've been lucky enough to be there
when Allison Janney won and got to see Emma nominated again.
Got to be there when Viola won again.
Got to be there when Jessica was nominated again.
And so I felt got to be there when Melissa was nominated again.
There's something really wonderful
when you get to take that, have that experience
with other people that you love and that love you.
And it takes some of that grandeur
and the overwhelming excitement.
Yeah.
It's wonderful, but it's humbling.
Right.
What did you think about the whole red carpet of it all?
That sea of photographers and...
The thing that people don't know about me,
this is a huge reveal.
I have huge and I still have anxiety.
I have real anxiety about red carpets.
I love to dress up.
I love to do interviews,
but I don't like to do interviews and dress up
and have flashing cameras and a big throng of people.
So every time you see me on a red carpet,
there's always like this.
She's like, why is she always shining?
It's because I like literally have anxiety.
So when you imagine the longest red carpet in the world.
Yeah.
It just goes on forever.
But I mean, it's a really odd thing to...
I remember the arrest of development went to,
I think it was the Golden Globes
is the first thing that we went to, right?
Well, and I remember Michael Sarah
had never been to a red carpet thing.
And he was like, he had been saying to a couple of us,
like, so what do we do?
Do you just keep walking?
And I think I was like, no, no, no, you walk
and you stop and they take some pictures of you.
And then you walk again and stop and they take some pictures.
He goes, okay.
And like, how do you figure out which camera to look at?
You just keep kind of moving your eyes around a little bit.
He's like, okay, good.
So a couple of days later we go
and he's waiting his turn to go walk on the red carpet.
And in front of him is...
Wait, don't blow it, don't blow it, don't blow it, don't blow it.
I'm not...
Can I just finish?
Cause you're about to blow the...
Oh, am I? Go ahead.
Let's hear it, Will.
You.
So, you almost mentioned the name.
He's walking there and he said...
That's part of the joke, but let's go ahead.
They were going Michael?
No, no, this...
They were going...
No, you're doing it backwards.
Okay, you go ahead.
I'm telling you, go ahead.
So in front of him is Sarah Jessica Parker
and behind of him is Michael Douglas.
And so they're walking along and they're going,
Michael, Sarah, Michael, Sarah.
And he had no idea which way to look.
So, Will, in your telling, you would say...
You're telling the joke backwards.
He's walking along and he says,
just keep going as they call your name.
And he keeps hearing them go, Michael, Sarah.
And he's thinking, oh my God, this is incredible.
Michael, Sarah.
And then he looks on either side of him.
One side is Michael Douglas,
the other side is Sarah Jessica Parker.
That's how you tell a joke.
That's better.
Let's go to a commercial.
Because that was fucking embarrassing.
Let's go to a fucking commercial.
We'll take a breath.
You're right.
You're right, you're right.
Will? Will?
You're right.
Hey, it's great to be here on Jason's first day in Showbiz.
This is fun.
This is why I don't write, you know?
When you have something as big as the help
and then you start getting offers
and your career starts opening up
and getting bigger and bigger.
And people are noticing how talented you really are.
And you're invited into that kind of status.
Well, look at Will.
What's going on?
Jason knows.
He's just all pumped up because he was right.
He loves being right.
And you're now in this league of, you know,
for lack of a grosser word, legitimized as an actor.
You were before, but for some reason,
people see you differently in this business now.
And do you-
Legitimated.
What's that?
The correct word is legitimated.
Yeah, legitimated.
I'm just gonna try to be right.
I'm just gonna keep going and keep being wrong.
Go ahead.
You have to now legitimize.
You have to now navigate making more difficult decisions
as far as representatives, deal making.
There's the business side of that.
Did you fire all your agents?
No, that's not what I meant.
How do you navigate up that ladder?
You know what?
I've been very fortunate in that
the majority of the people that are with me
have been with me since the beginning of this whole journey
from obscurity to, you know, people,
some people know my name.
And so I feel like I've had good guidance
and have not felt the need because they know me
and they know the things that excite me,
the things that I am too safe with
that I need to push beyond and challenge myself.
Oh God, I'm doing that right now.
Singing and dancing.
Really?
Yeah.
You're doing a musical right now?
I'm doing a musical, guys.
Are you doing the movie with Will and Ryan?
Yes.
Oh my God.
That's great.
We should just go to Boston because they're all up there.
We've literally interviewed everybody in that show.
Yeah, I know.
Let's just go up there next week.
You should come, guys.
