Natasha Lyonne was in good spirits as she described her recent plane crash as “pretty bad” and admitted her sobriety journey was “funny”.
“Oh, you mean my flight plan? My performance art piece?” the 47-year-old “Poker Face” alum teased Wednesday when Page Six asked her how she was doing at the 2026 Planned Parenthood of Greater New York Spring Action Celebration.
“It was incredible,” Rion said in a more serious tone, adding, “I’m grateful to have been able to become something like a marathon man.”
Leung noted that he has been able to fly three times since the accident. “Despite everything, I seem to arrive on time and accomplish my goals. But yeah, it’s a strange moment, a strange time.”
Last week, the “Russian Doll” star was escorted off a Delta Airlines red-eye flight from Los Angeles to New York, appearing to be “out and about” after attending the season 3 premiere of “Euphoria.”
Lyon later blamed his actions on sleeping pills. She said she took the drug to get a “bushy tail” and “rest my beauty” because she was scheduled to go straight to a glam session to appear on “The Drew Barrymore Show” right after landing.
The “Orange Is the New Black” alum ignored Page Six’s suggestion that she was a survivor.
“I don’t know if it’s been a wilder ride than anyone else,” she said. “I look down and see my feet, so I know I’m where I’m supposed to be.”
Lyon added that she was “humbled” by the friendship.
“We are all living in difficult times and we are all doing the best we can,” she said.
Lyon, who publicly battled drug and alcohol addiction in the mid-2000s, revealed in January that he had relapsed after 10 years of sobriety.
“At the end of the day, I think those of us who are in recovery are just as sick as our secrets,” she frankly admitted. “I’m not ashamed to be a real person.
“I feel it’s important to tell the truth as much as possible. It’s been an interesting journey.”
But last month she said she was “doing much better” and “bouncing back.”
The former child star attended a gala ceremony honoring Pink for her vocal advocacy of reproductive rights, where she received the Catalyst of Change Award. The event, which also included Helena Christensen, Lily Rabe, Hamish Linklater and Patricia Arquette, raised $1.2 million.
Lyon noted that it seems odd that supporting women’s health institutions “has become almost like a radical position when it’s just about health care,” adding that everyone should care about it “because this affects all of us.”
Planned Parenthood of Greater New York continues to provide health care services and supports to everyone without discrimination based on immigration status.
