š Emma Thompson Unfiltered: Getting Paid to Be Funny & Why A.I. Fills Her With āIntense Irritationā š¤š¤
Emma Thompson lit up The Late Show with Stephen Colbert with a lively blend of wit, candor, and craft talk, touching on everything from her first paid gig as a comedian to her steadfast loyalty to pen-and-paper writingāand her āintense irritationā with artificial intelligence. She also teased her new series, Down Cemetery Road, premiering on Apple TV.

First laughs, first paycheck
– A stand-up start: Thompson vividly recalled her first paid comedy set at age 25, performing stand-up at the Croydon Warehouse. The material? Razor-edged jokes about Margaret Thatcher and herpesāboth, she quipped, āvery big at the time, equally unpleasant and difficult to get rid of.ā
– Paid in cash: She was handed 60 quid in a brown envelope. The thrill, she said, was realizing that money could come directly from words and a microphone. āSuch an amazing feeling,ā she musedābefore she pivoted to acting.
Why she writes longhandāand bristles at A.I.
– Pen to paper: Thompson writes longhand, convinced thereās a crucial link between the brain and the hand. Colbert agreed, noting he also writes things out when memorizing.
– Techās unwelcome nudges: Transferring her work into a Word document brings constant āhelpfulā prompts to rewrite. Her response is emphatic: she doesnāt want an algorithm meddling with her voice. The interruptions fill her with āintense irritation.ā
– A computer nightmare turned legend: While finishing Sense and Sensibility years ago, an ancient desktop converted the entire script into gibberish. In a panic, Thompson rushed to Stephen Fryāwho spent eight hours rescuing the file, which emerged as one long sentence. She had to reconstruct the script from there. It felt, she said, like the machine had āhidden it behind the wainscotingā out of spite.
Down Cemetery Road: a new caper with bite
– A darkly comic tone: Thompson stars in Down Cemetery Road, a series that balances mordant humor and intrigue. In a clip, her character wryly considers the ācash grabā potential of a house explosion and jokes about cases going āall the way to the middleāāthe middle of a bottle, that is.

A consummate performer, still dancing on
– Stage spark: Thompson danced onto Colbertās stage with trademark verve. Colbert called her āone of the best representations of our species,ā celebrating her as a Dame, an Oscar-winning actor and writer, and a conservationist with pitch-perfect comedic instincts.
Why Emma Thompsonās creative creed resonates
– The craft matters: Thompsonās devotion to longhand isnāt nostalgiaāitās a conviction about how thinking and writing connect. Her story underscores a larger tension many writers feel: automated tools can flatten voice and intention in the name of efficiency.
– Humor with depth: From Thatcher-era stand-up to literary screenwriting, Thompsonās range is powered by precision and playfulness. The same spirit animates her new work, bringing sharp intelligence and sly humor to contemporary storytelling.

Where to watch
– Down Cemetery Road premieres Wednesday on Apple TV. Stick around The Late Show for more of Thompsonās reflections on comedy, writing, and the stubborn humanity behind great art.