For Russell Brand, meditation puts life in perspective
Russell Brand, how do you stay so happy-go-lucky?
“I meditate often,” he told the Ministry of Gossip on Saturday. “It connects you to a source of energy that’s more powerful than the material world in which we primarily dwell. It helps you relax and unwind.”
That’s something clearly needed by the comic and actor, who has been percolating on a publicity tour for “Rock of Ages,” shooting his FX comedy show “Brand X” and navigating a media firestorm linked to his divorce from Katy Perry, whose new documentary “Part of Me” includes personal footage from their marriage.
Hardly relaxing stuff. On the other hand ...
“If you spend a lot of time meditating, you start to think of the stuff that is happening in your actual life as being secondary. It doesn’t feel so important,” he said before emceeing a David Lynch Foundation fundraiser in honor of manager George Shapiro’s lengthy career and love of transcendental meditation.
From the Beverly Wilshire auditorium stage later that night, Brand entertained high profile guests including Shapiro client Seinfeld, Jay Leno, Gary Shandling and Sarah Silverman (all of whom also performed), plus Shapiro himself, who received the Lifetime of Bliss Award from Lynch.
Proceeds from the fundraiser went to “meditation training” scholarships for impoverished kids and veterans. Brand said the practice saved him from a agonizing, drug-riddled decline -- though onstage he jokingly referred to Lynch’s organization as a “cult.”
Celebrities, meditation-championing, tickets starting at $1,000 a seat -- a Beverly Hills evening, indeed.
RELATED:
Katy Perry, Russell Brand make nice with divorce settlement
Russell Brand arrested for damage done in iPhone snatch-and-hurl
Russell Brand-Katy Perry: It’s a celebrity breakup that makes us go ‘aww’
Follow the Ministry of Gossip on Twitter @LATcelebs.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.