More Friends of “Friends”:  Missi Pyle, Christina Moore, Hugh Laurie, Willie Garson

While some Hollywood heavyweights like Brad Pitt, Bruce Willis, Julia Roberts and George Clooney can consider themselves forever friends of Friends, there are many familiar faces associated with the perennial television favorite that can do likewise.  As we draw closer to the show’s 25th anniversary on September 22, and the end of our Friends of Friends  series (for now), let’s look back at some of the “I know them” friends who made a lasting contribution to some of the show’s most memorable storylines.

Missi Pyle has numerous credits to her name, on both the big and small screen, making her one of the industry’s most consistent working actors.  But it’s The One with Ross’ Teeth from season six that still brings a smile to Friends devotees around the globe.  In the unforgettable episode, Ross (David Schwimmer, pictured at top) bleaches his teeth in preparation for a hot date with Hillary (Pyle), and after leaving the whitening gel on for too long, doesn’t realize you can see his teeth “from space!”

“Yes, I went on a date with Ross after he bleached his teeth,” laughed Pyle (above left) when I asked her about the show.  At the time of the episode, the busy Pyle admitted she hadn’t really watched Friends, but it’s something fans are delighted to remind her of.  “I do get people [still] recognizing me,” she added.  “I get like 60 bucks a year [in residual checks], so it’s a big deal.  But I did an episode of Seinfeld, too, which gives me so much street cred, probably more than anything else I’ve done.”

After making the rounds on everything from Beverly Hills 90210 and Married ... with Childrento Wings, Christina Moore (above) would find herself on Stage 25 at Warner Bros. in 1998 for season four’s twentieth episode (The One with All the Wedding Dresses) as Marjorie, a girl Chandler (Matthew Perry) and Joey (Matt LeBlanc) encounter at a sleep clinic.  “My episode is in a compilation of the top 20 episodes of all time,” Moore noted with obvious pride.  “In it, Joey had to go to a sleep clinic and get a mouth guard, so Chandler could sleep.  It was phenomenal to be on such a huge hit at the time.  It was one of my first jobs.”  Moore, like Pyle, is still cashing those residual checks for the umpteenth re-runs of the episode admitting, “Because it’s in a top 20 list, I get like $120 a year!”

Long before Hugh Laurie (above) became a household name courtesy of Fox’s long-running medical drama House (2004-12), the actor found himself on Friends in 1998.  With Ross’ wedding to Emily (Helen Baxendale) taking place in England, the two-part The One with Ross’ Wedding called for a host of British guest stars that included Sarah Ferguson, Sir Richard Branson, Jennifer Saunders and June Whitfield.  It was in part two that Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) found herself seated next to Laurie on her mad-dash plane trip to England to tell Ross that she still loved him.  “That comes up a lot and that was a hell of a thing!” admitted Laurie of his contribution to Friends.  “Given I was only there for about 45 seconds, it’s something that lingers on, and well, it’s never off the television and never will be -- so it’s a good thing!”

Steve Gidlow

Steve Gidlow, a long-time columnist for MediaVillage ("Behind the Scenes in Hollywood"), has written about television and pop culture since 1994, beginning in Australia.  Since moving to Hollywood in 1997, Steve has focused on celebrity interv… read more