And it's with Sean Anders, I mean,
directing and I just feel very lucky
that the reason I am not a one hit wonder
and went out on a high note with the help
is that I have wonderful partnerships and representation.
Melissa, Kate's and everybody at viewpoint.
I mean, I've just, I feel like our publicists,
and I feel like the guidance is there
and they understand me.
So I feel very lucky.
That's great.
Yeah, you must feel.
And I feel like you get all the attention.
Sean doesn't get anything.
Is that right?
Cause I would do that.
If I was your publicist, I would give it all to you.
All of my press goes to Octavia.
And then I'd be like, and I'd be looking at my phone.
I'd be like, oh, it's Sean.
Hey, what?
Hey, what's up?
We're mistaken for each other, Sean.
All the time.
I had a dollar.
So what is the role that you've always wanted
that you didn't get?
Is there a part that you auditioned for
or you heard that was maybe gonna be offered,
but you didn't get it?
Oh honey, this is the absolute.
I have always been obsessed with Kevin Costner.
I, he's one of those actors
that I've seen everything he's done.
And I had played so many nurses in Hollywood
that there was a movie that he did called Dragonfly.
And there was a nurse, he was a doctor
and his wife was killed in a foreign country
and he had to go,
he was going back to get her remains
and found out that he literally had a child
that he didn't know about.
And it was so amazing.
And they brought me back so many times
to play his nurse who had all these things with Kevin.
And it was after like the fifth time I think,
I have it, I have it.
I honestly thought in those horror films
when people are so afraid or they're so angst-ridden
that they're in the shower and they're just so upset
that they cry and slide down the back of the shower.
All right, all right.
That when I found out I didn't get that part,
I was like, I'm okay, I'm okay, I take a shower.
And as I'm in the shower,
I just slide down the back wall.
And what pulled me out of it, guys,
what pulled me out of it is that my towel
got stuck in the drain and literally the water
was rising up and it snapped me out of it
because it was about to overflow.
You went full Karen Silkwood.
You know, one time I auditioned,
I had a callback with Kevin Costner.
I remember telling you guys this years ago
and I was in New York for that movie,
did it called The Postman.
And so the night before I'd gone for some sushi.
So you're a little puffy.
And no, well, that was the least of my problems
with back then.
And so I get home about three a.m.
I wake up and I am throwing and going.
And it's just everything and I'm in batch.
I ended up going to the hospital.
Now you are losing water weight.
Sorry, keep going.
Now I'm losing, Jason's looking at the glass being half full.
He's like, lucky, oh, lucky.
So I ended up going to NYU Medical Center
and they put me on a bag and put me on a bag.
A sodium drip and now you're gaining water weight.
Keep going.
So I'm just like barely keeping together,
but I've got this huge callback
at the Essex House Hotel on Central Park South in New York.
And I go up there and I remember it was like the dead of,
like the middle of summer is super hot.
I'm sweating and I'm like,
I can't be more than five feet from the bathroom
at this point.
And I got, so I come in to talk to Kevin Costner
and I sit down really gingerly.
Sure.
Oh, you're sore.
I'm sore and there's more coming in.
I'm like, nice to meet you.
I'm really excited.
And he's like, okay, let's see when we start to read.
And he goes, let's get this on in speed, huh?
And I'm thinking, oh, oh, Jesus.
Oh, Kevin, I've torn something.
Just don't, don't shit yourself in front of Kevin Costner.
Don't shit yourself in front of Kevin Costner.
Did you get through it?
I barely, I barely, I got through it.
It was terrible because I was just,
I was a wreck and I'd been up all night.
I'd been in the hospital.
I was sweating.
Nice to meet you.
And of course I did not get the part.
Good luck with the project, guys.
Yeah.
Anyway, Kevin, if you're out there, I love you, buddy.
And now, back to the show.
Octavia, how did the Kevin fascination start?
What hooked you?
I think the first thing that I ever saw of his
was dances with wolves.
Sure.
And the fact that he wore all those hats
and it was so...
John Dunbar.
John Dunbar.
John Dunbar.
John Dunbar.
Yeah, that'll do it.
Oh man, I just love that movie.
And then, you know, he's gorgeous.
And to get to meet him, he's such a, he's a good guy.
So, but I, you know, it's when you meet a person
that moves you and you're like,
oh my God, I got to see everything.
Wait, wasn't he in Hidden Figures?
He was in Hidden Figures.
And he and I also...
You got to work with him.
I got to work with him twice.
We did a movie together called Black or White.
And...
Oh yeah, wait, that's Mike Binder's movie.
Mike Binder, yeah.
