Characters of Friends

The American television sitcom Friends featured six main cast members throughout its run, with numerous characters recurring throughout the ten seasons. The main cast members were familiar to television viewers before their roles on Friends, but were not considered to be stars.[1][2] Series creator David Crane wanted all six characters to be equally prominent,[3] and the series was lauded as being "the first true 'ensemble' show".[4] The cast members made efforts to keep the ensemble format and not allow one member to dominate;[4] they entered themselves in the same acting categories for awards,[5] opted for collective instead of individual salary negotiations,[4] and asked to appear together on magazine cover photos in the first season.[6] The cast members became best friends off screen,[7] and one guest star, Tom Selleck, reported sometimes feeling left out.[8] The cast remained good friends after the series' run, most notably Cox and Aniston, with Aniston being godmother to Cox and David Arquette's daughter, Coco.[9] In the official farewell commemorative book Friends 'Til The End, each separately acknowledged in his/her interview that the cast had become his/her family.[10]

In their original contracts for season one, each cast member was paid $22,500 per episode.[11] The cast members received different salaries in the second season, beginning from the $20,000 range to $40,000 per episode.[11][12] Prior to their salary negotiations for the third season, the cast decided to enter collective negotiations, despite Warner Bros. preference for individual deals.[13] The actors were given the salary of the least paid cast member, meaning Aniston and Schwimmer had their salaries reduced. The stars were paid, per episode, $75,000 in the third season, $85,000 in the fourth, $100,000 in the fifth, and $125,000 in the sixth season.[14] The cast members received salaries of $750,000 per episode in the seventh and eight seasons, and $1 million per episode in the ninth and tenth.[15] The cast also received syndication royalties beginning with the fifth season.[12]

Contents

Main characters

All six main characters had prior experience in situation comedy, and, in some cases, improvisational comedy as well.

Recurring characters, notable characters, and celebrity-played characters

Each of the following characters of Friends was particularly significant to the story of the series, was played by a celebrity, and/or appeared in multiple episodes.

Introduced in season one

Pickles was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her appearance in "The One Where Nana Dies Twice".[e 1] The Seattle Times ranked Jack and Judy jointly as the second best guest character of the series in 2004.[25]
Carol and Susan were based on creators Marta Kauffman and David Crane's best friends in New York: "We didn't create them for any particular political reason or because of lesbian chic. It was just an opportunity to tell a really interesting story."[26] The characters were called a positive example of a gay couple on television by GLAAD. Jessica Hecht originally auditioned to play Monica.[27]
James Michael Tyler was cast as Gunther because he was the only extra who could competently work the coffee machine on the Central Perk set. Tyler appears as Gunther in a co-host voice-over in the Friends trivia game for PS2, PC and Xbox, and in the board game Friends: Scene It?. The Seattle Times ranked Gunther as the eighth best guest character of the series in 2004.[25] When asked in 2009 by Heatworld.com what Gunther would be doing "now", Tyler joked, "He'd probably have a very traditional marriage, with lots of white-haired babies running around with hair brighter than the sun."[28]
Janice speaks with a nasal New York accent and emphasizes each word of her catchphrase, "Ohhh — myyy — God!" Janice's distinctive laugh was borne out of a slip-up Wheeler made during the rehearsal of "The One with the East German Laundry Detergent";[e 19] after Chandler and Janice's "More latté?"/"No, I'm still working on mine" lines, Wheeler laughed.[29] The Seattle Times ranked Janice as the best guest character of the series in 2004.[25]
In 2003, Azaria was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series for his performance.

