How 'Tuesday' Brings Death to Life With Heart, Humor, and a Giant Bird (2024)

feathered friends

Stars Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Lola Petticrew, plus writer-director Daina Oniunas-Pusic, discuss their offbeat film about dying and what it can teach us about how to live

To Julia Louis-Dreyfus, funerals can be a great place to laugh — “maybe one of the best laughs you would ever have,” she says. “In dark times, a good laugh is almost like a drug. It’s bumping up against something it’s the opposite of, which makes it much more needed.”

The ability to find humor and absurdity amid deep pain is at the heart of Louis-Dreyfus’ latest film, the dark comedy Tuesday (in theaters now). Louis-Dreyfus plays Zora, a mother struggling to accept the fate of her terminally ill daughter, the titular Tuesday (Lola Petticrew). Written and directed by the Croatian filmmaker Daina Oniunas-Pusic, the A24-produced film uses a big dollop of magical realism to bring lightness and whimsy to the heavy subject matter: Death takes the form of a macaw — sometimes tiny, sometimes giant — who visits people in their final moments on Earth. But when the bird prepares to take 15-year-old Tuesday’s life, Zora makes a deal with it to buy her daughter some time.

The film draws inspiration from one of Oniunas-Pusic’s friends, who died of a degenerative illness while Oniunas-Pusic was a teenager. Tuesday — who Oniunas-Pusic says suffers from neuroblastoma, though that isn’t explicitly stated in the film — is restrained to a wheelchair and must use a ventilator. In many ways, Pusic says that creating this story helped her heal from the profound loss she suffered when she was younger: “The selfish part of art or making films is that a lot of the time, its private function is to help you process things and look at them from every possible angle, and then get over them, and put that chapter of your life behind you, and move on.”

When bringing Death to life, Oniunas-Pusic knew that she wanted a creature that could talk, dance, and tell jokes. Humans felt too mortal, she says, and puppets felt too childlike. Once she settled on a parrot, she examined 17th-century Flemish paintings as well as Ornithomimus dinosaurs to figure out how the film’s computer-generated bird should look — bright red plumage, soot and scars from the dirty work it does — and move. Casting was the final step: The actor Arinzé Kene voices Death with a harsh, raspy baritone.

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“One of the things that informed my decision for him not to be a puppet was to avoid this possibility that people might think, ‘Oh, he’s a figment of Tuesday’s imagination,’ or he is not real,” Oniunas-Pusic says.

In fact, bringing this supernatural element to the forefront somehow only grounds the story. In Oniunas-Pusic’s imagining, Death is troubled by the cacophony of voices calling him to put the dying out of their misery. When the bird flies onto Tuesday’s back porch, she instinctively cracks a joke about penguins headed to the beach. The pair become quick friends: She offers him a bath, they jam to Ice Cube’s “It Was a Good Day” and puff-puff-pass a vape pen. To Oniunas-Pusic, the ordinary-ness of their connection is part of the point: Yes, death is an inescapable reality but, we shouldn’t dread or attempt to run from it; it’s neither positive nor negative; rather, it’s a driving force to live life to the fullest.

“He just arrives as a fact of life,” Oniunas-Pusic says. “If I were to say anything on what the film is saying on life and death, I would say that life gains its meaning and its weight and wonder because of the fact that it has an expiration date.”

How 'Tuesday' Brings Death to Life With Heart, Humor, and a Giant Bird (1)

To Louis-Dreyfus’ Zora, however, Death is very much a threat. Before Zora strikes a deal with the bird, she attempts to destroy Death to keep her daughter alive: slamming the bird with a textbook, setting it ablaze, and then swallowing its charred remains. As a mother of two adult children, Louis-Dreyfus says she wouldn’t have handled things any differently herself. Reflecting on the strength mothers can muster when their kids are in danger — like those stories of women who can lift up a car that’s run over one of their children — she says she approached that scene with similar gusto.

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“That was very satisfying, to set him on fire and club him to death,” Louis-Dreyfus says. “I mean, just talking about it makes me very happy.”

Although in the film Zora is navigating her first dance with death, Louis-Dreyfus has confronted it several times, and called on those experiences, too. Her father, Gérard Louis-Dreyfus, died in 2016. The following year, she was diagnosed with stage II breast cancer and underwent six rounds of chemotherapy and a double mastectomy.

“When you’re up against something that’s as critical as a cancer diagnosis, you certainly consider mortality in a way that you might not have prior,” she says. “And so I’m keenly aware of how fleeting this beautiful life can be. So I brought that to bear in the film.”

After she was declared cancer-free in 2018 and had returned to work on Veep, her half-sister Emma died of a seizure while camping in the Sierra Nevada. Over time, Louis-Dreyfus says she learned that when a person dies, our relationship with them does not end. It simply takes a new shape.

“If we are lucky enough to live long enough, we will all suffer some loss,” she says. “I have had some in the last 10 years, more than I had really considered [or] thought about, but it’s happened. So, I’m familiar with grief and anticipating grief.”

For Petticrew, 28, working alongside Louis-Dreyfus was a “pinch-me moment” — though it wasn’t problem-free. Filming began in the summer of 2021, amid mask and social-distancing mandates, and Louis-Dreyfus had to quarantine in London for two weeks before arriving on set, which made building the intimate mother-daughter bond a challenge. Ultimately, though, Petticrew says, the experience fostered “a great kinship and admiration and love from both sides.”

