Photo: Brad Barket/Getty

Somebody somewhere gave comedian Bridget Everett a vote of confidence when her career started taking off. That somebody?Amy Schumer.
Everett, 51, met Schumer, 41, in 2009 at the Just For Laughs Comedy Festival in Montreal, which theSomebody Somewherestar and writer calls “a real big deal” in this week’s issue of PEOPLE.
“That’s where all the comics go, and I’m not a comic. I was more of a cabaret singer, so I felt a little on the outside,” Everett admits.
But Schumer took Everett under her wing.
“She was familiar with my work and she’s like, ‘Get out of your room. Let’s go have some Chardonnay, let’s go down to the bar, because everybody’s there,'” the Kansas native recalls. “We went down and we started talking to people. I’m like, ‘Well, this isn’t so bad.'”
“I’m more introverted, and Amy’s more of an extrovert. So, she’s done [a lot] of getting me out of my comfort zone over the years,” she adds. “She took a chance on me and I just listened.”
Michael Rowe/Getty

After studying opera in college at Arizona State University, Everett moved to New York City in 1997. She waitressed while discovering her loves for karaoke and cabaret. “I was like, ‘If only you can make karaoke your living,'” she says.
Meeting other performers in the New York City made Everett feel she found her community. “Everybody was just a little wild and a little left of center, and I loved it,” Everett says. “It was a bunch of misfits having the time of their life, and I was like, ‘That’s what I want to do.'”
Everett worked withSex and the CitycreatorMichael Patrick Kingon an off-Broadway show, which led to her first Hollywood role, playing a drunk girl who interviews to be Carrie Bradshaw’s assistant in the 2008’sSex & the Citymovie. But Everett didn’t quit her waitressing job until 2015, the same year she toured with Schumer and appeared in themom of 4-year-old Gene’s movie,Trainwreck.
That night, the crowd at her Joe’s Pub show (whichPatti LuPoneandBette Midlerhave previously attended!) in N.Y.C. cheered on Everett’s decision. “I got a 10-minute standing ovation,” she remembers. “That really helped solidify that taking a chance on myself was the exact right thing to do.”
RELATED VIDEO: Amy Schumer Explains Why She Let Go Her Doula, Penn Badgley’s Wife, While Recovering Postpartum
“When it first opened, it was a real hotspot. We would have all kinds of celebrities fromJ.Lo,P. Diddy,Sarah Jessica Parker,Woody Allen, you name it,” Everett says. “But whenRichard Simmonswalked in, he stopped traffic. He was in the shorts, he walked up the stairs, he took his time, he was waving to people, and I was the only one old enough to really appreciate who he was. I was like, ‘Oh my God, Richard Simmons is here.’ To be in the same building with him was a real treat.”
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
“I’m more comfortable relating to something that can reverberate through me from experience,” Everett says.
In the show, now in its second season, Everett plays Sam, a woman navigating life in her Kansas hometown following the death of her sister. Offscreen, Everett’s oldest sister Brinton died in 2008 of cancer, the year after her dad died.
“Sam is willing to get under the hood a little bit more than I am,” Everett says. “I usually just repress everything and make jokes just like a lot of Midwesterners do, at least the ones in my family. Sam is more willing to — maybe reluctantly — try to understand why she’s feeling things and dealing with her grief and learning how to love people.”
Marian Wyse/HBO

Everett’s real-life family see her having her own HBO show as a sign of success. “They’re proud of me,” theLady Dynamitestar says. “It’s really cool for them that it has so many touches of my hometown, but there’s something undeniable about being on HBO that does sort of indicate that things are going okay for me.”
For more on Bridget Everett, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands now, or subscribehere.
Somebody Somewhereairs Sundays at 10:30 p.m. ET on HBO.
source: people.com