Tag: matt-leblanc

  • ‘Friends’ Actor Matthew Perry Dies

    David Schwimmer and Matthew Perry in HBO Max's 'Friends: The Reunion.'
    (L to R) David Schwimmer and Matthew Perry in HBO Max’s ‘Friends: The Reunion.’ Photography by Terence Patrick.

    Preview

    • Friends’ actor Matthew Perry is dead at 54.
    • His TV and movie also career included ‘The Whole Nine Yards’, ‘Fools Rush In’ and ‘The West Wing’
    • Colleagues and co-stars, including Paget Brewster, paid tribute.

    Matthew Perry, who became hugely famous thanks to his role on iconic TV sitcom ‘Friends’, has died at the age of 54.

    He was reportedly found in a jacuzzi at his home, but the investigation is ongoing. He’ll be remembered primarily for his work on ‘Friends’ but enjoyed a long career on screens big and small.

    Matthew Perry: Early Life and Pre-‘Friends’ career

    Matthew Perry, Matt LeBlanc, David Schwimmer, Courteney Cox, Jennifer Aniston, and Lisa Kudrow in HBO Max's 'Friends: The Reunion.'
    (L to R) Matthew Perry, Matt LeBlanc, David Schwimmer, Courteney Cox, Jennifer Aniston, and Lisa Kudrow in HBO Max’s ‘Friends: The Reunion.’ Photograph by Courtesy of HBO Max.

    Matthew Langford Perry was born in Williamstown, Massachusetts, on August 19th, 1969. He was raised in Ottawa, Canada, where he attended elementary school alongside Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    His mother, Suzanne Morrison, was a journalist and press secretary to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, Justin’s father, while his father, John Bennett Perry, was an actor and model.

    Perry made his television debut in 1979 on an episode of ‘240-Robert’ (which starred his father). After moving to Los Angeles to pursue acting, he would go on to book roles in shows like ‘Not Necessarily the News’, ‘Charles in Charge’, ‘Silver Spoons’, ‘Just the Ten of Us’ and ‘Highway to Heaven’. Perry became a series regular on ‘Boys Will be Boys’, which premiered in 1987 and ran for a single season.

    In 1989 he had a recurring role on ‘Growing Pains’ followed by a series regular role on ‘Sydney’. He’d continue to guest star on shows like ‘Who’s the Boss?’ ‘Beverly Hills, 90210’, and ‘Dream On’.

    In 1993 he was a series regular on ‘Home Free’, but his big break would come the following year.

    Related Article: Richard Roundtree, Best Known for Playing the Lead in ‘Shaft’, Has Died at the Age of 81

    ‘Friends’ and Beyond: Perry’s career takes off

    Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox and Lisa Kudrow in HBO Max's 'Friends: The Reunion.'
    (L to R) Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox and Lisa Kudrow in HBO Max’s ‘Friends: The Reunion.’ Photography by Terence Patrick.

    In 1994, Perry landed the role of the wise-cracking Chandler Bing on the NBC sitcom ‘Friends.’ Along with co-stars David Schwimmer, Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow and Matt LeBlanc he became a household name.

    Across 10 seasons, ‘Friends’ was the most successful comedy series of the ‘90s, earning different generations of fans during its run and in more recent times since younger audiences have discovered it via Netflix.

    Perry, along with his colleagues, would end up earning a huge $1 million fee per episode.

    And though he never reached the heights of, say, his co-star Aniston in terms of movie fame, he appeared on a variety of shows and films following his time on the series.

    His post-friends TV work included appearances on ‘The West Wing’, ‘Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip’ and ‘Mr. Sunshine’, a sitcom he co-created that lasted for nine episodes. A reboot of ‘The Odd Couple’ fared better, lasting three seasons.

    Which movies has Matthew Perry appeared in?

    Matthew Perry stars in '17 Again.'
    Matthew Perry stars in ’17 Again.’

    Though it was not the focus of his career, Matthew Perry appeared in movies both before, during and after his stint on ‘Friends’.

    Early work included ‘A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon’, ‘She’s Out of Control’, ‘Fat Man and Little Boy’, ‘Fools Rush In’, and ‘Almost Heroes.’

    Other movies include ‘The Whole Nine Yards’, ‘Serving Sara’, ‘The Whole Ten Yards’, ‘Birds of America’ and ‘17 Again’.

