LEANNIE MORGAN JUST PROVED AGE IS NOTHING BUT A NUMBER đ„đ
At 60, the comedy icon is hitting her prime like never before. Her latest Netflix special turns everyday chaos â from family life to fame â into gold, delivering laughs, truths, and moments that feel painfully real.
Fans are calling it her most authentic and hilarious performance yet, a glow-up thatâs equal parts heart, humor, and pure fire. One glance, one punchline, one story at a time, she reminds us why comedy gets better with age.
đ âšÂ Stream the special now â this is a comedy journey youâll want to feel, laugh at, and share.
Leanne Morganâs late-stage comedy glow-up at 60 couldnât have come at a better time

Leanne Morgan onstage in her new special, âUnspeakable Things.â
(Todd Rosenberg / Netflix)
Comedian Leanne Morgan, 60, premiered her latest Netflix special âUnspeakable Thingsâ Tuesday, marking her continued rise after a late-stage career breakthrough.
After 25 years honing her comedy while raising three children, Morgan has become a top-grossing touring act, sitcom star, bestselling author and film actress.
Despite her Hollywood success, the Tennessee native credits her Knoxville family roots with keeping her grounded and fueling her relatable Southern humor.
Most comics are used to getting better with age but not necessarily bigger. Though having just turned 60 years old, one of comedian Leanne Morganâs funniest jokes about herself is about just how big sheâs gotten ânot in terms of her career but her figure. Itâs one of the first lines that escapes her mouth in her latest Netflix special, âUnspeakable Things,â which premiered Tuesday.
After watching herself back on the special that took her to the next level (2023âs âIâm Every Womanâ), she â like most people who find themselves on camera in front of the masses for the first time â couldnât help but be critical, even in her glow-up era. But despite her lament over not fitting into the typical Hollywood mold, itâs clear that Morganâs life and career have certainly changed for the better. As she grabs the mic on a glitzy stage wearing a golden gown to talk about her fluid retention, pearl-clutching strip club antics and watching her husband Chuck Morgan get arrested by highway patrol, her unvarnished style of storytelling shows us why sheâs resonating with much of America. Thereâs just no substitute for a whip-smart Southern woman telling it like it is.
That charm has resulted in her becoming a top-grossing live act, sitcom star of her show âLeanne,â bestselling author and film actor sharing the screen with Reese Witherspoon in âYouâre Cordially Invited.â But most importantly, itâs kept her funny. Recently Morgan spoke with The Times about finding her footing in comedy after raising a family, airing her loved onesâ dirty laundry on stage and the secret to staying grounded and famous at the same time.
Youâve had such a long development in your comedy career over 25 years, but was there a pivotal moment in your life when you felt like comedy could be your full-time career?
When I got these children raised, and I was in my early 50s is when my career blew up. I mean, this is bigger than anything I ever imagined. I thought I considered it my main thing when my children were 3, 5 and 7 â and now theyâre grown, Iâve got grandbabies. But I went all out from the time I started. I remember telling people that have known me in comedy for 25 years that Iâm doing this and Iâm going big. And so I always felt in my heart it was going to be big, and then I was going to have my own sitcom. I could see that from the time I was a child. But there were so many years where nobody cared. Comedy Central didnât want me, I was not, you know, one of the hip comedians ⊠but I just felt in my heart, even though I was raising my children, which was my No. 1 priority, Iâm going big and this is my thing.
I wish I could have been younger and thinner, but thatâs OK, but I just look at it now, and I think, what a blessing, because I got to raise my own children and they are all grown, and they donât need me like they used to. My youngest went to school in Manhattan for makeup for television and film. When I moved her into college is the day that a bunch of my comedy video clips went viral and I started selling out shows all over the United States. So it could not have been a more perfect plan. Now she travels with me and takes care of me. She says sheâs my caregiver, and she didnât sign up for that, but we are having a ball.
Given how big you are now, it seems like it wouldâve been impossible to give your kids the kind of parenting you gave them before you got famous.
I wouldnât have and they wouldnât be who they are. And Iâll tell you this, I wouldnât have the stories that I have that relate to all these people that feel like Iâm speaking to them. Because I do think my audience has kind of been ignored. Itâs men and women out in the middle of the United States that have just raised a family, and I talk about everything that theyâve been through, but I went through it too. I think it was the best thing that it didnât happen until later in life. Iâve got more that people can relate to. Honey, if Iâd have been in Hollywood at 30, Lord knows what would have happened to me.
How do you keep your normal life and Hollywood life separate and what keeps you grounded?