Yeah, he's a friend of the court.
Does Kevin know that you're a security risk?
Well, I tried to keep that from him.
But let me tell you, when I got the call
to do Black or White, I was driving from Beverly Hills.
And I'm the worst driver guys anyway.
But I'm driving and they're like,
he and I had the same agent at the time.
And he was calling to tell me about, you know,
the role and offer me the role and Black or White.
And I'm thinking, oh yeah, yeah,
Kevin Costner's gonna call me.
I'm driving and all of a sudden, you know,
my phone rings and it's not a phone number.
I recognize, I pick up and it's like Octavia's Kevin.
I'm like, oh God, oh my God, God's great.
Because I'm about to lose signal.
I pull over like, you know, it was so crazy.
But he's still, he's a good,
it was just fun to get to work with him.
And because...
The man has some presence, doesn't he?
He definitely does.
And he is, he's the definition
of classically handsome too, isn't he?
He's classically handsome and classically generous too, guys.
Yeah, I love that.
Very generous, yeah.
I love that, I love that.
Now, is it true Octavia, are you the,
I'm gonna get this right or wrong.
Are you the most nominated
African-American actress of all time?
No, I think that would be Viola Davis this year with,
oh God.
Did she just surpass you?
So it was until this year?
Uh-huh.
Now, I think she and I were tied.
We were tied.
That's pretty awesome.
Yeah, yeah, she's... That's pretty great.
Yeah, no kidding.
She's amazing.
That's crazy, that's crazy.
The most nominated, that's incredible.
Well, now you get another one
for the singing and the dancing too, you know?
Oh honey, I would just love,
like my scalp is the only thing
that's sweating and losing weight.
It's the thinnest thing on the body.
All this dancing, I'm like, come on, God.
Look at what you're doing.
Yeah, what's the dancing like?
Is that, so what's, did you have to train for it
before you guys started?
Are you training right now?
Like what's that like?
I'm training right now.
I'm just trying to keep it all flowing.
It's just not, my body, I don't have rhythm.
And, you know, just, you know,
moving from here to like right there.
And I'm pointing maybe a foot away or like, you know,
I can do it, you know?
But I, all of the, I just don't have that kind of movement
and to do it and sing at the same time is challenging,
but really, really fun.
How are you dealing with that nasty prick, Ryan Reynolds?
He's just, he's a nasty piece of business.
Yeah, he just must just wreck the vibe on the set.
And he's not a friend, he's not a friend of the show.
The worst reputation.
And that negative, that negative Will Ferrell.
I mean, oh, she's always so, you know, come on,
turn it upside down.
Let's turn it into a smile.
I would say this, and I reserve this for only a few people,
but Will Ferrell is a great A-hole.
Yeah, we'll cut that out, but yeah.
I'm not gonna tell him you said that.
I don't want to start none, and I don't want him to be.
Because he's also very violent.
A lot of people don't know how violent he is.
He's a very, make a clip of it,
and I want to mail it to his house.
Yeah.
But you're gonna get through it.
You'll get through it, Octavia.
I'm gonna deny all aspects of this, guys, because, you know.
Octavia, so what I want to ask you is,
so you mentioned Jim Rash and Nat Faxen,
and of course, Melissa and all these groundlings.
So forgive me, were you a groundling?
Was that, did you start in sketch comedy?
No, I took classes at the groundlings,
but I would go because Tate Taylor,
he did go through the whole four years,
and I met Ben and Melissa and Nat, all of those guys.
I would go and watch them, you know, every Sunday.
Right, of course.
And it was the best, and so we all became friends.
Were your friends with Dax too?
Dax, I got to be Dax.
It's funny, it's a small world.
I know, it's so small, so, so small.
So you seem to be living the dream
of doing everything you've always wanted.
You're constantly working, which is like,
oh my God, this is happening.
I'm an actor, I've always wanted to be an actor.
Not am I only an actor now,
but I'm like one of the most famous actors on the planet,
and what do you do to balance yourself out
so it's not all work all the time,
or is that really, what makes you happy?
And by the way, Sean's looking for a roadmap
because he doesn't do anything other than work,
so this is more like a suggestion for him.
Please help me.
I'm a bit of a workaholic, and I'm trying to not be.
I'm trying to pump those breaks
because when people say it's been 10 years since the help,
and I'm like it's been 10 years, I've been doing this for,
at that pace for that long, it's a little terrifying.
But I think that's the, I don't think,
I know that's one of the life lessons that I learned
during the pandemic to be able to,
to make sure that I have a work-life balance.
