The Roseanne Barr of today, sitting in an airless meeting room of a restaurant in New Yorkâs Meatpacking District, looks very different from the Roseanne Barr captured in Eric Weinribâs intimate and brilliantly observed documentary Roseanne For President!
In the film, which follows her ill-fated attempt to become the presidential nominee for the Green Party in the 2012 election (she eventually became the Peace and Freedom Partyâs nominee), Barr, 63, sports shoulder-length, straggly gray hair, and hippyish duds.
Today her hair is short, dyed blond, and she wears a metallic fitted jacket and tight trousers. The look has gone from âweaves-her-own-hessianâ to techno DJ, complete with yellow-tinted sunglasses. She is direct and blunt, very funny, and also deadly serious. Youâre never sure which, in person and on screen.
Weinrib tells me that working with Barr was âlike getting fucked up with your friends playing with a video camera, and thinking that it would be hilarious if other people would watch itâonly in this case it was true because the person I was hanging out with was a world-famous comedic icon.â
That scratchy, deadpan monotone, familiar as her delivery during her years starring on the groundbreaking sitcom which bore her name, remains a constantâeven when discussing how she is going blind.
I had asked why she was such a fan of marijuana, which we see her smoking in the film, and which she claims is excellent for releasing us from âmind control.â Obviously she wants it legalized.
âItâs a good medicine, you know,â she says.
For pain, I ask.
âI have macular degeneration and glaucoma, so itâs good for me for that because I have pressure in my eyes. Itâs a good medicine for a lot of things.â
Will the macular degeneration ultimately leave you blind, I ask.
âYeah,â Barr replies, flatly.
Have her doctors given her any kind of time frame on when that will come to pass?
âNo, they canât. My vision is closing in now,â Barr says, making a narrowing motion with her hands near her eyes. âItâs something weird. But there are other weird things. That oneâs harsh, âcause I read a lot, and then I thought, âWell, I guess I could hire somebody to read for me and read to me.â But I like words and I like looking. You do what you have to do. I just try and enjoy vision as much as possibleâyâknow, living it up. My dad had it, too.â
And she believes pot releases us from mind control, in what way? âItâs expansive. It opens your mind. Youâre like,ââshe looks upââWow, youâre in awe. You look up into the stars. It makes you wonder. It doesnât close that down.â
âMind control,â and âtheyâ (meaning, amorphously it seems, the corrupted political elite and their associates), she refers to a lot.
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Before we meet I am told by her representatives with cautioning expressions that Barr is tired and not feeling well after a day of interviews. I already know from the filmâwhich is premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival, hence the New York sojournâthat she doesnât shake hands.
Indeed, Barr doesnât like big groups at all, which made campaigning for president obviously a little tricky, with all the handshaking and contact with necessary allies and ordinary voters.
While her Green Party rival, Dr. Jill Stein, presses the flesh and attends multiple town hall meetings in an array of fetching scarves and blazers, Barr Skypes in to speak at events from her California home. When she does turn up at events, her star charm, straight-talking, and comedic timing are a winning combination: Audiences love her. In the film she gets her most rapturous reception from a crowd at a music festival: You sense it is the fame she knows best, and likes best.
One of the heroes of the film is the tireless and devoted Farheen Hakeem, the co-chair of the Green Party and Barrâs very own political operative. The indefatigable Hakeem sets up tables in crummy halls, speaks for Barr, canvasses for her. Barr says sheâs running a modern, very âgreenâ campaignâlow on spending on air flights and the likeâbut itâs Hakeem, battling away with nails and planks of wood and pacifying surly party members, whom she should be indebted to.
The derision Barr faced when her candidacy was announced is well documented in the filmâTV anchors smirk one after the otherâbut âas a woman I knew that would be the lens,â she tells me.
During the film, as support flows Steinâs way, Barr is incredulous why the Greens canât see that, as a celebrity, Barr can advance their agenda in the public realm, and among the powerful, more than Stein can? But Greens seem to like evidence of years of legwork and commitment, rather than Barrâs brash, parachuting-in, star quality.
Weinrib expected Barrâs to be more of a satirical campaign, like Dick Gregoryâs presidential run of 1968, and Hunter S. Thompson running for sheriff of Aspen and Pitkin County in 1970.