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    Matthew Perry: tributes arrive

    Matt LeBlanc, Jennifer Aniston, Matthew Perry, Courteney Cox, David Schwimmer and Lisa Kudrow in HBO Max's 'Friends: The Reunion.'
    (L to R) Matt LeBlanc, Jennifer Aniston, Matthew Perry, Courteney Cox, David Schwimmer and Lisa Kudrow in HBO Max’s ‘Friends: The Reunion.’ Photography by Terence Patrick.

    Warner Bros. TV, the production company behind friends, issued a statement on his death:

    “We are devastated by the passing of our dear friend Matthew Perry. Matthew was an incredibly gifted actor and an indelible part of the Warner Bros. Television Group family. The impact of his comedic genius was felt around the world, and his legacy will live on in the hearts of so many. This is a heartbreaking day, and we send our love to his family, his loved ones, and all of his devoted fans.”

    Paget Brewster, who appeared on ‘Friends’ hit Twitter to offer her own tribute:

    Matthew Perry: life struggles

    Perry was open about his battles with addiction to both alcohol and pills and spent a considerable amount of time and money getting sober. He ended up founding Perry House, a men’s sober living facility, in his old Malibu beach home. “I really lived life to its fullest and that got me in trouble from time to time,” he said in a US Weekly interview several years ago.

    Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matthew Perry, Lisa Kudrow, David Schwimmer and Matt LeBlanc in HBO Max's 'Friends: The Reunion.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matthew Perry, Lisa Kudrow, David Schwimmer and Matt LeBlanc in HBO Max’s ‘Friends: The Reunion.’ Photography by Terence Patrick.

    Matthew Perry Movies:

    Buy Matthew Perry Movies On Amazon

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  • Matt LeBlanc Shared Cute Stories About the ‘Friends’ Monkey

    Matt LeBlanc Shared Cute Stories About the ‘Friends’ Monkey

    Jimmy Kimmel Live still
    Jimmy Kimmel Live/YouTube

    The six stars of “Friends” live large in TV fans’ hearts and memories and so, too, does Marcel the Monkey.

    Matt LeBlanc recently appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” to promote his sitcom “Man With a Plan,” and the subject of “Friends” came up. At that point, Kimmel couldn’t help but ask about the show’s little primate, giving LeBlanc (Joey) the chance to share some cute stories about Marcel (whose real name is Katie).

    After joking about trying to buy Katie, LeBlanc spilled that David Schwimmer (Ross) wasn’t such a big fan of working with the monkey.

    “I like animals. Yeah, the monkey was really cool,” LeBlanc said. “Schwimmer not so much. …  He’s the one that had to work with it the most, so he was like, ‘Again with the monkey?’”

    LeBlanc continued to reminisce about working with Katie, telling a story about a time she misbehaved on set. Watch below. The conversation turns to “Friends” at 2:07 and to the monkey at 3:09.

    “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET/PT on ABC.

  • 7 Times Joey From ‘Friends’ Proved That He Just Gets Us

    7 Times Joey From ‘Friends’ Proved That He Just Gets Us

    Joey Tribbiani (Matt LeBlanc) is the “Friends” character that just keeps on giving.

    Sure, we all want to be Chandler — and no one wants to be Ross — but we also know that deep down inside, we are 100 percent Joey Tribbiani.

    These are the seven times he made us scream ” SAME!”

    1. He knows that being an adult means having fun!

    2. He can’t learn a new language, but still tries.

    3. If it’s in a bowl, he’ll eat it.

    4. His patience when candy is around is -10.

    5. He has no shame. Just, none.

    6. He accepts himself for who he is and doesn’t care who knows it!

    7. He doesn’t have time for people who don’t like pizza.

  • CBS Pulls ‘Me, Myself & I’ From Schedule, Brings Back ‘Man With a Plan’ Early

    Sorry, Bobby Moynihan. But congrats, Matt LeBlanc.

    CBS keeps reshuffling its Monday lineup, and the latest change is to pull the new Bobby Moynihan and John Larroquette comedy “Me, Myself & I” from the schedule.

    This is not, however, a cancellation (yet) since the show is still in production to fulfill its initial 13 episode order, and CBS said it will return to the schedule at a later date. But it’s not performing well in the ratings, so they’re moving up the premiere of LeBlanc’s “Man With a Plan” Season 2 to Monday, November 13 instead of midseason 2018.

