Hannah Einbinder imagines life after ‘Hacks’

Hannah Einbinder imagines life after ‘Hacks’


When casting began in 2020 for the award-winning HBO Max series โ€œHacks,โ€ its three creators โ€” Paul W. Downs, Lucia Aniello and Jen Statsky โ€” saw hundreds of actors for the role of Ava Daniels, a 20-something comedy writer who teams up with a Vegas comedian, Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), whose act has grown as dated as her updo and glittery outfits. In choosing Hannah Einbinder, they put a little-known stand-up comic whoโ€™d never before set foot on a TV series shoot on a path to four Emmy nominations. So what did they see then that indicated Einbinder could hold her own with Smart, a storied actress who famously can do anything?

Downs, who also stars as manager Jimmy LuSaque Jr. on โ€œHacks,โ€ says Einbinder caught the trioโ€™s attention with her audition scene, in which Ava threatens to kill herself after learning that her tweet about a closeted senator and his gay son has rendered her unhirable. โ€œA lot of really funny, really talented actresses read for the part, but their reads were emotional,โ€ he says. โ€œHannah read it in a way that was dry, sardonic, the way that a comedy writer would say it, and she just had this toughness about her.โ€

Avaโ€™s decision to blackmail Deborah into letting her become head writer of her new late-night talk show signaled a power shift in the series, and Season 4, which premiered in April, is distinctly more Ava-centric. Even as her unsinkable, emotionally complicated boss combats Avaโ€™s efforts to elevate the show at every turn, Avaโ€™s maturation stands out.

With some comedic hurdles, of course. Sitting in a conference room at The Times, Einbinder acknowledges that Season 4 showed the โ€œHacksโ€ writers knew she could take her performance into fresh territory.

A woman screams in a writers' room in front of a board of post-it notes.

In Season 4 of โ€œHacks,โ€ Einbinderโ€™s Ava Daniels blackmails her way into the head writer gig on a late-night show โ€” and it doesnโ€™t always go smoothly.

(Max)

โ€œI think there are moments in the series where they gave me new mountains to climb,โ€ she explains, citing Avaโ€™s epic meltdown after realizing her writing staff has exploited her team-building gestures, a reaction that combines high-decibel shouting with the hurling of a $70 branzino. โ€œTotally enraged is not a place that Iโ€™ve ever gone before as an actor.โ€

Back on Day 1 of her โ€œHacksโ€ journey, Einbinder arrived on set knowing so little about making a TV show that her go-to source for the ins and outs of hitting a mark was Michael Caineโ€™s legendary how-to handbook, โ€œActing in Film.โ€ Downs attributes her rapid growth since to a combination of hard work and raw talent. โ€œSome people just have a natural-born ability to make dialogue thatโ€™s written seem like itโ€™s said for the first time and they are just living that moment,โ€ he says, adding, โ€œSheโ€™s someone who prepares so much. Iโ€™ve seen her scripts, filled with notes. Sheโ€™s always working on lines, thinking about the character.โ€

A case can be made that Einbinderโ€™s showbiz education began at a young age, with a mom โ€” Laraine Newman, an original โ€œSaturday Night Liveโ€ cast member โ€” who liked listening to comedy while driving and who brought along her pale-skinned, redheaded little daughter to voice-over auditions. But Einbinder also believes her years as a competitive cheerleader โ€” she held the gravity-defying position of point flyer, the one being tossed around or hoisted in the air โ€” gave her the tools to finesse her transition to โ€œHacks.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s so rooted in misogyny, the way cheerleading is viewed in our culture,โ€ she says before ticking off comparisons between the two professions. โ€œThereโ€™s the showmanship. The performance aspect is really similar. Working with an ensemble, working with your team. Taking direction from your coach. My cheerleading background was very strict and created a lot of maybe unhealthy patterns that have led me to success, for better or for worse.โ€

Hannah Einbinder in a white dress with fringe.

โ€œI grew up with these people,โ€ Einbinder says of the prospect of โ€œHacksโ€ ending. โ€œWe are in each otherโ€™s lives in a real way. So, yeah, itโ€™s emotional.โ€

(Bexx Francois / For The Times)

Mark Indelicato, who plays Deborahโ€™s assistant on โ€œHacksโ€ and bonded with Einbinder on the first day of shooting, remembers watching her learn on the fly. โ€œSheโ€™s like a sponge,โ€ he says, adding that she also can be her own harshest critic. โ€œSheโ€™s so competitive with herself. Sometimes Iโ€™ll just be like, โ€˜Han, Iโ€™m exhausted talking to you right now.โ€™ She pulls herself in a million different directions and doesnโ€™t look up, just goes, goes, goes, goes.โ€

Back in her post-high school days, she went through a different sort of phase. Having cast cheerleading aside, she channeled her energies SoCal slacker-style.

