Episodios

  • June Squibb "Nebraska"
    Apr 13 2026

    Oscar-nominated actor June Squibb joins Steve Kmetko on Still Here Hollywood for a funny, honest, and deeply inspiring conversation about longevity, craft, and what it really means to keep working at the highest level in your 90s.

    June looks back on her early days in theater, including working with the legendary Ethel Merman in Gypsy, learning Broadway discipline, and why she always knew, even as a child, that acting was not just something she wanted to do, it was who she was. She also talks about Law & Order, Nebraska, Thelma, Marjorie Prime, Yellowjackets, and what it feels like to still be headlining films when most people have long stepped away from the spotlight.

    The conversation also explores aging in Hollywood, how Scarlett Johansson directed her in Eleanor the Great, what made Jack Nicholson such a generous scene partner, why realism matters so much in her work, and how Nebraska changed the way the industry saw her. June also shares her thoughts on inspiration, criticism, ambition, and the simple wisdom she would send back to her 35-year-old self.

    If you love great actors, great stories, and proof that a second act can turn into seven acts, this episode is for you.

    Support the show and get early access and extras at patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    00:01 Intro: June Squibb and a breakout decades in the making

    00:37 Why some people still call her Miss Squibb

    01:06 Working with Ethel Merman in Gypsy

    02:57 Learning to bump and grind on stage

    03:37 Knowing she was an actor from the very beginning

    04:18 If she had done anything else, it might have been forensics

    04:46 Law & Order memories and Jerry Orbach

    05:28 Broadway discipline and arriving early to the theater

    06:20 Her backstage ritual before curtain

    07:17 How June prepares for a role

    08:04 Seven decades of acting, and still going strong

    08:29 What she looks for in a script now

    09:18 Aging in Hollywood and what audiences want to see

    10:32 Why older stories matter more than ever

    10:53 What has not changed in Hollywood

    11:45 How age changes the roles she gets

    12:37 Scarlett Johansson, Eleanor the Great, and using the cane

    13:19 Working with Scarlett as a director

    14:19 Oscar night for Nebraska and sharing it with her son

    16:22 Patreon break

    17:20 Nebraska cemetery scene and that unforgettable moment

    18:16 Why she never thought “why did this take so long?”

    18:57 How Nebraska changed the way she saw herself

    20:00 Thelma, action comedy, and strength at any age

    21:11 The best thing about her life right now

    21:48 What roles she still wants to play

    22:51 What quality makes people want to work with her

    23:56 What performance of hers she recommends people watch

    24:49 In & Out, comedy, and Frank Oz

    25:19 Working with Woody Allen on Alice

    26:15 Can you separate art from artist?

    27:25 Who made a big impression on her, Jack Nicholson

    28:20 Fame, recognition, and being known for the work

    28:31 Marrying her acting teacher

    29:07 What makes a director great for actors

    30:17 Was she ever typecast? Yes, as a bimbo

    31:17 Roles that felt too familiar

    31:47 Supporting player vs leading lady

    32:26 Seeing her younger self on screen

    32:48 How old she feels now, 35

    33:16 Does she watch her own performances?

    33:44 The one truth that shaped her whole life

    34:09 Her secret to looking good and feeling healthy

    35:13 Being called inspiring, and that word “icon”

    36:09 A June Squibb documentary may be coming

    36:44 What she hopes people say about her work

    36:59 Still hoping to work with Robert De Niro

    37:30 At 96, does she think about mortality?

    38:05 What she would tell her 35-year-old self

    39:17 Closing thoughts and wrap-up

    Show Credits

    Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko

    All things technical: Justin Zangerle

    Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein

    Music by: Brian Sanyshyn

    https://stillherehollywood.com

    http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com

    Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com

    Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    40 m
  • Nicole Eggert "Baywatch" Encore
    Apr 6 2026

    She was on the biggest show in the world, but behind the slow motion runs and global fame, Nicole Eggert was dealing with something very different.

