Allison Janney is tired.  She’s been putting in 
		seven day weeks, doing eight shows a week in 
		her Tony Award nominated role on the hit Broadway musical 9 to 5.  
		It is also awards season, so she has been hitting the red carpet 
		regularly.  Plus her latest film role – in the comedy Away We Go 
		by Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes – is about to be released. 
		Therefore, even though she’d rather be sleeping, 
		Janney gets up this morning to meet with a 
		bunch of members of the press corps to discuss the new film. 
		Of course, Janney is no stranger to hard work.  She 
		spent several years putting in twelve-and-more-hour 
		days on the hit TV series The West Wing as CJ Craig, the 
		hard-working White House Press Secretary-turned-Chief of Staff. 
		Besides, she is a working actress, and knowing that the downtimes 
		sometimes come in that lifestyle, so she is more than happy to be
		too busy as it beats the 
		alternative.  
		In her supporting role in Away We Go, she 
		plays Lily, a loud and kind of obnoxious woman unhappily married to a 
		repressed and miserable husband played by Jim Gaffigan.  Her character 
		is a former co-worker and friend of Verona and Bert (Maya Rudolph and 
		John Krasinski) who hopes to talk the rootless couple into moving to 
		Arizona to live nearby - frankly just because she is 
		so bored with her life as it is she is hoping having friends there may 
		shake it up. 
		Janney sat down with us and several other websites 
		in a roundtable to discuss the movie, the musical, her career and how 
		she has been surviving with so little sleep.
		How are you? 
		I’m good.  I’m exhausted, but I’m fine.  Lately 
		I’ve been burning the candle every which way.  Once the Tonys are over I 
		think my life will get back to normal a little bit – besides doing eight 
		shows a week on Broadway. 
		
		 Making the movie must have been a vacation.
Making the movie must have been a vacation. 
		Truly it was.  I got to be in Phoenix, Arizona.  In 
		120 degree heat. 
		Yes, Jim [Gaffigan] said it was really hot… 
		It was.  I’ve never been under such heat in my 
		life.  Filming at the dog track – right out in the bright sun.  We 
		really had to drink a lot of water.  I got faint a couple of times.  It 
		was serious heat.  I never had to perform in those conditions.  I felt 
		bad for the dogs, too.  I wanted to go and rescue them all and take them 
		home with me.  I felt really sad about the dogs. 
		So in a way you were almost in a hallucinatory 
		state to play that character? 
		I wasn’t.  I was sick.  I was on antibiotics.  
		Antibiotics and the sun, not a good combo.  It made me dizzy. 
		You worked with Sam Mendes way back in 
		American Beauty, his first film.  Could you talk about his growth as 
		a director? 
		Well as far as I’m concerned, he was right on from 
		the get-go.  Sam has such a confidence about him that is so attractive.  
		As a director, to be that confident and enjoy what he does.  You know 
		when people really love what they do?  It’s just nice to be with them 
		and be around them.  To have rehearsals for American Beauty, he 
		had us all sitting around a table.  Even me, I didn’t have that big a 
		part in it, but to be there every day for rehearsal, I really felt like 
		I was a part of the movie.  I love that he knows how to talk to actors 
		and give good direction and inspire the actor.  He’s not just a traffic 
		cop.  He really knows what he is doing.  Then to work on this with him, 
		even more.  After all the successes he’s had, he’s even more confident.  
		Encouraged me to go out on a limb with this character.  I mean, she’s 
		big.  Lily is a big character.  I was a little nervous about going as 
		big as I did, but he just was like, “Go on, you can be bigger than 
		that!”  I hope I get to be part of his acting troupe. 
		Did you or any of the other actors give him tips 
		on comedy?  This is really his first comedic film. 
		Well, he’s a funny man.  He’s married to Kate [Winslet], 
		who is pretty funny, too.  Did you ever see her on Extras?  They 
		are fun.  Sam is a very funny, smart-witted guy, so I think he knows 
		what he’s looking for.  He doesn’t need any help in that department.  I 
		would follow him off a cliff. 
		
		 Your character is pretty broad.  Was your 
		theater background helpful in that sense? You could really push it…
Your character is pretty broad.  Was your 
		theater background helpful in that sense? You could really push it… 
		Yeah.  I think when anyone gives me a direction, I 
		go big.  Then they tell me to pull back.  Better to be big and then pull 
		back than not be able to go big at all.  I always haven’t had a problem 
		embarrassing myself.  (laughs) 
		A lot of the movie is about finding what your 
		definition of home is and revisiting your past.  Have you had any 
		experiences coming up from your past or your old hometown since you have 
		become a well-known actress? 
