While it may be hard to imagine the larger-than-life performer ever losing her voice, her candidness - combined with wit, self-deprecation and, of course, talent - is part of what makes her, and the show, so charming. “Losing your voice, feeling like you’re rudderless through life, giving up on yourself - those are all things that hit close to the bone,” Everett told NBC News. While the show is fictionalized, she said the themes - including the loss of her sister Briton to cancer - pull from her upbringing. She has been developing “Somebody Somewhere,” along with co-producer Carolyn Strauss, since series creators Hannah Bos and Paul Thureen pitched her the idea in 2018. And in recent years, she’s charmed the rest of the country in small and big screen roles, on comedy series such as Comedy Central’s “Inside Amy Schumer” and HBO’s “Camping,” as well as a dramatic turn in the Sundance hit “Patti Cake$.” Danny McCarthy and Bridget Everett in HBO's "Somebody Somewhere." HBO If you’re somebody who feels like you’re a little too much or you’re a little too big - and you never fit the hometown mold - what would it be like to go home?” she said of signing on to do the HBO series.Įverett, 49, has long been a fixture of Manhattan’s nightclub scene, making a name for herself by performing alt-cabaret and raunchy original songs at iconic institutions like Joe’s Pub. “I thought it was really interesting to think about what it might be like for somebody like Bridget Everett who doesn’t go to New York but stays home.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |