
Jeff Gordon and Tom Cruise Secretly Planning Days of Thunder Sequel
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Former NASCAR driver and chairman of Hendrick Motorsports, Jeff Gordon, acknowledged that a Hollywood boost is what NASCAR needs to grow and reach more people. Gordon revealed the idea of having a Days of Thunder sequel starring his friend and celebrity Tom Cruise, which he believes could help the sport reach the masses.
Gordon played a major role in boosting NASCAR's popularity back in 2003 by partnering with the entertainment industry, hosting 'Saturday Night Live,' appearing on 'The Late Show with David Letterman,' and showcasing his people-friendly personality that helped him become the face of the sport.
The 1990 film Days of Thunder starred Tom Cruise as Cole Trickle, a young driver who had just entered the world of open-wheel racing. However, a rivalry sparked between him and a veteran driver, but it was only through a dramatic crash between the two that their relationship evolved into friendship.
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Jeff Gordon (L) is introduced by actor Tom Cruise to accept the Bill France Award of Excellence onstage during the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards show at Wynn Las...
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Jeff Gordon (L) is introduced by actor Tom Cruise to accept the Bill France Award of Excellence onstage during the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards show at Wynn Las Vegas on December 4, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada. MoreWitnessing the rise of digital media and streaming platforms, Gordon feels this is the perfect time to produce Days of Thunder 2. Speaking on the SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, he said:
"Let's do Days of Thunder 2, I am all for that. Tom Cruise has told me it's gonna happen, so let's make it happen. I can't go back to driving, I am too old for that, so gonna have to be one of our four or all four of our Hendrick drivers, Alex Bowman, Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson, William Byron. When I came into NASCAR, Days of Thunder had just come out. It played a huge role in the growth of NASCAR. So let's bring it back."
The NASCAR Hall of Famer confirmed at the Daytona 500 this year that he had spoken to Tom Cruise about the sequel and stressed that he wants his team to be a part of it. He said:
"I've absolutely talked to Tom about it because I want him to do the project, and we want to be a part of it if it were to happen."
Gordon acknowledged the role of streaming platforms in expanding NASCAR's popularity. He added:
"There's this kind of resurgence, which is awesome, and there's also a whole new landscape of opportunities with streaming services and docuseries and also the big screen, which I think it would be amazing to do.
"I am seeing just a lot more momentum in projects like this coming through NASCAR and coming to Hendrick Motorsports and just more interest. So that's good, right? It talks a lot about where the sport is at, where it's heading, the amazing crowd that was [at Daytona], not just today, new TV partners."
Gordon expressed confidence that NASCAR would appear on the big screen. He said:
"Cameras have gotten a lot smaller so maybe you could pull it off, but how do you do it and make it realistic and really authentic.
"We'll see what happens. If that doesn't happen, I feel pretty confident there's a project out there that will get NASCAR back on the big screen, if not just a really cool docuseries or something beyond even what we're already seeing right now."
Related: Ryan Blaney Breaks Down Real Reason For NASCAR's Disconnect With the Masses
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Fox News
28 minutes ago
- Fox News
NASCAR Ponders Unique Elements Of New Course On Naval Base
CORONADO, Calif. — As Ben Kennedy described the roughly three-mile course where NASCAR Cup Series cars will weave through Naval Base Coronado next year, he mentioned elements that don't sound typical of a NASCAR course. There will be a turn by the aircraft carrier. Maybe some by helicopters and F-18s. Another turn onto the tarmac of the naval base, a tarmac area that could include a chicane or some esses (quick, multiple turns). Kennedy, NASCAR's chief venue officer, doesn't have the course finalized yet. He's having drivers work through a variety of elements on iRacing, the racing game simulator that has helped NASCAR work on designs for street courses and other track reconfigurations. The June 19-21 race weekend next year will be NASCAR's first on a military base and will coincide with the 250th anniversary celebration of the U.S. Navy. "You have the tarmac, which is as wide as you want to make it," Kennedy said while standing near the top of the base's control tower. "And then