		Well, there’s Facebook.  (laughs)  Just in 
		terms of people contacting you from your past.  Also, now being on 
		Broadway, I’ve had a lot of people come backstage who I haven’t seen in 
		a long time.  It’s been kind of bittersweet.  I felt a little sad, a 
		little nostalgic for the past.  “Wow, it was that long ago we went to 
		college together?  Oh my gosh.  Look at you now.”  It’s been kind of 
		amazing to reconnect with so many people.  Now everyone knows where I 
		am, so they can come find me.  Anyone can come backstage and it’s kind 
		of… it’s nice.  But it always makes you feel like: Oh, did I make the 
		right choices?  What did I do?  Look what they did.  Everyone has a 
		little bit of that.  I think that’s the biggest lesson that the movie.  
		I always thought is should be called Anywhere You Go, There You Are.  
		That’s one of the hardest lessons to learn, just to be at peace with 
		where you are.  Your home is where you are or where you make it.  It 
		doesn’t matter where it is.  I feel that wherever I am working is home. 
		Congratulations on your Tony Nomination. 
		Thank you. 
		Besides the nomination, what has been the 
		highlight about being in 
		9 to 5? 
		Working with Dolly Parton.  That’s been just crazy, 
		to be in her presence every day.  To be hanging out with Dolly.  She’s 
		an extraordinary woman, so generous.  It’s nice to be around someone 
		that’s that famous and see how down to earth they are, lovely they are.  
		She’s really truly, truly talented and so smart.  Sometimes you forget, 
		because of the way she dresses and looks.  You do kind of judge her.  
		You have a preconceived notion of what she is like and then you find out 
		she’s actually not in any way cheap or tawdry.  (laughs)  She’s 
		incredibly smart, brilliant, talented.  That’s been pretty great.  Then 
		just getting to sing on Broadway and dance.  I get this one big number I 
		do in a white pantsuit with all the boys.  It’s like a dream come true 
		to do a number like that.   Seven people in the world get to do that.  I 
		was really trying to think; how many people get to fulfill that kind of 
		fantasy? 
		
		 I saw it last weekend.  It’s really pretty 
		amazing.  Where do you get all that energy?
I saw it last weekend.  It’s really pretty 
		amazing.  Where do you get all that energy? 
		I don’t know, man.  I’m sleeping a lot and not 
		having that much of a life outside this right now.  This is a huge day 
		for me today.  I’m going to go home and sleep until I have to go do the 
		show.  I have no personal life right now. 
		Where does your passion and energy for acting 
		come from? 
		My mother was an actress and I’m sure that’s where 
		it started.  But I think I really enjoy getting to be… I get so excited 
		when I read scripts, when I read good writing.  I get excited thinking 
		about saying that line.  I don’t know what it is, but I love it so 
		much.  I think it’s just that it’s not me.  Not to be self-deprecating, 
		but I do sometimes find that I’m always at a loss for words.  To get to 
		play a character, the script is all there and you know more.  It’s 
		great.  It’s just a real satisfying feeling to get to do that.  I like 
		to be other people. 
		I was reading that you were discovered by Paul 
		Newman. 
		Yes.  Well, I went to Kenyon College in Gambier, 
		Ohio.  Paul Newman went there.  He was a graduate.  When I was a 
		freshman there, he had built a beautiful new theater.  He came back to 
		christen the theater by directing the first play in it.  It was written 
		by Michael Cristofer.  I met him, got into the play and then I met 
		Joanne Woodward, who then told me to come to New York to The 
		Neighborhood Playhouse.  I did plays with her that she directed.  They 
		took me under their wing and I was very lucky to get to hook up with 
		them.  It was really nice to have them when I came to New York.  Joanne 
		would have us all to their house in Westport.  We’d do play readings and 
		she directed us in plays.  She was very generous with her time. 
		What was that first play? 
		The one I did in Kenyon?  It was called C.C. 
		Pyle and the Bunyan Derby.  It didn’t go anywhere from there.  It 
		didn’t go anywhere.  But Michael Cristofer won a Pulitzer Prize for 
		The Shadow Box.  And he’s an amazing actor.  Did you see him in the 
		park in Romeo and Juliet?  Oh my God, he’s a fabulous actor.  But 
		anyway, that’s that play.  I didn’t go anywhere but Paul Newman directed 
		it. 
