9 Matthew Perry performances to watch besides âFriendsâ
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone still reeling from the death of Matthew Perry.
As senior television writer Yvonne Villarreal reminds us in this weekâs Catch up, Perry, who died Saturday at 54, made his mark in more than just âFriends,â and she offers a guide to his best roles and where to find them.
Also in Screen Gab No. 106, Times staffers offer streaming recommendations for your weekend and âAbbott Elementaryâ star Chris Perfetti drops in to tell us what heâs watching.
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Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
âMilli Vanilliâ (Paramount+)
If you turned on VH1 at any point in the late 1990s, chances are you caught the episode of âBehind the Musicâ about Milli Vanilli, the infamous spandex-clad dance-pop duo who won a Grammy for best new artist in 1990 only to be exposed as lip-synching impostors. Fabrice Morvan and Rob Pilatus, the groupâs front men, were treated as shameless scammers by the media and were forced to absorb most of the backlash that ensued. Meanwhile, the industry players who backed them â including producer Frank Farian, the mastermind behind the scheme â largely escaped unscathed. Even Pilatusâ death of an overdose in 1998 did little to bring nuance to public understanding of the groupâs story. For the last 30-plus years, the Milli Vanilli scandal has been viewed as a semi-farcical cautionary tale about seeking fame at any price, but a new documentary by filmmaker Luke Korem reframes the ordeal as a tragic story about the exploitation of artists â particularly Black artists â in the music business. âMilli Vanilli,â now streaming on Paramount+, features interviews with Morvan as well as several of the singers who actually did perform on the âGirl You Know Itâs Trueâ album. At times funny but also surprisingly moving, the film includes an impressive array of archival footage that makes it impossible to fathom that anyone believed Morvan and Pilates were actually singing on their album, not to mention the vitriolic backlash to their act (including a blackface sketch from Howard Stern). The documentary also goes into detail about Farianâs history of recording studio trickery, dating back to his work with disco group Boney M., whose charismatic lead singer Bobby Farrell was â you guessed it â also lip-synching. With all due respect to âBehind the Music,â âMilli Vanilliâ finally gives serious treatment to a story that should have never been treated as a joke. âMeredith Blake
âBlue Eye Samuraiâ (Netflix)
I have a general aversion to gruesome, blood-splattering action, but there is something about stylized samurai violence that I canât resist. It also helps when itâs beautifully animated. Set in Edo-era Japan, âBlue Eye Samuraiâ follows Mizu, a skilled warrior who easily takes down a thug with a kitchen knife even before the series reveals her name. A biracial woman born in a time when Japan was closed off from the outside world, Mizuâs blue eyes are a marker that she is different. Foreign. Even monstrous. So she is on a mission of vengeance to find and kill the only four white men who were in Japan when she was born. She has also spent almost her entire life passing as a man in order to be free from the scrutiny and limitations placed on women in her time. The set-up flirts with potential broader explorations of gender, identity, colonialism and more, but the series keeps its focus on Mizuâs personal journey, which is not necessarily a bad thing. Plus, the fight scenes are top-notch. âTracy Brown
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Matthew Perry, who died Saturday at 54, will forever be known for his indelible portrayal of Chandler Bing in the enduringly popular sitcom âFriends.â His skillful take on the sarcastic but lovable, neurotic but sweet character who couldnât be any funnier helped make the series a TV juggernaut over its 10-season run. The showâs appeal has continued in the streaming era, with all 236 episodes available to stream on Max â but the actor also left a lasting impression in several other movies and TV shows throughout his career. Here are some of Perryâs standout performances besides âFriendsâ and how to watch them. âYvonne Villarreal
- âFools Rush Inâ (Amazon Prime Video): This romantic comedy was released in 1997, while âFriendsâ was still at its peak. In his first big movie role as a lead, Perry plays Alex Whitman, a New York developer and perpetual bachelor who gets caught up in a shotgun wedding with a photographer, Isabel Fuentes (Salma Hayek), after he gets her pregnant during a one-night stand.
- â17 Againâ (Prime Video): Perryâs last film role is like a reverse version of âBig.â The 2009 family fantasy features Perry as a middle-aged man, Mike OâDonnell, a former high school basketball star who peddles erectile dysfunction pills as an adult and longs to return to his teen glory days. With the help of a magical janitor, Mike finds himself transformed into his teenage self, played by Zac Efron, once again.
- âThe Odd Coupleâ (Paramount+): A revival of the classic 1970s sitcom, based on Neil Simonâs play about two divorced men who make unlikely roommates, this CBS sitcom featured Perry as Oscar Madison, the irrepressible slob against Thomas Lennonâs more uptight Felix Unger. Perry also served as an executive producer on the show, which ran for three seasons beginning in 2015.