a lot of the roads and streets that we drove in this morning, they're five or six lanes wide. So this is going to create for some really good passing zones." Kennedy says there will probably be 10 to 15 turns on what will be a relatively flat course, with a slight decline on the frontstretch and a slight incline when they get to the road by the bay. "I don't know all the challenges they're going to face with the location," said seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, who will possibly compete in the event, as he grew up in the San Diego area. "I'm highly confident we're going to have an incredible venue, incredible backdrop and great racing." Drivers who visited the base on Wednesday didn't seem too concerned about the design of the track. "I have heard a rumor that on one of the straightaways, we will be going by a couple aircraft carriers, so that's going to be hard not to pay attention to going by those on the sea," said 2023 Cup champion Ryan Blaney. "I don't have any expectations. I know it's going to be a great layout and a great course and just a special place to be able to go run here at such a famous base. "I'm honestly really honored that they are having us and letting us do what we're going to do. And I think it's going to be a heck of a time. I'm incredibly excited about it." All three NASCAR national series will compete on the track, with the course finalized sometime this fall. "I have no clue," said 2021 Cup champion Kyle Larson. "I haven't seen any drawing or anything of anything yet. But I don't really care what the course is. I'm just happy that we're doing this. "It's going to be a fun event no matter what. It's a beautiful part of the country. You're racing on a Navy base. This is pretty surreal." Larson indicated that they won't know how the track will race until they race. "A lot of times, the weirder and crazier the tracks are, the better racing we have," Larson said. "When we think things aren't going to be right, it creates chaos and whatnot. ... We could build an oval right here. We can build a road course. I don't care. "I'm just glad that we're here racing on this base, and it should be fun." One thing that probably won't be possible (and won't be a goal) is to design a course that could limit the dominance of Shane van Gisbergen, who has won the last three road courses this year. The three-time Supercars champion has won at Mexico (where he battled stomach issues), the Chicago street course and Sonoma in the last couple of months. "Food poisoning still won't get the job done so we've just all got to get better," Blaney quipped. Bob Pockrass covers NASCAR and INDYCAR for FOX Sports. He has spent decades covering motorsports, including over 30 Daytona 500s, with stints at ESPN, Sporting News, NASCAR Scene magazine and The (Daytona Beach) News-Journal. Follow him on Twitter @bobpockrass.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Molly Gordon wasn't landing starring roles. So she co-wrote one for herself in 'Oh, Hi!'
Conventional wisdom now has it that Hollywood no longer creates and nurtures young stars in the way it once did. Which is to say that if the system won't do it for her, Molly Gordon will simply make herself a leading lady. Known for supporting roles in series such as 'The Bear' and 'Winning Time' and features such as 'Booksmart,' 'Shiva Baby' and 'Theater Camp' (which she also co-wrote and co-directed), Gordon is finally stepping up to her first leading role in a film, for the new 'Oh, Hi!' with a performance that is equally heartfelt as it is unhinged. It premiered earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival, after which it was acquired for distribution by Sony Pictures Classics. Gordon shares a story credit on the film and is also a producer, as she takes a stronger grip on creating the roles (and career) that studios may not yet be providing her. Smart, witty and vulnerable, she can come across as a modern iteration of the urbane persona of Diane Keaton. 'I don't think I've gotten to really show this emotion or this darkness or gotten to be this crazy,' says Gordon, 29, of her "Oh, Hi!" turn. 'It would've been cool if it came with someone else giving me that opportunity, but it just didn't really feel like that was going to happen. So hopefully this shows people that I can do other things. But if not, I will keep trying to make my own things.' The movie stars Gordon and Logan Lerman as Iris and Isaac, taking their first out-of-town trip together to a romantic rental house in the country. After some zesty, playful sex inspired by the adult toys they discover in a closet, Isaac reveals — ill-advisedly — that he doesn't see theirs as a committed relationship while still handcuffed to a bed. She takes this as an opportunity to convince him otherwise, leaving him chained up as she pleads her case for why they would make a great couple. He threatens to have her arrested, she calls for backup from her friends (Geraldine Viswanathan, John Reynolds) and complications ensue. Entering a fashionable Los Feliz bistro in a sunshine yellow scoop-neck minidress, a forest green ballcap for local NPR station KCRW perched atop her head, Gordon greets me with an endearingly awkward exchange — to stay seated to shake hands or stand up and hug? — to rival any high-'90s romantic-comedy heroine. 