    On this episode of Still Here Hollywood, Nicole opens up about joining Baywatch in her early 20s, why she walked away from the #1 show on the planet, and how the “Baywatch bimbo” label shut down her career. She shares what fame really cost her, from dating struggles to doors suddenly closing in Hollywood.

    Then the conversation takes a powerful turn.

    Nicole talks candidly about her breast cancer diagnosis, discovering it herself after it was missed in screenings, and what it’s really like to live with cancer long term. From the emotional toll of telling her daughters, to the mindset it takes to fight through treatment, this is an honest, raw look at survival and perspective.

    This is Still Here Hollywood. I’m Steve Kmetko. Join me with today’s guest, from Baywatch, actor Nicole Eggert.

    00:00 Intro

    00:45 How Nicole Eggert landed Baywatch

    02:30 Leaving the #1 show in the world at 20

    04:10 The downside of fame, dating and perception

    05:10 “Baywatch bimbo” label and career fallout

    05:40 The truth about slow motion running

    07:15 Why Hollywood doors suddenly closed

    08:20 Stepping away from acting

    09:10 Global fame and being recognized everywhere

    09:54 Charles in Charge and early career

    11:30 Growing up on set and life decisions

    13:20 Real estate passion and life outside acting

    15:30 Working with Scott Baio

    15:45 Would she let her daughters act?

    16:50 Cancer diagnosis and discovering it herself

    19:00 The hardest part of cancer, mental vs physical

    21:00 Living with cancer and ongoing treatment

    22:20 What she’s learned from other cancer patients

    24:50 Advice for women facing cancer

    26:20 Telling her daughters the diagnosis

    28:10 How cancer changed her as a person

    29:00 Career today and finding purpose in podcasting

    30:45 Chemo side effects and “chemo brain”

    31:50 The lowest moment during cancer

    32:50 Scary fan encounters and real threats

    35:20 Does she regret Baywatch?

    36:05 Producing the Baywatch documentary

    37:15 Bringing Baywatch full circle

    Show Credits

    Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko

    All things technical: Justin Zangerle

    Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein

    Music by: Brian Sanyshyn

    https://stillherehollywood.com

    http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com

    Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com

    Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    47 m
  • Melora Hardin "The Office" Encore
    Mar 30 2026

    Melora Hardin, best known to millions as Jan Levinson on The Office, joins Steve Kmetko for a funny, revealing, and surprisingly wide-ranging conversation about her life and career in Hollywood.

    Melora looks back on working with Steve Carell, the improvisational magic behind The Office, and why the legendary “Dinner Party” episode still makes her laugh. She also opens up about her early years as a child actor on Little House on the Prairie, working with Michael Landon and Clint Eastwood, her thoughts on AI and creativity, and what it was like seeing Miley Cyrus at 15 during the Hannah Montana movie.

    Beyond acting, Melora talks about dance, directing, cabaret, parenting in Hollywood, Transparent, Dancing with the Stars, and the creative energy that still drives her after more than 50 years in the business.

    This is a smart, funny, and honest conversation with one of television’s most memorable performers.

    #MeloraHardin, #TheOffice, #JanLevinson, #SteveCarell, #StillHereHollywood, #SteveKmetko, #LittleHouseOnThePrairie, #Transparent, #MileyCyrus, #Hollywood

