Photo:Brian Bowen Smith via GettyWhenSaturday Night Livefirst launched as a sketch comedy show in 1975, there were seven original cast members: Jane Curtin,John Belushi, Laraine Newman,Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris andChevy Chase.Nearly 50 years later, Curtin, 75, who is currently starring in the endearingly quirky filmJulesalongsideBen Kingsley, reflects on her time on the show.“I got along with everyone,” she tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue. (The interview was conducted on July 7, before the SAG-AFTRA strikes.) “But I did have problems with John,” she says of Belushi, who died of a drug overdose in 1982 at age 33. “But that was because John wasn’t John. He was an addict.“Belushi and Curtin on Weekend Update in 1978.Fred Hermansky/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/GettyCurtin says when she was cast on the show, she had just gotten married to her husband, producer Patrick Lynch, and was just excited to be a working actress and make enough money to support herself — she had no interest in the trappings of fame or the partying that came along with such a high-profile gig.“I had a life — a dog, a husband, an apartment with a little garden. It was a life I really enjoyed,” she says. “John, obviously, he could party with the best of them, but the next day these guys were just so miserable. Plus, the 90 minutes on the show were so exciting and adrenaline-pumping, I felt all the other stuff was self-indulgent and seemed hard.”AfterSNL, where she was the first female anchor of Weekend Update and originated the role of Prymaat Conehead in The Coneheads, among other memorable sketches, Curtin moved on to more family-friendly fare, starring in the sitcomKate & AlliewithSusan St. James.Curtin says her fame became different then. “I’d have the firemen say to me, ‘Hey, how ya doin’, Allie?' I’d be like, I’m great, thanks!“Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Jane Curtin with Harriet Sansom Harris Ben Kingsley and Jade Quon in Jules.Courtesy of Bleecker StreetCurtin, who is happily still acting in stage productions and on film, loves that she’s still working.Her latest movieJules,out now, is about a group of senior citizens who befriend a benevolent alien who crashes into one of their backyards. The group decided to help hide and protect the alien while he works on repairing his spacecraft.“It’s such a lovely film,” Curtin says ofJules, which evokes themes of dementia and aging and, toward the end, of death and the afterlife. “It’s one thing to see Indiana Jones on film cracking his whip at 80, but it’s another to just see a group of people just living their lives at 80.“She adds, “It’s kind, it’s funny, it’s sweet, and it deals with a subject matter that’s inevitable. It’s just such a wonderful, wonderful movie.”

Photo:Brian Bowen Smith via Getty

Jane Curtin as Sandy Ryan - UNITED WE FALL

Brian Bowen Smith via Getty

WhenSaturday Night Livefirst launched as a sketch comedy show in 1975, there were seven original cast members: Jane Curtin,John Belushi, Laraine Newman,Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris andChevy Chase.Nearly 50 years later, Curtin, 75, who is currently starring in the endearingly quirky filmJulesalongsideBen Kingsley, reflects on her time on the show.“I got along with everyone,” she tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue. (The interview was conducted on July 7, before the SAG-AFTRA strikes.) “But I did have problems with John,” she says of Belushi, who died of a drug overdose in 1982 at age 33. “But that was because John wasn’t John. He was an addict.“Belushi and Curtin on Weekend Update in 1978.Fred Hermansky/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/GettyCurtin says when she was cast on the show, she had just gotten married to her husband, producer Patrick Lynch, and was just excited to be a working actress and make enough money to support herself — she had no interest in the trappings of fame or the partying that came along with such a high-profile gig.“I had a life — a dog, a husband, an apartment with a little garden. It was a life I really enjoyed,” she says. “John, obviously, he could party with the best of them, but the next day these guys were just so miserable. Plus, the 90 minutes on the show were so exciting and adrenaline-pumping, I felt all the other stuff was self-indulgent and seemed hard.”AfterSNL, where she was the first female anchor of Weekend Update and originated the role of Prymaat Conehead in The Coneheads, among other memorable sketches, Curtin moved on to more family-friendly fare, starring in the sitcomKate & AlliewithSusan St. James.Curtin says her fame became different then. “I’d have the firemen say to me, ‘Hey, how ya doin’, Allie?' I’d be like, I’m great, thanks!“Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Jane Curtin with Harriet Sansom Harris Ben Kingsley and Jade Quon in Jules.Courtesy of Bleecker StreetCurtin, who is happily still acting in stage productions and on film, loves that she’s still working.Her latest movieJules,out now, is about a group of senior citizens who befriend a benevolent alien who crashes into one of their backyards. The group decided to help hide and protect the alien while he works on repairing his spacecraft.“It’s such a lovely film,” Curtin says ofJules, which evokes themes of dementia and aging and, toward the end, of death and the afterlife. “It’s one thing to see Indiana Jones on film cracking his whip at 80, but it’s another to just see a group of people just living their lives at 80.“She adds, “It’s kind, it’s funny, it’s sweet, and it deals with a subject matter that’s inevitable. It’s just such a wonderful, wonderful movie.”

WhenSaturday Night Livefirst launched as a sketch comedy show in 1975, there were seven original cast members: Jane Curtin,John Belushi, Laraine Newman,Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris andChevy Chase.

Nearly 50 years later, Curtin, 75, who is currently starring in the endearingly quirky filmJulesalongsideBen Kingsley, reflects on her time on the show.

“I got along with everyone,” she tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue. (The interview was conducted on July 7, before the SAG-AFTRA strikes.) “But I did have problems with John,” she says of Belushi, who died of a drug overdose in 1982 at age 33. “But that was because John wasn’t John. He was an addict.”

Belushi and Curtin on Weekend Update in 1978.Fred Hermansky/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty

John Belushi, Jane Curtain during the Weekend Update on December 2, 1978

Fred Hermansky/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty

Curtin says when she was cast on the show, she had just gotten married to her husband, producer Patrick Lynch, and was just excited to be a working actress and make enough money to support herself — she had no interest in the trappings of fame or the partying that came along with such a high-profile gig.

“I had a life — a dog, a husband, an apartment with a little garden. It was a life I really enjoyed,” she says. “John, obviously, he could party with the best of them, but the next day these guys were just so miserable. Plus, the 90 minutes on the show were so exciting and adrenaline-pumping, I felt all the other stuff was self-indulgent and seemed hard.”

AfterSNL, where she was the first female anchor of Weekend Update and originated the role of Prymaat Conehead in The Coneheads, among other memorable sketches, Curtin moved on to more family-friendly fare, starring in the sitcomKate & AlliewithSusan St. James.

Curtin says her fame became different then. “I’d have the firemen say to me, ‘Hey, how ya doin’, Allie?' I’d be like, I’m great, thanks!”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Jane Curtin with Harriet Sansom Harris Ben Kingsley and Jade Quon in Jules.Courtesy of Bleecker Street

Jane Curtin, Harriet Sansom Harris, Sir Ben Kingsley and Jade Quon in JULES

Courtesy of Bleecker Street

Curtin, who is happily still acting in stage productions and on film, loves that she’s still working.

Her latest movieJules,out now, is about a group of senior citizens who befriend a benevolent alien who crashes into one of their backyards. The group decided to help hide and protect the alien while he works on repairing his spacecraft.

“It’s such a lovely film,” Curtin says ofJules, which evokes themes of dementia and aging and, toward the end, of death and the afterlife. “It’s one thing to see Indiana Jones on film cracking his whip at 80, but it’s another to just see a group of people just living their lives at 80.”

She adds, “It’s kind, it’s funny, it’s sweet, and it deals with a subject matter that’s inevitable. It’s just such a wonderful, wonderful movie.”

source: people.com