    That’s a nice show of confidence, and it’s surely based on the “Friends” alum’s show being the second-highest-rated new comedy of last year behind “Kevin Can Wait.”

    Before “Man With a Plan” moves in, a “Big Bang Theory” encore will air on Monday, November 6. That day will also see new comedy “9JKL” move to 9:30 p.m.

    Here’s the new Monday schedule, as of Monday, Nov. 13:

    • 8 p.m. “Kevin Can Wait”
    • 8:30 p.m. “Man With a Plan”
    • 9 p.m. “Superior Donuts”
    • 9:30 p.m. “9JKL”
    • 10 p.m. “Scorpion”

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  • Why Matt LeBlanc Turned Down Playing Phil on ‘Modern Family’

    “Friends” alum “Modern Family” — and from here it definitely seems like the right call.

    LeBlanc just revealed to USA Today that he was offered the lead in ABC’s hit comedy in 2009, during a break in his career after the flop of the “Friends” spinoff “Joey”:

    “I remember reading it thinking, this is a really good script, (but) I’m not the guy for this. I’d be doing the project an injustice to take this. I know what I can do, I know what I can’t do. Plus, I’m having too much fun laying on the couch.”

    2017 PaleyLive LA Summer Season - Premiere Screening And Conversation For Showtime's 'Episodes' - InsideAccording to the USA Today article, LeBlanc not only thought the role of Phil was a bad fit for him, he figured it was written with someone else in mind. And it was, since the producers really wanted to cast Ty Burrell, but the ABC Powers That Be were initially hesitant, probably hoping for a bigger name like LeBlanc. Now it’s hard to imagine anyone by Ty Burrell in that role, for which he’s won two Emmys (so far).

    “Modern Family” will launch its ninth season on September 27. Meanwhile, the final season of LeBlanc’s Showtime comedy “Episodes” just premiered on August 20.

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  • Matt LeBlanc Reveals ‘Friends’ Scene That Led to ‘Exploded’ Shoulder

    ENTERTAINMENT-US-TELEVISION-CBS-TCAThere’s nothing like one of the stars of “Friends” taking us on a walk down memory lane.

    Fans got just that when Matt LeBlanc sat down this week with Jimmy Kimmel. The actor shared a number of gems — including the fact that he’s been asked if he’s “Joey’s dad” — but the best one was the story of how he dislocated his shoulder while shooting “The One Where No One’s Ready.” Painful as the experience sounds, it made for quite the funny story, especially as LeBlanc told it.

    The injury happened in what should have been a simple scene: LeBlanc, in character as Joey, was trying to jump into a chair before Chandler (Matthew Perry) could. Unfortunately, as he was in mid-air, he realized he was going to land on his head and had to put out an arm to break his fall. The awkward landing “just exploded [his] shoulder,” causing a nasty dislocation.

    LeBlanc managed to get backstage, but he became extremely confused when he saw “ER” star Anthony Edwards there. The actor had come over from the neighboring set, but his presence made LeBlanc confused. He told Kimmel he knew Edwards wasn’t a real doctor, but apparently it was still jarring to see him there after a serious injury.

    Watch more of the hilarious interview below.

    “Jimmy Kimmel Live” airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET/PT on ABC.

  • Yvette Nicole Brown: Super Star and Super Fan

    Variety's Celebratory Brunch Event For Awards Nominees Benefitting Motion Picture Television Fund - ArrivalsYvette Nicole Brown may be living her best life. All she just needs is some more quality time with Oprah.

    For the self-admitted super-enthusiast of all things entertainment, Brown’s got just about all her bases covered: she’s a prominent network TV actress (see the insta-classic sitcom “Community” and the current incarnation of “The Odd Couple”); she’s turned her addiction to “The Walking Dead” into regular guest spots on the aftershow “Talking Dead”; she put her red carpet reporter hat on to host the Hollywood Foreign Press Association official live stream of the SuperMansion” to her flourishing voice actress career — which includes stints as Beyoncé on “Bojack Horseman” and Amanda Waller on “DC’s Super Hero Girls.”

    She’s the ultimate fusion of star and fan, as she reveals in a wide-ranging conversation with Moviefone that includes her thoughts on her ongoing projects, her take on the current season of “TWD,” her outspoken Twitter account, the long-apparent genius of Donald Glover, her lifelong love for the late Garry Marshall, and why she needs a real sit-down with the Queen of All Media.