âI was excited to see Roseanne shake things up,â Wenrib tells me. âWhat surprised me was that the longer we went, the more serious she got, and that comedy is deadly serious. Historically, it was the jesters who spoke truth to kings. Iâve always been a fan of people taking risks, not people on the sidelines critiquing them. For me, Roseanne embodies that.â
If Stein wins, Barr says in the film, she will make all the right, Green-friendly noises about working with her, then simply not. They barely speak to each other backstage at one event. After she is defeated, Barr offers this assertion (twice): âFuck Jill Stein.â
Her bitterness today seems dialed down. âI loved it, it was fun, exciting, and interesting,â she says of the campaign. What does she think of Stein? âSheâs very entrenched, and they like their candidate,â Barr says tightly.
I ask if Barr really feels her celebrity should have convinced the Greens to take her on. âIn some ways it should have counted for more, in that I knew had I been a man who had accomplished the things I accomplished in television I think they would have been more respectful towards me.â
She was not surprised not to win the Green nomination, she saysâalthough on screen, we watch her glued to the results coming in, a contender to the last moment.
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We speak days after Hillary Clinton announces her own presidential candidacy. Barr is emphatically not a Clinton supporter.
âI think sheâs a Democrat just like they all are. She seems like every other Democrat. I would not like to see her win. Sheâs the same old shit. Iâd like to see me win. I donât see how she can win, but it will be interesting to see how the process goesâalthough its kind of offensive that the American people for 21 months have to live through the mudslinging that goes on between the two parties, which I think is just a tactic to prevent government from doing anything about any of our problems. It just elongates the election process. Itâs like a traffic jam. Thatâs how it works: blaming and mudslinging.â
So, Barr--herself a much-hailed trailblazer--isnât excited by the prospect of the first female president?
âNo, not at all. I think that a party that was woman-friendly would be revolutionary, and that party could be headed by a male or female. Itâs what the party itself stands for that matters. She is standing as a Democrat so sheâs a Democrat, and I donât see much difference between them and the Republicans. They both get paid by the same guys. They do the same thing, they want the same stuff, more business.â
A Clinton presidency wouldnât even be a symbolic achievement, I ask.
ââSymbolicallyâ? What does that mean? I would rather see the first intelligent, honest American president. I donât care whatâs in their shorts. I donât care what it looks like down there at all. The thing I did like Hillary for was that she was the first candidate who ever listened to what women said, because she had to.â
Barr isnât sure if she will vote; she isnât even convinced there will be an election.
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Clearly, politics fascinates her and makes her passionate, but I also wonder if Barrâs campaign fulfilled her desire to remain relevant and in the public eye.
The film contrasts her doing daily chores and puttering around at home, with the magazine covers and pop-cultural hype around her at the height of the success of Roseanne, which ran for nine seasons from 1988 to 1997. The then-and-now dislocation is startling. Part of her seems to want attention, and part of her seems to want to retreat from it.
Her fame isnât what it was, though she insists she is still famous. âOnce youâre famous, youâre never not famous. My show is on five times a day in 15 countries or something. Iâm still relevant to people. I was young then, man. I was in my late 30s, early 40s. You needed so much energy. I couldnât keep that up now.â
Sheâs done a few roles (âI like doing small thingsâ), but sheâs glad not to be playing a character, as she did on Roseanne, âfor a number of years in a big box with no windows. I was like Rumpelstiltskin. Itâs hard in your 60s [to imagine doing] that much work again. It was boring. I just didnât want to continue doing that because there are too many sacrifices to continue it.â
Barr famously fought with her own writers, she says, but after she got good ratings the network let her do what wanted. âItâs hard to get people to see things they werenât raised to see. But Iâm over fighting. Iâm old now.â
That simply isnât true, as the film shows: Barr likes fighting, raising hell, shouting for what she believes in. Itâs her rocket fuel. Her brother Ben, in the documentary, says a lot of her family life was distilled for her sitcom. Barr was a born, impassioned agitator. She tells me that her motherâs side of the family was Republican (her grandmother was a small-business owner), while her father was a Socialist, âthe working manâs party.â

Inspired by that, Barr has âalways tried to do the right things with my privilege,â and recalls her first joke, written at age 3 or 4, was inspired by fury at a daily gender inequality she witnessed at lunchtimes.
