Julia Louis-Dreyfus happily returns to Emmy-winning ‘Veep’ role after breast cancer
Instagram selfie with ‘Veep’ crew. |
TV stalwart Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who’ll undoubtedly remember her breast cancer diagnosis and treatments for the rest of her life, is happily back at work at HBO’s satirical “Veep.”
And she’s also involved in her first cancer-awareness initiative.
According to an Associated Press story by Leanne Italie today, the 57-year-old star says it feels “fantastic” to be acting again.
Louis-Dreyfus disclosed her cancer diagnosis last September, shortly after having garnered her sixth consecutive Emmy Award for her Selina Meyer role.
According to the AP, the seventh and last season of “Veep,” which will air in the spring, evoked this from the former “Seinfeld” co-star: “I feel good. I feel strong. I’ve got energy and, yeah, back o my old tricks. It feels like I never left.”
Her wading into the cancer-awareness waters, the piece continues, comes through her “helping Carolina Herrera designer Wes Gordon design a flower-adorned T-shirt as part of Saks Fifth Avenue’s 20th year raising money through its Key to the Cure program.”
Over two decades, the program has donated almost $40 million to cancer research and treatment organizations.
All proceeds from the shirt that will sell for $35 during October, which for decades has served as Cancer Awareness Month, reportedly will go to the AiRS Foundation, which the AP describes as “a nonprofit Louis-Dreyfus supports for its work in helping women with the costs of breast reconstruction after mastectomy.”
The shirt features three poppies (in red and pine tones) and a slogan: “We are fighters & we are fighting for a cure.”
Noted the actor about the design process, “It was a super-fun endeavor,” elaborating that she “wanted it to have a sort of femininity and a powerful message at the same time because I believe the two can go hand in hand. I liked the idea of talking about fighting.”
Regarding reconstruction, she’d noted that “up to 70 percent of breast cancer survivors who have had a mastectomy are really unsure or unaware of their reconstruction options, and many of those women who desire to have surgery don’t have sufficient insurance or other resources to cover it.”
Regarding her participation in the awareness program, she said that while she now was “putting my whole self into Key to the Cure,” she’d previously been “very careful about managing my time and conserving my energy. You can’t spread yourself too thin.”
After going under the knife for breast cancer, Louis-Dreyfus had been perhaps a bit less eloquent and a bit more dramatic. She’d written on Instagram, “Hoorah! Great doctors, great results, feeling happy and ready to rock after surgery. Hey cancer, f**k you!”
More details about both reconstruction and awareness can be found in “Rollercoaster: How a man can survive his partner’s breast cancer,” a VitalityPress book I, Woody Weingarten, aimed at male caregivers.
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