Ellen Pompeo Says ‘Ballsy’ Katherine Heigl Was ‘100% Right’ About Grey’s Anatomy

It has only taken our culture over a decade to reckon with the truth: We absolutely did Katherine Heigl dirty.

Scrubbing back into some mid-aughts “Grey’s Anatomy” drama, Ellen Pompeo has come to her former co-star’s defence more than a decade after she controversially exited the long-running medical drama.

Heigl was branded as a villain for clashing with the powers behind the ABC series after publicly criticising the harsh working conditions on set and later withdrawing her name from Emmy contention over lacklustre material.

But Pompeo is now praising Heigl for making “ballsy” comments at the time.

“I remember Heigl said something on a talk show about the insane hours we were working, but she was 100% right — and had she said that today she’d be a complete hero, but she was ahead of her time,” she said in an episode of her “Tell Me” podcast.

“Of course, let’s slam a woman and call her ungrateful when the truth is she’s 100% honest, and it’s absolutely correct what she said,” Pompeo continued. “And she was fucking ballsy for saying it. And she was telling the truth. She wasn’t lying. Also, when you’re younger, you’re so excited to be there and you’re so happy to be invited to the party that you’re willing to do whatever it is they’re asking you to do.”

Heigl indeed faced backlash over a 2009 appearance on “The Late Show With David Letterman,” where she described her “17-hour” workday as “cruel and mean.”

Heigl addressed those comments while endorsing the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees strike in a lengthy Instagram post in September, remarking that she got her “ass kicked for speaking up.”

Pompeo, who now also serves as one of the executive producers on “Grey’s Anatomy,” explained that the culture has thankfully evolved since Heigl’s days, adding that “happier actors” mean there’s “not as much drama.”

“I’m very lucky now with my schedule on ‘Grey’s,’” she said. “I get to cut back, and overall I’m happy for the production as a whole because we have cut back tremendously. Back in the day, we used to do crazy, crazy hours.”

While Heigl has since starred in a slew of projects, including Netflix’s “Firefly Lane,” she has spoken about how being labeled “difficult” took a serious toll on both her career and mental health.

“I may have said a couple of things you didn’t like, but then that escalated to, ‘She’s ungrateful,’ then that escalated to, ‘She’s difficult,’ and that escalated to, ‘She’s unprofessional,’” she told The Washington Post in an interview last year. “What is your definition of difficult? Somebody with an opinion that you don’t like? Now, I’m 42, and that shit pisses me off.”

Heigl said that she was “quickly told to shut the fuck up” amid the fallout from her comments.

“I asked my mom and my husband to find me somewhere to go that could help me because I felt like I would rather be dead,” she told the Post. “I didn’t realize how much anxiety I was living with until I got so bad that I had to really seek help. You can do a lot of inner soul work, but I’m a big fan of Zoloft.”

Heigl previously expressed interest in returning to the series and wrapping up her character’s arc, but creator Shonda Rhimes has said she’s unequivocally “done with that story.”

“I’ve turned that idea over in my mind a thousand times and thought about how it would go,” Rhimes told TVLine back in 2013. “And I don’t think so.”

“Grey’s Anatomy,” currently standing as the longest running medical drama in television history, was renewed for a 19th season in January. Apart from Pompeo, Chandra Wilson and James Pickens Jr. are the show’s only remaining original cast members.

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Katherine Heigl Reflects On Controversial 2007 Interview That Derailed Her Career

Katherine Heigl is opening up about being comfortable as the “villain” following comments in multiple interviews in the early 2000s that led to her being labeled “difficult”.

“I’m always the bad guy. People like me to be the bad guy,” she said during a sit-down with her former Grey’s Anatomy co-star, Ellen Pompeo, for Variety’s Actors on Actors series.

In the 2000s, Katherine gained notoriety for famously speaking out against her role in Knocked Up, as well as pulling her name from consideration from the Emmys and rallying against tough working conditions during her time on Grey’s.

“I got on my soapbox and I had some things to say, and I felt really passionate about this stuff. I felt really strongly,” Katherine told her former colleague.

“I felt so strongly that I also got a megaphone out on my soapbox. There was no part of me that imagined a bad reaction. I felt really justified in how I felt about it and where I was coming from.”

Ellen Pompeo and Katherine Heigl in Grey's Anatomy in 2008
Ellen Pompeo and Katherine Heigl in Grey’s Anatomy in 2008

Eric McCandless via Getty Images

Katherine, who said she has spent most of her years in “people-pleasing mode,” said she found it “really disconcerting when you feel like you have really displeased everybody”.

“It was not my intention to do so, but I had some things to say, and I didn’t think I was going to get such a strong reaction,” she added. “I was in my late 20s.”

She said her success on Grey’s Anatomy gave her a “false sense of confidence” to speak out.

“So then I started getting real mouthy, because I did have a lot to say, and there were certain boundaries and things that I was not OK with being crossed,” she explained. “I didn’t know how to fight that.”

After questioning the reactions and labels she was faced with after speaking out about certain projects and roles, Katherine realised that only a few people’s opinions truly mattered to her, and that she needed to tune out the other noise.

“That’s when I got comfortable with my role as the villain and really enjoyed it.” Katherine said, jokingly rubbing her hands together in a villain-like way, as Ellen giggled.

Katherine has experienced something of a 180 in terms of public opinion over the years, as people have reexamined the backlash she faced at the time for speaking the truth.

Just last year, Ellen spoke out in support of the “ballsy” comments Heigl made about their workplace, and said her co-star “was telling the truth”.

“I remember Heigl said something on a talk show about the insane hours we were working, but she was 100% right — and had she said that today she’d be a complete hero, but she was ahead of her time,” Ellen said on her Tell Me podcast last August.

“Of course, let’s slam a woman and call her ungrateful when the truth is she’s 100% honest, and it’s absolutely correct what she said,” she added.

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