โ€œThatโ€™d be smoking pot and racing my Honda Element around Los Angeles,โ€ she says. โ€œI was really focused on that.โ€

But in 2017, her senior year as a broadcast major at Chapman University, she volunteered to be a warmup act for comedian Nicole Byer. For some reason, Einbinder decided her material didnโ€™t need much road testing. โ€œI did, like, maybe three open mics,โ€ says Einbinder. Though she admits to some pre-debut jitters, by the time sheโ€™d left Byerโ€™s stagesomething had clicked. โ€œIn certain ways, this was dopamine-driven. Iโ€™m an adrenaline seeker. I just have always liked the feeling of flying.โ€

After that, it was all stand-up, touring the country as an opener for high-profile comics like Chelsea Handler and Dana Gould. Then, in early 2020, she became the youngest comic ever to appear on โ€œThe Late Show With Stephen Colbert.โ€

Itโ€™s not lost on Einbinder that her tight, idiosyncratic set became her industry calling card. โ€œThe experience was so transformative for me, and Iโ€™m grateful for that,โ€ she says. โ€œWhen I auditioned for โ€˜Hacks,โ€™ it was the only thing they could see online. I didnโ€™t have any previous acting jobs.โ€

So whatโ€™s her take on CBSโ€™ decision to end the late-night series amid a highly politicized corporate merger? โ€œIโ€™m going to choose my words wisely here,โ€ she says, pursing her lips. โ€œThe type of comedy that late-night hosts do reflects a pretty moderate centrist Democrat position, so it scares me that, like, the middle-of-the-road Dem white guys are being silenced and what that means for people who are really actually speaking truth to power.โ€

Despite this bout of caution, Einbinder can also be an open book. In high school she was diagnosed with ADHD and prescribed a heavy dose of Adderall, and as a result, she says, she doesnโ€™t have much access to those years. โ€œMy best friend Phoebe will be, like, โ€˜Remember when you did that crazy thing?โ€™ And Iโ€™m like, โ€˜Absolutely not. I sound awesome in that story. Iโ€™ll take your word for it.โ€™โ€

Hannah Einbinder

(Bexx Francois / For The Times)

When asked about the first live comedy show she ever attended, she says, โ€œBill Maher, which I am kind of humiliated to admit. Sorry, Bill.โ€ A pause. โ€œNot really.โ€ Then she leans over my digital recorder and gives a quick, wet Bronx cheer.

Her 2024 stand-up comedy special for HBO Max, โ€œEverything Must Go,โ€ is wall-to-wall personal anecdotes, some of them embarrassing. But something else in that hour convinced transfeminine writer-director and indie force Jane Schoenbrun (โ€œI Saw the TV Glowโ€) to cast Einbinder in their upcoming film, โ€œTeenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma.โ€ โ€œIt was almost like she was dancing with the camera,โ€ says Schoenbrun. โ€œI love โ€˜Hacksโ€™ and think Hannah displays incredible acting chops, but itโ€™s a sitcom, and Iโ€™m making something more of an art film. And I found her deranged physicality exciting.โ€

In โ€œMiasma,โ€ Einbinder, who is bisexual, plays a queer director who, after being hired to direct the latest installment of a slasher franchise, travels to a remote cabin to meet with an original cast member (Gillian Anderson) and falls into what Schoenbrun has described as โ€œa frenzy of psychosexual mania.โ€ Considering that Einbinder chose โ€œMiasmaโ€ as the first big step sheโ€™s taken outside of โ€œHacks,โ€ it seems like an indicator of the sort of career she is hoping to build.

โ€œComedy feels really good,โ€ she says. โ€œBut I also want to make sure that the projects I join are emotionally fulfilling. Jane is someone I feel so aligned with, and the work that Jane makes is so deeply personal and queer. Itโ€™s just exactly the type of thing I wanted to do.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m on another movie right now โ€” itโ€™s a really cool comedy,โ€ Einbinder says of an ensemble film thatโ€™s yet to be announced. Then, next month, sheโ€™s expected back at โ€œHacks.โ€ Even when its three creators were pitching the series, the plan was to end after five seasons. So mapping out her future path isnโ€™t just whimsy. (The series has been renewed for a fifth season, and while thereโ€™s no official word on an end yet, many viewers have speculated that Season 5 will indeed be its last.) When sheโ€™s asked to imagine her life after โ€œHacks,โ€ Einbinderโ€™s face suddenly turns pink, a folded tissue appears, and sheโ€™s dabbing away tears. โ€œI grew up with these people,โ€ she says in a strangled voice. โ€œWe are in each otherโ€™s lives in a real way. So, yeah, itโ€™s emotional.โ€

Einbinder says she feels connected to the characters and their stories โ€œthe way fans do.โ€ So what does she hope happens to Ava before โ€œHacksโ€ concludes? The tissue drops and Einbinderโ€™s sense of humor returns.

โ€œI think she should cure her acne and grow her hair out,โ€ she says. โ€œThat would be meaningful for her.โ€

The Envelope magazine cover with Hannah Einbinder

(Bexx Francois / For The Times)

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