'I've been calling it a rom-com gone wrong,' says Gordon, 'because I don't know how else to explain it. She thinks they're in a rom-com but they're not in a rom-com." 'Oh, Hi!' enters a summer of debate about the modern romantic comedy, with Celine Song's 'Materialists' and Lena Dunham's 'Too Much' pushing the form in some new directions. The premise of 'Oh, Hi!' is something of a Trojan horse, as its girl-takes-boy-hostage concept creates a platform for conversations and considerations on the difficulties of dating. With her mix of winsome appeal and knowing air, Gordon feels of a piece with such established rom-com stars such as Meg Ryan, Reese Witherspoon or Kate Hudson — yet with just enough smartphone-era savvy to also feel particularly now. 'I think the world is in such a heightened place that it feels like maybe the right rom-com of our time,' she adds. 'In this moment, nothing feels normal. It's not like Meg and faking an orgasm at the deli anymore. Life is just crazy. It's just a different moment.' Born and raised on the westside of Los Angeles, Gordon moved to New York City for college but soon dropped out to pursue acting full-time. In the years since she has typically split her time between the two cities, but has most recently been spending more time in New York, especially since her parents moved there after losing their home in the January fires. Perhaps in a rom-com premise all its own, Gordon is in what she describes as 'a new chapter in New York.' Gordon's mother Jessie Nelson is a director and screenwriter whose credits include the features 'Corrina, Corrina,' and 'I Am Sam,' while her father Bryan Gordon is a prolific television director. (He once worked with a young Lerman in an episode of the short-lived series 'Jack & Bobby.') "Oh, Hi!" writer-director Sophie Brooks and Gordon are longtime friends who found themselves both back in their parents' houses during the early stages of the pandemic and commiserating on relationship troubles and uncommunicative exes. 'She's so funny and dynamic and she has this inherent charm and likability to her onscreen that feels like a leading-lady energy,' says Brooks, 35, of Gordon's onscreen presence. 'She also has this range of being able to do really sentimental, sincere scenes and also being incredibly funny and absurd and big." Viswanathan, 30, was sitting in a sushi spot on Sunset Boulevard that she and Gordon often go to together as she took a call recently to talk about her friend. The two have been close ever since meeting while shooting the 2020 movie 'The Broken Hearts Gallery' and Viswanathan recalled also being surprised when Gordon mentioned that "Oh, Hi!" was her first time leading a film. 'She said to me once: 'This industry is like a swinging spotlight that shines its light on people at various times,' ' said Viswanathan, who also appeared in this summer's 'Thunderbolts*.' 'And I just think that was one of the most profound pieces of wisdom and advice that I've gotten from anybody in the business. That's the perfect way to think about it, because the spotlight — it moves around. She just feels like such a seasoned pro.' Alongside Viswanathan, Gordon is also close with such multi-hyphenate talents as Rachel Sennott and Ayo Edebiri, forming a cohort of smart, talented women who have all been navigating Hollywood on and off-screen together. Gordon likes to keep up with the Hollywood trades, reading scripts and tracking projects she has nothing to do with out of a mix of amateur enthusiasm and professional curiosity. She projects a composure and clear-eyed point-of-view that may come partly from growing up around the industry but also from her own studious interest in how the contemporary entertainment business works, right now, from how films get green-lit to how celebrity gossip gets circulated Last year Gordon found herself the target of unexpected scrutiny when tabloid photos emerged of her with her 'The Bear' co-star Jeremy Allen White, stoking fevered speculation from the show's passionate fandom. 'Oh, Hi!' also includes Gordon's first nude scenes, with pictures taken from a preview screening popping up online before the film had even opened. It has taken all her sharpness and confidence to steer around these pitfalls of rising fame. 