Itâs a family affair for the Howards.
Bryce Dallas Howard joined her dad, Ron Howard, and uncle, fellow actor (and Ronâs young brother) Clint Howard, for a panel at MegaCon in Orlando, Florida, on Sunday, Feb. 9.
Speaking about his early life in Oklahoma, Ron, 70, ruminated on how his own parents (director Rance Howard and actress Jean Speegle) propelled his start as a child actor on shows like The Andy Griffith Show and, later, Happy Days, in which he starred as Opie.
Like himself, Ron said Bryce began to âshow a real aptitudeâ for performing when she was just a child â but he worried about her falling into his shadow.
âShe would ask about [acting], and my wife Cheryl and I would say, âNo, we canât let you be a child actor,â â Ron said. âWe didnât have the bandwidth to do what my parents did, which is really supervising ⌠And plus I felt like that the Opie mythology was a little bit tough, you know, too much to ask a kid to face as a child performer.â
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But Bryce, now 43, continued to show an aptitude for film, Ron added.
âAs a student, Bryce was unbelievable. She did every show, every summer program, and by the time she was, I donât know, 14 or 15, I could see that she could be a professional anytime she wanted to be,â he continued. âAnd yet we didnât still didnât allow it, and she kept learning, and sheâs never stopped learning, and now sheâs carried that into directing.â
âThe thing I love is that Bryce is into this for the right reason. She loves the process and she loves the audience,â Ron then said.
Bryce echoed her love of film during the panel, at one point telling the audience that her family has a mantra they turn to again and again. âItâs something from my grandfather that we always say to each other, which is: âYou know where to kick it â kick it in the ass.â â
âIt takes courage to just go for something ⌠So when youâve prepared, youâve done the research, youâve had the conversations, youâve challenged your biases, youâre ready, ready, ready â you kind of need that shove. And thatâs I think what we all do for one another,â she added.
At a Happy Days reunion event held at MegaCon on Friday, Feb. 7, Ron said he initially entered Hollywood as a child actor but quickly realized he was more attracted to the role of the director.
âI always liked acting. I always liked being around it,â he said. âBut very, very early on, I was attracted to the role of the director. And years later, I recognized that I donât have the performerâs personality. I wasnât hungry to perform ⌠I was just dying to be behind the camera.â
Still, the veteran filmmaker â who has recently appeared as himself in Huluâs Only Murders in the Building and will soon do the same in the forthcoming Seth Rogen Apple TV+ series The Studio â said he would consider acting again if it was for one of his daughterâs projects.
âLook: If Bryce wanted me to be in a movie or a TV show she was directing, I would make time for that,â Ron explained.
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Ron, a longtime filmmaker, previously won Best Director and Best Picture at the 2002 Academy Awards for A Beautiful Mind, starring Russell Crowe, Ed Harris, Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany.
He shares daughter Bryce with wife Cheryl Howard, whom he met in high school and married in 1975. They also share three other children: twins Jocelyn and Paige, 39, and son Reed, 37.
Bryce, meanwhile, found success in film and television after being cast in M. Night Shyamalanâs 2004 thriller The Village. She has since gone on to star in Spider-Man 3, The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, The Help, Black Mirror, the blockbuster Jurassic World film series and, most recently, Argylle.
Like her father, she has also directed several works, including episodes of three Star Wars TV series: The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett and Skeleton Crew. Bryce made her feature directorial debut with the 2022 documentary Dads.
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