    Moviefone: When the Stoopid Monkey guys called you for “SuperMansion,” were you already a fan, or did you have to check it out?

    Yvette Nicole Brown: I was already a fan. I love stop-motion animation, so they had me with that. You add in Bryan Cranston and Keegan-Michael Key, I’m sold. I got a call about an audition. I think people think there’s some glamorous world where people just get calls going, “We need you on set tomorrow, darling!” No, it’s, “Would you like to audition for ‘SuperMansion’?” “Yes I would.” So I auditioned twice, and I got the nod.

    What did you want to bring to it? Once you got a sense of the role, and you knew the show already, what did you want to bring your contribution?

    I wanted her to be wacky, unpredictable, and fun. Every time Portia came to the scene, or Zenith came to the scene, I wanted them to know that it was going to be crazy fun. I hope that’s what I brought.

    Did you have to think, “Do I do it mostly in my own voice? Or do I put on a weird cartoon voice?”

    I think I was thinking “talk show host,” and she has to have gravitas, and she has to have an Oprah way of speaking. And I did her kind of like in reference to Oprah at first, and then the more we recorded, we realized how crazy she is. So we needed to take Oprah to, like, crazy town. So then it got kind of morphed into more of a mixture of Oprah sensibilities and wanting to help people, but then just a wacky black woman

    Have you met Oprah?

    I have met Oprah, but I haven’t met Oprah. I’ve had the, “Hi, I’m Yvette, I love you” moment, but I want to have a sister-girl sit-down, fry-some-chicken, talk-about-life moment, and I hope one day I achieve enough where I can get that invitation.

    One of the things I love about you is that you are a fan as much as you are a pro.

    I am a fan more than I’m a pro.

    Tell me what’s happening inside your head in a case like this, as in some of the other things you do where you’re living out the fan dream, when you get to show up thinking “I’d pay you guys to be here.”

    I actually hosted the Golden Globes red carpet for the Hollywood Foreign Press and Twitter and I had a moment where it was like, “I need to cut somebody a check. This right here …” Or refuse the check they give me, because this is my childhood dream come true.

    I’m interviewing Mel Gibson and Vince Vaughn and Tracee Ellis Ross and Octavia Spencer and Donald Glover. To get to talk to a couple of my friends, hours before they got their first Golden Globe, and to know that that moment of anticipation and excitement is saved forever, and me getting my chance to wish them well publicly is saved forever, there is nothing greater.

    Let’s talk about one of those friends, Donald Glover, for a second. You knew he was talented. You knew he was multi-talented, but what’s been happening lately …

    Listen, if you Google me talking about Donald Glover as far back as 2009 or ’10, I have said this from the beginning: I have never met anyone more talented in every creative endeavor than Donald Glover. He can dance, he can sing, he can draw, he can bake, he can write, he can rap. When we were there first season, and he brought in sweet potato pies, little mini pies that he had made himself? “The baby bakes? Looks like the baby bakes, too.”

    There’s nothing that he can’t do, and also, he’s very efficient with time. When they yelled cut on “Community,” I went to the craft services table, as anybody who watched me balloon on that show will know. When they yelled cut on “Community,” Donald went and sat in front of his computer and wrote a song, or went and sat in front of his computer and wrote a script, or did a treatment. No time is wasted. I don’t know if he sleeps now, there was a moment in time where Donald wasn’t sleeping. He was like, “I’ve got too much. I’ve got to get it out.” So he’s the truth.

    And the thing that I always say about him, too — and I know I gush about him a lot publicly, but I’m so proud of him — he’s also a good man. There’s a lot of people that get a pass for bad behavior because they’re talented, and this industry rewards bad behavior, and you see people that are horrible just continue to get opportunity after opportunity. Donald deserves every opportunity he gets because he’s still a decent human being.

    I don’t think being Lando Calrissian is going to change him. I don’t think being a Golden Globe-winning show creator and actor is going to change him. I think he’s a good egg and will remain a good egg until the Lord calls him.

    Tell me about being an actress, and being Yvette on camera, too. You’re straddling both worlds now. What’s cool about that for you?

    You know what’s cool about it is I always think of acting as an offering. I don’t use it to take; I use it to give. I feel like there’s a lot going on in the world, and if I can be a part of something that makes people forget something at their job, or something in politics or whatever, for 30 minutes, what a gift that is. So I look at acting as an opportunity to say, “What can I give to people today?”

    I think of my Twitter page the same way. The hosting and the “Talking Dead” is me taking. It’s me as little Yvette from east Cleveland being around people whose work energizes me. It’s me getting to talk about television shows that I absolutely love. So it’s very evenly measured. I give and I take, and I hope that I give in the same measure that I take so that the scale stays balanced.

    You, of course, are a well-known “Walking Dead” superfan. Do you think they’ll ever let you on the show to act? Or is it too meta?

    It probably is too meta! I think I could probably be a walker. I’ve talked to Greg Nicotero and Scott Gimple about being a walker. My only thing is, I’ve done prosthetic work before on “Percy Jackson,” and it’s very long hours, and they shoot in the summer in Atlanta, and I’m a girl that likes comfort! So I joke and say, “If they ever want to do a flashback to before the zombie apocalypse in an air conditioned room, I am the girl to call.” But as long as they’re in the woods with soot and dirt on their faces in the summer time, I’m going to have to pass.

    Super polarizing season this year.

    It is!

    What side of the pole are you on?

    I have always been someone that affords a creator the opportunity to create the show that they want to make. I respect Robert Kirkman, I respect Dave Alpert, I respect Scott Gimple, Gale Anne Hurd, Greg Nicotero. They are telling their story, and I as a fan do not have a right to dictate the ride they take me on. I can get out of the car, but I don’t get to ride in someone’s passenger seat or back seat and dictate where they’re taking me. That’s just rude.

    So I thought that the first episode was brutal, but I felt that in order to pay homage to the comic book, it had to be. I feel like those of us that have watched the show from the very beginning, we’ve seen entrails out of people, we’ve seen bloated walkers in wells, we’ve seen people literally ripped to shreds. The reason that episode, the first episode, destroyed as much as it did, was because it was someone that we had been with from the very beginning, and it happened to him.

    But we’ve seen violence equal to, or at times worse, than what we saw in that episode. So I’m not going to tap out because a show about zombies is violent. And I also am not going to tap out before I see the person that caused the violence get their comeuppance. I believe the second half of this season is going to be amazing. I believe that my group is going to find themselves again and come together, and fight back this evil as they always do, and I’m going to be on my couch watching it when it happens.

    At the Globes, Meryl Streep made a sensation, and you yourself have been outspoken on Twitter about politics. I find it ironic that Donald Trump is someone who used his celebrity platform to actually end up in the highest office of the United States of America, and yet actors shouldn’t say anything?

    Isn’t that interesting? Doesn’t the irony just wash over you like an acid bath? That’s what someone said on Twitter. I thought that was a perfect way to say it. I’ve never felt that your vocation prevents you from being American. I never thought that your vocation or your profession prevents you from speaking up about things that grieve your spirit.

    I believe that you are given a platform to use responsibly. I try to do everything in my life with love, with kindness, and with care. When the nation is confronted with someone who mocks disabled people, who assaults women, who vilifies religion — certain religions — and vilifies certain races and ethnic groups, who tears down the family of a soldier who has passed away, who’s called women pigs, and dogs. As a black woman, a double minority, who would I be if I did not speak out against that evil?

    And I don’t care what office he’s in. He’s not the best of America. I’m not saying he can’t be better. It is my sincere prayer that he will get better. But I’m saying what I’ve seen right now, as long as it stays like this, as long as I’ve got air in my breath and Twitter followers, I don’t care if it’s five of us by the time I’m done, I will continue to speak about the things that are not the best of us.

    As a celebrity that’s very wired into social media, you’re a bigger target than me when people disagree with you. How do you handle that?

    Most of them are ignorant — and I didn’t say “dumb,” I said “ignorant.” They don’t know, and a lot of them don’t know that they don’t know. That’s not saying they can’t open up a book, Google a reputable news source and find out, they just don’t know. So the first thing I try to see is, is this someone that is reachable? Because if they’re reachable and they just don’t know, then I’m going to try to share what I can to pull them back from the brink.

    But you’ve got someone in power working against that by calling news fake, and vilifying journalists, and saying that anything that is said that doesn’t come from this source is not true. I knew something was wrong when he told his followers not to watch the DNC. So I watched the RNC. I watched every minute of it. I’ve watched every debate from all of the parties. I am fully aware of every single person that ran. I watched everything. That’s how you make a decision.

    So if all you hear is one side of a story, and you have someone saying, “My side is the truth, but that person is lying,” how will you know? My heart broke when he did what he did to that CNN reporter. My heart broke. Because this is a man that has the most power in the world telling the people that are going to keep him in check “You don’t matter. Your questions don’t matter, and what you put out is not real. Because you’re saying things about me that I don’t like.”

    If he was a decent man, and he heard that a foreign power had intruded in our electoral process, and he cared about this country, he would say, “Stop everything. Let’s redo all of this. Because I don’t want it if I didn’t earn it, and I definitely don’t want it if somebody wants me because it benefits them, and that person is possibly a war criminal.”

    You guys don’t know yet about the future of “The Odd Couple”?

    We don’t. No idea. No, we have no idea. We literally will find out in May, and they have us until June. And listen, we did the best we could, CBS did the best they could, Nielsen numbers count. That’s why I’ve been begging to everyone, I’m like, “Guys just watch these last three. If you’ve never seen the show, please tune in.”

    They put us behind Matt LeBlanc‘s show and we held on 100% to his — and he was a rerun, and we held on to all of it. That’s the first time this season we’ve held on to 100% of our lead-in. I think Matt into Matthew [Perry] would have been a really great opportunity for our show. I don’t know why it never happened.

    Did you get to have many encounters with Garry Marshall before we lost him last year?

    I did. There’s actually a video of me talking to [TV Line’s] Michael Ausiello where I cried like a baby through the whole interview about Garry. He was simply the best that there was. The only person I can think of that even comes close to his level of caring for other people is Henry Winkler. The two of them are cut from the same cloth.

    This, in my opinion, perfectly encapsulates who Garry Marshall was: he said, “It’s nice to be important, but it’s more important to be nice.” And he lived that. I don’t care if you were a street sweeper, or President of the United States. Garry treated you exactly the same and it was with love and kindness. And if you were rotten, he let you know you were rotten, and you didn’t have to be that way. You could do better, because we don’t do that here. And he created sets with lovely, wonderful people for that reason.

    I felt his loss stronger in certain instances than some family members that I lost, because there’s not a time in my life where he wasn’t a part of it. I love entertainment, so at every point in my life, there’s a Garry Marshall moment, a Garry Marshall memory. Then to get to work with him, and he was lovely, funny, and an encyclopedia of sitcom info.

    When he did the episode he did with us, getting to act with him was amazing because he’s got little tidbits: “When you cross, you make sure you ring the doorbell, then knock on the door — it’s funnier.” And sure enough, if you rang the doorbell and then knocked, the crowd went “Yaaah!” It’s like he understood the math of how a joke hit someone in the funny bone.

  • Matt LeBlanc Wants to Catch Up on ‘Game of Thrones’ to See Emilia Clarke Naked

    There are many good reasons to watch “Game of Thrones” — which was nominated for 23 Emmys at the 68th annual Emmy Awards — and, you know, nudity might be one of them. If you’re Matt LeBlanc, anyway.

    If you’re really up on things, you may recall seeing the “Friends” alum and GoT star Emilia Clarke on the U.K.’s “The Graham Norton Show,” where Emilia revealed she’s a big “Friends” fan and was thrilled to meet “Joey” in person.
    68th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards - ArrivalsWell, fast-forward to the 2016 E! Emmys red carpet, and both the GoT star and the “Friends” alum were interviewed, separately, at the same time. It was clear Emilia was a “Friends” fan, so Matt was asked if he’s a “Game of Thrones” fan. He said he stopped watching after Season 1, then Emilia’s character, Daenerys Targaryen, “got naked,” he now he feels like has to catch up. Ahem!


    When the camera cut back to Emilia, she seemed skeptical that Matt had even seen Season 1 (since she was naked right out of the gate and in the finale, which you’d think he’d know). Either way, it sounds like this is a true mutual admiration society … if perhaps for different reasons.

    But speaking of “Friends,” again, that sounds like the kind of show Emilia would like to do next, after “Game of Thrones” ends in Season 8. She said “doing comedy — more of that would be wonderful.”

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  • Famous TV Shows That Launched Stars’ Careers

    Freaks and GeeksEvery famous actor has one performance that served as a breakout role, and for many, that role was in a television series. Inviting the actors into your home on a daily or weekly basis is one of the most magical things about television. So you feel invested in those moments you see a star being born. From low-rated shows that only ran a season to ratings behemoths that remained popular for more than a decade, these series launched the careers of some beloved stars.

