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Keeping it real with Amy Schumer

We talk to the comedian about conquering low self esteem, early antisemitic experiences and THAT Instagram pic

May 3, 2018 10:28
Amy Schumer (Photo: Getty)

ByJames Mottram, James Mottram

7 min read

Most actors when they call in sick from promotional duties are usually making an excuse for a hangover. Not Amy Schumer. The stand-up comedian, who is fast becoming one of the biggest stars in Hollywood, has just spent five days hospitalised with a “horrible kidney infection”, under the watchful eyes of the doctors, her sister Kim and chef Chris Fischer, her husband, whom she married in February. “This is sexy as hell,” she noted on Instagram, sharing a less-than-flattering self-portrait from her hospital bed.

It meant she had to cancel her trip to London to promote her latest comedy, I Feel Pretty. So fair play to her for getting on the phone to chat; her voice is a little croaky and she’s in recovery mode, but she clearly hasn’t lost her sense of humour. “I am more important now,” she jokes, when we exchange greetings and I say, ‘And, more importantly, how are you?’ She’s annoyed about missing out on a trip to London, though. “I love it there,” she says. “People go so crazy!”

Such fervour is understandable. Schumer has already starred in four successful seasons of Inside Amy Schumer, the Comedy Central sketch show that received eight Emmy nominations and won a Peabody Award. She also wrote and starred in Judd Apatow’s Trainwreck, which grossed $140 million worldwide. There have been sell-out tours, a best-selling memoir — The Girl With The Lower Back Tattoo — and now a Tony nomination for her Broadway debut performance in the Steve Martin-written Meteor Shower.

Has there been one defining moment she looks back on? “No,” she says. “It’s been pretty gradual. I’ve been doing stand-up for over 15 years.” Then she cites the Charlie Sheen roast that she took on back in 2011, the Comedy Central show where assorted comedians take down the “guest” with vicious barbs. Schumer’s included a nod to Sheen’s classic Vietnam War movie Platoon. “Your marriage to Denise Richards was kinda like her Vietnam,” she quipped, “because she was constantly afraid of being killed by Charlie.”