		
		 Lily and Lowell have such different 
		personalities.  Did you, Jim and Sam figure out a backstory on how they 
		got together and if there was ever a spark there?
Lily and Lowell have such different 
		personalities.  Did you, Jim and Sam figure out a backstory on how they 
		got together and if there was ever a spark there? 
		I think it was a drunken night in a bar.  Truly, I 
		think the lighting was low (laughs) and Lily and Lowell probably 
		got drunk and made out.  They probably dated for a while and then just 
		got engaged because they were scared they weren’t going to find anybody 
		else.  They ended up together in such a tragic relationship.  They are 
		so desperate to have Verona and Burt come live with them.  Please save 
		our lives!  (laughs)  Actually, I don’t think Lowell would even 
		care. 
		What’s going to happen to their kids? 
		I think they actually probably will be fine.  
		(laughs)  They probably will.  Oh my God, isn’t that awful, the last 
		scene with the girl talking with the truckers?  Hopefully they will be 
		resilient and tough.  They need to get some love somewhere.  They’re not 
		getting a lot from their parents. 
		What was it about this script that stuck out for 
		you? Most of the characters just get a little time and then the film 
		moves on. 
		It’s definitely a road movie.  I’m a huge fan of 
		Dave Eggers, so I kind of was predisposed to like it.  (laughs)  
		I love him so much and the part of Lily was just so fun that I liked it 
		right away.  I like his writing.  I don’t know what my first impression 
		was with it.  In fact I think I said I’d do it before I even read it, 
		really. 
		Do your characters remind you of people from 
		home in Ohio?  I know people from Cincinnati like that… 
		You do? (shocked) 
		Who end up in the same scenario… 
		Tragic and too loud.  That’s what I love about 
		Lily.  She thinks she is the funniest person on the planet.  As far as 
		Lily is concerned, she should have been a standup comedian.  And 
		(long pause) she’s just tragic. 
		Yet you don’t hate her.  How do you relate with 
		her and get that across as an actress? 
		Because I think you have to identify with her and 
		see some of her tragedy.  You have to have some feeling for her.  
		Empathy for her.  That’s what I like to do, whatever character I play.  
		I have to find something that I like about them or that I relate to.  I 
		think it’s her unhappiness, sometimes that I can relate to.  The feeling 
		that you’re with the wrong person, I can relate to feeling that way.  I 
		don‘t have kids, but I can relate to that.  Oftentimes to the tragic 
		side of characters (laughs), I don’t know why, but….  Many times 
		I think I shouldn’t, though.  The parts that make me sad, that make them 
		human.  That’s the part that I respond to, no matter what they cover it 
		up with – the big joking or whatever.  It’s nice to know what’s 
		underneath. 
		It’s quite a contrast to 9 to 5. 
		Yeah, Violet is the opposite of Lily.  She’s 
		incredibly put together.  Has her own insecurities, but, you know.  
		Violet and Lily wouldn’t like each other. 
		
		 You’ve done movies, TV and theater.  Can you 
		talk about the differences – the rigors of it?
You’ve done movies, TV and theater.  Can you 
		talk about the differences – the rigors of it? 
		When I did West Wing the most demanding 
		thing was the time commitment.  And the early calls – the 6:00 am calls 
		when I’m not getting to the set until 3:00 pm.  Trying to maintain your 
		anger and your poise (chuckles), because you start to feel: “Oh 
		my God, I could have been at my brother’s bar mitzvah” or whatever.  
		It’s just a scheduling nightmare.  The waste, the amount of private time 
		I had in seven years – in lifetime I should have only aged two years.  
		That is a real downside, sitting around in your trailer, just waiting, 
		waiting and waiting.  The actual work is really fun.  Broadway, that’s 
		all about maintaining your body and your throat for the performances.  
		It’s grueling on so many levels.  The singing is new for me.  I have to 
		protect my voice.  I have to make sure I don’t get sick.  I have to go 
		to sleep or not go out after the show.  I have to really maintain my 
		health.  That I never worried about.  If I had a flu, I could still do a 
		walk and talk.  But to kick while trying to sing and run around, it’s so 
		demanding.  Once the show is up, it’s doing it for a year for eight 
		shows a week.  But I love them all.  I just want to work, so I’ll suffer 
		the pros and cons of every one of them. 
