Life as the sixth Friend
In the summer of 1994, Lisa Kudrow (below) joined five other struggling actors on a private plane to Las Vegas. Once there, the director James Burrows, a sitcom veteran, sat them down and told them something important, says Adam White in The Independent. Never again, he said, would they be able to socialise in public together without being noticed. Because once their new show, Friends, hit the airwaves? Forget it. “I remember everyone going, ‘oooooh’,” laughs Kudrow. “Everyone but me, anyway. I was the odd one out. I thought maybe…? I mean, it’s a good show, but I don’t know about that.” Burrows, of course, was right; and that trip wasn’t the only time Kudrow felt like the odd one out. Unlike the others, she’d…