'I think the internet is really gross and scary and I've become my most depressed when I start to view my art through that or I read too much of that stuff," says Gordon. "That's the hardest part about making things in 2025. But then I also talk about this with my sounding board of women, it's like you have to kind of be a little bit on the internet to know what people want and it helps your art. Especially with comedy, you want it to be so of the time. But then sometimes I'll read stuff and I'll be like, 'Oh, now I'm thinking about making a movie through this lens of a review or a bad comment.' It's just hard to find that balance. So I try to not look at it that much.' As to whether she is currently in any kind of relationship with anyone at all, Gordon says succinctly, 'I don't ever want to talk about my personal life. Remember Jack Nicholson with the sunglasses sitting courtside at the Lakers? Let's all go back to that.' The nature of the story in 'Oh, Hi!' meant that Lerman spent long stretches of the production handcuffed to a bed, sometimes for hours at a time. Between shots, Gordon would make sure he had water or fetch him snacks. 'She really was looking after everybody in this production and really wanting everybody to do their best work,' Lerman, 33, says in a phone call from his home in Los Angeles. 'It was infectious. And I think it flowed through to everybody else, every other department, just how much Molly loved this movie.' Read more: Logan Lerman and the pandemic vice he learned from Stanley Tucci Brooks notes how when Gordon was in a scene, their dynamic was one of actor and director, but between shots, 'she was an incredibly active producer, really dealing with nitty-gritty things.' During one pivotal early scene, in which the two main characters have a romantic dinner outside, complications almost forced a revision due to budget and scheduling issues. But it was Gordon who backed up her director. 'It was written as outside — I wanted it to be outside," Brooks remembers. "And there was this day where kind of everybody was pushing me to move it inside. And she was like, 'Sophie, you don't want it inside. You want it outside, it should be outside.' And she was right. I was so grateful to her in that moment that my producer was like, 'No, that's not what you want. let's keep it as you intended it.' ' Viswanathan recalled a time when she and Gordon were going up for the same role and worked on their self-taped auditions together. (Neither got the part.) Gordon's notes and direction were decisive and convincing, and so Viswanathan is not surprised to see her moving further toward creating and shepherding her own projects. 'It's a very precarious landscape for women with roles like ['Oh, Hi!'s' Iris],' said Viswanathan. 'But that's kind of the magic of Molly. She's just the most likable person. It was something that she had to constantly find the balance for: how crazy to make her, how sympathetic, how comedic, how dramatic. It's a difficult tone. So watching her navigate all of it on no sleep was really a marvel.' As an actor Gordon will soon be seen alongside Hugh Jackman and Emma Thompson in the 2026 live-action-animation hybrid 'Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie' (for which, she emphasizes, they all play people). Gordon is also co-writing the screenplay for a remake of the '80s comedy 'Outrageous Fortune' about two struggling actresses for Searchlight Pictures which she hopes to be allowed to direct herself. 'What I have in my head is going to be big,' says Gordon, likening the idea to "The Nice Guys," the Ryan Gosling-Russell Crowe action-comedy. 'And so I'm going to have to convince people and do the song-and-dance. And I'm ready to do it.' Before that she will direct and star in the high school reunion comedy 'Peaked,' which she also co-wrote, for A24. 'The movie kind of explores the age that I'm at right now, which is kind of: Where do we fit? I'm not a mother but I'm not the naive 22-year-old. I'm in this nebulous place of like: Where do we put her?' says Gordon. 'Which is kind of why I started writing my own stuff.' Has she answered that question for herself yet? 'Where do I fit? I think it's a constant question,' says Gordon. 'I'm lucky to have that mirrored back in all my friends who see the world in a similar way that I do. But I'll be on my journey of where do I fit probably till I die.' Interview finished and on her way to the door, Gordon navigates her farewell having already reconfigured the blocking of who sits and who stands in a small-scale piece of directing, producing and performing all at once. That's at least one problem solved. Sign up for Indie Focus, a weekly newsletter about movies and what's going on in the wild world of cinema. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. Solve the daily Crossword


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Molly Gordon wasn't landing starring roles. So she co-wrote one for herself in ‘Oh, Hi!'