    CHAPTERS

    00:00 Cold open, Steve Carell and AI tease
    00:49 Intro, Melora Hardin joins the show
    02:05 Melora’s colorful outfit and new scarf collection
    02:43 More than 50 years in show business
    03:23 Little House on the Prairie and first screen kiss
    05:48 Working with Michael Landon
    06:50 Clint Eastwood stories and singing for him
    09:24 Did the cast of The Office get along?
    10:01 Greg Daniels, improv, and the collaborative set
    12:08 Does Melora watch old episodes of The Office?
    13:29 The “Dinner Party” episode and breaking on set
    15:37 Melora’s lifestyle brand, wallpaper, and scarves
    16:16 What kind of a kisser was Steve Carell?
    16:38 How much improv happened on The Office
    19:05 Miley Cyrus at 15 and the making of Hannah Montana
    19:35 Melora’s thoughts on AI and creativity
    23:58 Acting, dancing, singing, directing, and creative energy
    25:04 Why ballet didn’t become her career
    27:34 Playing Baby in Dirty Dancing
    29:41 Biggest influences, her parents, and growing up in Hollywood
    32:04 What she still wants to do next
    34:17 More on Miley Cyrus and child stardom
    36:32 Cabaret, singing, and getting through Covid
    38:37 Social media, parenting, and raising kids without phones
    42:18 Raising grounded children in Hollywood
    44:54 Emmy nomination for Transparent
    48:14 Why film and TV is the ultimate team sport
    50:07 Directing, editing, and her documentary Hunter’s Thunder
    54:11 Melora on going to the movies
    55:30 Dancing with the Stars and loving dance
    55:50 From Jan on The Office to Tammy on Transparent
    57:03 What she wants next in her career
    57:50 Where the name Melora comes from
    58:31 Jan’s breakup on The Office
    59:32 What still “flaps” Melora
    1:00:46 Gratitude, family, and staying grounded
    1:02:30 Final moments and ruby slippers story

    Show Credits

    Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko

    All things technical: Justin Zangerle

    Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein

    Music by: Brian Sanyshyn

    Transcription: Mushtaq Hussain

    https://stillherehollywood.com

    http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com

    Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com

    Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    1 h y 4 m
  • Frances Fisher "Titanic"
    Mar 23 2026

    Frances Fisher joins Steve Kmetko for a candid, funny, and deeply thoughtful conversation about acting, ambition, heartbreak, Titanic, Clint Eastwood, Lucille Ball, and what it really means to build a life in Hollywood.

    Frances talks about growing up around the world, finding acting through community theater in Texas, bartending in New York while chasing work, and the unusual creative choice that transformed her performance in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. She also shares a remarkable story about the phone call that may have led to Titanic, what made James Cameron such an effective director, and why Rose’s mother was one of the easiest characters she ever played.

    The conversation goes deeper as Frances reflects on grief, aging, motherhood, social media, ambition, and the one thing she wishes she had told her younger self: aim higher.

    This is Still Here Hollywood with Steve Kmetko.

    Episode Hashtags:
    #FrancesFisher,#Titanic,#ClintEastwood,#JamesCameron,#LucilleBall,#StillHereHollywood,#SteveKmetko,#HollywoodStories,#ClassicHollywood,#Acting,#FilmHistory

    00:00 Introduction
    00:49 The artist comes before the actor
    01:34 Her first big acting paycheck
    03:09 The black hair story from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
    06:35 How acting first hooked her
    08:45 Growing up around the world
    12:21 How being the new kid shaped her
    13:27 Why the work mattered more than fame
    16:35 The phone call before Titanic
    18:26 Why she wanted Titanic so badly
    19:43 James Cameron on set
    22:04 Working with Leo, Kate, and the costumes
    27:27 Playing Lucille Ball
    31:36 What acting really is
    36:08 What Clint Eastwood was like
    42:19 The joy of being a grandmother
    45:05 Frances Fisher on grief
    48:49 Her thoughts on social media
    52:19 Her toilet paper theory of life
    54:40 Why she wishes she had aimed higher

    Show Credits

    Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko

    All things technical: Justin Zangerle

    Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein

    Music by: Brian Sanyshyn

    Transcription: Mushtaq Hussain

    https://stillherehollywood.com

    http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com

    Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com

    Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    57 m
  • Adrienne Barbeau "Maude" / "The Fog"
    Mar 16 2026

    Adrienne Barbeau joins Steve Kmetko for a candid and entertaining conversation about a career that has spanned Broadway, television, cult films, and animation.

