The Comeback (TV series)

The Comeback
Poster for the TV series The Comeback
Genre Comedy-drama
Mockumentary
Found footage
Created by Lisa Kudrow
Michael Patrick King
Starring Lisa Kudrow
Malin Åkerman
Robert Bagnell
Lance Barber
Robert Michael Morris
Laura Silverman
Damian Young
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 21 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) John Melfi (season 1)
Michael Patrick King
Lisa Kudrow
Dan Bucatinsky
Camera setup Single camera
Running time 30 minutes
42 minutes (Season 2 premiere)
Production company(s) Is or Isn't Entertainment
Working Class Films
Warner Bros. Television
Distributor Warner Bros. Television Distribution
Release
Original network HBO
Original release First series:
June 5 (2005-06-05) – September 4, 2005 (2005-09-04)
Revived series:
November 9, 2014 (2014-11-09) – present[1]
External links
Website

The Comeback is an American television comedy-drama series produced by HBO that stars actress Lisa Kudrow as sitcom actress Valerie Cherish in modern-day Los Angeles. It was created by Kudrow and Michael Patrick King, a former executive producer of Sex and the City. Kudrow and King are 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, 13-episode season before being canceled. The series was revived nine years later and an eight-episode second season started airing on HBO on November 9, 2014.[2]

The show, a satirical, comedic look inside the entertainment television industry, is shot by a two-camera crew. Season One is presented as found footage shot for the fictional reality show within The Comeback, also called The Comeback. Season Two is presented as found footage shot by a camera crew originally commissioned by Valerie to pitch a pilot to noted reality TV producer Andy Cohen, later repurposed as behind the scenes web content, and then into a full-scale documentary.

Kudrow has said that she, King, and HBO are all interested in producing a third season of the series.[3][4]

Overview

Season Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired
1 13 June 5, 2005 September 4, 2005
2 8 November 9, 2014 December 28, 2014

Season 1

The series initially follows Valerie Cherish (Kudrow), a veteran sitcom actress who has been out of the spotlight for more than a decade, as she attempts in 2005 to return to the industry that made her famous. Valerie lands a role on a new network sitcom called Room and Bored, but struggles with the matter of being an aging, non-influential performer in an increasingly youthful Hollywood, while her every move on and off the set is being documented for a companion reality show.

Season 2

In 2014, she is cast as a fictionalized version of herself in an HBO series entitled Seeing Red, which chronicles the career of the sitcom writer/producer who tormented her nine years earlier. A documentary film crew captures her second career resurgence as it threatens to destroy her personal life.

Cast and characters

Main

Recurring

Season One

Season Two

Cameos

Because the show is set in modern-day Hollywood, celebrities and media personalities such as Andy Cohen, Chelsea Handler, Jane Kaczmarek, Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien, RuPaul, among others, often play themselves in cameo appearances.

Reception

Season 1

Despite a coveted time slot after the hit series Entourage, The Comeback debuted to low ratings. It was also met with a mixed critical response, yet 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 had been canceled after being on the air only 13 weeks. Its initial lukewarm reception and short run notwithstanding, The Comeback has been retrospectively lauded.

The show placed #79 on Entertainment Weekly's "New TV Classics" list. In 2009, the publication named The Comeback one of the 10 best shows of the decade, calling it "the most brilliantly brutal satire of reality TV ever captured on screen."[5] In 2012, the magazine listed the show at #8 in the "25 Best Cult TV Shows from the Past 25 Years," saying, "Both painfully uncomfortable and deadpan hilarious, The Comeback was spot-on in its inside-showbiz look at the making of a sitcom – while featuring one of the decade's biggest sitcom stars, no less. But it was so inside, it was too inaccessible to a mass audience, or even an audience that might have returned for a second season on HBO."[6] Entertainment Weekly also voted Valerie Cherish on The Comeback as Lisa Kudrow's second best performance.[7]

The New York Times gave the show a lukewarm review, dubbing it "interesting", but also complaining about a lack of originality in the concept and finding The Comeback ultimately less entertaining than its fellow HBO series Entourage.[8]

In a commemorative article in 2012, UK newspaper The Guardian praised the show for its "bittersweet comedy" and Lisa Kudrow for her "ego-free acting." The newspaper questions whether, in an era where "you can't move for meta-sitcoms," this sitcom was just "too far ahead of its time."[9]

Season 2

The second season was met with critical acclaim. On the review aggregator, Rotten Tomatoes the second season received a 84% approval rating giving it a "fresh" rating.[10] It also scored a 71 out of 100 on Metacritic[11] Robert Loyd of the Los Angeles Times praised the show saying "The current episodes have more weight and intensity; they come off a shade darker and yet more sympathetic to its cast of co-dependent lost souls."[12] Joshua Alston of The A.V. Club also praised it, writing: "The Comeback is the same as it ever was, and more highly concentrated. It still out-metas anything else on television. The performances remain stellar all around."[13] On the other hand, Kristi Turnquist gave the show a mixed review, writing: "While the first few episodes of the new Comeback make stingingly accurate points about the sexism and ageism Valerie has to contend with, The Comeback has its own problems. As in the first go-round, Valerie comes off as cartoonish, a caricature of a so-so celebrity."[14] The last episode of Season 2, "Valerie Gets What She Really Wants", received almost universal praise, scoring 10/10 and A scores across the board.[15][16][17]

Future

On the pressing question of whether we will get to see The Comeback for a third season – according to HBO, the show drew an average of 1.4 million viewers across its channels and on demand – Kudrow said she has not "heard it officially," but that she and King have gotten the impression that the door is open for more. Soon, she hopes she and King will begin to "talk about what more would look like." [18]

In an interview with E!, Kudrow also had this to say: "I would love to do more. In 2005, that was an ending, that was definitely an ending because I guess now we see that those episodes were a piece and these episodes were a piece and then if we do more then we will be doing that piece." [19]

On April 27, 2015 it was confirmed that The Comeback would return for a third season, but HBO has signed off the deal to wait until Kudrow and Patrick King are ready.[3]

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