I think what keeps me grounded is Iâve still got a husband that says, âDid you leave the garage door open?â And I still wash everybodyâs clothes. Iâm still out here on the road renting a Mitsubishi rental car. Iâm doing the same thing Iâve always been doing. I went down in the lobby and got a complimentary coffee before they started charging at 9 oâclock, because this success just happened to me. And now I just turned 60 in October. I canât imagine me becoming Hollywood. I love it, donât get me wrong. I love where I live down there, and Iâll go back in January and start filming. Itâs all wonderful and glamorous. But then I just go right back to Knoxville [Tenn.] and buy toys for grandbabies and I start cooking. Iâm still the mama, Iâm still the grandmama, and they need me, you know?

âI do think my audience has kind of been ignored,â Morgan said. âItâs men and women out in the middle of the United States that have just raised a family, and I talk about everything that theyâve been through, but I went through it too.â
(Todd Rosenberg / Netflix)
Did you do anything fun to celebrate your 60th birthday?
I went to the beach down in Florida with my husband and my kids and my grandbabies, and we cooked every night and they bought me two grocery store birthday cakes and I stood at the kitchen counter and ate them with a fork. We really had a good time. We walked on the beach every day and I needed that time to rest. But it was really one of the best birthdays Iâve ever had, if not the best. And I was worried about turning 60. I thought, oh, Lord, 60 â thatâs gonna be bad. And then I thought, you know what, Iâve got my health and Iâve had all this success and wonderful things that I get to do.
Which comedians do you look up to the most?
I always loved Jim Gaffigan. I just love how he talks about his kids and family. Always loved Jerry Seinfeld. Iâm crazy about Dave Chappelle. Growing up, I loved Lucille Ball, Carol Burnett and then of course Jay Leno, David Letterman, Johnny Carson and Roseanne. The first time I saw Roseanne it blew me away. I guess I just love when I see people that are very unique and have their own voice. I used to love watching Ellen DeGeneres when she was first coming on the scene.
How is your family handling your newfound fame?
Well, now everybodyâs asking me for Jonas Brothers tickets, which Iâm thankful I can get them. Everybodyâs enjoying those kind of little perks. But itâs been interesting to watch, because my youngest daughter who is on the road with me, the 27-year-old, has been with me in the crowds in airports and all that. She knew what was happening. I realized that when it was first happening, my other kids and my husband didnât even understand what was happening. Iâd go to the University of Tennessee SEC football game, and I would say to my husband, âChuck, I donât know if I can walk through this crowd. Weâre playing Alabama. I mean, Iâm kind of a big deal in Alabama.â And he would say, âOh, good Lord, Leanne, everythingâs fine!â And then, of course, heâd walk off, and Iâd see the top of his bald head and he would not even be looking at me. And then all these women at that ball game would stop and kiss me in the mouth. I could barely get through that crowd. And then it was somebody at the ball game that happens to be one of my agents in Nashville said, âShe canât do this, Chuck! Sheâs going to have somebody walk her through this crowd,â and he was just dumbfounded by it.
And then to see my grandbabies that are still babies â theyâll be watching âTrash Truckâ or one of the cartoons or something, and theyâll go, âItâs grandma on the screen!â Of course, they donât know what Iâm doing, but itâs been fun. Iâve got the sweetest children in the world, they could do with it or without it. Now, my baby daughter canât. Sheâs pretty boujee. My youngest child, the makeup artist, sheâs like, âWe cannot get in a regular Uber anymore. Weâre gonna have to have the Uber XL.â So sheâs getting very spoiled, but weâre still in an Uber!
One of the greatest parts of the new special is when you air your familyâs dirty laundry â including a bit about your husband getting arrested by highway patrol. Do you run that bit by Chuck first before you said it onstage?
Of course, heâs the one who said âWhy donât you tell them about the time I got arrested!â He likes for me to talk about him â donât let him fool you. [My daughter] Tess is worried about getting a man with me saying that she had to scratch her butthole. But she was a baby when that happened. She said, âIâm so glad that you added that I was a baby, mom.â So but, yeah, everybodyâs pretty sweet about it.
What are you most excited to experience in the next phase of your career in 2026?
Iâm excited to see whatâs going to happen with my character on my TV show âLeanne.â I have so many women come up to me and say, Iâve got a divorce after 30 something years, or my husband left me, or Iâm starting a whole new job, or whatever. And they go, you donât know how much that show means to me, and Iâve felt seen, and how much hope that character has given me, and I think thatâs so sweet. So Iâm excited to see whatâs going to happen with her â because sheâs now turned 60, and is a grandmother and a mother. And I want women to know that itâs not over, you know and they can do any career and do anything they want to in life, go back to school, whatever it is, and theyâre still desirable. I donât want women to think nobody wants them, you know? And then I hope I can do more movies. I had a ball on the Reese Witherspoon, Will Ferrell movie âYouâre Cordially Invited.â Hope I get to do things like that again. And, yeah, Iâm excited about the new tour, I just got to come up with this material.
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