    Long before becoming a horror icon, Adrienne Barbeau first gained national attention playing Carol Traynor on the groundbreaking sitcom Maude opposite the legendary Bea Arthur. From there she built a career that moved effortlessly between stage, television, and film, appearing in classics like The Fog, Escape From New York, Creepshow, and Swamp Thing. She also became the unforgettable voice of Catwoman in Batman: The Animated Series, a role that continues to resonate with fans decades later.

    In this episode, Adrienne looks back at her early days performing for U.S. troops overseas for just seven dollars a day, her Broadway run in Fiddler on the Roof alongside Bette Midler, and what she learned working with Bea Arthur on one of television’s most influential sitcoms. She shares behind the scenes stories about working with directors like John Carpenter and George Romero, explains how she accidentally became a horror movie legend, and reveals why she never saw herself as the “bombshell” many fans remember from films like Cannonball Run.

    Adrienne also talks about aging in Hollywood, why she has avoided cosmetic procedures, the surprising fan encounters that still happen at conventions, and how her children keep her grounded after decades in the spotlight.

    It’s a funny, insightful look at a remarkable career that continues to evolve more than sixty years after her first professional job.

    This is Still Here Hollywood. I’m Steve Kmetko. Join me with today’s guest, actor Adrienne Barbeau.

    00:00 Introduction – Adrienne Barbeau joins Still Here Hollywood

    00:48 A Career That Spans Broadway, Television, and Film

    02:07 Entertaining U.S. Troops for $7 a Day

    03:10 Broadway Years and Fiddler on the Roof with Bette Midler

    04:22 Learning the Difference Between Stage and Film Acting

    06:07 Adrienne Barbeau on Fame and Success

    09:19 A Wild Story About Burt Reynolds and Celebrity Life

    10:35 How Maude Impacted Fans in Real Life

    13:12 What Adrienne Learned from Bea Arthur

    14:53 Life on the Set of Maude

    17:30 When Adrienne Realized Maude Was Groundbreaking

    19:03 The Behind the Scenes Rhythm of Filming Maude

    22:22 Finding Confidence as Carol on Maude

    24:04 The Controversial Maude Abortion Episode

    27:27 How Adrienne Became a Horror Movie Icon

    29:30 Almost Turning Down George Romero’s Creepshow

    31:08 When Horror Fans Started Recognizing Her Work

    33:04 Adrienne’s New Film Oddities

    35:37 Voicing Catwoman in Batman: The Animated Series

    37:23 The Acting Advice That Changed Her Career

    40:05 The “Bombshell” Label in Hollywood

    41:15 The Famous Cannonball Run Costume Story

    43:00 Do Actors Have More Freedom Today?

