From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Comeback is a television
series produced by HBO that
stars actress Lisa
Kudrow as sitcom actress Valerie Cherish in modern-day Los Angeles, California. It was created by
Kudrow and Michael Patrick King, a former executive
producer of Sex and the City. Kudrow and King
were also screenwriters and executive producers of
the series, with King also serving as the director of some episodes. The
series premiered on HBO on June 5,
2005 and aired for a single season.
The show, a comedy, was
shot by a single camera, in the style of reality
television. Viewers of The Comeback are actually
watching raw footage shot
for the fictional reality show within The Comeback, also
called The Comeback.
The series' episode titles (excluding the pilot) begin
with the main character's first name Valerie... followed
the theme of the episode as the main character would have named
them, e.g. Valerie Triumphs at the Upfronts.
Despite a coveted time slot after the hit series Entourage, The
Comeback debuted to low ratings and a mixed critical response;
despite this, it was nominated for three Primetime Emmy Awards including
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for Kudrow. HBO
confirmed on September 21, 2005 that the series was officially
canceled after only being on the air for thirteen weeks. It has
since been removed from HBO's online list of Original Series
programming.
The show placed #79 on Entertainment Weekly's "New TV
Classics" list.
Plot
Valerie Cherish is a D-grade actress who had it all. From 1989 until
1992, Valerie starred on a sitcom known as I'm It! The show
was a hit during its initial run, but fell just three episodes shy
of reaching syndication
status. Valerie claimed that the show was canceled over a Rodney King joke, but
in a later episode it is made clear that the quality of the show
had declined before that point and that a chimp had been brought
onto the show to star as another lawyer at the firm. Since then,
the fame and fortune Valerie gained from her success and triumphs
has depleted. She has become unemployed, married, and does not get
the roles for which she was once famous due to her age and
personality. Valerie vows that she will make a comeback, which is
the ultimate goal in her career as an actress.
The Comeback is shot in the style of a reality
show (also called The Comeback). The
show-within-a-show follows Valerie through her home life and her
career resurgence. It offers behind-the-scenes footage of the other
fictional show-within-a-show, Room and Bored, a network
sitcom on
which Valerie plays a minor role.
Each episode begins with color bars, over which
are superimposed the words "The Comeback: Raw Footage", indicating
that viewers to the actual HBO series The Comeback are
watching unedited video for the
fictional reality show The Comeback.
Characters
Major
characters
- Valerie Cherish (Lisa Kudrow), the central character of
The Comeback, was the star of a sexually-charged 1989
sitcom, I'm It!, in which she played a young superstar attorney. Valerie has fallen out
of the limelight but receives a call from her former network
asking her to do a reality show called The Comeback,
about an actress attempting to relaunch her flagging career by
landing a starring role on the sitcom Room and Bored, a
show featuring four sexy singles living in a condominium. The role is originally written
as a 40-ish architect who acts as an older, wiser, yet still sexy
roommate. Valerie wins the role over former sitcom stars Marilu Henner and
Kim Fields (who also
had reality show cameras following them in case either had received
the role). However, after an early rehearsal, Valerie learns the
script has been changed to reduce her character's role to that of a
40-ish landlord named Aunt Sassy, a character much like the Mrs.
Roper character from Three's Company. Aunt Sassy is a
woman who dresses only in pastel jogging suits, lives upstairs, and
usually only appears in one scene per episode.
- Despite the changed role, Valerie performs well, much to the
delight of the audience and the network, and the show is greenlit
for a fall
season. However, still in denial that her day in the sun has
passed, Valerie is obsessed with the direction of Room and
Bored. She attempts to use her standing as a veteran sitcom
star to persuade the young producers to take her suggestions for
the show, despite numerous warnings to "back off." Valerie
constantly reminds the crew of her success on I'm It! as a
reason to listen to her. Valerie believes it is her duty to explain
to her young co-stars what starring on a sitcom entails.
