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Busy being herself

Actress Busy Philipps is all set to channel her charmingly unfiltered perspectiv­e that has turned her into a social media powerhouse with her new show ‘Busy Tonight’, debuting today in the UAE

- By Ana Kaplan New York Times News Service

Busy Philipps was pulling up her Spanx in a private dining room in midtown when we met on an October afternoon. “Are we in a Goodfellas movie?” she asked, using an expletive and laughing as she took in the ostentatio­usly luxe cherry-wood-walled space. “What is about to happen?”

She was about halfway through a frenetic day of publicity, having knocked out an appearance on Good Morning America to promote her candid new memoir, This Will Only Hurt a Little, and preparing for multiple appearance­s after lunch.

The book is a freewheeli­ng tour through Philipps’ career, relationsh­ips and on-and-off-again stardom. Although she began writing it before the #MeToo movement took off last year, it has already generated some related headlines, including resurrecti­ng an old story about a time James Franco was rough with her on the set of Freaks and Geeks.

BIGGEST MONTH

The book’s release is just part of what is the biggest month of Philipps’ career so far. Today, she will debut Busy Tonight, her new talk show on E!. Executive produced by Tina Fey, it will pair the usual topical comedy and nightly guests with the charmingly unfiltered perspectiv­e that has turned Philipps into a social media powerhouse.

She was an early adopter of Instagram Stories, and the unvarnishe­d glimpses of her workouts, private moments with her screenwrit­er husband, Marc Silverstei­n, and her daughters, Birdie and Cricket, and more general shenanigan­s (her Lindsay Lohan Mykonos dance impression) have transforme­d her into a bona fide “influencer” with more than 1.3 million followers — numbers that led to the book and TV deals.

Philipps, 39, is a case study for her own “sparkly human” theory — something she invented a few years ago. It refers to someone who isn’t necessaril­y the most famous, but radiates self-confidence in a way that the world opens up to them.

Since landing her first major role as the tough “freak” Kim Kelly on Freaks and Geeks, she has cycled through Hollywood highs (a six-year run on Cougar Town) and lows (during the housing crash, she was unemployed and so indebted that she auditioned for Glee one week after giving birth) but never stopped willing her way though the industry.

She persuaded the craft chain Michaels to invent a spokeswoma­n position for her because she was such a fan. When her male co-stars started directing episodes of Cougar Town, she did the same out of principle. And when TV opportunit­ies dried up despite her award-winning resume, which also includes Dawson’s Creek and ER, she created the equivalent of her own personal sitcom on Instagram.

“When you live truly and when you speak your truth, only positive things will happen,” she said, citing Oprah Winfrey as an inspiratio­n. “When I started doing that, everything kind of shifted in my life.”

She’s been less thrilled by how many websites latched on to a Freaks and Geeks anecdote from the book, in which her co-star Franco shoved her to the ground

on the set in response to her hitting him at the director’s request. Philipps has shared the story over the years but the memoir gave it new life online. When I brought it up, she sighed.

“I feel like this kind of celebrity clickbait takes away from how good my book is, how hard I worked on it and what I’m actually trying to say,” she said, using another expletive in a conversati­on sprinkled with them. “James and I are fine. I’m fine about that situation.” (Franco’s representa­tives did not respond to a request for comment.)

When I asked Philipps about the sexual misconduct allegation­s that have surfaced about Franco in the past year, she responded with uncertaint­y and resigned exhaustion. “In the last year I have not been surprised by anything,” she said. He has denied the accusation­s.

In another revelation from the book, on September 27 — as Christine Blasey Ford testified before the

Senate Judiciary Committee and presented, in heart-wrenching detail, her accusation that Brett Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her when they were teenagers — Philipps posted a teenage photo of herself on Instagram. “This is me at 14. The age I was raped,” she wrote.

It was the first time she had shared the story publicly — she posted it then because she felt a responsibi­lity to help women realise that they don’t need to carry their trauma alone. “When I think about these dudes that get off scot-free, I’m like, ‘Go live your life, dude who raped me when I was 14,’” she said, tearing up. “I still have problems with sex. I’m 39 years old.”

The bulk of This Will Only Hurt a Little reflects on previously untold stories of her Hollywood career, friendship­s and toxic situations.

Readers will also learn about, among other things, the night actor Chad Michael Murray held her hand on the floor of a bar after she had drunkenly injured her knee; the dishearten­ing time she posed for a Maxim cover to help her acting career; the day, in 2008, she flew across the country to be with her best friend, Michelle Williams, after Heath Ledger, the father of Williams’ daughter, died of an overdose. At times she revisits grudges, as when asserting she co-wrote the film Blades of Glory with her childhood friends Craig and Jeff Cox, only to see her name removed from the script when it was sold. (She eventually received a story credit. “We don’t have any comment but wish Busy lots of success with her book and Busy Tonight,” Jeff Cox wrote in an email in response to a request for comment.)

Such frustratio­ns, failed pilots and other false starts ultimately persuaded Philipps to focus on building a brand around being unabashedl­y herself.

“Years ago, people had floated the idea of me doing a talk show, and I always sort of railed against it because I felt like I’m an actor, and that’s what I love,” she said. But at a some point, she said, “you have to lean into” what you’re good at. “Not that I’m not good at acting. I think I am, but it’s just so hard to do.”

Philipps’ personalit­y is what persuaded Fey, whose production company, Little Stranger, cast Philipps in an ultimately unsuccessf­ul pilot last year, to produce Busy Tonight.

Philipps is “so warm and instantly likable and refreshing when you talk to her,” Fey said. “I always sort of gravitate toward things that I myself would be interested in as a viewer. I felt like her presence is funny, natural and positive in a way.”

Despite her successes, Philipps remains grounded by the fact that she’s “well aware of how it all works and goes down.” But she’s found comfort in how her authentici­ty has resonated with people.

“I’ve just been around for so long, seeing so many people that are having their big moments that are so quickly not a big moment at all,” she said.

“Years ago, people had floated the idea of me doing a talk show, and I always sort of railed against it because I felt like I’m an actor, and that’s what I love.”

“When you live truly and when you speak your truth, only positive things will happen.” BUSY PHILIPPS

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AP
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 ?? Photos by New York Times and supplied ??
Photos by New York Times and supplied
 ??  ?? Joshua Jackson and Philipps in TV show ‘Dawson’s Creek’ (1999). In ‘Cougar Town’ (2009).
Joshua Jackson and Philipps in TV show ‘Dawson’s Creek’ (1999). In ‘Cougar Town’ (2009).
 ??  ?? Linda Cardellini and Philipps in ‘Freaks and Geeks’ (1999).
Linda Cardellini and Philipps in ‘Freaks and Geeks’ (1999).
 ??  ?? In ‘ER’ (1994).
In ‘ER’ (1994).
 ??  ?? ‘This Will Only Hurt a Little’ is a tour through Philipps’ career and relationsh­ips.
‘This Will Only Hurt a Little’ is a tour through Philipps’ career and relationsh­ips.

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