Jean Smart on her new comedy 'Hacks,' becoming the queen of HBO at 69: 'I was always a late bloomer'

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

Just call her the new queen of cable.

In the last two years, Jean Smart has appeared in not one but three critically acclaimed HBO series: 2019 superhero drama "Watchmen," as tormented FBI agent Laurie Blake; the currently airing crime thriller "Mare of Easttown" (Sundays, 10 EDT/PDT), as the stubborn mom to Kate Winslet's police detective; and new HBO Max comedy "Hacks" (first two episodes streaming Thursday), as a Joan Rivers-style comedian in need of fresh material.

"They can just give me some (HBO) stock, I'll be satisfied," jokes Smart, 69, who gained fame starring in the late 1980s CBS sitcom "Designing Women."

Fans have been hailing Smart's recent TV resurgence, which started in 2015 with FX anthology "Fargo" and continued with roles in Netflix's "Big Mouth," FX's "Legion" and now multiple HBO projects.

"I certainly can't deny that I'm getting offered bigger and better opportunities," she says. "Most actors in their entire careers never get a chance to show what they're capable of. So I feel incredibly fortunate that I've been offered so many varied roles. And you know, I was always a late bloomer – I don't know what to tell you."

Kate Winslet on HBO’s ‘Mare of Easttown,’ her ‘Titanic’ accent and funny nickname from Jack Black

Jean Smart plays a successful comedian struggling to reset in HBO comedy "Hacks."
Jean Smart plays a successful comedian struggling to reset in HBO comedy "Hacks."

A showbiz satire with the acid tongue of "Veep" and heart of Lisa Kudrow's "The Comeback," "Hacks" follows legendary Las Vegas standup Deborah Vance (Smart), who's told she'll be put out to pasture unless she reinvigorates her act.

Cue the arrival of Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder), an unemployed twentysomething who got "canceled" after a salacious tweet. The young comedian reluctantly takes a job as Deborah's new joke writer, and the caustic duo trade barbs about their talent, love lives and personal style. ("Jesus Christ, I was just wondering why you're dressed like Rachel Maddow's mechanic," Deborah greets Ava in one episode.)

"I love that they feel like qualified opponents: both heavyweights and truly funny," Einbinder says. "They share that, regardless of some of their fundamental and surface-level differences. That is the throughline and I love that dynamic."

"Hacks" was created by "Broad City" producers Paul W. Downs, Lucia Aniello and Jen Statsky, although they didn't write it with Smart in mind.

And yet, "it's almost got little bits and pieces of all my favorite characters I've ever gotten to play," says Smart, a three-time Emmy winner for "Frasier" and "Samantha Who?" But unlike those sitcoms, "there's so much darkness in this show. It's kind of like Laurie in 'Watchmen': She's a funny character but a very sad and lonesome one, too."

Ava (Hannah Einbinder, left) begrudgingly interviews to become a new assistant/writer for veteran comic Deborah (Jean Smart).
Ava (Hannah Einbinder, left) begrudgingly interviews to become a new assistant/writer for veteran comic Deborah (Jean Smart).

Deborah gradually sheds her viperous persona and becomes more vulnerable with Ava throughout the 10-episode first season, revealing the emotional scars left by her ex-husband, who ran off with her sister.

"Part of her philosophy is 'living well is the best revenge,' " Smart says. "She spent a lot of her career doing exactly what she wanted to do, which was to be on stage and make people laugh. But she also wanted to show her ex-husband she was funnier and more successful than he could have ever dreamed of, and that drove her."

Annie Potts, left, Dixie Carter, Jean Smart and Delta Burke were the female foursome of "Designing Women."
Annie Potts, left, Dixie Carter, Jean Smart and Delta Burke were the female foursome of "Designing Women."

Smart says she doesn't share Deborah's bitterness, nor the feeling that she's had to fight every step of her career.

"I always kind of knew that it was all ahead of me because I didn't start out as an ingenue," she recalls. "I knew that I would always work, even if I didn't get the parts I thought I deserved or the roles I wanted. I had enough confidence in myself."

Review: Kate Winslet's 'Mare of Easttown' is far better than any detective show should be

She was less confident in her Delaware County (or "Delco") accent for "Mare," which is set in a rural Pennsylvania county where multiple girls have gone missing or been murdered. The unique dialect is known for its slurred consonants and drawn-out vowels, "which was daunting because you don't want to be thinking about that while doing the lines," Smart says. To help, "I would record my lines on my phone, and listen to them on a loop as I was falling asleep or in the car until it became automatic."

"I thought it was an unbelievable page-turner," Jean Smart says of HBO mystery "Mare of Easttown." "You're  kept guessing until the very end."
"I thought it was an unbelievable page-turner," Jean Smart says of HBO mystery "Mare of Easttown." "You're kept guessing until the very end."

Smart had a much easier time learning Fruit Ninja, which her character, Helen, plays furiously on her iPad even amid heated conversations with Winslet's Mare.

"I'd never even heard of Fruit Ninja," Smart says with a laugh. "But I got pretty good at it – I was getting some good scores. I don't have the time right now, but if my kids put it in front of me, I'll definitely play."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jean Smart talks 'Hacks,' 'Mare of Easttown' and mastering Fruit Ninja