Michelle Pfeiffer opened up about the uncomfortable beginnings of her career and the surprising path that led her to her first major movie role, as reported by Fox News.

Speaking with Entertainment Weekly, the 68-year-old actress reflected on how she landed her breakout role in “Grease 2” and revealed how self-doubt and embarrassment almost marked the end of her audition story.

Pfeiffer explained that she went into the “Grease 2” audition with “zero expectations” of actually being cast. Her agents had sent her “just for the experience,” thinking it could help her get used to the casting process.

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The actress described the environment as chaotic, with “actors and dancers and singers everywhere hanging out, coming in and out auditioning,” all separated by thin walls that allowed everyone to hear each other.

She said that made the situation worse. “All the other actors waiting to go in could hear your reading, could hear your singing. I was not a singer,” Pfeiffer recalled, adding that she had been taking voice lessons on the advice of her acting coach but didn’t feel confident in her abilities.

She admitted that she was also not a dancer and that the combination of singing and movement left her feeling completely out of place.

Pfeiffer remembered the next part of the process vividly. After completing the singing portion, she had to join the dance audition, which she described as something straight out of a movie scene.

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According to her, everyone formed long lines, and each row would take turns performing in front. Pfeiffer, nervous and unsure of her steps, quietly moved further and further back until she found herself in the last row.

“I stumbled my way through because I couldn’t remember the choreography,” she said. Feeling exposed and inadequate, Pfeiffer left the audition “with my tail between my legs, feeling so humiliated.”

Moments later, something unexpected happened that turned everything around. “Somebody’s assistant, I think it was [director] Pat Birch’s assistant, ran after me across the Paramount studio lot,” Pfeiffer recounted.

She told the assistant how embarrassed she felt, but the woman replied, “Well, you shouldn’t be because she wants you to come back tomorrow.”

Despite her self-doubt, the assistant’s message meant Pfeiffer had impressed the director enough to earn a callback. That second chance led to her landing the lead role of Stephanie Zinone, the bold leader of the Pink Ladies in the 1982 sequel.

“Grease 2” flipped the storyline of the original film by focusing on a rebellious girl who falls for a straight-laced boy, and Pfeiffer’s performance as Stephanie set her apart as a rising star.

Although the actress said she felt insecure about her singing, her performance of “Cool Rider” from the film remains one of the most beloved moments for fans of the musical. The movie became the launching point for a career that grew rapidly in the following years.

Pfeiffer went on to star opposite Al Pacino in “Scarface” and then earned three consecutive Academy Award nominations for “Married to the Mob,” “Dangerous Liaisons,” and “The Fabulous Baker Boys.”

Now decades into her career, Pfeiffer continues to take on new projects, most recently starring in “Margo’s Got Money Troubles” and Taylor Sheridan’s “The Madison.”

In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter earlier this year, Pfeiffer said she and Sheridan spent time discussing her character Stacy before filming began.

“[Taylor] wanted to know who Stacy was before he started writing. I wanted to know who Stacy is before I committed,” she said.

She reached out to Helen Mirren, who had worked on Sheridan’s series “1923,” for advice.

“She said the scripts were great, the productions were perfect,” Pfeiffer recalled, adding that Mirren told her she “was having the time of her life.” That glowing recommendation ultimately convinced Pfeiffer to sign on.

Looking back, the actress’s story of humiliation and redemption serves as a reminder of how an uncertain beginning can transform into a defining opportunity.

What once felt like defeat during a “Grease 2” audition ended up opening the door to one of the most enduring Hollywood careers of her generation.

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