Introduced in season two

When Gable auditioned for the role, she played Estelle quite plainly and was encouraged to "go away and do something with her". She returned to the audition room wearing a "fat suit" and eating a sandwich from a delicatessen, which she stubbed out a cigarette on. The performance was used in the deleted scene of "The One with the Butt".[e 58] Her age is never given but Gable believed that she was in her 80s.[30] In 2004, The Seattle Times ranked Estelle as the sixth best guest character of the series.[25] Gable also plays the nurse who delivers Ben in "The One with the Birth".
All of Selleck's entrances in Season 2 had to be refilmed after the audience left because "it was like The Beatles with the screaming and the applause".[31] For his appearance in "The One with the Proposal",[e 65] Selleck was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series. In 2004, The Seattle Times ranked Richard as the third best guest character of the series.[25]
For her appearance in "The One with the Lesbian Wedding", Thomas was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series.
Adam Goldberg later appeared in the second season of Joey as a different character.
Previously, Ribisi appeared in "The One with the Baby on the Bus" as a stranger who leaves a condom rather than money in Phoebe's guitar case when she is singing in the street, and then comes back to retrieve it. It was never addressed if this was intended to be the same character as Frank, who had not yet been introduced by name. [e 35]
In 2004, The Seattle Times ranked Frank as the fourth best guest character of the series.[25] Alice was only scheduled to appear in the one episode but was brought back for a recurring role after the surrogacy storyline—which was created when Lisa Kudrow became pregnant in real life.[32]

Introduced in season three

The character of Pete was conceived as "a Bill Gates billionaire genius scientist-type" whom Monica was not attracted to. The producers and casting director had difficulty finding an actor to play Pete as they wanted, "someone who was appealing enough that we liked him, so we could root for him, but on the other hand, wasn't so drop-dead male model gorgeous that we would go, 'What's your problem?' to Monica when she didn't fall for him."[33]
Chandler briefly names the chick "Yasmine", after Baywatch actress Yasmine Bleeth (the chick later, however, turns out to be a rooster, not a hen); and in "The One With Ross's Thing", Chandler refers to the possible offspring of the duck and the chick as "Dick" (Joey refers to it as Chuck). By Season 6 the animals disappeared; the duck was mentioned but not seen in Season 7. In the final episode of the series,[e 10] Joey bought Chandler a new duckling and chick as a housewarming gift—which Joey names "Duck Jr." and "Chick Jr."—and it is revealed that the birds died a while ago, and Chandler, not wanting Joey to be upset about it, told him that they had gone to live on a farm, where visitors were not allowed. The birds do not appear on the Friends spinoff Joey.

Introduced in season four

When Paget Brewster arrived for her audition, she believed she was the "runty alternate" and did not have a chance of getting the part. Matthew Perry later told her that the producers knew she was right for the role when she called herself a "runt". She spent her first two weeks working on the show believing that she would be fired and the part recast with a better looking actress. Brewster did not want Kathy to be written out by cheating on Chandler. The female stars agreed with her and tried to persuade the producers to have Kathy tour in a play instead.[34]
Patsy Kensit was originally approached to play the role but turned it down.[36] Emily and Ross' marriage was intended to last much longer in the series, but Helen Baxendale became pregnant prior to Season 5 and was unable to travel for the show; hence, her limited appearances after Season 4.[37] Helen Baxendale was asked to reprise the role in Season 10, but turned it down to star in the West End play After Miss Julie, and because she did not want the same level of tabloid attention she received in 1998.[38]

Introduced in season five

Introduced in season six

Bruce Willis donated his appearance fee to five charities after losing a bet with his The Whole Nine Yards co-star Matthew Perry. He won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series for his role.[40]

Introduced in season seven

Introduced in season eight

Introduced in season nine

Applegate won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her appearance in "The One with Rachel's Other Sister" and was nominated again for her appearance in "The One Where Rachel's Sister Babysits".
The character of Charlie was created to specifically counter criticism the Friends production staff had received for featuring too few characters played by ethnic minority actors. Aisha Tyler was only the second major supporting character to be played by a black actor, following Gabrielle Union's appearance in "The One with the Cheap Wedding Dress" (airdate March 15, 2001; Season 7, No. 17).[42] The role was not specifically written for a black actor. Tyler told the St Petersburg Times, "I hope [people's] frustration over [the lack of diversity] is tempered by the fact that when they wrote this role, they didn't wimp out. They wrote her so smart and sexy and elevated, she wasn't just the black girl on Friends."[43]

Introduced in season ten

References

Primary sources

From Friends:

