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'FRIENDS' TILL THE NOT-SO-BITTER END THEY FULFILLED OUR FANTASY OF BEING THERE FOR EACH OTHER, AND NOW THEY - AND WE - SAY GOODBYE.


Byline: Evan Henerson Staff Writer

There's a very deft silent gag in a season-six episode of ``Friends.'' In ``The One With Rachel's Sister,'' Ross, Phoebe, Rachel, Chandler, Joey and Monica are all gathered for some sort of game in Monica and Chandler's apartment when there's a knock on Noun 1. knock on - (rugby) knocking the ball forward while trying to catch it (a foul)
rugby, rugby football, rugger - a form of football played with an oval ball

rugby, rugby football, rugger - a form of football played with an oval ball
 the door. The friends do a silent head count, note that all their company are present and look at each other in puzzlement puz·zle·ment  
n.
The state of being confused or baffled; perplexity.

Noun 1. puzzlement - confusion resulting from failure to understand
bafflement, befuddlement, bemusement, bewilderment, mystification, obfuscation
. Who from the outside world could possibly have business here? Turns out the intruder is one of the show's legions of ``Famous Guest Stars'' - Reese Witherspoon, playing Rachel's spoiled kid sister, Jill.

For 10 years we've seen the six function as a kind of extended family unit. Over the years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 question arose again and again: How do you sustain those relationships and that kind of closeness (times six) when you're halfway through your 30s?

The answer is you can't. While the ``Seinfeld'' quartet might have spun a few more seasons out of their cracked insulated universe, the friends of ``Friends'' have outgrown their series' formula.

So what you do is open the door. You let new people in. If you're Rachel, you take that job offer in Paris with or without Ross. If you're Chandler and Monica, you move to the 'burbs with your adopted child. If you're Phoebe, you spend more time with your non-inner-circle husband, Mike.

And, if you're ``Friends'' producers David Crane David Crane may refer to:
  • David Crane (comic strip), created by Win Mortimer.
  • David Crane (talent agent), job-finder, talent coach for TV news talent.
  • David Crane (programmer), video game designer, programmer and co-founder of Activision.
 and Marta Kauffman Marta Kauffman (born September 21, 1956) is an American TV producer and writer and the creator of the TV series Friends with David Crane. Both Crane and Kauffman were also executive producer of the show, along with Kevin S. Bright. , you end the series. With as much fanfare, tears, retrospectives and advertising as humanly possible.

So farewell, ``Friends,'' and thanks for not overstaying your welcome.

``From a psychological standpoint of what is healthy, realistic, normal and expected, you shouldn't stay 'stuck in second gear' for 10 years,'' says Robert Thompson Robert Thompson may refer to:
  • Robert Thompson (professor), Syracuse University professor of television and popular culture
  • Robert Thompson (poker director), the Tournament Director on Celebrity Poker Showdown.
  • Robert Thompson (Soviet spy)
  • Robert B.
, director of the Center for Popular Television at Syracuse University Syracuse University, main campus at Syracuse, N.Y.; coeducational; chartered 1870, opened 1871. Syracuse is noted for its research programs in government and industry; facilities include the Center for Science and Technology, the Newhouse Communications Center, and . ``The show is this nether region where the characters exist before they settled into responsible adulthood. This season was pretty good, and they've been jumping the shark right and left every single time and getting away with it "Getting Away With It" was the first single released by the English band Electronic, which comprised Bernard Sumner of New Order, ex-Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, and guesting vocalist Neil Tennant of Pet Shop Boys. . It would have been very difficult for them to write another year.''

Why it worked

The ``shark jumping'' reference - for those unfamiliar - signals the identifiable moment when a popular TV series starts to go downhill. It could have happened, TV critics maintain, with Chandler and Monica's wedding or the birth of baby Emma. But ``Friends'' shrewdly hung on because it never shook up the formula. They may be 30-somethings now, but they're the same group of six we met 10 years ago. And they're just as tight.

That's why the show worked. Because if we don't believe that Rachel, Ross, Chandler, Monica, Joey and Phoebe will eventually end up side by side in the same six-wide coffin, then why have we been tuning in tuning in,
v process in which a therapeutic touch practitioner centers himself or herself so as to be aligned with or “in tune” with a healing energy “frequency,” so that the patient may choose to join the practitioner (tune
?