âMy grandmother ran around serving the men, they never said âThank you,ââ she recalls. âOne day my uncle had two or three bowls of soup. He complained every mouthful. âYou put too much chicken fat in this,â he said. âThatâs what immigrants do.â I did not like anyone messing with my grandma. âI said, âWell, if you donât like it, how come youâre eating three bowls of it?â And his face wentâŚâ and she widens her eyes⌠âbecause nobody had ever said that to any man in our family before. âThat girlâs got a big, big mouth,â my uncle said. And thatâs still how I see the world: women doing the labor.â
Shooting the documentary depressed her âin seeing what passed for socialism these days.â Matching fundsâwherein the federal government funds a candidate to the same amount they have raised personallyââis corrupt. You canât have a revolution thatâs profit-based. You feel compromised on every level. The level of mind control is really disturbing, the sanctified parroting of having to say this and having to say that. That has nothing to do with the real left. Thatâs the fake left. It never talks about labor. All they talk about is Israel, and whether it should exist, and the rest of that fucking bullshit, which is really about the corporate nullification of tribal rights.â
The thing she most enjoyed about running for president was talking to people, she says. The worst aspect was having to talk to, and cozy up to, those people with the power to decide her futureââthe Gatekeepers,â as she calls them.
âThey want to censor you,â Barr says. Even in the Greens? She nods. âI was like, âWeâre doing it my way, not your way.â They think youâre their puppet. I never seemed to see somebody who had real vision, theyâre blind to that. They canât tell the difference between their own ass and their own elbow. They donât know the difference between truth and bullshit.â
She thinks a truly independent candidate could one day win the presidency, though that likelihood is âpossible not probable.â As for herself, the last time she voted Democrat was for Jimmy Carter, because she liked his recommending voters âto put on a sweater and turn down your air conditioning [to conserve energy during a 1977 crisis]. He talked a good farmer thing.â
With Obama, Barr was initially hopeful of his promised âchange,â but âI knew he had taken money from the nuclear industry, and they always pay back the people who sponsor them. I thought it was cool Americans voted him in. I was glad that in some ways it showed Americans were less racially divided. And he grew up [in income terms] on the other side of things, which we donât see that much. But heâs just another corporate Democrat like they all are. He rushed to give the banks their bailout. Theyâre all the same, they work for big money.â
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Despite her many frustrations with the current system, Barr says she is not pessimistic, but optimistic for a future in which Americans are forming coalitions, âand not being divided off or bought off.â
The viewer might think it would have been better had Barr really hit the campaign trail, but she didnât want to get âshot by crazy people. Iâm known. Iâm pretty certain Jill Stein hasnât had her life threatened. My life has been threatened ever since I sang the âStar-Spangled Bannerâ badly,â in 1990.
Does she regret that now?
âNo, no, not at all. Itâs my national anthem and I have the right to sing it. I sang it again a few more times after that. I did improve as a singer, I have to say. But it was so perfect. The next day there was a news blackout, they started Operation Desert Storm, and I was cast as the useful idiot. That was a time when I didnât account for my thing. I just thought it would be funny.â
And therein lies another tricky minefield for Barr, because she is a comedian, a risky, questioning, convention-defying, profanity-loving one at thatâand the thing about running for office, as she says, is that you âcanât do any dick jokes.â
She was frustrated herself that when, say, she went to Florida, âready to discuss stand-your-ground gun laws, the questions were all about Israel and Palestine. Thatâs the American mind control: not playing up whatâs going on in your backyard, but talking about whatâs going on âover there,â where whatever it is will never touch you while you live in relative privilege and safety.â
Does she describe herself as a feminist? âI did for a while. Iâm tired of words. Now I just describe myself as a thinker. I donât want to buy into any of their code words, so that it makes mind control. It activates mind control. If you say âfeminist,â it means certain things if youâre pro or con. And you know you could change your mind when the right facts are presented, if youâre not married to a certain rhetoric or dogma.â
Barr is proud that she came in sixth overall in 2012 (she ran only on three state ballots), but isnât looking to run again soon. âI earned my wings because I know how the system works. I might run again for the Peace and Freedom Party, but theyâd have to get rid of a lot of their platformâitâs obsolete. I thought about starting my own party, the Green Tea Party, a hybrid of freedom and safety net. Thatâs what I think the future is all about: a limit to government size and power, government made efficient. Thereâs a party called the National Womanâs Party, which started about 100 years ago: That would be a great party to run with.â
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The thing that seems most evident, on film and in conversation, is that Barr wants to have her voice recognized, in politics and/or entertainmentâand taken seriously. But there is a built-in conflict with her wanting to play serious politics, while also shooting her mouth off, and saying what she likes, which she often does via Twitter.