  1. ^ The One Where Nana Dies Twice. September 10, 1994. No. 8, season 1.
  2. ^ a b The One with the Evil Orthodontist. April 6, 1995. No. 20, season 1.
  3. ^ a b c d e The One with Barry and Mindy's Wedding. May 16, 1996. No. 24, season 2.
  4. ^ a b c The One That Could Have Been. February 17, 2000. No. 15, season 6.
  5. ^ The One with the Sonogram at the End. October 29, 1994. No. 2, season 1.
  6. ^ a b c The One with the Birth. May 11, 1995. No. 23, season 1.
  7. ^ a b The One with the Lesbian Wedding. January 19, 1996. No. 11, season 2.
  8. ^ The One with the Truth About London. February 22, 2001. No. 16, season 7.
  9. ^ The One with the Thumb. October 6, 1994. No. 3, season 1.
  10. ^ a b c The Last One. May 6, 2004. No. 17 & 18, season 10.
  11. ^ The One with the Morning After. February 20, 1997. No. 16, season 3.
  12. ^ The One with the Stain. November 8, 2001. No. 7, season 8.
  13. ^ a b c d The One with the Monkey. December 15, 1994. No. 10, season 1.
  14. ^ a b The One Where the Monkey Gets Away. March 9, 1995. No. 19, season 1.
  15. ^ The One with the Fake Monica. April 27, 1995. No. 21, season 1.
  16. ^ a b c d e f The One After the Super Bowl. Jaunary 28, 1996. No. 12 & 13, season 2.
  17. ^ a b c The One with Two Parts. February 23, 1995. No. 16, season 1.
  18. ^ a b c The One With The Blackout. December 3, 1994. No. 7, season 1.
  19. ^ a b The One with the East German Laundry Detergent. October 20, 1994. No. 5, season 1.
  20. ^ The One with the Candy Hearts. February 9, 1995. No. 14, season 1.
  21. ^ a b c The One Where Mr. Heckles Dies. October 5, 1995. No. 3, season 2.
  22. ^ The One with the Race Car Bed. November 7m 1996. No. 7, season 3.
  23. ^ The One with the Giant Poking Device. November 14, 1996. No. 8, season 3.
  24. ^ The One with All the Rugby. February 26, 1996. No. 15, season 4.
  25. ^ The One with Chandler's Work Laugh. January 21, 1999. No. 12, season 5.
  26. ^ The One with Unagi. February 24, 2000. No. 17, season 6.
  27. ^ a b c The One with Ross's Library Book. November 16, 2000. No. 7, season 7.
  28. ^ a b c The One Where Rachel Has a Baby. May 16, 2002. No. 23 & 24, season 8.
  29. ^ The One with the Fertility Test. May 1, 2003. No. 21, season 9.
  30. ^ a b c The One Where Estelle Dies. April 22, 2004. No. 15, season 10.
  31. ^ The One with the Flashback. October 31, 1996. No. 6, season 3.
  32. ^ The One with the Dozen Lasagnas. January 12, 1995. No. 12, season 1.
  33. ^ The One with Ross's New Girlfriend. October 21, 1995. No. 1, season 2.
  34. ^ The One Where Underdog Gets Away. November 17, 1994. No. 9, season 1.
  35. ^ a b c The One with the Baby on the Bus. November 2, 1995. No. 6, season 2.
  36. ^ a b c The One with Russ. January 4, 1996. No. 10, season 2.
  37. ^ The One with the Cheesecakes. January 4, 2001. No. 11, season 7.
  38. ^ a b The One with the Male Nanny. November 7, 2002. No. 6, season 9.
  39. ^ a b The One with the Donor. May 8, 2003. No. 22, season 9.
  40. ^ The One in Barbados. May 15, 2003. No. 23, season 9.
  41. ^ The One with Mrs. Bing. January 1, 1995. No. 11, season 1.
  42. ^ The One with All the Thanksgivings. November 19, 1998. No. 8, season 5.
  43. ^ The One with Chandler and Monica's Wedding. May 17, 2001. No. 23 & 24, season 7.
  44. ^ a b The One After "I Do". September 27, 2001. No. 1, season 8.
  45. ^ The One with the Jam. October 3, 1996. No. 3, season 3.
  46. ^ The One with the Jellyfish. September 25, 1997. No. 1, season 4.