- Initially, even with her reduced role, Valerie thinks she is
(or should be) the real star of the show, and is very concerned
about her image. It is only after a meeting with a cancer-stricken family friend
that Valerie realizes she must learn humility and to make the best
of every situation she is presented. In the end, Valerie agrees to
return for a second season of her reality show, despite being
thoroughly embarrassed during its highly-rated premiere. This
serves as proof that she is willing to completely sacrifice her
dignity to return to the spotlight.
- Entertainment Weekly voted Valerie Cherish on The
Comeback as Lisa Kudrow's second best performance.[1]
- Jane (Laura
Silverman) is the director of Valerie Cherish's reality show, The Comeback. Jane
seems very committed to seeing Valerie is comfortable on camera and is forced to endure
the drama that Valerie creates.
Jane is seldom seen on-camera, but her voice is often heard. When
she is seen on camera, often she is mortified at what she perceives
as Valerie's increasingly pathetic attempts to regain stardom. Jane
attempts to limit her communication with Valerie, so as not to
sacrifice the "reality" content of the show, but the star
constantly seems to be talking to Jane. Valerie will ask her
director for advice and "re-shoots" of a particular event, and Jane
will usually avoid such communication and deny such requests by
repeatedly telling Valerie she is forbidden to interact with her in
any way. The relationship between the two comes to a head in the
final episode.
- Mark Berman (Damian Young) is Valerie's loving (and extremely
patient) husband. They had lived a quiet, lavish lifestyle until camera
crews invaded their privacy. Mark is a dedicated businessman with very little understanding
of show
business. He doesn't seem to be impressed by Valerie's celebrity and is annoyed by
the reality show cameras but admits to using cocaine and watching pornography on camera. Valerie refers to
Mark most often as "Marky Mark" and also by the nickname "Love
Ball".
- Mickey Dean (Robert Michael Morris) has been Valerie Cherish's
hairdresser and friend since the late
1980s. Between I'm It! and Room and Bored, he
only worked for the actress part-time. Mickey agreed to work for
Valerie full-time as she was cast on Room and Bored in
order to receive health benefits from the studio. Mickey is
an effeminate man in his 60s who believes that his obvious
homosexuality is a well-kept secret. He came out of the closet in the finale.
- Paulie G (Lance Barber) is the pudgy co-creator and executive
producer of Room and Bored. He is the person who
pushed the change in Valerie's character, as he is very
unsympathetic to Valerie herself. Paulie G disagreed with Valerie's
casting from the beginning, and constantly seeks to reduce her role
on the show. Paulie G is resentful of Valerie's efforts to control
Room and Bored and attempts to avoid any communication
with Valerie, despite her endeavors to butter him up. In one
episode, Valerie and her camera crew walk in on Paulie receiving fellatio. Though viewers
watching the "raw footage" know Paulie G's true intentions toward
Valerie, the editors of The Comeback have polished the
finished "reality show" by using the same footage to portray Paulie
G as a sympathetic producer and all-around nice guy while Valerie
is shown to be the antagonist between the two.
- Tom Peterman (Robert Bagnell) is the co-creator and executive
producer of Room and Bored. While he tends to agree with
Paulie G that Valerie is too overbearing, he attempts to
accommodate her requests and show ideas. Unlike Paulie G, Tom tries
to communicate calmly with Valerie and treat her with appropriate
respect. Valerie tends to speak to Tom first when approaching the
producers.
- Juna Millken (Malin Åkerman) is a
beautiful young blonde model and musician, who (in her first-ever acting role)
plays Cassie, the lead character and niece of Aunt Sassy on Room and
Bored. Juna and Valerie become fast friends on and off the
set. Juna sees Val as her mentor, and Val calls Juna her "baby
girl", though Valerie is silently jealous of Juna's stardom.
Minor
characters
- Shayne Thomas (Kimberly Kevon Williams) plays
Dylan, Juna's sexy roommate on Room and Bored. Shayne is
a Christian who objects
to the sexual content of Valerie's reality show, but overlooks the
obvious sexual innuendo included within Room
and Bored because she is playing a character and is not being
"herself".