Conventional wisdom now has it that Hollywood no longer creates and nurtures young stars in the way it once did. Which is to say that if the system won't do it for her, Molly Gordon will simply make herself a leading lady. Known for supporting roles in series such as 'The Bear' and 'Winning Time' and features such as 'Booksmart,' 'Shiva Baby' and 'Theater Camp' (which she also co-wrote and co-directed), Gordon is finally stepping up to her first leading role in a film, for the new 'Oh, Hi!' with a performance that is equally heartfelt as it is unhinged. It premiered earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival, after which it was acquired for distribution by Sony Pictures Classics. Gordon shares a story credit on the film and is also a producer, as she takes a stronger grip on creating the roles (and career) that studios may not yet be providing her. Smart, witty and vulnerable, she can come across as a modern iteration of the urbane persona of Diane Keaton. 'I don't think I've gotten to really show this emotion or this darkness or gotten to be this crazy,' says Gordon, 29, of her 'Oh, Hi!' turn. 'It would've been cool if it came with someone else giving me that opportunity, but it just didn't really feel like that was going to happen. So hopefully this shows people that I can do other things. But if not, I will keep trying to make my own things.' The movie stars Gordon and Logan Lerman as Iris and Isaac, taking their first out-of-town trip together to a romantic rental house in the country. After some zesty, playful sex inspired by the adult toys they discover in a closet, Isaac reveals — ill-advisedly — that he doesn't see theirs as a committed relationship while still handcuffed to a bed. She takes this as an opportunity to convince him otherwise, leaving him chained up as she pleads her case for why they would make a great couple. He threatens to have her arrested, she calls for backup from her friends (Geraldine Viswanathan, John Reynolds) and complications ensue. Entering a fashionable Los Feliz bistro in a sunshine yellow scoop-neck minidress, a forest green ballcap for local NPR station KCRW perched atop her head, Gordon greets me with an endearingly awkward exchange — to stay seated to shake hands or stand up and hug? — to rival any high-'90s romantic-comedy heroine. 'I've been calling it a rom-com gone wrong,' says Gordon, 'because I don't know how else to explain it. She thinks they're in a rom-com but they're not in a rom-com.' 'Oh, Hi!' enters a summer of debate about the modern romantic comedy, with Celine Song's 'Materialists' and Lena Dunham's 'Too Much' pushing the form in some new directions. The premise of 'Oh, Hi!' is something of a Trojan horse, as its girl-takes-boy-hostage concept creates a platform for conversations and considerations on the difficulties of dating. With her mix of winsome appeal and knowing air, Gordon feels of a piece with such established rom-com stars such as Meg Ryan, Reese Witherspoon or Kate Hudson — yet with just enough smartphone-era savvy to also feel particularly now. 'I think the world is in such a heightened place that it feels like maybe the right rom-com of our time,' she adds. 'In this moment, nothing feels normal. It's not like Meg and faking an orgasm at the deli anymore. Life is just crazy. It's just a different moment.' Born and raised on the westside of Los Angeles, Gordon moved to New York City for college but soon dropped out to pursue acting full-time. In the years since she has typically split her time between the two cities, but has most recently been spending more time in New York, especially since her parents moved there after losing their home in the January fires. Perhaps in a rom-com premise all its own, Gordon is in what she describes as 'a new chapter in New York.' Gordon's mother Jessie Nelson is a director and screenwriter whose credits include the features 'Corrina, Corrina,' and 'I Am Sam,' while her father Bryan Gordon is a prolific television director. (He once worked with a young Lerman in an episode of the short-lived series 'Jack & Bobby.') 'Oh, Hi!' writer-director Sophie Brooks and Gordon are longtime friends who found themselves both back in their parents' houses during the early stages of the pandemic and commiserating on relationship troubles and uncommunicative exes. 'She's so funny and dynamic and she has this inherent charm and likability to her onscreen that feels like a leading-lady energy,' says Brooks, 35, of Gordon's onscreen presence. 'She also has this range of being able to do really sentimental, sincere scenes and also being incredibly funny and absurd and big.' Viswanathan, 30, was sitting in a sushi spot on Sunset Boulevard that she and Gordon often go to together as she took a call recently to talk about her friend. The two have been close ever since meeting while shooting the 2020 movie 'The Broken Hearts Gallery' and Viswanathan recalled also being surprised when Gordon mentioned that 'Oh, Hi!' was her first time leading a film. 'She said to me once, this industry is like a swinging spotlight that shines its light on people at various times,' said Viswanathan, who also appeared in this summer's 'Thunderbolts*.' 