Hugh Jackman weighs in on Martha Stewart calling Ryan Reynolds ‘not so funny in real life’
The two actors have been in a mock feud for years
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Your support makes all the difference.Hugh Jackman has backed up Martha Stewart’s claims that Ryan Reynolds isn’t funny in real life.
Businesswoman and TV personality Stewart, 83, made the remarks on Bilt Rewards’ November Rent Free game show, after she was asked which celebrities she thought respondents had named as the most fun to hang out with.
Stewart correctly guessed her good friend Snoop Dogg, but she was taken aback by the next person on the list – Jackman’s Deadpool& Wolverine co-star star Reynolds.
“He’s probably on the list just ’cause he covers himself up in his movies and you don’t see his face,” she said, before adding: “And you want to know something? He’s not so funny in real life. No, he’s not so funny. He’s very serious.”
Stewart said she would “take Ryan off [the list], and I would put in somebody else”.
As for who she would replace the actor with, Stewart said: “George Clooney, because he’s fun. George is really nice to hang out with.”
She clarified that Reynolds is “a good actor. He can act funny, but he isn’t funny. Maybe he can get to be funny again.”
“I’m going to get in trouble,” she added. “He’s my neighbour.”
Jackman, 56, who has long had a playful public feud with his Deadpool & Wolverine co-star Reynolds backed up Stewart’s comments on X/Twitter following the episode’s release.
“Finally someone says it,” he said of Reynolds allegedly performative sense of humour.
Reynolds also responded to Stewart’s insult on the social media site, writing: “I’d disagree with her. But I tried that once. The woman is unexpectedly spry. She really closed the gap after a mile or so.”
Stewart also recently made headlines for issuing a damning review of a new documentary about her by filmmaker RJ Cutler, saying that it’s “shocking” how little of her archive he used despite having “total access”.
She also slammed the film’s “lousy” soundtrack. She claimed that she had originally told Cutler that “an essential part of the film is that you play rap music.”
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Instead, she said, he got “some lousy classical score in there, which has nothing to do with me.”
In the documentary, Stewart talked about her day in solitary confinement while serving time at Alderson Federal Prison Camp in West Virginia after “touching an officer”.
The cooking connoisseur was sent to the minimum-security correctional facility for five months from October 2004 to March 2005 after she was found guilty of conspiracy, obstruction, and lying to federal investigators about insider trading.
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