  47. ^ The One Where Chandler Can't Cry. February 10, 2000. No. 14, season 6.
  48. ^ a b The One Where They All Turn Thirty. February 8, 2001. No. 14, season 7.
  49. ^ The One with the Halloween Party. November 1, 2001. No. 6, season 8.
  50. ^ The One Where Rachel Finds Out. May 18, 1995. No. 24, season 1.
  51. ^ The One with the List. November 16, 1995. No. 8, season 2.
  52. ^ The One with the Stoned Guy. February 16, 1995. No. 15, season 1.
  53. ^ The One with the Blind Dates. February 6, 2003. No. 14, season 9.
  54. ^ a b The One with Phoebe's Dad. December 14, 1995. No. 9, season 2.
  55. ^ The One with the Ballroom Dancing. October 16, 1997. No. 4, season 4.
  56. ^ The One with the Free Porn. March 26, 1998. No. 17, season 4.
  57. ^ The One Where Rachel Tells.... October 11, 2001. No. 3, season 8.
  58. ^ a b The One with the Butt. October 27, 1994. No. 5, season 1.
  59. ^ a b The One with the Screamer. April 24, 1997. No. 22, season 3.
  60. ^ The One Where Joey Loses His Insurance. OCtober 14, 1999. No. 4, season 6.
  61. ^ The One Where Ross and Rachel ... You Know. February 8, 1996. No. 16, season 2.
  62. ^ a b The One Where Joey Moves Out. February 15, 1996. No. 17, season 2.
  63. ^ The One Where No One's Ready. September 26, 1996. No. 2, season 3.
  64. ^ The One Where Monica and Richard Are Just Friends. January 30, 1997. No. 13, season 3.
  65. ^ a b The One with the Proposal. May 18, 2000. No. 24 & 25, season 6.
  66. ^ a b The One with Ross' Inappropriate Song. November 14, 2002. No. 7, season 9.
  67. ^ a b The One with Two Parties. May 2, 1996. No. 22, season 2.
  68. ^ The One with the Baby Shower. April 25, 2002. No. 20, season 8.
  69. ^ The One Where Eddie Moves In. February 22, 1996. No. 17, season 2.
  70. ^ The One Where Dr. Ramoray Dies. March 21, 1996. No. 18, season 2.
  71. ^ The One Where Eddie Won't Go. March 28, 1996. No. 19, season 2.
  72. ^ a b The One with Joey's Bag. February 4, 1999. No. 13, season 5.
  73. ^ The One with the Bullies. April 25, 1996. No. 21, season 2.
  74. ^ a b The One with Frank Jr.. October 17, 1996. No. 5, season 3.
  75. ^ The One with the Hypnosis Tape. March 13, 1997. No. 18, season 3.
  76. ^ a b The One with Phoebe's Uterus. January 8, 1998. No. 11, season 4.
  77. ^ The One Hundredth. October 8, 1998. No. 3, season 5.
  78. ^ The One Where Ross is Fine. October 2, 2003. No. 2, season 10.
  79. ^ a b The One with the Stripper. November 15, 2001. No. 8, season 8.
  80. ^ The One Where Joey Speaks French. February 19, 2004. No. 15, season 10.
  81. ^ The One with the Chicken Pox. May 5, 1996. No. 23, season 2.
  82. ^ a b The One where Ross and Rachel Take a Break. January 1, 1997. No. 15, season 3.
  83. ^ a b The One with the Tiny T-Shirt. March 27, 1997. No. 19, season 3.
  84. ^ a b c The One with Princess Consuela. February 26, 2004. No. 14, season 10.
  85. ^ a b The One Where They're Going to Party!. December 11, 1997. No. 9, season 4.
  86. ^ a b The One with the Ultimate Fighting Champion. May 8, 1997. No. 3.
  87. ^ The One with the Dollhouse. April 10, 1997. No. 20, season 3.
  88. ^ a b The One with the Cuffs. October 9, 1997. No. 3, season 4.
  89. ^ a b The One with the Dirty Girl. November 6, 1997. No. 6, season 4.
  90. ^ The One Where Chandler Crosses the Line. November 13, 1997. No. 7, season 4.
  91. ^ a b The One with Chandler in a Box. 1997. No. 8, season 4.
  92. ^ The One with Rachel's Crush. January 29, 1998. No. 13, season 4.
  93. ^ The One with Joey's Dirty Day. February 5, 1998. No. 14, season 4.
