| Lisa
Kudrow could not be further from the character she plays
on the hit NBC sitcom Friends, ditzy New Age musician/masseuse/taxi
driver, Phoebe Buffay. For starters, the character she
plays is in her twenties, while Lisa was born July 30th,
1963, in Encino, California. While Phoebe only discovered
her biological parents a couple of years ago, Lisa comes
from a secure household, where she was raised in Tarzana,
California. article
continued below...
Awards
1995: Screen Actors Guild Award: Ensemble in
a Television Comedy Series, Friends; shared with cast
members
1998: Emmy: Outstanding Supporting Actress in
a Comedy Series, Friends
1998: New York Film Critics Circle: Best Supporting
Actress, The Opposite of Sex
1999: Screen Actors Guild: Female Actor in a
Television Comedy Series, Friends
2000: American Comedy Award: Funniest Female
Supporting Performer in a Television Series, Friends
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| Lisa
Kudrow could not be further from the character she plays
on the hit NBC sitcom Friends, ditzy New Age musician/masseuse/taxi
driver, Phoebe Buffay. For starters, the character she
plays is in her twenties, while Lisa was born July 30th,
1963, in Encino, California. While Phoebe only discovered
her biological parents a couple of years ago, Lisa comes
from a secure household, where she was raised in Tarzana,
California.
Lisa's
father Lee Kudrow is a renowned headache specialist,
while her mother Nedra Kudrow is a travel agent. Although
Lisa was a hard worker and studied intensely while in
elementary school, she started to show an interest in
acting at an early age. She would lip sync to the soundtrack
form Fiddler on the Roof, pretending to be one of the
musical's characters. Lisa performed her Fiddler routine
in several classes, a teacher caught a glimpse of her
act and was fully impressed.
After
graduating from William Howard Taft High School in 1981,
where Lisa played tennis on her free time, she attended
Vassar College in New York where she majored in Biology.
When she graduated in 1985, Lisa initially hoped to
pursue a career in medical research and returned to
Los Angeles to work with her father.
As
luck would have it, comedian Jon Lovitz, a friend of
Lisa's brother's, had just been cast on Saturday Night
Live which reawakened the little girl in her who loved
to act. Lovitz encouraged Lisa to audition for the improvisational-comedy
troupe the Groundlings, to follow her real passion in
life: performing. She was referred to a well-known improvisation
teacher after having been rejected for the Groundlings,
but in 1989, she finally became an official member of
the Groundlings team.
After
gaining experience and recognition as a member of the
popular comedy troupe, Lisa landed a role in a small
production called The Ladies Room. Her next move as
a comedienne was on the small screen with appearances
on shows such as Cheers, Coach, Newhart, Life Goes On,
and The Simpsons.
In
1993, Lisa received the role that ultimately led to
her Emmy winning role as Phoebe on Friends. She was
cast as Ursula, the ditzy waitress on the NBC sitcom
Mad About You. NBC was so impressed with her performance,
that they encouraged her to audition for a more substantial
part on another NBC show.
She
tried out for the part of Roz on Frazier, but was turned
down as the role did not suit Lisa's character. But
the role of Phoebe fits Lisa like a charm, so much so
that people probably think that that's how she is in
real life. Phoebe Buffay is actually the twin sister
of Ursula Buffay, Lisa's Mad About You character, which
Lisa continued to play.
Lisa
can add roles in the following movies to her resume:
Romy and Michele's High School Reunion, Clockwatchers,
The Opposite of Sex, 1999's Analyze This, co-starring
Robert De Niro, and Hanging Up, also starring the beautiful
Meg Ryan.
One
of People Magazine's Most Beautiful Women in the World
in 1997, Lisa has received a lot of recognition for
her acting skills, including the Screen Actor's Guild
Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor
in a Comedy Series for her role on Friends, an Independent
Spirit Award Nomination for her role in The Opposite
of Sex and a nomination for an American Comedy Award
for her role in Analyze This. This broad recognition
shows that Lisa is not typecast as the flaky girl she
plays on Friends.
Lisa
and her husband Michael Stern have a son Julian Murray.
She can still be seen every Thursday night on Friends
with her fellow beautiful cast mates, Courteney Cox
Arquette and Jennifer Aniston.
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