
""I think we're all a little frightened of AI because we don't really understand it all the time, nor do we understand exactly what it can or can't do," says the actor and star of Broadway's Marjorie Prime, in which AI is a central theme. "There's nothing you can do to stop it. And the only thing we can do is learn how to work best with it, learn how it can help us.""
"With a career spanning seven decades across film, TV, and the stage - and no desire to stop - the 96-year-old actor has little reason to be afraid of anything. Squibb started out in the theater in the '50s, first at the Cleveland Play House before moving to New York, where she got her big break in the off-Broadway show The Boy Friend and made her Broadway debut in the original production of Gypsy."
June Squibb recognizes widespread fear and misunderstanding about AI and advocates learning how to work with it to harness its help. Squibb's career spans seven decades across film, television, and theater, and she continues to perform at age 96. She began in the 1950s at the Cleveland Play House, moved to New York, broke through off-Broadway in The Boy Friend, and made her Broadway debut in Gypsy. Film work began in 1990 with Alice, and mainstream recognition arrived with Nebraska in 2013. Recent starring roles and Marjorie Prime engage themes of aging, memory, grief, loss, and AI.
Read at Bustle
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