The filmmaker has been able to relive some of the magic of her youth through her latest project, co-produced by her husband and partner in film, Ashley Pugh.
Downs has already filmed a range of interviews with the “Grease” cast, including Jamie Donnelly (Jan) and Lorenzo Lamas (Tom). She also spent a day with members of the greaser gang—Michael Tucci (Sonny), Barry Pearl (Doody), and Kelly Ward (Putzie)—taking them back to where it all started: Rydell High.
“The core of the success is the camaraderie—a blessing and an honor that will live with me for the rest of my days,” Pearl shares in the trailer while recalling his time making the film.
Downs said being able to join the T-Birds at Venice High School in Los Angeles, where several scenes of the fictional campus were filmed, was a memorable moment.
“To not only be at Rydell, but to be there with such icons and just see how they interacted with each other—back on the bleachers, in the cafeteria where ‘Summer Nights’ was filmed. They have such a love for each other and affinity for the film, it was so special to witness,” she said.
“I really do think part of the reason ‘Grease’ is so successful now is you can just see the absolute love all the cast have for each other. They are a family, and when you meet them, they make you feel like family too.”

“Grease,” which is based on the early 1970s stage musical of the same name, premiered in theaters on June 16, 1978, breaking box office records and cementing itself as a pop culture phenomenon.
Set in the 1950s, the coming-of-age film centered on the adventures of a group of high schoolers, including teenagers Danny Zuko and Sandy Olsson, played by John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John, respectively.
Downs intends to honor Newton-John, who died in 2022 at 73, in “Life After Grease,” which is also being used to raise funds for her charity, the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Wellness & Research Center.
“That was really important to me from the beginning,” Downs said. “Everything we can do to honor her legacy and memory, we will be doing. I would have loved to have met her. She was so special to everyone.”

Downs aims to wrap up filming this year, with hopes of launching the documentary by the end of 2026.
She and her husband are also working on two more “Life After” films, which are currently in production: “Life After Goodfellas” and “Life After the Goonies.”
“This whole journey has been so surreal,” Downs said of filming the series.
“I’m so incredibly grateful that I’ve been in a position to not only meet these iconic people, who were responsible for these films that mean so much to me, but some have become wonderful friends,” she added.
“The child in me continually has to step back to ensure it’s real.”







