Welcome to Busy Philipps Fan! You have come across the web's largest and most up-to-date fan site dedicated to the awesome actress Busy Philipps! You may recognize Busy from her role as Laurie in the hit ABC comedy "Cougar Town". Busy has also been in numerous film and television projects including: "He's Just Not That Into You", "ER", "Made of Honor", "White Chicks", "Dawson's Creek", and "Freaks & Geeks". Here at Busy Philipps Fan you can find the latest news on Busy and her career, information about Busy and all of her film and television projects, the largest collection of Busy photography with over 23,000 pictures, fan interactions, video clips of Busy, fan created artwork and so much more! Thanks for stopping by and please return to www.busy-philipps.com soon!
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More Photos From The Point Honor Gala

I have just added another 36 HQ and MQ photos of Busy Philipps from the Point Honor Gala that was held in Los Angeles last night!

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New Event Photos

Earlier today, Busy Philipps took part in the Walk For Lupus Now in Los Angeles. I have just added 10 photos of Busy at the event into our photo gallery. Then later tonight, Busy was photographed at the Point Honor Gala and I have just added 14 photos from the event!

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New Event Photos

Last night, Busy Philipps attended two new events in Los Angeles. She was at the The Launch Of The Alexa Chung For Madewell and the Lucky Brand New Movement In Denim event. I have just added 52 HQ and MQ photos of Busy from both events into our photo gallery!

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Busy Philipps on Motherhood, Movies and Playgroup Politics

It’s ten o’clock AM and Busy Philipps is having a life-imitates-art moment. As Philipps describes trying to cram an entire workday into the brief window when her three-year-old daughter is at school, her real-life lament could easily double as dialogue in the script for her most recent project, “I Don’t Know How She Does It,” which stars Sarah Jessica Parker as a woefully overextended working mom.

Another way to look at it is that Busy is just living up to her name. Best known for her role as the terminally single woman pining after Justin Long’s bartender in “He’s Just Not That Into You,“ Philipps has made a habit of working on zeitgeist-y projects aiming to capture the most of-the-moment female archetypes: TV’s “Cougar Town” and ”I don’t Know How She Does It.”

In the latter, which is based on the bestselling novel by Allison Pearson, Philipps plays a Type-A supermom who organizes school bake sales as if she were running a Fortune 500 company and acts as a foil to Sarah Jessica Parker’s frazzled working mom struggling to stay afloat at work and at home. Philipps identified strongly with the film’s premise — that the feminist-era fairy tale that women can have it all hasn’t exactly panned out as promised.

Over the course of a lively conversation, Philipps opens up about her own experiences — in life and on screen — of trying to solve the eternal maternal riddle of how to survive motherhood with a career and vice versa.

Word & Film: What aspect of the story resonated most with you?

Busy Philipps: It’s difficult learning to balance and my life has certainly been a trial by fire. I’ve messed up every day for the past three years since I had my daughter, and especially in the past two years since I started working. So every day I figure out how to do it better the next day. I definitely loved the script, especially since I had personally had experiences with mean judgmental non-working moms. So I was excited to play my character.

W&F: Give us some insights into your character.

BP: I play a woman named Wendy Best, who puts this mirror up to Sarah Jessica Parker’s character and illuminates the worst things she feels about herself as a mother. Which is a horrible feeling. It’s that weird thing that happens where women become very judgmental of decisions other women are making. It’s sad to me we can’t be in a place where we can acknowledge we’re all doing our best and respect the decisions other women make and even offer to help out.

W&F: Was it fun or interesting to play one of those perfectionist supermoms?

BP: I’m just so not that woman. I certainly know women who had children, quit their jobs, and still have full-time nannies. That’s who these women are: Even to the detriment of their own relationship with their kids, they want to appear perfect Martha Stewart moms.

W&F: You could probably make a whole comedy about what it’s like to be that kind of mother.

BP: It’s hard to find the balance and find time and that’s what I love about this movie: Sarah Jessica Parker’s pulled in all these different directions and she’s trying to hold together a relationship with a man that’s maybe not the most exciting thing. Maybe Pierce Brosnan is a little more exciting but only because he’s new and shiny. It’s hard to find a way to be good to your husband, be good to your kid, and be good to yourself.

W&F: Was it refreshing to take an alternative approach to a traditional rom-com narrative, in which a woman’s sole obsession is to find the right guy and get married?