Oh, sure, it's a clever enough show with chemistry aplenty a·plen·ty  
adj.
In plentiful supply; abundant: "There were warning signs aplenty for their candidates as well" Michael Gelb.
, big-name guest stars and occasional water-cooler fodder. But the Gen X-ers who tuned in when Jennifer Aniston, David Schwimmer David Lawrence Schwimmer (born November 12, 1966) in Astoria, New York) is an Emmy-nominated American actor and director, who gained popularity when playing Dr. Ross Geller on the American sitcom Friends. , Matthew Perry, Courteney Cox Courteney Bass Cox Arquette (born Courteney Bass Cox on June 15, 1964) is an American actress and former fashion model, best known for her role as Monica Geller in the hugely popular television sitcom Friends. , Matt LeBlanc Matthew Steven LeBlanc (born July 25, 1967) is an Emmy and Golden Globe Award-nominated American actor, best known for his role as Joey Tribbiani in the hugely popular sitcom Friends (1994-2004) and its less successful spin-off Joey (2004-2006).  and Lisa Kudrow Lisa Marie Diane Kudrow (born July 30, 1963) is an Emmy Award- and SAG-winning American actress best known for her role as Phoebe Buffay in the hugely popular sitcom Friends.  were virtual unknowns stayed with them and took delight in living vicariously through them.

We all wanted Chandler's job - whatever the hell it was - Rachel's hair, Monica's apartment and Phoebe's freedom. Above all, we wanted a Central Perk and a pack of buddies guaranteed to be there whether we felt like seeing them or not.

``At some level, the idea of six friends all staying together and not getting married and leaving each other is probably unrealistic,'' admits Kathy M. Newman, an associate professor of English at Carnegie Melon University, and a ``Friends'' devotee. ``Connectedness is, at some level, a fantasy, but it's a compelling fantasy.''

Newman is 37. Like half the known female population, she requested a ``Rachel'' 'do from her stylist at some point during the '90s (``But you also have to have Jennifer Aniston's hair,'' she says). She watched the show on a regular basis, often with friends of her own.

She didn't always warm to the plotting, pointing to a fourth-season subplot sub·plot  
n.
1. A plot subordinate to the main plot of a literary work or film. Also called counterplot, underplot.

2. A subdivision of a plot of land, especially a plot used for experimental purposes.
 that had Lisa Kudrow's Phoebe agreeing to be a surrogate mother surrogate mother, a woman who agrees, usually by contract and for a fee, to bear a child for a couple who are childless because the wife is infertile or physically incapable of carrying a developing fetus.  for the triplets of her brother and his much older wife. Far-fetched, yes, but a point was made.

``I realized that was a way for there to be procreation PROCREATION. The generation of children; it is an act authorized by the law of nature: one of the principal ends of marriage is the procreation of children. Inst. tit. 2, in pr.  without the group splitting up,'' says Newman. ``To me, that's what made the show compelling. You have a group of people who managed to stay successfully in each other's lives over a long period of time in spite of the relationships they had with other people outside their circle.''

Who needs family?

That these characters had little but their friendship in common was another departure from sitcoms of years past. ``Friends'' isn't a comedy centered around a family or around a bunch of people who all work at the same job. Combinations of the friends did live together (Monica and Rachel; Chandler and Joey), and, in at least one case, married (Monica and Chandler). If they're not at somebody's apartment, the friends are usually hanging out at Central Perk, the coffeehouse where Aniston's Rachel Green was a waitress during the show's early years.

``Friends'' wasn't even the first show to depict a bunch of developmentally arrested New Yorkers forming their own clan. ``Seinfeld'' played the formula first, albeit with a completely different tone, according to Thompson.

`` 'Friends' of course picked up on (the 'Seinfeld') formula, changed it and brought more to the table, made it a little more user-friendly,'' says Thompson. ``The show added two people, made them prettier and softened the edges.'' And made them their own family. When we meet the senior Gellers, Bings and Buffays - or what's left of them - we discover dysfunction personified. Phoebe's mother committed suicide, Chandler's father had a sex change, Ross and Monica's parents are nut cases. Is it any wonder the friends invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 turned to each other for comfort, support, money and, occasionally, sex? It's all there in the title of that catchy little theme by the Rembrandts, ``I'll Be There for You.''

