“How Rosemary Clooney Shaped George Clooney’s View of Fame Later in Life”

The ‘Jay Kel­ly’ actor talked about the dif­fer­ence between his movie-star char­ac­ter and him­self in real life, in terms of their fame

George Clooney has no qualms about find­ing fame lat­er in life — in part thanks to his aunt, the late Rose­mary Clooney.

The 64-year-old actor opened up about fam­i­ly and fame dur­ing a Q&A fol­low­ing a Jay Kel­ly screen­ing at the 63rd New York Film Fes­ti­val on Tues­day, Sept. 30, when he was asked about achiev­ing noto­ri­ety in his mid-30s.

My aunt Rose­mary was a very famous singer, at 19,” said George. “She was on the cov­er of Time mag­a­zine and then she did White Christ­mas as an actress, and boy, there was noth­ing she touched that could­n’t be great. And then rock and roll came in, and women in pop­u­lar music were gone — at the time, when she start­ed, nine of the top 10 singers were women. And then Elvis came along four years lat­er, and there was­n’t a woman in the top 25.”

As George recalled, “She was on the road singing and came back and they were like, ‘What hap­pened to you?’ And she’s like, ‘I’m done,’ at 24 years old,” he told the audi­ence. “And she was done, and she han­dled it poor­ly. She got very drunk and did a lot of drugs and did every­thing stu­pid, and had to wait for about 40 years to have her career turn around again.”

The “les­son” George learned from his aunt, who died in 2002 at age 74, “was to pay atten­tion to how lit­tle this has to do with you — which you learn when you’re old­er, because when you’re young, you think you’re real­ly smart.”

And how much it is about cir­cum­stance and a beau­ti­ful script and direc­tor and extra­or­di­nary actors, and those kind of things,” added the two-time Acad­e­my Awardwin­ner.

Jay Kel­ly is the first movie by Mar­riage Sto­ry direc­tor Noah Baum­bach since 2022’s White Noise, and stars George along­side Adam San­dlerLau­ra Dern and Bil­ly Crudup.

The film “fol­lows famous movie actor Jay Kel­ly (George) and his devot­ed man­ag­er Ron (San­dler, 59) as they embark on a whirl­wind and unex­pect­ed­ly pro­found jour­ney through Europe,” per a syn­op­sis. “Along the way, both men are forced to con­front the choic­es they’ve made, the rela­tion­ships with their loved ones, and the lega­cies they’ll leave behind.”

Dur­ing the NYFF Q&A on Tues­day, George not­ed that his title char­ac­ter is “a guy who got famous much younger” than he him­self did, “and was pam­pered in all the ways that you should­n’t be

“We’ve all met peo­ple who got famous young. It’s a dif­fi­cult thing to do, you know?” The actor also said, jok­ing, “I think if things had worked out when I was 21 years old and sud­den­ly was star­ring in films and things that … I would have been shoot­ing crack into my fore­head.”

“It’s not designed [for you] to say, jump and have peo­ple old­er than you say, ‘How high?’ You real­ly need some time on your legs,” George added of the busi­ness.