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The actor, who uses they/them pronouns, appreciates how kind the film is to all of its characters — especially Tuesday’s grief-wracked mother. “What’s really lovely about it is the light that it shines on motherhood and the fact that there’s no handbook,” they say. “The love that you have is so big that sometimes it’s actually quite blinding. That’s what’s really lovely about this film is that nobody’s a bad guy. Everybody’s just trying their best.”


Born in Belfast, Petticrew’s ideas about death originate from Irish lore and Catholic ritual — open-casket vigils and three-day wakes. Though they’re now an atheist, the actor echoes Oniunas-Pusic on the film’s core takeaway, one they hope resonates with believers and nonbelievers alike: “If you spend a lot of time focusing on what’s going to happen to you, you forget to enjoy what’s happening to you right now.”

How 'Tuesday' Brings Death to Life With Heart, Humor, and a Giant Bird (2024)

FAQs

What is the meaning behind the movie Tuesday? ›

“Tuesday” is a fantasy movie about the acceptance of death. It's told through the experience of Tuesday, a terminally ill 15-year-old whose mother, Zora, refuses to accept her daughter's pending death.

What is the bird in Tuesday? ›

Daina O. Pusić's Tuesday, from A24, is a film that follows the relationship between Tuesday (Lola Petticrew) and her mother Zora (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and their experience with Death–a talking macaw.

Who is the parrot on Tuesday? ›

But, when death itself suddenly and unexpectedly appears to claim Tuesday, taking the form of a talking, shape-shifting parrot (voiced by Arinzé Kene), Zora's hand is forced.

Who is the voice of the parrot in Tuesday? ›

But in Tuesday, the feature film debut from writer-director Daina O. Pusić, death appears in the form of something much more unusual: a mutating, talking macaw (voiced by Arinzé Kene).

What is the story behind Tuesday? ›

Tuesday gets its name from the Norse god Tyr, Thor's less famous little brother — a god of law and justice, and a champion of single combat, who was later identified with Mars, the Roman war god. Tyr is the kind of warrior who courageously squares off against his opponent, looking him straight in the eye as they fight.

What does the day Tuesday mean? ›

The English name is derived from Middle English Tewesday, from Old English Tiwesdæg meaning "Tīw's Day", the day of Tiw or Týr, the god of single combat, law, and justice in Norse mythology. Tiw was equated with Mars in the interpretatio germanica, and the name of the day is a translation of Latin dies Martis.

What is the spirit of Tuesday? ›

As we journey through the week, Tuesdays often offer a unique opportunity for reflection and growth. It's a day that sits comfortably between the start of the week and the approaching weekend, making it the perfect time to reassess our goals and intentions.

What is the symbol for Tuesday? ›

Shorthand Day Symbols
DaySummary Description
SundayCircle with inner dot representing the sun
MondayLast quarter crescent moon
TuesdayLunate "w" with macron representing fire and proximity to moon and water
WednesdayCapital letter "W" representing water
3 more rows
Aug 17, 2024

What is the mythology of Tuesday? ›

Tysdagr - Tuesday

Mars is a god of war, and so is the Nordic god 'Tyr' or 'Tír'. It is Týr who has given his name to Tuesday. In Norse mythology, Týr is one of the Aesir. He is primarily known as the god of justice and war, but is also described as wise and brave.

What is the parrot in Tuesday? ›

Death, masking as a talking parrot, helps Julia Louis-Dreyfus come to terms with an impending loss. Take a look at the Tuesday trailer. The death we know from films and TV is usually a lanky fella, with a scythe and a bit of a frown. He means business and that business is death, he's not a jolly fellow.

Who is the lucky bird? ›

Robin. Robins are seen as harbingers of good luck and joy. Their cheerful song and bright red breast are thought to symbolise new beginnings and happiness in the home.

What is the number one talking bird? ›

African greys are often the first choice for owners looking for a bird that can talk, and a determined trainer can help them build a vocabulary of hundreds of words.

Who is the voice of the macaw in Tuesday? ›

Tuesday, meanwhile, is prepping for the end by spending time with the Death bird, who is voiced by Arinzé Kene, who sounds like he smoked 100,000 cigarettes to prepare for the role.

Why didn't the parrot talk? ›

She tried hard to teach the parrot to talk but it would not talk. In fact, the parrot disliked the aunt from the very beginning. One day, when the aunt asked the parrot for a kiss and put her face close to the cage, the parrot in anger knocked her specs off her nose. She felt humiliated.

Who is the voice for Big Bird? ›

Caroll Spinney performed Big Bird from 1969 to 2018. Matt Vogel began as an understudy in 1996 before becoming the character's full-time performer in 2018.

What is the Tuesday movie about? ›

What is the meaning behind Fat Tuesday? ›

Mardi Gras, festive day celebrated in France on Shrove Tuesday (the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday), which marks the close of the pre-Lenten season. The French name Mardi Gras means Fat Tuesday, from the custom of using all the fats in the home before Lent in preparation for fasting and abstinence.

What is the movie Tuesday Club about? ›

What does the daughter have on Tuesday? ›

Plot. Zora's 15-year-old wheelchair-bound daughter Tuesday has an incurable terminal illness and Death comes to her in the form of a size-altering macaw to give her final deliverance from pain and suffering.

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