- Perry also had a number of memorable TV guest turns worth revisiting. During Seasons 4 and 5 of âThe West Wingâ (Max), he played Republican attorney Joe Quincy, earning two Emmy nominations. Perry also had a recurring role on âThe Good Wifeâ and its sister series âThe Good Fightâ (both on Paramount +) as Mike Kresteva, a shameless politician and lawyer whose easy lies made him a fan favorite to hate watch. And if you really want to dig into the vault, let the time machine take you back to 1991, with Perryâs guest appearance on âBeverly Hills, 90210â (Hulu, Paramount+). In the Season 1 episode âApril is the Cruelest Month,â he plays Roger Azarian, West Beverlyâs star tennis player who wrote a screenplay about killing his father.
- If youâre willing to rent or buy, the Perry performances to prioritize include 2000âs crime comedy âThe Whole Nine Yards,â in which he plays a dentist who gets entangled with Bruce Willisâ ex-gangster; his big post-âFriendsâ return to TV in Aaron Sorkinâs short-lived behind-the-scenes dramedy âStudio 60 on the Sunset Strip,â with Perry as a former writer who takes over production of an âSNLâ-type show; and âGo On,â the 2012 NBC sitcom that starred Perry as Ryan King, a snarky sports radio host who is required to attend group therapy sessions to cope with his grief after losing his wife. (Itâs a comedy, promise.)
- Finally, if you just want to curl up to âFriendsâ without having to search for your favorite Chandler episodes, Nickelodeon is honoring Matthew Perry with a half-hour special, âMatthew Perry: Thanks for Being a Friend,â that will air on Sunday at 10 p.m. as part of the channelâs Nick at Nite programming block. Nickelodeon says the tribute will be followed by âfan favoriteâ episodes of âFriendsâ featuring Perry. TBS has also been airing âFriendsâ marathons dedicated to his character in the week since Perryâs death. Theyâll continue through Sunday. Viewers can watch Nickelodeonâs Perry tribute and the TBS marathons on TV through their local cable provider and can stream online through select streaming services that offer the channels.
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
On ABCâs âAbbott Elementary,â Chris Perfetti plays Jacob, the underfunded public schoolâs endearingly eager teacher who never passes up an opportunity to rap a history lesson or quote an NPR story. Onstage, he is performing alongside Alfred Molina and John Douglas Thompson in âInherit the Wind,â opening Sunday at the Pasadena Playhouse and running through Nov. 26. In the education-related courtroom drama, Perfetti plays the influential newspaperman E.K. Hornbeck (famously portrayed by Gene Kelly in the 1960 film). Between rehearsals, Perfetti stopped by Screen Gab to talk about reporters and lawyers onscreen, his favorite Kelly project and what heâs been watching lately. âAshley Lee
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
Iâm embarrassingly, egregiously late to this game but Iâve been talking about Celine Songâs âPast Livesâ [VOD, multiple platforms] quite a bit lately. Itâs like a Chekhov play. (And whatâs better than that?) Fabulous performances. Loads of silent storytelling. Messy, gorgeous human beings caught in the epic tide pool of life. I loved it. I am missing my city of New York right now, which I suspect heightened its blow. GO SEE IT. See it alone!
What is your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
The subtle omniscient croonage of David Attenborough simultaneously comforts me and plugs me deep into the ground like nothing else. That man could say just about anything, and Iâd believe it! Typically the amount of documentaries I watch outweighs the narrative stuff 4 to 1 and I canât get enough of Sir Dave. âPlanet Earthâ [Max, Discovery+], âThe Blue Planetâ [Discovery+], âLife on Earthâ [Fubo] ⌠you name it!
With âInherit the Windâ largely taking place in the courtroom, what is your favorite courtroom-set movie or TV show?
This is a softball. Lucky for us all that the age-old debate over which courtroom drama transcends the rest was settled in 1992 with the seminal introduction of âMy Cousin Vinnyâ [Paramount+]. Next question.
You play newspaper reporter E.K. Hornbeck in the play. Who is your favorite reporter from a movie or a TV show, and why?
Wow, this turned out to be the toughest question of them all. Iâve swung capriciously from not being able to name a single reporter character in the history of film ⌠to humbly declaring it a three-way tie between Meryl Streep in âAdaptationâ [VOD, multiple platforms], Jeff Daniels in âThe Newsroomâ [Max] and Patrick Fugit in âAlmost Famousâ [Fubo, Paramount+ with Showtime]. TWIST.
Gene Kelly played your âInherit the Windâ character in the 1960 movie. If you have one, whatâs your favorite movie of his, and why?
Does âXanaduâ [VOD, multiple platforms] count? Can I say âXanadu?â If I can, I am. GK stans will roll their eyes but, hey, Iâm just a guy.
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.