Because I really love working, I just love it.
Yeah, yeah, I get it.
But life is also important.
But do you travel and stuff?
Like do you go like, I'm gonna finish this job,
and I'm gonna take time, and I'm gonna go to Europe,
or whatever, like is that your thing?
Well, you know what's funny is I always say,
I'm gonna take, after this,
I'm gonna go take some time to travel.
And then, and I always make this declaration,
I'm done working after this guys,
after this job, I'm done working for the year.
And then someone comes along with a great project,
and you're like, well, you know,
and so the next thing you know,
another nine months has passed.
And so that's been the situation quite honestly.
But that's one of the reasons why I'm making sure
to get back to my roots and see some trees
and some grass growing and go to friends' houses
and hang out, it's just important to do that.
And does it matter to you whether it's comedy or drama?
Do you like being funny or serious more?
Let me tell you something, you guys are comedic geniuses
and you make it look really, really easy.
Comedy is much more difficult than drama to me.
And so my hat is off to people
who can move through both worlds.
But I like learning the world of comedy
and getting to watch people.
Jay said, I'm telling you, it was such an honor
because I think you're one of those people
who you can do everything.
And to get to watch you effortlessly do comedy.
Well, no, listen honey, this is not anything
that I've not said behind your back.
I think we're gonna cut this.
I think we're gonna cut all of this out.
Yeah, we're not gonna let this go out.
Just watching you in your element, I learned so much.
You never overplayed.
You look past the Crab Arms.
Those Crab Arms were delicious.
They were delicious.
It's just such a beautifully cooked.
Oh yeah, you had Crab Arms in that film.
Yeah, my character was pissed off about it.
How could you get a superhero power and it'd be Crab Arms?
It'd be Crab Arms, it was the best.
It may be hungry though, it may be hungry all the time.
That's very sweet.
We all feel the same way about each other, actually.
All four of us on today's show, yeah?
Yeah, you guys are brilliant.
It's a lot of love, it's a lot of love.
Octavia, and then-
Oh yes, yes, sorry, yes, yes.
All this, with all that's going on,
thank you for taking an hour out of your busy schedule
to be here with us today.
Very nice.
It's an honor and I, it was so hard for me
to not reveal that I was on early.
And I don't know if you guys heard me
giggling in the background while you're in your opening
and was like, oh God, I'm gonna spoil this.
Thank you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Please, please, please tell Ryan and Will and Sean
to stick it in their ass for us.
Yeah, I will.
Thank you.
And if they laugh, keep it dead fancied, they mean it.
They mean it.
I'm gonna sell it guys, I'm gonna sell it too.
I love you much.
Thank you Octavia, what a pleasure to meet you.
Thank you so, so much.
God bless you guys and take care.
Bless you too.
Thanks Octavia, bye.
Bye.
Bye.
She did the, she did the laptop shut.
Yeah.
She's only the second one that's done that.
Second one.
Best way to do it.
It's a nice having you and a pleasant goodbye.
Yeah.
And then just shut it.
Yeah, it's like she's a little pearl in an oyster shell
and she just closes it back up.
It doesn't feel the need to like hang around after
and go like, hey guys, yeah, that's great.
I was glad that I was able to introduce you
to my talk show character and then now we can say bye
for real.
All right, no, no.
Which is why, I always liked about Letterman
because you do Letterman.
What the fuck am I looking at right now?
Sorry, I took my shoe off for a second.
It's my van.
It's one of his shoes, it's a van shoe.
And I was just making a point that, you know,
when you go to Letterman, he didn't do a lot of,
wasn't a lot of small talk.
Not a lot of commercial chitchat, yeah.
Yeah, the commercial chitchat was.
Yeah, when you go to commercial, yeah, Dave.
Carson would light up a cigarette.
He'd sit there, light up a cigarette
and watch Doc play in the band.
Really?
Right in his seat there.
Yeah, yeah, during the commercial break.
Right on the stage.
Yeah, just fire up a butt.
No way.
When I was, when I first moved to LA
and I went to a taping of Jay Leno,
I was shocked, I was wondered what they do
during commercial breaks, right?
And I'm saying to the audience and that the host
and the guests never talk really.
They just sit there next to each other.
You would just come from a taping of Price is Right, right?
Cause you would have like every show.
You were like, I would just watch Rod Reidy.
He's had so much fun with everybody.
Come on down.
So then I go to Leno and I go, God, Shawn.
Here's what I like about Octavia.
Here's what I love about Octavia.
