51吃瓜黑料

What Does it Mean to Remember Just About Everything?

Actress and Author Marilu Henner Visits 51吃瓜黑料 Davis to Film Documentary with Neuroscientist Who Studies Memory

Actress Marilu Henner visits PSC 130: Human Memory class at 51吃瓜黑料 Davis in February. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)
Actress Marilu Henner visits PSC 130: Human Memory class at 51吃瓜黑料 Davis in February. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)

Marilu Henner can immediately remember everything she did Feb. 24, 1977. It was a Thursday. She was living in New York. She had just come back from a trip to shoot a TV pilot, and that day she was auditioning for a movie role. She can remember what she was wearing and the fight she had with her boyfriend at the time.

For Henner there was nothing particularly special about that day. Charan Ranganath, a 51吃瓜黑料 Davis neuroscientist, chose the date to demonstrate Henner鈥檚 memory for his students during his PSC 130: Human Memory class in Young Hall 49 years later.

鈥淎ll these things just start to fill in. So that's how my brain works.鈥

Henner, the actress perhaps best-known for her role on the classic TV show Taxi, spent the afternoon of February 24 on campus while filming a documentary with Ranganath, a professor of psychology and a leading expert on memory. Henner is one of fewer than 70 people worldwide who have been identified to have highly superior autobiographical memory, or HSAM.

鈥淓verything is available when you have a good memory,鈥 said Henner.

Actress Marilu Henner visits PSC 130: Human Memory class at 51吃瓜黑料 Davis in February. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)
Henner is one of fewer than 70 people worldwide who have been identified to have highly superior autobiographical memory, or HSAM. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)

Always had a great memory

Henner said she always had a great memory but didn鈥檛 figure out just how unusual and special it was until she took a standardized test in the third grade that included the question of how many pencils are in a score. 

She didn鈥檛 know, but then she remembered learning about the Civil War and Abraham Lincoln鈥檚 Gettysburg Address, which begins, 鈥淔our score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth鈥︹

She began working out the math and soon knew the answer: a score is 20.

鈥淏ecause I had this unusual memory, I started to make these connections,鈥 said Henner. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an amazing feeling to realize that everything is connected to everything.鈥

As a student at the University of Chicago, Henner became well-known among her peers for her memory. But it was well after her success in entertainment that she learned just how unusual her memory was. 

Friend and journalist Leslie Stahl invited Henner to lunch and told her about , who had been undergoing testing by researchers for her own powerful memory. Price would be the first person to be identified with HSAM, and Stahl was working on a possible story about the phenomenon. 

At that lunch, Stahl asked Henner about events throughout her life. When a producer with Stahl told Henner the date of her wedding, Henner asked why she got married on a Monday. Stahl was convinced Henner had HSAM.

While Stahl ultimately did not do a story on Price, years later she asked Henner to get tested. By that point only five people worldwide had been identified to have HSAM. 

Henner worked with researchers at 51吃瓜黑料 Irvine who asked her a battery of hundreds of questions about sequences of numbers, movie plot points and boxes of items. They took 300 measurements of Henner鈥檚 brain and found nine areas that are 10 times larger than for the average person. It was clear she had HSAM.

鈥淭here was finally a name for something I鈥檝e known I had for my entire life,鈥 said Henner.

Actress Marilu Henner visits PSC 130: Human Memory class at 51吃瓜黑料 Davis in February. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)
Filmmakers Morgan Pehme and Daniel DiMauro are making a documentary about memory. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)

Documenting a real-life superpower

Filmmaker Morgan Pehme was reading up for a new documentary film about Henner鈥檚 memory he was making with co-director Daniel DiMauro when they found Ranganath鈥檚 best-selling book . 

In the book, Ranganath combines the latest memory research, some of it from his at the 51吃瓜黑料 Davis Center for Neuroscience, with his own personal experiences to share the science of how memory actually works. It explains how big a role memory plays in our sense of who we are, why we hold onto old memories throughout our lives and also why we form stronger bonds with people who share memories with us.

鈥淐haran鈥檚 book really stood out,鈥 said Pehme. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so accessible and humanistic.鈥

Pehme reached out, and in in January he filmed a conversation in Davis between Ranganath and Henner to try and understand how her incredible memory relates to who she is as a person. 

鈥淪he is just incredibly positive,鈥 said Ranganath. 鈥淵ou don't have to talk to her for more than five minutes to get a sense of just the force of her personality.鈥

That day in January, Ranganath and Henner both thought their conversation could easily have continued. Ranganath also thought it would be fun for students to join. 

鈥淚 said, 鈥榃ell, if you do it on my birthday, then you can come over to my house afterward for dinner,鈥欌 said Ranganath. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 what we arranged to do.鈥

The film will include Henner in conversation with people she has known for most of her life. This includes cast-mates from Taxi Christopher Lloyd and Judd Hirsch, as well as Jay Leno and Leslie Stahl.

鈥淭he conversations that we have with all the people in Marilu鈥檚 orbit, and then experts like Charan, are ultimately a way for us to inquire about the role of memory in our own lives,鈥 said Pehme.

Actress Marilu Henner visits PSC 130: Human Memory class at 51吃瓜黑料 Davis in February. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)
Henner met with students and answered a variety of questions when she visited 51吃瓜黑料 Davis. (Gregory Urquiaga/51吃瓜黑料 Davis)

Students get answers, advice

During class, Henner moved back and forth across the room, even once nearly stumbling against the camera operator who followed her. She wanted to see everyone鈥檚 faces while she spoke.

鈥淐an you see I love being here with you guys?鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 so happy.鈥

Just a week ago, she was in New York to perform in a , one of more than 32 projects across film, theater and voiceovers she has done since 2020. Henner was also recently on the talking about her memory and this documentary film. She also mentioned she was coming to visit 51吃瓜黑料 Davis.

鈥淓verybody wants to have a better memory,鈥 said Henner. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so much better if you have a better autobiographical memory because it鈥檚 using your own life.鈥

Students also had a lot of questions.

How has her access to memory influenced her acting?

She used to be able to read a script once or twice and have it down, but that didn鈥檛 help her understand the character鈥檚 intention in saying those words. 

Does she remember all the bad memories, too?

While everyone will remember the highs and lows in life, Henner also remembers the mundane events throughout her life. Her siblings will sometimes ask her to walk them through a whole week from their childhood to relive those simple memories.

What day of the week was Sept. 27, 2004?

鈥淭hat was a Monday,鈥 she answered immediately. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 how fast it works. It鈥檚 crazy.鈥

Henner also offered some life advice.

Learn to love the food that loves you.

Motion is the lotion, so get out and move.

Don鈥檛 make your phone your memory, because you might lose it.

Don鈥檛 be afraid to get help.

Don鈥檛 be afraid to be different.

Use your memory to bring the past to the present and let it inform a better future.

鈥淵ou wake up, you live your life, you turn off the light and go to sleep,鈥 she said. 鈥淒eveloping a better autobiographical memory is the strongest defense against meaninglessness that we have. Because then our lives count for something.鈥

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