Daily Press (Sunday)

Comic scene-stealer now star

At age 60, former ‘SNL’ writer Pell has become actor she always dreamed of being with ‘Girls5eva’

- By Dave Itzkoff

The rustic upstate New York residence that is home to the “Girls5eva” star

Paula Pell, is a two-hour drive from the Manhattan borough in a tranquil countrysid­e. It is secluded, but its proprietor is hardly in need of companions­hip.

Pell’s coterie here in Hudson Valley includes her wife, Janine Brito, a comedy writer-actor. Then there is the congregati­on of rescue dogs, and Eloise and Verbena, Pell’s horses, in a stable on a hill above the house.

“There’s two old mares up there and one old mare down here,” Pell said theatrical­ly, running a hand through her long silver locks.

Pell has been known to nurse stunned birds back to health. She volunteere­d at a nearby sanctuary, where she took care of neglected pets and farm animals.

Her love of animals is integral to her personalit­y, as much a part of Pell as the brassy, oblivious characters she dreamed up on “Saturday Night Live,” where she spent 18 years as a writer, and which she continues to play in movies and on TV.

“Humans, always, will be imperfect,” Pell said. “They will still say, ‘I love you,’ when they don’t. Animals, to me, are the only ones that when they love you, you totally believe it.”

Animals also remind her that all creatures, however many legs they walk on, deserve second chances. That’s the lesson of “Girls5eva,” the comedy series about members of a girl band — now all grown up — trying to recapture fame and success decades after their heyday. (The show itself was facing cancellati­on at Peacock, but its third season was recently released on Netflix; Seasons 1 and 2 are available on both services.)

That is also a lesson exemplifie­d by Pell, who at 60 has become the comedy star she always dreamed of being: a beloved scenesteal­er and deliverer of acidic one-liners, for whom a writing career proved to be a necessary detour of self-discovery.

As Pell explained in a recent conversati­on, breaking into comedy as a writer while she yearned to be an actor sometimes felt “like

I’m at the party, but I’m catering it.”

After a run of increasing­ly prominent comedy roles, Pell came to a realizatio­n about acting. “This is the easiest thing,” she said. “Writing is harder. Don’t tell actors.”

That confidence has benefited Pell in small, quirky parts on shows like “30 Rock” and “Parks and Recreation,” and a lead role on “Girls5eva,” in which she plays Gloria, the most world-weary and unflappabl­e member of an ensemble that includes Sara Bareilles, Renée Elise Goldsberry and Busy Philipps.

“Paula is just one of those people who makes you hope that goodness will prevail in life,” said Lorne Michaels, the creator and longtime executive producer of “SNL.” Michaels hired Pell to write for the show in 1995, when it was trying to transition away from its dude-bro reputation and boost female cast members such as Molly Shannon and Cheri Oteri.

At “SNL,” Pell created memorable characters like Debbie Downer but still yearned to be in front of audiences.

In New York, Pell dated a woman who she would later marry and has since divorced. Pell wasn’t open about her sexuality, at “SNL” or anywhere else.

Tina Fey, the “Mean Girls” mastermind and an executive producer of “Girls5eva,” joined the “SNL” writing staff in 1997, two years after Pell, and was one of the first people who Pell came out to there.

Fey described Pell as “a source of warmth and humanity” at “SNL” and said she could understand why Pell felt hesitant to share this side of herself with her colleagues at that time.

“Compared to a regular workplace, it’s like, is it a little bit harder to come out here?” Fey said. “Will this become fodder for jokes the moment I say it? In a place with no boundaries, is this a harder step to take?”

After leaving “SNL” in 2013, Pell wrote “Sisters,” the bawdy 2015 comedy that starred Fey and Amy Poehler. She was also a creator of the streaming shows “Hudson Valley Ballers” and “Mapleworth Murders.”

Pell performed a spot-on homage to Elaine Stritch in a “Documentar­y Now!” episode that parodied the making of the “Company” cast recording. She also played a high school secretary in the Peacock series “A.P. Bio” and one of the spirited revelers in “Wine Country,” the 2019 Netflix comedy (directed by Poehler) inspired by a trip she and her “SNL” gal pals had taken.

When Fey and the “Girls 5eva” creator Meredith Scardino approached Pell about the show in 2020, she was not that interested; at the time, she and Brito were riding out the pandemic in Asheville, North Carolina.

But Pell said she was won over after learning who her co-stars would be and reading the pilot script, which she felt offered a truthful and poignant depiction of adult female friendship.

On the show, Pell has been able to bring more of her real-life attributes and frailties to Gloria: When Pell was about to undergo knee replacemen­t surgery (on a knee that she’d already had replaced), her character was given a similar ailment at the start of Season 2.

Other upcoming storylines — including Gloria’s need to take care of injured animals during a van tour with the band — were informed by Brito, who wrote for the show this season.

Spend enough time in Pell’s company — like, say, an hour and a half — and she will eventually tell you the most intimate, blush-inducing details of how she and Brito began courting and dating in the months after Pell’s divorce.

Her longtime friends and colleagues have come to appreciate her endearing candor.

Goldsberry, who also worked with Pell on “Sisters” and “Documentar­y Now!,” said, “There is no knowing Paula reasonably well — you know her intimately if you know her at all. She is 100% authentica­lly, always herself, and there is absolutely nothing that she holds back.”

In her time outside of “Girls5eva,” Pell makes occasional return visits to “SNL,” helping to write for guest hosts like Kate McKinnon (Pell also appeared in a music video on that episode). She and Brito are also writing the screenplay for a Netflix comedy film that will star Kim Kardashian.

Although Pell could not share additional details about that project, she did talk about a broader sensibilit­y she strives for in her work, on shows like “Girls5eva” and in her own writing, that balances humor with an undercurre­nt of tender human emotion.

“My niece calls it ‘heart itch,’ ” she said. “I was like, did she make up heart itch? I’ve always used it because I love when she says it.” But when Pell did a search of the term online, she found some results suggesting that it could be a symptom of heart failure. “I’m like, maybe I shouldn’t be using that?” she said. “It makes it a little tragic.”

 ?? TONJE THILESEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Paula Pell, seen March 6, plays former girl group member Gloria in the series “Girls5Eva.”
TONJE THILESEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Paula Pell, seen March 6, plays former girl group member Gloria in the series “Girls5Eva.”

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