BP: This was certainly a lot of fun. Aline Brosch McKenna is one of my favorite writers, with all due respect to my husband (Marc Silverstein) who makes a living writing romantic comedies. But to be able to tell this story, which is a romantic comedy but from a different perspective, was really fun. We were also given a lot of room in the interview portion in which Aline and director Doug McGrath and occasionally Harvey Weinstein would interview us on camera about the character’s point of view on certain subjects. Some of it was written out and other stuff was freestyle improv. You don’t really get that experience much on these comedies. That stuff ended up in the movie as the segments when the characters speak to the camera.

W&F: I imagine this was a very family-friendly set. Did you bring your kids to work?

BP: The movie was filming in New York and I shoot a show in Los Angeles, so for me it wasn’t even worth it to bring my kids because it would have messed up their sleeping schedule. It was also cold and flu season so I don’t think Sarah Jessica was bringing her kids around because you just don’t want your kids to be exposed to that.

W&F: Did you two commiserate about your own struggles to balance work and life?

BP: Definitely. I shared with her how I only worked a couple days during the first year of my daughter’s life. I shot the pilot for “Cougar Town” and then it got picked up and I started to shoot the series after her first birthday. I had been part of a mommy playgroup for the first year of her life and then I was working so much on the show, I stopped getting the e-mails and stopped being included in the group. TV shows only shoot seven months out of the year, so I had this moment when the show was done shooting when I felt so alone. Then I sent out this big mea culpa e-mail saying, “I know I let the ball drop and I was overwhelmed with the show. But I’d really like to get back into things.” And really only three of the fifteen women e-mailed me back. I had a really hard time. I had to go to therapy. I was really devastated by it. I felt incredibly hurt. Like, ‘You’re mad at me for working. Don’t take it out on my kid.’ I guess I missed all those months of important bonding.You have to be able to talk to other mothers. It is so vital. Just so you know you’re not crazy. The short version of the story is: I got kicked out of my playgroup. But it was about so much more than that.

W&F: “Cougar Town” has a whole different take on what it means to be a mom and have a social life.

BP: Absolutely! On our show Christa Miller and Courteney Cox are both moms. Christa Miller’s viewpoint is hilarious: She’s a stay-at-home mom who gave up her career and has a nanny and drinks wine all the time.

W&F: The wine is just basic survival.

BP: You got that right!

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Six Questions With Busy Philipps

I can’t tell you how excited I am to have Busy Philipps here today. Do you guys watch Cougar Town? If not, you should, and why? Because it is the most underrated show on TV. Flat-out hilarious. And the most hilarious part of it is Busy. Seriously: she’s brilliant. Cougar Town isn’t back on ABC until this winter (sob), but the good news is that Busy – whom you’ve seen in everything from Freaks and Geeks to Dawson’s Creek to ER – is hitting the big screen tomorrow in the adaptation of Allison Pearson’s bestselling novel (and must-read for any juggling mom), I Don’t Know How She Does It. Both the book and the movie are all about one mom’s quest to find that impossible balance that so many of us seek. Along the way, she deals with unsympathetic co-workers, demanding office hours, children who miss her, children who love her, a husband who is both devoted and frustrated, and even something many of us wish (and hope) we never have to deal with: lice.

Yup. It’s real life.

Busy plays that mom whom we all know and whom we all (kind of, maybe) secretly hate: the perfect mom, or at least the one who looks perfect but who probably isn’t at all perfect if you examined her a little closer. When Busy’s not lighting up the silver screen, she’s a real life mom to Birdie, who’s 3, and given her fabulous answers below, I think Busy’s pretty close to being perfectly imperfect, which as you know, is exactly the goal that I aspire to here on The Balance Sheet. For more on Busy, be sure to follow her on Twitter.