- Jesse Wood (Jason Olive) plays Stitch, the African-American male roommate on Room and Bored. He had
been turned down for several acting jobs before landing his current
role on the show.
- Chris MacNess (Kellan Lutz) plays Mooner, the surfer-type
roommate on Room and
Bored, who is a love interest to Juna's character. As an actor, he is curious why Valerie is
on the show due to her age difference with the younger generation of the cast.
- Jimmy Burrows (James Burrows) plays himself and is the
director of
many, but not all, of the Room and Bored episodes. His
scenes with Valerie indicate the two have previously worked
together. Jimmy likes Valerie and genuinely wants to help her
succeed. He becomes increasingly annoyed with Valerie and her
reality show, but his attempts to escape Jane and her cameras are
usually futile. Jimmy must sternly remind Valerie quite often that
she is not the star of Room and Bored and that
her input to the producers is unwelcome. Burrows' real career as a
television director
enhances the show's believability, as he has won several Emmy awards for
his work as producer and director of such series as Friends, Cheers, Frasier, and Will &
Grace.
- Francesca Berman (Vanessa Marano) is Valerie's stepdaughter. Francesca has generally tried
to avoid Valerie, but becomes very eager to bond with her stepmother when in front of the reality show cameras. Francesca lives
primarily with her birth mother, but on occasion stays with Mark
and Valerie at their Beverly Hills home.
- Gigi (Bayne Gibby), a naive playwright from New York City, is hired as the newest
writer for Room and Bored. Valerie becomes fast friends
with Gigi, with the ulterior motive of getting Aunt Sassy a greater
role on the show, and to attempt to supersede some of the writing
decisions of Tom and Paulie G. Sensing Valerie's intentions, the
show's creators have forbidden any further fraternization between
Valerie and Gigi.
- Esperanza (Lillian Hurst) is Valerie and Mark's
Hispanic housekeeper. She is very uncomfortable around the cameras,
often simply staring into them with a suspicious glare on her
face.
- Billy Stanton (Dan Bucatinsky) is Valerie's publicist,
hired to earn Valerie magazine covers (due mainly to her jealousy
of Juna's photo appearing on the cover of Rolling
Stone). Billy is a second-rate publicist who is just
starting his own agency. He is very aggressive and tends to push
and shove anybody who offends or disagrees with him. The first
magazine cover he lands Valerie is for a yoga magazine, despite Val's ignorance of the yoga
culture.
Episodes
Season 1:
2005
| Episode |
Title |
Writer |
Director |
Overview
(taken from official website) |
Original Airdate |
| 1 |
"The Comeback" (Pilot) |
Lisa Kudrow & Michael Patrick King |
Michael Patrick King |
Valerie Cherish starts a new chapter in her TV career as she
agrees to allow cameras to trail her around the clock for a reality
show called "The Comeback", a prerequisite for being cast in the
pilot of the new series "Room and Bored." |
June 5, 2005 (HBO) |
| 2 |
"Valerie Triumphs at the Upfronts" |
Lisa Kudrow & Michael Patrick King |
Michael Patrick King |
Valerie, Mickey and the cast of "Room and Bored" travel to New
York for a traditional network event where new shows are unveiled
to the media. |
June 12, 2005 (HBO) |
| 3 |
"Valerie Bonds with the Cast" |
Michael Patrick King |
Michael
Lehmann |
After a table read for "the first official episode", Valerie
invites her co-stars to a "bonding lunch", but Juna doesn't show
up. The two make up later with a one-on-one lunch, where Valerie
learns why Juna is such a paparazzi favorite. At home, Valerie is
touched when Francesca appears to reach out to her at long
last. |
June 19, 2005 (HBO) |
| 4 |
"Valerie Stands Up for Aunt Sassy" |
John Riggi |
Michael
Lehmann |