She seems like an actor's actor, right?
So from the outside, I always think like certain actors
or actresses, they just like become famous.
And I don't know, I don't understand like where they came
from, but Octavia really worked her ass off
to become who she is.
And we all kind of have the same circle of friends
and it's like, oh, she just seems like very of actors.
I agree.
Yeah. And there's also, you can tell
that she's exactly who she is today,
who she was back in the day, as opposed to some people
get famous and they go, oh, I'm famous now.
I can unzip this suit and zip on this one.
And now I'm this guy and everybody better fucking stand back.
And we've talked about it.
The three of us have.
We know people who fame has changed them
and not necessarily for the better.
Looking at two of them.
Like that fucking Ryan Reynolds and Will Ferrell.
I mean, Jesus Christ.
Those two failing upwards.
God damn it.
Obviously Ryan and Will.
They slipped right through.
You know what?
I'm glad they're in a movie together now
because maybe they'll cancel each other out.
You know what I mean?
Boy from your lips.
I know.
But you're right.
You're right.
Octavia does seem to have,
and maybe it's also a product of the fact
that she did work for so long in casting
and it was a reader.
So she knows what it's like
and having that sort of sense of,
I mean, the three of us know what it's like.
Jason, you grew up doing this,
but still, you know what it's like
when things aren't going great.
I was struggling.
I was struggling.
I got a couple of real heartbreaking callbacks
for a golden ram spot that I really, really wanted.
Is that true?
No, no, I actually booked that one.
No, but you did.
You had some lean years though in all of the movie, true?
Oh yeah, plenty of them, plenty of them.
And Sean, you know what?
That's like, it gives you perspective.
Yeah, absolutely.
You know, as soon as I,
I would get so nervous in casting though,
like going for auditions.
As soon as I, you know, got in there,
I'd say hello and I would wanna,
buy, tail it out of there, buy, tail it out of there, buy.
No, you're on your own, you're on an island.
That's not the end of the show.
You're off the fucking, that was so embarrassing.
Burn your mic and shut your laptop.
Jason, I mean, this is both a compliment.
Here it comes now, here comes Will's,
Will's gonna take a shot at it right here.
Initially it's a compliment,
but it's safe to say that these for you
are not the lean years.
You know, what are they?
Both professionally and the way.
Instead they are.
These are not your lean years.
Cause you're doing so well is what I mean.
Because you're doing so well.
And you know what I mean?
It's like I, is there not a buy going in?
I know, just waiting for the,
I thought you were teeing yourself up, no?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I mean, basically, well,
I'm taking a big buy out of the, buy.
No, no, no, no, no, no, we don't have it yet.
We don't have it yet.
We didn't earn it.
We didn't earn it.
We didn't have it.
Thought mine was good.
Yeah, no, no, yours was terrible.
That was one of the worst and we're keeping that in.
That was one of the worst ones.
That was one of the worst.
And we're keeping it in.
We should cut that one.
Nope.
No, we're not going to cut it.
Are you out of your fucking mind?
No, no, we're keeping it.
Thank you, we're keeping it.
We're going to sit here and we're going to keep talking
until somebody comes up with an idea
and tries to gently braid it into the conversation.
So again, so Octavia, fantastic, fantastic, incredible.
She's there in Boston.
I'm throwing out options for you guys.
Sean, stop writing ideas down.
Yeah, stop writing ideas.
You can't try to come up and say that rhymes with high.
Okay.
Oh my God.
Does it need help?
No, we don't need help.
We don't need any fucking help.
God, would just let us sink.
So I imagine what she's doing today.
She's up there, she's enjoying her life.
She's making a musical.
She's up there in Boston.
It's a nice sunny day.
And she might just get along the Charles River
and just go on one of those beautiful bike trails.
We've used that one before.
Did we?
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Sean, you just went, bye.
Like.
That was terrible.
Okay, you know what?
Here's this.
I'll tell you what.
This has been the worst attempt at the end of the show.
Real sloppy ending.
Really sloppy.
And you know what?
It's left me with a taste in my mouth.
My mouth is full of bile.
Acceptable.
Definitely acceptable.
Bile.
Bile, you guys.
Bile.
Bile.
Smart.
Right.
Smart.
Right.
SmartLess is 100% organic and artisanally handcrafted
by Rob Armjolf, Bennett Barbaco, and Michael Grant Terry.
The next episode will be out in a week
wherever you listen to podcasts
or you can listen to it right now early
on Amazon Music or by subscribing to Wondry Plus
in the Wondry app.
SmartLess.