Jamie Lee Curtis does not mess around.
The actress posted on Instagram today calling on viewers of The Bear to get behind a charitable fundraiser. She kept the message short and all caps: “FANS OF THE BEAR PLEASE WATCH!” She said all the money goes to three recipients named in the post: Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, The Bear on FX, and My Hand in Yours.
Curtis didn’t attach a dollar goal or an end date to the announcement. She tagged all three accounts and kept the caption short.
Curtis plays Donna Berzatto on The Bear. She’s the volatile, deeply complicated mother of chef Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto. Donna doesn’t show up in every episode. When she does, the whole show tilts. That’s meant as a compliment.
Most people know Curtis from horror. She built her name in the Halloween franchise, playing Laurie Strode across decades of sequels and reboots. She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 2023 for Everything Everywhere All at Once. And somewhere in there, she found time for The Bear. The woman keeps moving.
Curtis made a major splash in the show’s second season. Her appearance in a single episode that year generated more conversation than most shows manage from an entire run. Awards attention followed.
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is one of the top pediatric hospitals in the country. It serves children from across Southern California. The hospital covers a wide range of medical specialties. My Hand in Yours is also part of the fundraiser, tagged in the post alongside the hospital and The Bear’s official FX account. Curtis didn’t elaborate on the campaign’s structure or how donations would be processed.
The Bear has earned one of the louder fan bases in recent television. The FX series follows Carmy Berzatto’s chaotic attempt to run a Chicago restaurant. He inherited it from his late brother. The show is known for relentless pacing and a genuinely stacked ensemble. Episodes feel like surviving a dinner rush. Curtis stepped into that world and became one of its most memorable parts fast.
Donna, the character she plays, shows up at some of the most emotionally loaded moments of the series. She’s messy and magnetic. She’s the kind of TV character people can’t stop arguing about.
That kind of character attachment doesn’t hurt. It makes the charitable ask easier to land.
Charity drives tied to hit shows can work or they can fizzle. This one has a straightforward structure. An actress people know, a show with devoted viewers, and a children’s hospital. Hard to argue with that combination. Curtis made the ask as simply as possible. That’s usually what gets results.
This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider
