Do you like to collect anything?
asked by Maureen J from Branson, Missouri
(September 2006)
I collect 1st editions of books I
love, art, books by Edward Gorey, certain comic
books, and believe it or not, the old "wheat"
pennies. I only have about 12 or 13 of them though.
I was always very proud of this until I was doing
'How to Succeed in Business' on Broadway with
Matthew Broderick and he told me I could buy 100 of
them for, like, a quarter. When I was a kid, I
collected baseball cards, records, troll dolls and
monster cards, some of which my mom still has.
answered by
Megan (September 2006)
During the year what holiday do
you look forward to the most? asked by Kari P
from Tulsa, Oklahoma (September 2006)
I would have to say our wedding
anniversary. It's already become tradition that Nick
takes me away to a surprise destination.
answered by
Megan (September 2006)
How did you feel when you heard your
name called as the winner of the Emmy?
Mullally: I thought of all the great
years we had on the show and how I will
miss all of these wonderful people who I
went to work with everyday. I wanted to
try to convey the idea that it was a
group effort, the combination of crew,
staff and cast.
The daytime television landscape
is a graveyard of tanked talk shows. Why
do you want to jump into that?
I loved talk shows growing up. When I
was old enough to stay up that late I
use to watch Johnny Carson and Merv
Griffin and variety shows like Carol
Burnett and the Smothers Brothers. Then
I sat in for David Letterman and really
liked it. I wasn't nervous at all. Also,
it was so satisfying playing the
character of Karen that after eight
years I didn't have a real big desire to
play another character. So when
NBC-Universal called about doing a talk
show, it was an offer I couldn't refuse.
What will differentiate your
daytime talk show from all the others?
The answer is me, I guess. There will
also be a lot is variety — 60% or 70%
celebrity guests and original sketches.
We have an opening sketch that we call
the "Megalogue" and a super interactive
web site which is part of my secret
agenda to get away from the crush of the
"celebrity culture."
So what do you want your show to
be like?
I've been a guest on a lot of talk
shows and sometimes it has felt like I'm
being fitted into a format. I don't want
to force anything on my show. I'm not
afraid if something uncomfortable or
unexpected comes up during the course of
a segment. I'm okay with not being funny
for five minutes. And I don't want my
guests to feel that they have to ride a
unicycle or swallow flaming keys for
laughs. I don't want them to feel
pressure to set the world on fire.
Speaking of guests, why Will
Ferrell for your first show?
He was the one person I wanted. To me
he represents the best of popular
culture. He's very versatile and
super-talented. He's like a modern-day
Jimmy Stewart. And he's full of
goodwill. There's no negativity about
him.
Who are some of your other dream
guests?
Like everyone else who does this I'd
love Meryl Streep, Tom Cruise, Barbra
Streisand — all the A-list stars. Then I
have my weird people who I want to have
on like Tom Waits and Randy Newman.
How about your Will & Grace
co-stars?
For sure, but probably ladies first.
Though we had a funny idea for Sean
Hayes. Back in the old days when Dinah
Shore was going out with Burt Reynolds
she had a cooking segment on her show
where she opens the oven and Burt is in
there. We thought of something like that
— have Sean hiding in a kickdrum.
On Will & Grace Karen
Walker's voice became her signature. How
did you come up with that voice?
I don't know. I'm not an analytical
person. I act on instinct. I got the
first script and thought "how can I make
this the funniest?" and for some reason
that voice came out of me.
Karen and Jack were such a great
duo. What was the secret of their
chemistry?
Sean and I have a strong connection.
He is one of the most important people
in my whole life, and probably always
will be. I think of him as my second
husband. He's my back-up plan. I guess
that chemistry spilled over onto the
show. Karen was sort of the fabulous gay
man that Jack aspired to be.
What made Karen such a funny
character?
She was likeable in that she was
happy and filled with joy. She was very
childlike and that part of her could pop
out at any moment. And although she had
so many despicable behaviors, she never
had any ill will towards anyone and was
always trying to do the right thing. So
it put a weird spin on her as a
character.
Will & Grace was
groundbreaking in its portrayal of gay
characters. What is the enduring legacy
of the show?
We went into Will & Grace with
warnings that we would be attacked for
the gay characters, but it never
happened. Our show was never political.
The fact that our lead character was a
regular guy who happened to be gay
allowed him to be accepted. We got
letters from viewers who said the show
helped make it possible for them to come
out. We started to realize that
something was happening to our little
shuck-shuck comedy. When we went to the
GLAAD awards and people stood up and
applauded, I started crying — I'm such a
geek! It was a very emotional moment
because at the end of it we saw the
impact the show had.
Do you miss Karen Walker, and
would you ever bring her back?
I would totally do it again. In our
promos for my new talk show there's a
split screen with the real me on one
side and Karen on the other. She says
she's coming with me to my talk show and
I have to break it to her gently that
she can't.