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Lisa Kudrow’s Farewell To ‘The Comeback’ Felt “Absolutely True” To Her

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SPOILERS: This post contains details about The Comeback series finale ‘Valerie Cherish’

More than 20 years after bringing Valerie Cherish into our living rooms, Lisa Kudrow said goodbye to the leading lady in a touching The Comeback finale.

Ahead of Sunday’s concluding episode ‘Valerie Cherish’, the Emmy winner said “being able to put Valerie in the lens of Jane’s [Laura Silverman] camera was unbelievable” during her confessional in the final scene of the HBO mockumentary reality series, which she co-created with Michael Patrick King in 2005.

“And Valerie never felt humiliated is absolutely true, and to me, it’s everything,” she explained. “It’s a little meta because the show itself, after the first season, people, actors, a lot of people would say, ‘Oh my God, that must have been really hard to do because it was so painful.’ And I just like blink, ‘Painful? I don’t remember. I didn’t feel an ounce of pain.’”

Kudrow added, “Valerie spins it and believes her spin—and I called it spin—and then I realized what’s the difference? Spin your reality, what you let in, what you don’t. And that’s how a person can go on, that’s how people in dire situations can make a joke and laugh at some point. That’s how we survive. And also just hope and optimism. And she wasn’t wrong.”

Longtime fans of the show were also happy to see the return of Malin Akerman’s Juna in the penultimate ‘Valerie Chases the Truth’, after Kudrow’s character took the young actress under her wing in the first season.

Laura Silverman as Jane Benson and Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish in ‘The Comeback’

“Because there’s a history there, and it’s someone that is a perceived success, Juna Milken, and someone who always saw Valerie as a decent person,” noted Kudrow. “I always saw her that way. So, it’s an important person in Valerie’s life, and Valerie, it turns out, is an important person in Juna’s life, when she says, ‘Way back, everyone said watch out, everyone’s out for themselves, and you weren’t like that. And I’ve taken that attitude with me, and I’ve had a blast.’ And honestly, to me, that was my experience on Friends.”

The actress explained that her experience on the iconic 1994-2004 NBC sitcom “informs this and kind of informed how Valerie was. Yeah, she wanted her role in the first season, and yes, you look out for your career, but you don’t cut people off at the knees over it.”

More than 20 years after ending her tenure as Phoebe Buffay on Friends and introducing the world to Valerie Cherish with The Comeback, Kudrow’s experience came full-circle when her son Julian Stern appeared this season as AI technician Evan.

Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish and Malin Akerman as Juna Milken in ‘The Comeback’

“He was Evan and I was Valerie,” said Kudrow. “I mean, he was so much Evan that it was easy. … I was really proud, but mostly proud because when other people went, ‘Wait, I just found out that’s your son. He’s so nice, he’s so great. How did you do that, raising him in LA?’ It’s like, I didn’t, he came in that way, that’s him. I didn’t do anything. But he’s great. He’s talented. He’s so much better than I was at 27, for sure.”

Read on about Lisa Kudrow’s touching farewell to Valerie Cherish in the series finale of The Comeback, now available to stream on HBO Max.

DEADLINE: In the finale, we see Valerie’s arc come full circle. She’s taken a stand against AI and the studio. Tell me what it was like bringing her to that point. 

LISA KUDROW: Well, because it’s Valerie, who’s not taking a bigger worldview of AI, but it was that the AI in place for How’s That is serviceable, it’s not great writing. And it was never intended to be great writing is what she finds out that they just wanted sort of a second screen that people will put on and have it going in the background as they do whatever, and she’s been killing herself the whole season trying to make it great, not realizing that it was never ever gonna happen. So, it’s a betrayal, and then finding out, “well, we scanned your digital image so we can just use you”—because I’m not entirely sure, but I don’t think there are any protections by the unions, or by SAG-AFTRA—but anyway, she signs it away and then again, has to decide, “What do I do?” Because I have to say, as Valerie, not while we were writing, but maybe a little while we were writing, but there’s that whole cast that she’s bonded with, and she’s just gonna leave them, is what she’s initially thinking, you know? “I can’t just leave, it’s my show. How do I just let them use an avatar?” But then because she stood up to the ‘Big Three’ in a very polite way about trashing the show she’s on, didn’t feel right. And there’s so many things going on in that the ‘Big Three’ meeting. 

Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish, Bradley Whitford as Jack Stevens, Justin Theroux as Matt Wright and Adam Scott as Ben Morrow in ‘The Comeback’

DEADLINE: Yeah, what was it like working with those guys? 

KUDROW: Oh my God, it was really thrilling.  It was really thrilling. Oh God, Justin [Theroux], just the look, he is so intimidating, the look on his face, so intimidating. And Adam Scott so perfect as that smart, funny writer who keeps clipping, so it’s a little disarming. And then, “the future of television depends on what you do now” and then, “whoa, what just happened?” They’re very nice, reasonable, smart. Bradley Whitford’s character, Jack Stevens, he’s listening to her. They’re like, “You’ve gotta say something, you’ve gotta destroy your show because 10 or 20 writers could work.” She’s got 200 people working on her show, and she had just seen them all so scared that they’re gonna lose their jobs to AI, and that’s real. And so, they’re saying, “Trash your show so that for writers.” It’s all big, but to me, the last episode, there’s a lot going on, and the very end is the thing I think of. 