That contradiction echoes her desire for controversy and banner headlinesâindeed her making this filmâwhich sit alongside the prevailing mood of our conversation, which seems to suggest a desire for a quieter life and retreat. She may want both, of course, and why not. She still enjoys doing stand-up, and is a judge on the talent show Last Comic Standing.
One of the intriguing moments in the documentary sees Barrâs family saying she radically changed after a catastrophic head injury she suffered as a teenager, which almost killed her.
âI died, and I came back changed,â she tells me. âI did that whole tunnel, white light deal. I saw very clearly that this was my life and I was the author of it. It took 10 or more years to heal from.â
In 1991, she claimed she had been the victim of incest (which her sister later disputed). She once took psychiatric drugs, but she said in 2011 they made her âtotallyâ lose touch with reality.
Your family said your personality changed after the accident, I say. âThey say shit,â Barr says, and laughs. âI guess a little bit. I got more convinced that I could do whatever I wanted.â
Certainly, she was hailed as a pioneer for women in comedy, given not only the helm of Roseanne, but her strong character therein, its working-class focus, and the many then-controversial issues the show covered, even featuring a much-hyped lesbian kiss.
âI feel I was a good link in a big, long chain that stretched from Mae West to all the woman comics today, that I think was needed to open the door wider.â
But still no women presenting in late night? âI know. That pisses me off. I had a daytime chat show that moved to late night. I always wanted to do late night.â Whatâs the late-night âglass ceilingâ all about? I ask. âThey [the networks] donât want to do it, to go there. Women like to watch men at night, and other women during the day: Thatâs it, period. At night they want a cute guy.â
Barr has thought âa million timesâ about bringing her sitcom back. âI donât know if I can do it again, Iâve thought about it doing it as a movie too. I donât know. I appreciate living life with no deadlines or stress. Itâs too hard.â Is the cast still close, do they still talk? âWe do. We donât see each other that much, but we are still connected.â
As for comics, sheâs a fan of Doug Stanhope (âI think he is a geniusâ), Louis CK, Sarah Silverman, Chelsea Handler too. âAll stand-up comics I love because I know how hard is it and what it takes to get up and there and do it. Itâs a great art form.â
In the movie, the one person Barr defers to (-ish) is John Argent, her partner of the last 13 years. They met when he entered a competition on her website for people to write childrenâs songs. Heâs a genius, she says. They havenât married. âIâm lazy. You know, weâre thinking about it, but weâre OK as we are. Iâm too old to get married.â She smiles. âItâs not like weâre going to have any kids or anything.â
The film shows her taking great delight in swearing. âFuck yeah, I do,â Barr says with a smile. âI love colorful language. I used to get my mouth washed out with soap by my mom for doing it. So of course I never did it around her too much. I did around my friends. I love it. I justââ she smiles, ecstaticallyââItâs so free.â
She and Argent orbit between their homes in Hawaii, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Happily? âHappyâs a weird word... Iâm content with my life.â
Was passing 60 a big deal? â50 was the big one, wooo, half a century. After that I was like, âOK, Iâm lucky Iâm here another year, itâs all a plus.â So, she thinks about aging and her mortality? âI think about them all the time. Itâs tough you know. Itâs bittersweet. Iâm in the youth of my old age.â She smiles. âItâs very different from the old age of my youth. Iâm just passing from one to the other.â
She may seem weary, but Barr will return, almost certainly, to rabble-rouse via one platform or another. Tired as she may feel today, she is off shopping for Weinrib, and orders him to join her at a nearby branch of All Saints, so she can buy him a scarf with the legend âDirectorâ on it. He laughs that he will be there imminently. Hers sounds like the command of someone whom itâs wise to obey.
Roseanne For President! shows at the Tribeca Film Festival on Tuesday and Saturday. Screening details here.