'And I just think that was one of the most profound pieces of wisdom and advice that I've gotten from anybody in the business. That's the perfect way to think about it, because the spotlight — it moves around. She just feels like such a seasoned pro.' Alongside Viswanathan, Gordon is also close with such multi-hyphenate talents as Rachel Sennott and Ayo Edebiri, forming a cohort of smart, talented women who have all been navigating Hollywood on and off-screen together. Gordon likes to keep up with the Hollywood trades, reading scripts and tracking projects she has nothing to do with out of a mix of amateur enthusiasm and professional curiosity. She projects a composure and clear-eyed point-of-view that may come partly from growing up around the industry but also from her own studious interest in how the contemporary entertainment business works, right now, from how films get green-lit to how celebrity gossip gets circulated Last year Gordon found herself the target of unexpected scrutiny when tabloid photos emerged of her with her 'The Bear' co-star Jeremy Allen White, stoking fevered speculation from the show's passionate fandom. 'Oh, Hi!' also includes Gordon's first nude scenes, with pictures taken from a preview screening popping up online before the film had even opened. It has taken all her sharpness and confidence to steer around these pitfalls of rising fame. 'I think the internet is really gross and scary and I've become my most depressed when I start to view my art through that or I read too much of that stuff,' says Gordon. 'That's the hardest part about making things in 2025. But then I also talk about this with my sounding board of women, it's like you have to kind of be a little bit on the internet to know what people want and it helps your art. Especially with comedy, you want it to be so of the time. But then sometimes I'll read stuff and I'll be like, oh, now I'm thinking about making a movie through this lens of a review or a bad comment. It's just hard to find that balance. So I try to not look at it that much.' As to whether she is currently in any kind of relationship with anyone at all, Gordon says succinctly, 'I don't ever want to talk about my personal life. Remember Jack Nicholson with the sunglasses sitting courtside at the Lakers? Let's all go back to that.' The nature of the story in 'Oh, Hi!' meant that Lerman spent long stretches of the production handcuffed to a bed, sometimes for hours at a time. Between shots, Gordon would make sure he had water or fetch him snacks. 'She really was looking after everybody in this production and really wanting everybody to do their best work,' Lerman, 33, says in a phone call from his home in Los Angeles. 'It was infectious. And I think it flowed through to everybody else, every other department, just how much Molly loved this movie.' Brooks notes how when Gordon was in a scene, their dynamic was one of actor and director, but between shots, 'she was an incredibly active producer, really dealing with nitty-gritty things.' During one pivotal early scene, in which the two main characters have a romantic dinner outside, complications almost forced a revision due to budget and scheduling issues. But it was Gordon who backed up her director. 'It was written as outside — I wanted it to be outside,' Brooks remembers. 'And there was this day where kind of everybody was pushing me to move it inside. And she was like, 'Sophie, you don't want it inside. You want it outside, it should be outside.' And she was right. I was so grateful to her in that moment that my producer was like, 'No, that's not what you want. let's keep it as you intended it.' ' Viswanathan recalled a time when she and Gordon were going up for the same role and worked on their self-taped auditions together. (Neither got the part.) Gordon's notes and direction were decisive and convincing, and so Viswanathan is not surprised to see her moving further toward creating and shepherding her own projects. 'It's a very precarious landscape for women with roles like ['Oh, Hi!'s' Iris],' said Viswanathan. 'But that's kind of the magic of Molly. She's just the most likable person. It was something that she had to constantly find the balance for: how crazy to make her, how sympathetic, how comedic, how dramatic. It's a difficult tone. So watching her navigate all of it on no sleep was really a marvel.' As an actor Gordon will soon be seen alongside Hugh Jackman and Emma Thompson in the 2026 live-action-animation hybrid 'Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie' (for which, she emphasizes, they all play people). Gordon is also co-writing the screenplay for a remake of the '80s comedy 'Outrageous Fortune' about two struggling actresses for Searchlight Pictures which she hopes to be allowed to direct herself. 'What I have in my head is going to be big,' says Gordon, likening the idea to 'The Nice Guys,' the Ryan Gosling-Russell Crowe action-comedy. 'And so I'm going to have to convince people and do the song-and-dance. And I'm ready to do it.' Before that she will direct and star in the high school reunion comedy 'Peaked,' which she also co-wrote, for A24. 'The movie kind of explores the age that I'm at right now, which is kind of: Where do we fit? I'm not a mother but I'm not the naive 22-year-old. I'm in this nebulous place of like: Where do we put her?' says Gordon. 'Which is kind of why I started writing my own stuff.' Has she answered that question for herself yet? 'Where do I fit? I think it's a constant question,' says Gordon. 'I'm lucky to have that mirrored back in all my friends who see the world in a similar way that I do. But I'll be on my journey of where do I fit probably till I die.' Interview finished and on her way to the door, Gordon navigates her farewell having already reconfigured the blocking of who sits and who stands in a small-scale piece of directing, producing and performing all at once. That's at least one problem solved.