1) This is a blog about balance in parenting – in essence, the blog version of I Don’t Know How She Does It. I’ve learned balance by saying no (to outside distractions), saying yes (to my kids when I can and when reasonable!), and trying not to be perfect. You’re a busy working mom: how have you found balance between your home and work life? Or, in other words, just how DO you do it?
I think learning to say no is very important, however, I have not mastered that yet. I, in fact, feel like I say yes to everything – making cakes for other kids’ birthdays, doing improv shows at midnight, stranger’s podcast… The list goes on. The truth is, I’m happiest when I’m living up to my name (oh god, I’ve just made a Busy joke — kill me now). But my daughter, Birdie, is always my first priority and I cherish the time we spend together. I would say 98 percent of the time, I’m able to put her to bed at night. Since that’s something that is really important to both of us, I try to schedule work things around that. You know, like, yes, I’ll do your podcast but only AFTER 8pm… Look, some days you win and some days you feel like you need to do it all better — I think not being too hard on yourself is key — and also knowing when you need to ask for help…that’s for sure something I’ve needed to learn to do since becoming a mom…

2) What’s the most important thing that your own parents taught you?
To follow your dreams, whatever they may be. To be true to your self and not to be afraid to stand up for something you believe in, even if it doesn’t make you popular. That my opinion mattered and that I could do anything as long as I was willing to work hard and persevere.

3) What’s the biggest lesson that your daughter has taught you?
To let go. Becoming a mom allowed me to just relax in a way I never had before. I used to care A LOT about what I looked like in public, or what people thought of me. I care at least 40 percent less now (she says sarcastically…HA!). I want Bird to see her mom as a woman who is confident and real; not someone who’s always trying too hard. Don’t get me wrong, I still like to dress up and get fancy from time to time but it’s OK to be sweaty and without makeup at the grocery store or when you’re flying internationally. I may be an actress, but that is NOT what defines me as a woman. It’s just a part of who I am. The bigger part, to me, is being Birdie’s mom, (my husband) Marc’s wif,e and how I’ve worked very hard to grow the past ten or so years. Does that make sense?

4) One thing that I love about your Twitter feed and I find eminently relatable is how you use humor when things aren’t going perfectly. I think that moms who can cut themselves some slack and find the humor in the ridiculous (because parenting can be totally ridiculous) have a slightly easier go of it and may be a little less stressed. Is that just your natural parenting style and have you found this to be true?
I think that very early on, I realized that if I couldn’t come at this parenting thing with humor, I would not only lose my mind, but probably my marriage as well. I took great comfort in something I read in a Dr. Sears book which basically said to remember that the difficult moments WILL pass, and then at some point, you’ll long for the days when your child wanted nothing but to be held by you or rocked to sleep or breast-fed for ten hours straight. (I’m not sure about that last one…)

But basically, this early childhood time is SO fleeting and before you know it, you’ve got some huge person living with you. I think the chances of liking your kids as they grow into adults, and I mean REALLY LIKING, not loving (because obviously you always will love your children no matter what) has a lot to do with this early time in their lives. Birdie is at a point now where she’s more likely to laugh when something doesn’t go her way than cry or get mad. She’s developing her own, very unique, very weird sense of humor. I like to hear the stories she wants to tell me, or the way she interprets things that have happened to her or that she’s seen. The fact is, maybe because I’m lucky enough to have a job that affords me the luxury of SOMETIMES being a stay at home mom and SOMETIMES working full time, I’m able to appreciate both sides so completely.

5) Recently, I was labeling my kids’ clothes for camp, and I felt very much like a MOM – like, hello, I am so my mother! Do you have a moment or memory in which you felt the same?
Anytime I’m packing a bag of any sort for Birdie, I feel like a MOM. Because if it’s lunch, I want to make sure she’s got good healthy things to eat…are all the colors of the rainbow represented — enough veggies, fruit, protein and brown rice crackers or something? But also, I want her to be happy…maybe some organic cookies or Greek yogurt for dessert? And if it’s for a trip, I want to make sure I bring the right clothes, enough leggings, sweaters, tank tops, her favorite Crocs, favorite books, her Tiana doll, favorite pillows and sippy cups and snacks….

6) If you had one hope or aspiration for your daughter, what would it be?
You know, I just wish for her to find happiness, whatever that means for her. For me, it’s all that I have in my life. Which is a job I love, a stable relationship with a partner who helps me to not take it all too seriously and loves me deeply, an awesome kid, a great extended family, amazing friends and some really great vintage dresses and shoes…

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Busy Philipps Does “Know How She Does It”

Busy Philipps chats about being a super judgmental stay-at-home mom opposite Sarah Jessica Parker in “I Don’t Know How She Does It.”

Busy Philipps On KTLA

Yesterday, Busy Philipps was a guest on the KTLA morning news show in Los Angeles. You can now watch her interview below!