    44:47 What Keeps Adrienne Barbeau Grounded

    45:11 Adrienne Barbeau on Turning 80

    49:30 Her Early Days Working in a New York Nightclub

    51:23 Advice Adrienne Would Give Her Younger Self

    53:35 Playing Catwoman and Voice Acting Work

    54:40 HBO’s Carnivàle and Her Favorite Role

    56:30 Closing Thoughts

    Show Credits

    Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko

    All things technical: Justin Zangerle

    Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein

    Music by: Brian Sanyshyn

    Transcription: Mushtaq Hussain

    https://stillherehollywood.com

    http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com

    Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com

    Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    57 m
  • Paul Ruddy - Hollywood Casting Director
    Mar 9 2026
    What really happens inside the room where casting decisions are made? Casting director Paul Ruddy has spent nearly three decades shaping careers in film, television, and now the emerging world of vertical storytelling. In this revealing conversation, he explains how actors get cast, why self-tapes changed Hollywood forever, and how star power can be felt in the first 20 seconds of an audition. Paul shares behind-the-scenes stories about discovering talent early, including Sydney Sweeney’s early auditions, the tiny acting choices that win roles, and why memorizing your lines still matters more than anything else. He also dives deep into: • The rise of verticals and micro-dramas • Why pilot season disappeared • The impact of streaming and the Hollywood strikes • Why in-person auditions are unlikely to return • How actors accidentally talk themselves out of roles • The truth about success, ego, and reputation in Hollywood If you’re an actor, filmmaker, or simply curious about how Hollywood really works, this episode pulls back the curtain on the casting process and the industry’s evolution. Subscribe for more insider conversations with the people shaping entertainment. 00:00 Intro: Inside the Room Where Careers Are Decided 01:02 Paul Ruddy’s Origin Story: Scranton, TV Obsession, Law School 03:10 The Leap to Hollywood and the “Lied on My Resume” Move 05:21 The Power of Casting and Changing Lives 05:39 Early Talent Spotting and Sydney Sweeney’s First Jobs 07:42 How Fast Casting Instincts Kick In 07:46 Paul’s Best Advice: Do the Homework, Understand Tone 08:20 The #1 Audition Killer: Not Being Off Book 09:46 Can You Feel Star Power Right Away? 10:10 The Wetsuit Audition Disaster and Growth Over Time 12:39 Estelle Getty and Why Careers Can Start Later 13:20 Casting Directors Have Long Memories 14:05 When Someone Walks In and Wins the Role Instantly 16:20 What Are Verticals and Micro-Dramas? 16:35 TikTok Meets Soap Opera on Red Bull: The Vertical Model 18:40 How Episodes Work: 1–3 Minutes and Constant Cliffhangers 20:10 The Paywall Funnel and Why It’s Exploding 21:20 Why Verticals Are a New Frontier for Hollywood 22:08 Patreon Break 22:57 How Casting Works: Breakdowns, Submissions, Narrowing Down 25:15 Will In-Person Auditions Ever Return? 25:25 Why Self-Tapes Took Over Permanently 27:49 The Reality of Nerves and “Pilot Season” Chaos 31:24 Self-Tapes vs Live Auditions and the 47th Take Problem 32:19 How the Pandemic Accelerated the Industry 10 Years 33:20 How Actors Talk Themselves Out of Roles 33:30 “You Sold It. Don’t Buy It Back.” 38:58 Small Choices That Instantly Elevate an Actor 39:08 The Peephole Choice That Got Attention 40:15 The Orange Slice Prop That Won the Role 42:27 Break 42:43 Calling an Actor With Life-Changing News 44:11 Does Success Change an Actor’s Energy? 44:30 Reputation Matters and Word Travels Fast 46:54 Watching Movies as a Casting Director 47:03 Why Every Role Must Be Cast at a High Level 48:49 Why He Didn’t Become a Full-Time Producer or Director 50:00 Why Verticals Are an Incubator for Future Stars 52:10 “Nothing Is New” and Why People Always Dismiss New Formats 54:00 Verticals, Short Attention Spans, and the Real Competition 56:08 What He’s Proudest Of After 27 Years 57:15 Advice for Actors: Tenacity and Knowing the Business 59:43 Is Hollywood Becoming a Dinosaur? Production Slowdown Explained 1:05:01 Fewer Risks, Fewer Sitcom Hits, and Why Shows Need Time 1:07:13 The Loss of Shared TV Culture and Knowing What Came Before 1:09:20 Closing and Thanks Show Credits Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko All things technical: Justin Zangerle Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein Music by: Brian Sanyshyn Transcription: Mushtaq Hussain https://stillherehollywood.com http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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    1 h y 10 m
  • Laura Leighton "Melrose Place" Encore
    Mar 2 2026
