NEW YORK (AP) - Allison Janney recently found comfort in the fact that she shares something special with the late Sir Laurence Olivier. Yes, acting, of course. But also this: panic attacks.
The Emmy-winning actress from “The West Wing” and “Mom” confesses she’s been Googling her nervous symptoms and whom she shares them with as she makes her Broadway return.
“I’m not going to lie. There’s a considerable amount of nerves, panic attacks,” she says. “It kind of gets more acute as you get older, for some reason. I don’t know why. It should get easier as we get older. I’m going to have to find a mantra.”
When it comes to the wonderfully warm Janney, even her bout of nerves is refreshing. The actress - who has two Tony Award nominations - has built a huge following for her smart, heartfelt performances in everything from “The Way Way Back” to “Masters of Sex.”
“I think part of the reason I love acting is I never feel more connected than I do when I’m onstage or working with another actor,” she says. “I feel like I have a purpose and a reason. It makes me feel connected in a way that sometimes eludes me in my day in and day out life.”
The self-confessed workaholic says she’s having one of the busiest years of her life, juggling a movie - “I, Tonya,” in which she plays skating star Tonya Harding’s mother - as well as the TV series “Mom” - and now onstage in a revival of the 1990 play “Six Degrees of Separation .”
The play’s plot, based on a real-life incident, centers on a young black man claiming to be the son of actor Sidney Poitier who bamboozles his way through households of rich, supposedly sophisticated New Yorkers. Janney plays a woman whose comfortable life is jolted awake by the encounter.
“I think the issues that are in ’Six Degrees of Separation’ are issues we’re still dealing with as a country - race and class and wanting to be loved. Everything in it resonates, sometimes I think more now than even then,” she says. “It’s such a beautiful, beautiful play and it breaks my heart every single night.”
Janney’s name came up for the revival of John Guare’s play initially as a bit of dream casting on the part of Trip Cullman, the show’s director. He fell in love with her when she was playing the fast-talking White House press secretary C.J. Cregg on television’s “The West Wing.”
“You just always love to listen to Allison Janney talk,” says Cullman, who said she captures both the chilly patrician essence of the “Six Degrees” role and also its enormous warmth. “She is as kind as she is talented, as funny as she is heartbreaking in the role.”
That Janney snagged the Broadway gig at least in part because she previously played Cregg makes perfect sense: The actress is still a little in awe of that part she played for seven years.
“Of all the roles I’ve ever played, I wish I was most like her,” she says. “I look up to her and wish I could be more like her. I loved her smarts, her heart, everything. It was pretty exciting to get to play her.”
Nostalgia for “The West Wing,” which ended its run in 2006, is on the rise, with fans fondly recalling a steady, kindly president surrounded by staffers who were whip-smart, honorable and caring. That fictional West Wing seems better than the real thing to many people, including Janney.
“It’s just a very confusing time now for the world and Washington and for all of us. It’s kind of like a reality show that you don’t want to watch. I know I’m having difficulty watching it. I feel unmoored,” she says.
Has she watched any briefings from the real press secretary, Sean Spicer? “I have been able to watch few of them because I get so embarrassed and it is too upsetting for me to watch them,” she says. “I can’t even talk about it.”
She may just have to find a mantra for that, too.
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Online: https://sixdegreesbroadway.com
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Mark Kennedy is at https://twitter.com/KennedyTwits
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