    ‘Friends’ (1994 – 2004)

    It’s easy to forget that the cast of “Friends” were all unknowns at the start. Family Ties,” and a handful of movie roles. Jennifer Aniston, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, and David Schwimmer were all working actors but none had yet found a project that took off. Everything changed when the six of them sat on that orange velvet couch at Central Perk, drinking oversized lattes. Despite some spectacularly awful 1990s fashion and those distinctive haircuts, “Friends” doesn’t feel dated and remains one of the classic sitcoms of all time. The cast has not stopped working since the show went off the air, proving they will always be there for us.

    ‘My So-Called Life’ (1994 – 1995)

    Critically beloved and tragically canceled after one season, “My So-Called Life” launched the careers of Homeland,” while Leto, among other achievements, won every Supporting Acting award possible for his work in “Dallas Buyers Club.”

    ‘Freaks and Geeks’ (1999 – 2000)

    Cult classic “Freaks and Geeks” was a veritable talent farm, launching the careers of Linda Cardellini, John Francis Daley, Seth Rogen, James Franco, Jason Segel, and Busy Phillips. It was also created by Paul Feig (“Bridesmaids“) and executive produced by a little-known guy named Judd Apatow. So how exactly did this dramedy last for a mere 15 episodes on NBC? That’s one of television’s most enduring mysteries.

    ‘ER’ (1994 – 2009)

    Best known for stints on “The Facts of Life” and “Roseanne,” ER.” It’s a perfect example of the right actor being cast in the right role at the right time. Clooney brought an immense amount of charm to the role, and Doug became the quintessential bad boy with a heart of gold. His chemistry with co-star Julianna Margulies was electric, making Doug and Carol Hathaway one of the iconic TV couples of the ’90s. And don’t forget — he brought the Caesar haircut back. Clooney left “ER” in 1999 to pursue movies, but returned as a guest star several times, proving that he never forgot where he came from.

    Lest you think Clooney and Margulies were the only stars to emerge from County General, don’t forget that Noah Wyle, Ming-Na, Alex Kingston, and Maura Tierney all had breakout roles on “ER” as well, making it a destination show for dramatic talent in the ’90s.

    ‘Dawson’s Creek’ (1998 – 2003)

    Dawson’s Creek.” Holmes even famously delayed her audition so she could star as Lola in her high school’s production of “Damn Yankees.” While the entire cast delivers fantastic performances, the one to watch is future three-time Oscar nominee Williams. Her portrayal of the troubled Jen Lindley displays a maturity well beyond her 15 years.

    Sources

     

  • Matt LeBlanc and Matthew Perry Had a Mini ‘Friends’ Reunion in London, Baby!

    Cast of FriendsMatt LeBlanc and Matthew Perry held a mini “Friends” reunion in London over the weekend, making us happier than Joey Tribbiani exploring the world capital with with a giant, pop-up map.

    LeBlanc, who’s been in the UK a lot recently filming the rebooted version of BBC car series “Top Gear,” took in some theater on Sunday, catching Perry in the play “The End of Longing,” which is currently running in London’s famed West End theater district. (And is the reason why Perry couldn’t make it to NBC’s James Burrows tribute, at which the rest of the “Friends” gang reunited to reminisce about working with the famed director.) The two caught up after the show and posed for a photo, which LeBlanc shared on Instagram, star raving that “[Perry] and the cast were great.”

    Went to see The End If Longing last night and ran into this dude. He and the cast were great. Way to go bro.

    A photo posted by Matt LeBlanc (@mleblanc) on


    Of course, “Friends” fans know that LeBlanc and Perry have already hung out in London before: during the epic two-part season four finale in which Ross got hitched in the city, and his pals came along for some fun (and some shenanigans — “I take thee, Rachel,” anyone?). The episode featured Joey and Chandler squabbling over Joey’s overly-enthusiastic approach to being a tourist, leading Chandler to bail on his buddy — and miss out on a big celebrity sighting.

    There’s no word on whether or not LeBlanc later ran into a former royal and rubbed it in Perry’s face, though we can only hope something along those lines occurred. London, baby!

    [via: Matt LeBlanc]

    Photo credit: Getty Images

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