		The film has a cast that is primarily known for 
		work in TV more than films.  How did that affect the acting process? 
		It didn’t really come into play.  The thing that 
		came into play the most was trying to not laugh when I did those scenes 
		with John and Maya and Jim.  We really would just get the giggles and 
		not be able to stop.  Sam finally got really mad at us and said, “Stop 
		the scene.   We’re moving on.  We can’t get through this.”  We were 
		like, no, come on, we can do it.  Then we’d do another take and we’d all 
		start laughing.  That was really fun, but really sad too.  We were like, 
		come on.  I was pinching myself.  Jim Gaffigan is a very funny man.  I 
		never really knew his work before I got cast in this with him.   Now I 
		think he’s amazing. 
		It must have been nice to share the scene with a 
		man as tall as John Krasinski. 
		I love it!  It was pretty great.  I got to kiss 
		him.  Oh my God, it was so much fun.  Yes, he’s wonderfully tall.  It 
		was very nice to not feel like a giantess. 
		So when you saw the movie assembled, what did 
		you think? 
		I haven’t seen it.  Everyone has seen it.  I’ve 
		been too busy doing 9 to 5.  I looped.  I did some looping.  I 
		saw some of the stuff.  I was looking like (fakes shame) “Oh, my 
		God.  She’s so big.”  I think I’m going to see it next Monday.  Every 
		other screening, I’ve been ensconced in 9 to 5, so I haven’t been 
		able to see it. 
		Just in reading the script, there are a lot of 
		comic parts like yours, then more serious parts with other actors.  Did 
		you have to keep that in mind when you were doing your more comedic 
		scenes – how they would affect the more dramatic ones in the movie? 
		No.  I don’t think so.  As long as they were 
		grounded in some kind of reality.  It was a part of Lily, so you can go 
		anywhere if you know the truth about the character. 
		At what point did you know that comedy was meant 
		for you? 
		I grew up watching The Carol Burnett Show.  
		I was in love with that show.  Tim Conway.  I mean that was the best 
		comedy.  That was what I grew up watching.  Every time I thought, that’s 
		what I want to do.  I love to do physical comedy.  I’m not a stand-up 
		comic.  I can’t come up with the funny jokes.  But I know behavior that 
		is funny and physical comedy.  I’m lucky I get to do that. 
		You’ve gotten nominated for awards – The Emmys, 
		and now you have the Tonys.  Does it feel different dealing with one 
		awards season vs. the others? 
		The theater award season seems much more 
		manageable, much more civilized than the world of TV award shows.  It’s 
		much more a circus.  A huge circus.  The Drama Desk was just nice, there 
		wasn’t the volume of people you had to talk to.  It wasn’t as large.  It 
		was more manageable, so you weren’t spent after talking to the press.  
		It was nice.  It really actually made it more fun to be there, because 
		it gets exhausting to do that red carpet for the Emmys.  You’re like, 
		can I go home now?   I’m exhausted.  It’s very stressful.  Everyone is 
		looking at you. 
		Do you feel that there is a correlation between 
		the vibe of Juno and this film? 
		Maybe that they are small films.  They are not big 
		budget films, so they feel very similar.  They are dealing with 
		something small, something very human – like trying to find your home or 
		teen pregnancy.  (laughs)  I don’t know.  Very real issues that 
		people can relate to.  Maybe that’s what.  They feel small. 
		You have played so many interesting characters.  
		If you could hang out with any of them in real life, which would it be? 
		(laughs)  That’s funny.  I think… (long 
		pause) I think CJ would be great to know.  She’s a great gal.  Also, 
		I can’t remember my character’s name in Drop Dead Gorgeous. 
		  She’d be fun to hang out with.  She’d be fun to drink beers with.  But 
		CJ would be the one. 
		Can you talk about your upcoming pilot?  It 
		sounds cool. 
		Well, that was cancelled.  Unless they got it back 
		on.  We did it, it was a pilot and they didn’t pick it up.  I would have 
		loved it.  It was really fun. 
		What’s going on with the Hairspray 
		sequel? 
		Well, they haven’t asked me to be in it yet.  
		(laughs, then dramatically)  Fools!  Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman 
		are friends of mine.  I’ll be talking to them very shortly. 
		Zac Efron will be the holdout. 
		Yeah.  He doesn’t 
		want to do Footloose.   He won’t do musicals.