    Laura Leighton takes us back inside the Melrose Place phenomenon and what it was really like to ride that wave before social media and smartphones changed everything. In this episode of Still Here Hollywood, Laura talks about launching the Melrose Place rewatch podcast Still the Place with Daphne Zuniga and Courtney Thorne Smith, why it feels so freeing to show up without a script, and the surprising emotional impact of revisiting a time that happened more than 30 years ago. Laura opens up about the cast bond that never went away, the real conversations happening around a potential Melrose Place reboot, and why creating your own opportunities matters more as Hollywood changes and roles for women narrow with age. She also shares the best thing that came out of Melrose Place, her 26 year marriage to co star Doug Savant, and what it means to raise a big family and now become a grandmother. You will also hear Laura on the shift from water cooler television to reality TV and TikTok culture, the strange new normal of being photographed everywhere, and why self tape auditions can feel harder than walking into a room. Plus, Laura tells two unforgettable stories from her career, a fan encounter so intense a nurse thought her villain character was real, and the heartbreak moment she had to drop out of a musical film role that later went to Renee Zellweger. She also reveals a major career decision she still regrets, turning down the chance to play Rizzo on Broadway. If you love Melrose Place, Aaron Spelling era television, 90s nostalgia, Hollywood behind the scenes stories, and honest conversations about career, fame, aging, and reinvention, this one is for you. 00:00 Reboot Buzz and Grandma Life Tease 00:56 Intro: Aaron Spelling, Nighttime Soaps, and Melrose Mania 02:21 Laura’s Rewatch Podcast: Still the Place 03:04 Why Podcasting Feels Easier Than Acting 03:34 Rewatching Your 20s on Camera and the “Ick Attack” 04:21 Melrose Love Story: Meeting Doug Savant 04:52 26 Years Married and Raising Four Kids 05:10 Why Melrose Was a Cultural Phenomenon 05:27 Pre-Internet “Water Cooler TV” and Perfect Timing 06:17 Lightning in a Bottle: You Can’t Manufacture It 06:53 The Reboot: Is It Really Happening? 06:59 Who’s In and Why the Cast Still Feels Like Family 07:20 The Group Text, The Podcast Guests, The Real Bond 08:12 Churchill Quote: If You Want History, Write It 08:34 Aging in Hollywood and Steering Your Own Opportunities 09:03 Reality TV Changed Everything 09:19 The Early Reaction: “What Is This Crap?” 10:10 TikTok and Selfie Culture Is Not Going Away 10:28 Being Photographed Everywhere, Even at the Grocery Store 10:59 Social Media as a Tool, But Also Exhausting 11:59 Podcast Learning Curve: Why Rewatch Makes It Easy 12:33 Sets That Feel Good vs Sets That Don’t 13:03 Fondest Melrose Memory: It Felt Like a Family 14:13 You Don’t Fully Appreciate It Until Later 14:34 What’s Next: Producing and Building Projects 15:30 The Joy of Becoming a Grandparent 16:13 Watching Your Kid Become a Parent 17:07 “I Told You So” and Moms Always Being Right 17:28 Holidays With a Grandbaby and the Photos 18:05 Nana Duties: Teaching Piano, LA Traffic Included 18:37 The Weird Fan Encounter: Nurse Thought Sydney Was Real 19:32 Being Too Convincing Can Backfire in Meetings 20:59 Which Show People Recognize You From Now 21:35 Melrose vs 90210 and Why People Mix Them Up 22:05 One-Word Cast Shoutouts: Heather, Rinna, Grant, Marcia 23:19 Cast Friendships That Stayed Warm and Real 23:43 Missing the Weekly “TV Family” Feeling 24:18 Leaving After Five Seasons: The Contract Turning Point 24:42 The Last Day: Fighting Tears 25:02 Rapid Fire: First Crush, Movies, Pizza, Worst Subject 29:09 Fame Before Cell Phones: Honeymoon Recognition 30:14 Fake Names at Hotels During Peak Fame 30:42 The Morning After Leaving: Relief vs Grief 33:34 Being Married to an Actor: Teamwork, Not Competition 34:10 Doug’s Groundbreaking Gay Character and Pride 35:13 Aging in Hollywood and Fewer Opportunities 36:34 Self-Tapes: Why Auditioning Feels Harder Now 37:54 What Self-Tapes Took Away: Feedback and Connection 39:53 Steve’s Acting Dream and the “Pajamas Job” Idea 41:15 The Role She Lost: Torn ACL, Renee Zellweger Replacement 43:12 The Musical Muscle She Wishes She’d Kept 44:36 TV Movies in Hiatus: The 90s Career Strategy 45:30 The Big Regret: Turning Down Rizzo on Broadway 46:14 Closing Thanks Laura Leighton's Melrose Place rewatch Podcast is: STILL THE PLACE https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/still-the-place/id1754955354 Show CreditsHost/Producer: Steve KmetkoAll things technical: Justin ZangerleExecutive Producer: Jim LichtensteinMusic by: Brian SanyshynTranscription: Mushtaq Hussain https://stillherehollywood.comhttp://patreon.com/stillherehollywoodSuggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.comAdvertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.comPublicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com Hosted...
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    47 m
  • Gabrielle Carteris "Beverly Hills 90210"
    Feb 23 2026