  94. ^ The One Where Phoebe Hates PBS. October 15, 1998. No. 4, season 5.
  95. ^ a b The One with the Ride-Along. April 29, 1999. No. 20, season 5.
  96. ^ The One with the Yeti. November 5, 1998. No. 6, season 5.
  97. ^ The One Where Ross Moves In. November 12, 1998. No. 7, season 5.
  98. ^ The One with the Inappropriate Sister. December 17, 1998. No. 10, season 5.
  99. ^ The One with the Girl Who Hits Joey. February 18, 1999. No. 15, season 5.
  100. ^ The One with Ross's Sandwich. December 10, 1998. No. 9, season 5.
  101. ^ The One Where Everybody Finds Out. February 11, 1999. No. 14, season 5.
  102. ^ The One with the Cop. February 25, 1999. No. 16, season 5.
  103. ^ The One with the Ball. May 6, 1999. No. 21, season 5.
  104. ^ The One with Rachel's Inadvertent Kiss. March 18, 1999. No. 17, season 5.
  105. ^ The One Where Estelle Dies. April 22, 2004. No. 15, season 10.
  106. ^ The One Where Rachel Smokes. April 8, 1999. No. 18, season 5.
  107. ^ a b The One with Ross's Teeth. November 18, 1999. No. 8, season 6.
  108. ^ The One Where Phoebe Runs. November 11, 1999. No. 7, season 6.
  109. ^ The One with the Routine. December 16, 1999. No. 10, season 6.
  110. ^ The One with Apothecary Table. January 6, 2000. No. 11, season 6.
  111. ^ The One with Joey's Porsche. October 21, 1999. No. 5, season 6.
  112. ^ The One with Rachel's Sister. February 3, 2000. No. 13, season 6.
  113. ^ The One Where Chandler Can't Cry. February 10, 2000. No. 14, season 6.
  114. ^ The One Where Ross Dates a Student. March 9, 2000. No. 18, season 6.
  115. ^ The One with Joey's Fridge. March 23, 2000. No. 19, season 6.
  116. ^ The One with the Proposal, Part 1. May 18, 2000. No. 24, season 6.
  117. ^ The One Where Paul's the Man. May 4, 2000. No. 22, season 6.
  118. ^ The One with the Ring. May 11, 2000. No. 23, season 6.
  119. ^ The One with Rachel's Assistant. October 26, 2000. No. 4, season 7.
  120. ^ The One with All the Candy. December 7, 2000. No. 9, season 7.
  121. ^ The One with the Red Sweater. October 4, 2001. No. 2, season 8.
  122. ^ The One with Joey's New Brain. February 14, 2001. No. 15, season 7.
  123. ^ The One with Ross and Monica's Cousin. April 19, 2001. No. 19, season 7.
  124. ^ The One with Rachel's Big Kiss. April 26, 2001. No. 20, season 7.
  125. ^ The One with Chandler's Dad. May 10, 2001. No. 22, season 7.
  126. ^ The One with Monica and Chandler's Wedding, Part 1. May 17, 2001. No. 23, season 7.
  127. ^ The One with Monica's Boots. December 6, 2001. No. 10, season 8.
  128. ^ The One with the Sharks. October 17, 2002. No. 4, season 9.
  129. ^ The One with the Boob Job. February 20, 2003. No. 16, season 9.
  130. ^ The One After Joey and Rachel Kiss. September 25, 2003. No. 1, season 10.
  131. ^ The One with Phoebe's Wedding. September 12, 2004. No. 12, season 10.
  132. ^ The One with the Mugging. February 13, 2003. No. 15, season 9.
  133. ^ The One with Phoebe's Rats. January 16, 2003. No. 12, season 9.
  134. ^ The One with the Christmas in Tulsa. December 12, 2002. No. 10, season 9.
  135. ^ The One With Ross' Tan. October 9, 2004. No. 3, season 10.

From elsewhere:

  1. ^ "Married to the Job". Russ Woody (writer); Thomas Schlamme (director). Mad About You. NBC. October 7, 1993. No. 4, season 2.
  2. ^ "The Final Frontier". Paul Reiser, Helen Hunt (writers); Helen Hunt (director). Mad About You. NBC. May 24, 1999. No. 21, season 7.

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