The ‘Friends’ Star Who Was Fired From ‘Frasier’

The ‘Friends’ Star Who Was Fired From ‘Frasier’

When Friends debuted in the fall of 1994, its six lead performers were largely unknown. Headlining a popular sitcom, however, can do wonders for one’s exposure, and it wasn’t long before each member of Friends’ main cast became a household name in entertainment. Among newcomers to the primetime big leagues was Lisa Kudrow as the series’ quirky and aloof musician and massage therapist, Phoebe Buffay. Winning audiences over with youthful innocence and often surreal musings on life and relationships, Kudrow’s defining character and performance led to a prolific decades-long career in television and film. But her big break came on the heels of misfortune, and who knows what might have been had she not been in the right place at the right time?

Before ‘Friends,’ Lisa Kudrow Was Set to Star in ‘Frasier’

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A year before Friends hit TV screens, Frasier premiered on NBC. A spin-off of Cheers revolving around the titular radio psychiatrist (Kelsey Grammer), Frasier was a huge success with viewers and critics alike, capping its 11-year run with an impressive 264 episodes and a slew of awards. Acting alongside Grammer were Jane Leeves, David Hyde Pierce, John Mahoney, and Peri Gilpin, but Gilpin didn’t enter the picture as Frasier Crane’s producer, Roz Doyle, until after production on the series pilot commenced. Originally occupying the role was Lisa Kudrow, who ultimately worked on the show for only three days. According to People, the actress was fired at the behest of director James Burrows. “I wasn’t right for the part for the chemistry of the group,” she remembers. “So that wasn’t working but I did think, ‘Oh, I am not this guy’s cup of tea.'”

Director James Burrows Is a Sitcom Legend

Since directing his first sitcom with a 1974 episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, James Burrows has cultivated a legendary status in television history. His seemingly endless list of credits includes work on Taxi, Cheers, Frasier, and Will and Grace, for which he directed the pilot episodes, as well as Friends, The Big Bang Theory, Two and a Half Men, and Mike and Molly. With more than 1,000 television episodes and numerous accolades under his belt, the veteran director would no doubt be an intimidating figure for any up-and-coming performer hoping to make a mark on a ruthless and highly competitive industry. After Burrows decided to remove Lisa Kudrow from Frasier, neither the director nor actress likely had any idea that their paths would cross again so soon. But the following year, as the new television season was ramping up and hopefuls took their shot at scoring roles in pilots, Burrows and Kudrow found themselves collaborating on a project that would be a game changer.

Being Fired From ‘Frasier’ Led to ‘Friends’

According to Vulture, not long after her firing from Frasier, Lisa Kudrow was struggling to secure work after having a recurring role as Ursula Buffay on Mad About You, a character who’d ultimately cross over into Friends as Phoebe’s twin sister. In a 2010 commencement speech for her alma mater, Vassar College, Kudrow revealed she was urged to “come in to read for his new show about six twenty-somethings who lived in New York and hung out at a coffee house.” Among a slew of other performers, Kudrow auditioned for and, though she’d ultimately land a role and be the second person cast in the series, she’d be the only cast member who’d have to audition specifically for the man tapped to direct the pilot: James Burrows. “I did it and he went, ‘No notes,'” she remembers. “I left going, ‘That either means she’s beyond help and helpless, just like I always knew,’ or ‘Yeah, it’s perfect. I have no notes.'”

Nabbing the role of Phoebe, but in a state of anxiety over how things would go once production on the pilot commenced, Lisa Kudrow was “terrified” during her first week on Friends. She said of the experience, “Shooting the pilot that week I was like, ‘All right, here we go.’ And Phoebe was not the character that was part of this group really, that easily. There was a struggle.” As the director, Burrows was vocal about his concerns regarding how Phoebe fit into the group of titular friends, no doubt a concern that would make any performer uneasy about what lay ahead in the coming days. “And I was like, ‘Oh, my God. Here we go again,'” Kudrow said of the fear of losing another role.

 

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