Since "Friends" ended its wildly successful run a decade ago, the six castmates have taken various tracks, with pit stops in traditional sitcoms, rom-coms and off-Broadway plays. But it was Emmy winner Lisa Kudrow who embarked on the quirkiest and most interesting route, one that has led to Sunday's second-season premiere of her series "The Comeback" — a whopping nine years after HBO canceled the show.
In between, she's been executive producer of "Who Do You Think You Are?" a reality series exploring the genealogical trees of celebrities, and the star of "Web Therapy," a low-budget, improvised series that started on the Internet and is now in its fourth season on Showtime.
It wasn't the path Kudrow planned.
"All I knew was that I wasn't going to try for another 'Friends'-type show. I knew that was rare," Kudrow, 51, said in a phone interview this week. "I knew people would always see me as Phoebe, and that's fine; otherwise I'm going to be unhappy. But the only place offering me different kinds of roles was independent film."
Her first post-sitcom effort, the 2005 indie movie "Happy Endings," received mixed reviews, with Maggie Gyllenhaal stealing the show, so Kudrow was more than willing to listen to a new friend, Michael Patrick King, whose credits include "Sex and the City" and "2 Broke Girls."
He suggested they cook up something that would give them complete creative control. The result: "The Comeback," a mockumentary about a one-time sitcom star, Valerie Cherish, who readily agrees to be the subject of a TV reality show and the butt of every joke on a terrible series called "Room and Bored."
The show skewered the Hollywood system and how it plays on the vulnerability of actors such as Cherish, whose only sense of validation comes from being in front of the lens, no matter how pathetic they might appear.
The show earned Kudrow an Emmy nomination, but that wasn't enough to get it renewed.