Jonah Hill shot to fame “overnight” in his early 20s after starring in the 2007 genres movies” target=”_blank”>”Superbad”< for their Fall/Winter cover story. “[Co-star] Michael Cera and I talk about it all the time. We just had this really rare experience: One day life was one way, and then one day life was a different way. Right after ‘Superbad,’ I took a writing job on ‘Brüno’ [with Sacha Baron Cohen].”
“I was 23, and they asked me to host SNL for the first time,” the 37-year-old continued. “And I didn’t want to leave the writers room. I was like, ‘Guys, I don’t know what to do.; It was my first job working for Sacha. And Sacha was like, ‘Dude, you should go host saturday-night-live” target=”_blank”>SNL<
“I was a kid,” he explained. “I had probably too much power for a young person, and too much autonomy, and not enough life skills. I dropped out of college, and I used to not get why people would go to college. Because if you’re ambitious, why would you spend four years just idling? And then I didn’t realize until I turned 30 that what those four years gave all my friends was this wobbling period of how to be a person.”
“I was really advanced professionally but really behind personally,” Hill told the outlet. “All my 20s, I wasn’t really looking inward. I was just running toward success. Or trying to find success. And when I was 30, I was like, I’ve always wanted to be a director, but if I don’t get off this train now and write ‘Mid90s’ [his 2018 comedy] I’m not going to do it. And I hit pause. I took three or four years to reshape things. I was like, ‘I could just do this for 10 more years and I’m not going to evolve as a person.'”
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Jonah Hill attends the ‘Mid90s’ press conference during the 69th Berlinale International Film Festival Berlin at Grand Hyatt Hotel on February 10, 2019 in Berlin, Germany.
(Photo by Stephane Cardinale – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)
Today, Hill still considers himself to be a “workaholic.” However, he has found a greater balance in his 30s juggling fame and his personal life. Hill also credited the power of therapy and the many lessons it has taught him on having a more fulfilling life.
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“I still write and direct and get all my projects in order and stuff. But then I also surf every day,” he said. “I make myself surf every day. I don’t know if dropping out is kind of the accurate word, but I kind of dropped out a little bit. I still love my creativity and my work. But I definitely live a very quiet lifestyle, where I surf, hang with my dog, hang with my nephews. Just keep it mellow.”