Concerned that Paulie G. has written an unflattering line that
will turn audiences against her character, Valerie enlists a new
writer, Gigi, to help pitch a less-offensive one. Meanwhile,
Valerie rethinks her impulsive decision to adopt a puppy. |
June 26, 2005 (HBO) |
| 5 |
"Valerie Demands Dignity" |
Linda
Wallem |
Greg
Mottola |
Valerie worries that her comeback storyline isn't "enough", as
the network tries to spice up her reality show by cross-breeding it
with another one, and by pulling a highway prank that nearly
sabotages Valerie's lunch with a TV Guide editor; at home, Mark is
increasingly frustrated by the restraints the ubiquitous cameras
have imposed on their sex life. |
July 10, 2005 (HBO) |
| 6 |
"Valerie Saves the Show" |
Michael
Schur |
Greg
Mottola |
With the cast in a funk after a lackluster premiere, Valerie
tries to boost morale with a late-night cookie delivery that gives
new meaning to her trademark line, "I don't want to see that!";
Mickey accuses Valerie of sharing details about his private life
with Juna; and Valerie tries to persuade Shayne to see her reality
show in a different "light." |
July 17, 2005 (HBO) |
| 7 |
"Valerie Gets a Special Episode" |
John Riggi |
Michael
Lehmann |
Excited about a "Room and Bored" episode dedicated to her
character, Valerie pulls some strings to get a "name" actor to play
Aunt Sassy's romantic interest; and Mark's behavior at the Viper
Room brings to light intimacy issues that are ultimately too hot
for the camera. |
July 24, 2005 (HBO) |
| 8 |
"Valerie Relaxes in Palm Springs" |
Linda Wallem
and Michael Patrick King |
Michael
Lehmann |
Valerie and Mark head to the desert for a long weekend at a
Palm Springs resort, with strings attached; and while Mark draws
the line with Jane's crew on the golf course, Valerie finds a new
mentor in an old acquaintance. |
July 31, 2005 (HBO) |
| 9 |
"Valerie Hangs With the Cool Kids" |
Michael
Schur |
J. Clark Mathis |
At the insistence of the network, "Room and Bored" gets a
makeover and adds two new cast members, Greg and Kaveen, spurring
talk of a coup by the "original five." Meanwhile, Francesca's new
friend Kalla shakes up the status quo at home. |
August 7, 2005 (HBO) |
| 10 |
"Valerie Gets a Magazine Cover" |
Amy B. Harris |
David
Steinberg |
With Juna getting all the hype and most of the magazine covers,
Valerie enlists a new publicist, Billy Stanton, to land a cover of
her own. Billy obliges by scoring a shoot for Be Yoga magazine,
forcing Valerie to remodel her fitness room and take a yoga crash
course. |
August 15, 2005 (HBO) |
| 11 |
"Valerie Stands Out on the Red Carpet" |
Michael Patrick King |
Michael Patrick King |
When Room and Bored gets nominated for a People's Choice Award, Valerie gets a new
dress and a new look. |
August 21, 2005 (HBO) |
| 12 |
"Valerie Shines Under Stress" |
Heather Morgan |
David
Steinberg |
Jane pulls rank on Tom and Paulie G to get Valerie more lines
on Room and Bored. A stalker threat forces extra security on the
set, exposing Valerie's old back problems as she's prepping for a
big pratfall scene. |
August 28, 2005 (HBO) |
| 13 |
"Valerie Does Another Classic Leno" |
Michael Patrick King |
Michael Patrick King |
After hosting a memorable coming-out party for the premiere of
The Comeback, Valerie makes an even more memorable guest appearance
on The Tonight
Show. |
September 4, 2005 (HBO) |
DVD
"The Complete First Only Season" was released
on Region 1
DVD on August 1, 2006, with the Region 2 version released on
September 18, 2006. The discs include all thirteen aired episodes
as well as commentary from Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King on
the pilot episode and an interview.
References
- ^
"The EW Office Poll: Lisa Kudrow Dishes It Out," Entertainment
Weekly 1026 (December 19, 2008): 12.
External
links