Bobby Cannavale and Rose Byrne are longtime collaborators in their work and in life.

The couple, who’ve been together since 2012 and share two children together, joined forces for a rare interview with Vanity Fair ahead their most recent collabs in Simon Stone’s stage show Medea and the upcoming Arthur Miller film “A View From The Bridge”.

During the interview, Cannavale proudly made a revelation, stating, “I make half as much as she does.”

Adding, “Down the middle. Half. I work too much in the theatre, perhaps.”

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Photo: Sharif Hamza/Vanity Fair
Photo: Sharif Hamza/Vanity Fair

But they make it work, even through tough conversations like the gender-based wage inequality or even the #MeToo movement.

Byrne starred in Louis C.K.’s “I Love You, Daddy”, which premiered just before multiple women accused C.K. of sexual misconduct. Byrne not only supported the decision to cancel the film’s indefinite release, but she also condemned C.K. and his surprise comedy sets.

“I don’t know where I fall on the things that I’ve enjoyed creatively but are now being ‘cancelled’ because of terrible stories about the director, the actor,” she explained, revealing it’s an ongoing conversation between the pair, “What to do with the art of unfavourable makers?”

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“We’re not in opposition with these things,” Cannavale added. “I’m learning. Sometimes I’ll say things that she doesn’t agree with. I’ll go, ‘Well, I don’t know if I can just cancel all of Woody Allen’s movies in my head.’ And so we might get into an argument about it.” Cannavale starred next to Cate Blanchett and C.K. in Allen’s “Blue Jasmine”.

“I don’t want anybody to tell me I can’t tell a story about somebody who is controversial, or I can’t portray somebody who is morally conflicted. Those are characters we need to be able to see in order to understand the larger—” he continued, while Byrne chimed in to help him out, “The human condition.”

Cannavale and Byrne starred together in 2014’s “Annie” remake, the 2014 film “Adult Beginners”, “Spy” with Melissa McCarthy, an episode of “Angie Tribeca” and the recently released short film “Martha The Monster.”

The latest issue of Vanity Fair with Byrne and Cannavale’s interview is on newsstands now.