Julie Klausner is an American writer, comedian, actress, and podcaster. She is best known for creating, writing, and starring in the Hulu sitcom Difficult People (2015–2017), which also starred comedian Billy Eichner.
Klausner is head writer and co-executive producer of the Web series Billy on the Street, also starring Eichner, which had previously run on Funny or Die, Fuse, and TruTV and now premieres on Lyft's website and YouTube. Klausner has also written for television shows such as Mulaney, Best Week Ever, The Big Gay Sketch Show, The Jack and Triumph Show, Ugly Americans, and Saturday Night Live, as well as for pop culture websites such as The Awl and Vulture.
As an actor, Klausner has also appeared in several comedy series in addition to Difficult People, such as Netflix's Big Mouth and TruTV's At Home with Amy Sedaris, and as Cheryl in Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winning FX miniseries Fosse/Verdon.
In October 2011, NBC picked up a television pilot based on the Sue Margolis novel Apocalipstick, about a woman's father who dates her high-school nemesis, which Klausner was to write and serve as executive producer. In March 2018, it was announced Klausner would co-star in the NBC comedy pilot So Close, about two hopeless romantics unaware they live only blocks apart and may be soulmates. Neither program was picked up for series.
In March 2020, Klausner joined the writing staff of Amazon Prime Video's revival of the sketch comedy show Kids in the Hall. She is also a writer on the Apple TV+ musical comedy series Schmigadoon! which stars Cecily Strong. In 2021 she lent her voice to a gargoyle in a season three episode of What We Do in the Shadows, alongside “Difficult People” co-star Cole Escola.
In March 2020, Klausner and comedian-author Tom Scharpling premiered their podcast Double Threat, which they cohost on the Forever Dog network.
In March 2022, Klausner debuted her solo advice podcast "Ask Julie" on the Forever Dog Plus network.
In 2023 Klausner released the song "Silence", a parody of the music of Kate Bush sung from the point of view of the character Clarice Starling from the film The Silence of the Lambs.
|
|