​Melissa McCarthy: Generously funny

Melissa McCarthy's rise to stardom

Melissa McCarthy's series "Mike and Molly" has just been renewed for a fifth season here on CBS. She's becoming a regular in the movies, too, getting laughs with her special brand of comedy, as Mo Rocca shows us in this Sunday Profile:

"How did you get to be so fearless in performance?" Rocca asked Melissa McCarthy.

"Just probably dumb," she replied. "Just probably really dumb!"

She has become one of Hollywood's leading ladies, playing roles that aren't exactly ladylike, at least not in typical Hollywood terms. And she's having fun doing it.

"If somebody's doing something and you're laughing, and at the same time you're so embarrassed for them, it's my absolute kind of favorite type of laugh," said Melissa McCarthy.

Melissa McCarthy (right) with Susan Sarandon in the comedy, "Tammy." New Line Cinema

"You kind of have to be willing to act and look like a wreck in certain scenes," said Rocca.

"Yeah, I think you're supposed to be the butt of the joke."

McCarthy is redefining the A-list actress. She can play rough, she's not a size zero, and her characters come with plenty of character flaws.

"In a lot of comedies they kind of take all the problems away from the women," she said. "They give her great clothes, great hair, she almost always owns an artisanal shop, like a cheese shop in Manhattan. And the whole time I'm watching it I just think, 'How can you pay for rent? You have a Chloe bag? Like, you can't be broke.' They're charming and they just can't find a man. I would date her! Who's not dating these women?

"And then they say, 'Now, go be funny.' And I always think, 'With what? Like, there's no tools.'"

Melissa McCarthy on meeting "Brangelina"

What she really doesn't like is when women in comedies are reduced to playing off men, and stripped of any actual personality.

"It's a lot of, like, 'Oh, Jim! ... Oh, Jim! ... Oh, Jim!' I always feel like she's trying to say it different ways. But what point of view do you have when nine out of ten of your lines are, 'Oh, Jim . . .' 'Oh, Mo . . . '"

McCarthy grew up on a farm in Illinois. But she developed many of her comedic tools at the Groundlings, an improvisational comedy theater company in Los Angeles.

It was there she met comedian Ben Falcone. The theater provided the perfect opportunity for the young couple to get to know each other, warts and all.

"Seeing each other as all variety of kooky characters, what a great way to see you in every possible light!" said Rocca.

McCarthy said, "It's like, whoever can look the worst and the most hideous, [yet] realistic, it kind of really would make everybody laugh. Like, if you just came out and looked so horrible, it kind of got everybody's respect. So there was a weird challenge to look your worst."

Ben Falcone and Melissa McCarthy with correspondent Mo Rocca. CBS News

Or as Falcone explained, "Who could look the best version of their worst!"

Melissa and Ben got married in 2005.

McCarthy's first big success almost didn't happen; she was asked to star in the CBS primetime sitcom, "Mike & Molly," about two people who meet in an Overeaters Anonymous group. Initially, she was reluctant. She told Rocca her initial reaction to the show was, "No, thanks."

"I didn't want to do something that was just on a topic of weight," she said. "Not for any other reason than I just thought, 'Oh, God, I just don't find it interesting. It's not a storyline. It didn't feel like there was any where to go with it.' And then I read it and it felt like a romantic comedy."

The decision paid off with an Emmy.

Melissa McCarthy and the cast of "Bridesmaids." Universal Pictures

But her breakout role came in "Bridesmaids," with fellow Groundlings alumni Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolph. It pushed her into the top ranks of Hollywood, with an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actress.

Ben has been in her last three movies. Now he's directed her in "Tammy," which they co-wrote. It's a road movie about a woman with a lot of issues. Tammy starts her week by getting fired (by Ben, of course).

"Shockingly, you're nothing like the people you play in 'Tammy,'" Rocca said.

McCarthy said. "For some reason we're always aggressively fighting each other in movies."

Rocca said, "She likes to take it so far that, as she says, the audience might be embarrassed for the character."

Falcone agreed, admitting that -- as her husband -- he's sometimes thought don't do that. "Yeah. Yeah. You know, just sometimes I'll be, Oooh, mama!'"

He still cringes over her sex scene in "Identity Thief."

Melissa McCarthy: "I'm like a 900-year-old woman"

"I'm just sitting there in the audience, I'm like, 'Okay.' Still really funny, everybody's laughing. But I'm just sort of like . . . Oooh, that's a lot!

"It's so funny because she's got the raunchy Melissa McCarthy -- she's so raunchy, she's so wrong -- and she's, like, totally just a Midwestern, super sweet, 'Hi, how you doin'?"

Rocca said, "I haven't heard her swear yet."

"And you won't," said Falcone.

McCarthy added, "I don't curse anywhere near what I do in movies."

Except for that one time, when she was shooting "The Heat" with Sandra Bullock.

"I threw an F-bomb," she said. "But in my defense, I had been spending 14-hour days just saying 500 F-bombs. And so then I got home and I just casually dropped one, and Ben looked at me and said, 'Are you crazy?' 'Cause my two girls were there. Oh God, I felt crazy!"

Melissa and Ben have two young daughters. They say at home it's Ben who's the scene-stealer.

"Well, it just sounds like there are gales of laughter," said Rocca.

"There is!" McCarthy replied. "I probably laugh to the point where I literally think I can't get air in probably four times a day. I just can't imagine not having -- I think often about having a different husband . . . "

"What?" said Falcone.

"No, I can't imagine having a husband, or a partner or whoever you're with all the time, that doesn't make you laugh like that."

Melissa McCarthy wants her audiences to laugh like that, too. And she'll do just about anything to make it happen.

"My main thing is, you know, tickets are expensive. And I want someone, when they leave a theatre or rent a movie, to be like, 'Oh my God, I completely lost myself for an hour-and-a-half. I just laughed myself silly."

She added, "You know, I'd like to not horribly embarrass myself in the process. But I may have blown that."

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