For her talk-show debut, Drew Barrymore reunites with fellow ‘Charlie’s Angels’
Good morning, Angels!
Drew Barrymore debuted her talk show Monday, and who better to serve as her inaugural guests than her “Charlie’s Angels” costars — Lucy Liu and Cameron Diaz? The premiere episode of “The Drew Barrymore Show” doubled as a nostalgic “Charlie’s Angels” reunion, bringing Natalie, Dylan and Alex back together in the same room — sort of.
Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the program was filmed on a socially distanced set, where Liu and Barrymore sat in armchairs spaced several feet apart, as did Diaz — after visual effects artists zapped her hologram into the frame from Los Angeles.
“You gotta try this,” Diaz joked after seemingly disappearing and reappearing on command. “It’s so incredible — the ether, the little particles going out into space and coming back and re-massing into this beautiful space ... it’s crazy.”
Drew Barrymore interviews and fan-girls over her 7-year-old self in a new promo for her upcoming daytime talk show, “The Drew Barrymore Show.”
During the show, the actresses — who starred together in 2000’s “Charlie’s Angels” and 2003’s “Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle” based on the hit TV series of the same name — connected over the bond they formed while navigating Hollywood as young women.
“The thing about ‘Charlie’s Angels’ is that it’s about girls who can do all of these things and love each other and don’t have competition and support each other and laugh and want to talk about love and life so much that they actually start to talk about love and life while they’re fighting, because women are so like that,” Barrymore said.
“It all intersects. And that is why I asked you guys here today. It’s because, if you’re going to do something big, you want to do it with your girlfriends.”
The trio also reflected on how they’ve grown in the last 20 years. Since their first “Charlie’s Angels” film hit theaters, Liu, Diaz and Barrymore have all gone on to star in several other big- and small-screen projects and welcomed children, among other significant life changes.
“In my 20s, I felt very bulletproof and ... I didn’t really care if I lived or died,” Liu said. “And I lost my father a few years ago, and I didn’t really recognize the levels that we have in our lives. He was a place in my life that was always a roof, and so suddenly you feel like the roof has been torn off.
“And then you recognize, ‘Oh, I am now the roof.’ And I happen to have a child, so I guess I’m the roof to that child. So now I really have to understand that I have to shelter him, and I have a responsibility, and it’s a very powerful thing. It’s also terrifying.”
The emotional reunion ended in a love fest between the three “sisters,” who showered one another with appreciation, gratitude and support to cap off the first installment of Barrymore’s new series, which airs daily — with a virtual audience — at 2 p.m. Pacific.
Appearing later this week on Barrymore’s show are Reese Witherspoon, Gabrielle Union, Charlize Theron and Billy Porter.
“I’m gonna be thinking tonight in my bed, wondering how I got so lucky to live a life with you guys,” a tearful Barrymore told Liu and Diaz. “Thank you more than words can ever say.”
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