    Gabrielle Carteris helped define a generation as Andrea Zuckerman on Beverly Hills 90210. But the story behind the show is bigger, deeper, and more surprising than you think. In this candid and wide-ranging conversation, Gabrielle opens up about the truth behind landing 90210, including the age secret she kept when she was cast as a 16-year-old. She reflects on overnight fame, Beatles-level chaos, and how the show shaped her adult life in ways she is still unpacking. But this episode goes far beyond nostalgia. Gabrielle reveals the devastating on-set injury that temporarily left her partially paralyzed and unable to speak, the lawsuit that followed, and why she refused to sign an NDA after winning her case. That experience ultimately led her into leadership, where she became President of SAG-AFTRA and helped guide the union through historic negotiations. She also discusses: • The real impact of the Hollywood strikes • Why AI and voice replication are changing the entertainment industry • The merger of SAG and AFTRA • Losing Luke Perry and Shannen Doherty • The isolation of extreme fame • Aging in Hollywood and rejecting shame • Why family matters more than celebrity From 90s television icon to labor leader and activist, Gabrielle Carteris shares what she has learned about power, resilience, identity, and what no longer scares her. This is one of the most revealing Beverly Hills 90210 interviews you’ll see. Subscribe for more conversations with the stars you grew up with.

    Chapters

    00:00 Opening Introduction
    01:00 Gabrielle Carteris on Aging and Growth
    02:32 Learning to Stop Performing for Approval
    04:41 Aging in Hollywood and Saying “I’m 65”
    06:55 The 90210 Age Secret Revealed
    07:57 Overnight Fame and Losing Anonymity
    09:45 The Power and Pressure of Being Known
    12:33 Looking Back on the 90210 Era
    12:47 How Fox Saved Beverly Hills 90210
    14:09 Did Andrea Shape Gabrielle or Vice Versa?
    15:21 How the SAG-AFTRA Merger Happened
    16:29 “I Am an Activist”
    17:49 The On-Set Injury That Changed Her Life
    20:05 Relearning Speech and Movement
    21:35 Refusing to Sign an NDA
    22:50 Why Safety Became Her Mission
    24:04 Patty Duke, Sean Astin, and Hollywood Legacy
    25:14 The Hollywood Strike and the Rise of AI
    29:25 Remembering Luke Perry and Shannen Doherty
    31:14 Still Close with the 90210 Cast
    35:40 Beatles-Level Fame and Fan Chaos
    36:25 What Matters Most Now: Family
    37:53 Becoming President of SAG-AFTRA
    39:25 Leadership and Unsung Heroes
    40:02 “I’m Okay” — Owning Her Legacy
    41:03 Dubbing for Netflix and Amazon
    42:05 Fear of Returning to the Stage
    43:25 What No Longer Scares Her
    45:22 What She’d Tell Her Younger Self
    45:50 “The Girl I Was Is the Woman I Am”
    46:23 Closing

    Show Credits

    Host/Producer: Steve Kmetko

    All things technical: Justin Zangerle

    Executive Producer: Jim Lichtenstein

    Music by: Brian Sanyshyn

    Transcription: Mushtaq Hussain

    https://stillherehollywood.com

    http://patreon.com/stillherehollywood

    Suggest Guests at: stillherehollywood@gmail.com

    Advertise on Still Here Hollywood: jim@stillherenetwork.com

    Publicist: Maggie Perlich: maggie@numbertwelvemarketing.com


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