``Friends'' may have been a rip-off and has itself been ripped off many times since its debut, but no sitcom since has succeeded this well with the same formula. And not since ``Seinfeld'' has an ensemble meshed this effectively.

Ten years ago, of course, nobody knew who any of these actors were. With the exception of Cox, who had played Michael J. Fox's girlfriend on the last seasons of ``Family Ties,'' the ``Friends'' cast were a collection of attractive, white 20-somethings with no major credits to their names. Kudrow, the oldest, was 31.

A tight ensemble they began, and an ensemble they have stayed. Though the ``Rachel and Ross: apart or together'' plot was always bankable bank·a·ble  
adj.
1. Acceptable to or at a bank: bankable funds.

2. Guaranteed to bring profit: a bankable movie star.
, the writers distributed the story lines evenly among the sextet. No friend eclipsed or upstaged another. As Syracuse's Thompson notes, the friends - collectively and individually - became a factory designed to generate TV Guide and People magazine covers.

Off of ``Friends,'' they all did movies, and a few grabbed tabloid headlines. Perry battled weight and drug problems, Aniston married Brad Pitt, and Cox married David Arquette.

And, as has been well-documented, the camaraderie extended past the soundstage. The six ``Friends'' negotiated their now-famous $1 million-per-episode contracts together. For many of the early years, none would allow him or herself to compete in a leading performer category for award consideration. The ensemble won numerous awards. All but Cox has been Emmy-nominated at least once, with both Aniston (lead actress) and Kudrow (supporting) emerging victorious.

The unions should take notice, says Dee LaDuke, supervising producer on UPN's ``Girlfriends.''

``More power to them,'' says LaDuke, author of ``Making Great Television - Four Essential Ingredients.'' ``I think it was brilliant of them to put the group before their individual popularity. We should all have that sense of solidarity.''

Ultimately, ``Friends'' departs leaving behind one spin-off, a ton of episodes recycled endlessly in syndication and six very wealthy TV stars, a few of whom will have to sidestep side·step  
v. side·stepped, side·step·ping, side·steps

v.intr.
1. To step aside: sidestepped to make way for the runner.

2.
 typecasting The word typecasting (past participle typecast) can mean more than one thing:
  • type conversion in computer programming
  • type conversion in aviation
  • typecasting (acting) in acting
  • Typecast, a Filipino band
  • Typecast (horse), American Champion racehorse
 for the rest of their lives.

And one overhyped finale. LaDuke plans to watch. Although slightly older than the ``Friends'' actors, LaDuke was a consistent watcher of the series. Until she tapered off.

``I got a life, got myself a husband and a baby. My attention went elsewhere,'' she says. ``It's the same with these characters. It's time for them not to be each other's family. They have to go out and start new circles.''

Evan Henerson, (818) 713-3651

evan.henerson(at)dailynews.com

FRIENDS

What: A two-hour show beginning with a look back and the final episode at 9 p.m.

Where: NBC NBC
 in full National Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. commercial broadcasting company. It was formed in 1926 by RCA Corp., General Electric Co. (GE), and Westinghouse and was the first U.S. company to operate a broadcast network.
 (Channel 4).

When: 8 tonight.

UNIVERSAL HOSTS PARTY

If you can't fit all your friends into your living room for the big event tonight, take them to Universal CityWalk, where they claim to be hosting ``the world's largest 'Friends' Finale Viewing Party.''

The party starts at 7 p.m. and will be hosted by NBC Channel 4's Fritz Coleman, who will be joined by personalities from KIIS KIIS Kansai Institute of Information Systems , KOST and KBIG on a stage set to look like Central Perk. There will be a ``Friends'' trivia contest and some ``Friends'' giveaways.

The broadcast begins at 8 on the giant Astrovision screen at CityWalk. Admission is free.

CAPTION(S):

4 photos, box

Photo:

(1 -- cover -- color) Time to go

We help you see your `Friends' off with fun facts, profiles and a look at how they stuck together

(2 -- 3) no caption (cast from ``Friends'')

(4) The ``Ross loves Rachel'' plot line has proven reliable.

Box:

UNIVERSAL HOSTS PARTY (see text)
COPYRIGHT 2004 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:May 6, 2004
Words:1588
Previous Article:WHERE THEY'RE GOING, WHERE THEY'VE BEEN.(U)
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