You shoot the show in New York, so you get to split time
in New York and L.A., right? -Yes.
-And I heard you were in New York last night.
You were out in New York.
-I'm a little tired today. I'm not going to lie.
-Now, does that mean that you're not going out as much anymore?
-What are you -- Are you making like a mom comment?
-Well, I'm a dad and I go out never, so...
It's a parent comment. -You know what? Okay, fine.
You caught me.
It was just a special night because we had, like, kind of
our wrap and premiere party for the show.
So we knocked a few back. -As you should.
-Yeah, hit up a few locations.
Have you ever played Head's Up?
-Oh, yeah, where you like put something on your, like --
-Yeah.
-You have to guess a celebrity on your head?
-Yes. -Yeah.
-So, like, after a few margaritas
we were all playing that game. It gets really loud.
The people next to us were not happy about it.
Well, half the people actually came and joined our game,
just randos. -Yeah.
-Which was really fun. -That's great.
-I know. -Yeah, but then the randos
who don't join are probably super bummed.
-They were pissed.
But it was like 1:00 in the morning,
so if you're looking for peace and quiet, maybe go -- go home.
And then my friend -- We were walking by and my friend's like,
"Hey, sorry about the noise." And I'm like, "I'm not!"
[ Laughter ]
Hey, help me.
-So they probably have a completely different opinion
of you than they had going into the evening.
I know. Everyone thinks "Nice little Hilary Duff."
Apparently she gets a little sassy.
-I woke up and I was like, "That happened?"
My friend was like, "It did."
-Did you wake up still with the name of a celebrity
on your forehead? -No, no.
We used, like, you know,
the updated version that's on a phone.
-Oh, right. You used an app.
That's -- -Yeah.
Do you know about that? You know what an app is?
-In my day, we -- you had a quill pen.
-Right. With a Post-It?
-Yeah, you'd have to use a Post-It.
-P.S. -- still use Post-Its. -Yeah, exactly.
-If I don't write it down, it's not real to me.
-So, congratulations. Season four of the show.
So, for those who don't watch "Younger,"
Sutton Foster plays a 41-year-old woman
who is pretending to her friends -- you among them --
that she's 27. -To get a job.
-To get a job. And last season she came clean.
So you guys are at a crossroads.
Is that where we sort of pick it up now?
-Yeah, yeah. So this season is
a little more dramatic than the others,
and, you know, Kelsey's like, "You psychopath.
Who have I let into my life?
Like, you're 20 years older than you say you are?"
Like, it just cheapens their whole relationship and, like,
everything that Kelsey's done for her.
So they start off at odds, but really, you know,
there's not going to be much of a show with us fighting
the whole season. -Right.
-But Kelsey does "Mean Girl" her, which was quite fun.
-Oh, that's good.
Well, obviously based on your efforts last night
at The Bowery Hotel we know that comes easy to you.
-It's -- It's in there. It's in there.
It takes a few cocktails to creep out, but she in there.
-So, this show was created by Darren Star,
who created "Sex and the City," "Melrose Place," "90210."
Were you a fan of his work going into this?
-So, I was a little young for the "90210/Melrose Place" phase,
but my sister was obsessed.
So I would sneak in and get little -- get my little fix.
But, really, "Sex and the City" was everything to me.
Like, I did not miss an episode.
I feel so honored to work for him.
He called me up and asked me to do this job,
so it's not every day
Darren Star calls you on your cellphone.
-That's really cool. -Yeah.
I feel like our show is like
the Brooklyn version of "Sex and the City."
-Well, there you go. It's about time.
-Yeah, yeah.
We use the show as -- or the city
as a secret weapon in the show. It gives it so much energy.
-And you have a 5-year-old.
-I do.
-Is it true that he loves being in the city
because he thinks the Ninja Turtles are real
and in our sewers? -Yes.
And I don't know if you look down as much as I have recently,
but there's about nine manhole covers on every city block
in New York, and he wants to stop at every one of them.
He thinks that Leonardo and Master Splinter are down there,
concocting plans to save the city.
-Does he want to stop and say something?
-He wants to look in the tiny little hole.
-Oh, no. -I know.
And I'm really not that germy, weird mom that's like, "Don't.
"Let's Purell you up from head to toe."
But I'm like, "That is --" -That's the line for everybody.
-There's, like, dog urine. Probably human urine.
Don't touch the ground. -If you let him do that,
he'd just have one giant old pink eye.
-Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
-Whichever is his peekin' eye
would be probably swollen shut at this point.
-"His peekin' eye" is amazing.
-Is he familiar with --
I mean, at five, does he know of your career?
Does he know your work?
-He's starting to figure it out more and more.
I think some little rascal at school
told him what my name was.
And he came home from school a few --
-Your son doesn't know your name?
-Well, he knows that my name's Hilary.
-He knows what his parents' real names are.
I'm not just Mom. -Again, I don't know.
I guess my son doesn't know my name yet.
-Yeah, yeah.
He actually also doesn't know who you are, so --
-No, he knows. I drill it in.
-You're like, "Here's my show." -Yeah.
I basically sit him in front of it every night.
It's weird, because people are like,
"You can't keep your kid up till 12:30."
I'm like, "this is important." -"Watch me."
-Yeah. -Like, he belongs me right now.
-Yeah, exactly.
And they're like, "Why don't you show it to him
the next morning on YouTube?"
I'm like, "He needs to see it as it airs."
-He needs to be updated right away.
-Right away.
-Well, Luca did know my name and then he said to me, like,
"I know your name." And I was like, "I know."
And he was like...
like, "I know your name."
And I was like, "Okay." And he's like, "Hilary Duff."
And then he looked at me like, "Mm-hmm."
And I was, like -- caught, I guess.
-Like, I don't know what to say.
Who told you that? Like, what?
He's, like, very funny.
He's seen me on the cover of magazines at a grocery store.
And I really think he just thinks the next day, like,
Shane's mommy is going to be on a magazine.
-Right. He thought it was just this is where moms are.
They're on the cover of magazines.
As they should, because moms are amazing,
and they should be on the cover of magazines.
He's very cute, by the way. -That is true.
-This is a photo of the two of you. There you go.
By the way, that is the face a kid makes when he says,
"I know who you are." [ Laughter ]
-Nailed it. That was it.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét