Goldie Hawn took a nostalgic look back at the moment she realized daughter Kate Hudson was destined for the bright lights of Hollywood.
On Tuesday, Jan. 13, Hawn moderated a Q&A for Hudson's latest performance in Song Sung Blue, which recently landed her a Golden Globes nomination for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Musical or Comedy.
During the event, Hawn, 80, noted that the 46-year-old has "obviously come from two people who make movies," revealing she knew her daughter would follow in their footsteps from her "first picture" as a toddler.
"You were on your tricycle, and you were 3 years old, and you were like this," Hawn recalled while striking a wild "look at me!" pose.
"That was it. I mean, and that's when I knew you're also a performer," The First Wives Club actress added.
For Hawn, whose career spans decades of acclaimed film work, recognizing that spark in her daughter was less about ambition and more about authenticity.
Watching Hudson grow into that early promise, she noted, was rooted not only in talent but in commitment and truthfulness to the craft.
"It's really quite something to witness your child show such extraordinary ability. It's definitely talent, but it's also integrity. Integrity in your work," Hawn shared during the post-screening panel at AMC The Grove 14 in Los Angeles. "I didn't detect one lie in your work. You were so immersed."
Hudson, who made her big-screen debut in 1998's Desert Blue at 19, was quick to credit her mother for shaping her success.
"I mean, you're the one who instilled this in me," she said, before walking through how Hawn insisted on structure and discipline from the very beginning.
"I think from the outside looking in, it sort of feels like maybe if you grow up with parents like you and Pa, that it's sort of like, 'Oh, it's just an easy thing,'" the Almost Famous star explained. "But you're actually the opposite parents. It was like, 'This is a craft. You take this seriously.' You've said that to me from a very early age."
Even when Hudson was admittedly getting "a little boy crazy" in her teenage years or feeling lazy, Hawn kept her on track.
Throughout her childhood, Hudson noted that she was consistently enrolled in theater programs, acting classes, piano lessons, and dance, with Hawn ensuring that training and movement remained a central part of her routine.
"That discipline, even when I didn't want to be doing it, becomes the thing as you get older and you realize that you really love it; it's like you never take it for granted," Hudson emphasized.
"You never take the fact that...the privilege of having a mother who was like, 'Go, but you have to do these things and you have to take this seriously because it's a real art.' That is how I grew up."