DEADLINE: Yeah, the monologue really hit me in the feels and the way it faded from black-and-white to color was really awesome too.

KUDROW: That was Michael Patrick King. And Elie Smolkin, our DP. Being able to put Valerie in the lens of Jane’s camera was unbelievable. And Valerie never felt humiliated is absolutely true, and to me, it’s everything. It’s a little meta because the show itself, after the first season, people, actors, a lot of people would say, “Oh my God, that must have been really hard to do because it was so painful.” And I just like blink, “Painful? I don’t remember. I didn’t feel an ounce of pain.” Valerie spins it and believes her spin—and I called it spin—and then I realized what’s the difference? Spin your reality, what you let in, what you don’t. And that’s how a person can go on, that’s how people in dire situations can make a joke and laugh at some point. That’s how we survive. And also just hope and optimism. And she wasn’t wrong.  Everything with Paulie G, her whole attitude was, “Well, he’s going through something, it’s not me.”

Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish in ‘The Comeback’

DEADLINE: And I loved seeing that arc as well, how they’ve basically become friends at this point. 

KUDROW: Yeah, there’s an understanding in some respect. Yeah, but also, she doesn’t trust him. He seems to act out when he’s scared.

DEADLINE: Like you were saying, seeing Valerie in Jane’s lens, I really appreciated that as well, and also seeing Jane defend her on TV and how she made her proud. Why was that relationship so important to see full-circle? 

KUDROW: Because Jane was so conflicted that first season at the end, and she just didn’t show up because she couldn’t bear it to see Valerie watch the show and that Jane had manipulated her as a producer of a reality show. She kind of got attached to Valerie. But Jane still sees Valerie as she did always; maybe she liked her, but I think she just felt like, “Oh, she’s sort of this witless victim who needs a little protection.” And when Valerie tells her, “Humiliated? No, I didn’t feel humiliated.” And that’s funny, that you have to agree to be humiliated is right. And Val didn’t sign up for that. It’s called adapting and surviving, and that’s what we do as human beings. I mean we have to. I mean you can look at it as compromise or you can look at it as coping, but our existence depends on adaptation.

DEADLINE: Absolutely. And I also loved seeing Juna come back in the penultimate. Why was that important to have that reunion? 

KUDROW: Because there’s a history there, and it’s someone that is a perceived success, Juna Milken, and someone who always saw Valerie as a decent person. I always saw her that way. So, it’s an important person in Valerie’s life, and Valerie, it turns out, is an important person in Juna’s life, when she says, “Way back, everyone said watch out, everyone’s out for themselves, and you weren’t like that. And I’ve taken that attitude with me, and I’ve had a blast.” And honestly, to me, that was my experience on Friends. We’ve all heard, “Oh, everyone’s so competitive and women are so competitive.” But no, we weren’t. We were nothing but supportive, all six of us with each other. So, I know that’s a possibility. And also, you’ve heard about Bob Newhart sets. Oh, so nice, and he’s nice and he’s supportive and he laughs at other people even though he’s a comedian. And I worked on a couple of Bob Newhart shows, so I saw it and went, “Oh, that would be great. I know that doesn’t exist anywhere but here.” But then how lucky I was to have it at Friends

Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish in ‘The Comeback’

DEADLINE: I love to hear that. 

KUDROW: So, that informs this and kind of informed how Valerie was. Yeah, she wanted her role in the first season, and yes, you look out for your career, but you don’t cut people off at the knees over it. 

DEADLINE: And I interviewed Julian a few weeks ago. He’s really cool. I really loved his character. What was it like working with him? 

KUDROW: Oh, so good. And you know what, he was Evan and I was Valerie. I mean, he was so much Evan that it was easy. I mean, boy, he was pretty grounded and like, he’s a real person. I was really proud, but mostly proud because when other people went, “wait, I just found out that’s your son,” and they said, “He’s so nice, he’s so great. How did you do that, raising him in LA?” It’s like, I didn’t, he came in that way, that’s him. I didn’t do anything. But he’s great. He’s talented. He’s so much better than I was at 27, for sure. 

DEADLINE: Another thing I was curious about, way back in the season premiere, I loved the Traitors appearance that you had. Was there an attempt to get Alan Cumming in there? Because It would have been an awesome Romy & Michele reunion. 

KUDROW: Well, it wasn’t really possible. But no, there wasn’t really an attempt because we needed to streamline it as much as we could, and just make it another reason that the algorithm would select Valerie. 

Damian Young as Mark Berman and Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish in ‘The Comeback’

DEADLINE: Oh, OK, that makes sense.

KUDROW: Yeah, because something went viral on a very popular show that she did. 

DEADLINE: Well, on that note, can you give me an update on the Romy & Michele sequel?

KUDROW: We’ll see. We’re almost there. It looks like it’ll happen.

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On ’30 Rock’ & ‘Studio 60’ Anniversary, NBC Again Goes For Comedy & Drama In Same Arena With ‘Rockford Files’ & ‘Sunset’ As PI Shows Heat Up

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Twenty years ago, at NBC’s 2006 upfront presentation, the network unveiled its 2006-07 lineup which featured two new series on the fall schedule, Aaron Sorkin’s drama Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip and Tina Fey’s single-camera comedy 30 Rock, set behind the scenes of a Saturday Night Live-type TV show. They launched within weeks of […]

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Robert Kirkman Draws ‘Youngblood’ No. 100 Cover

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Robert Kirkman is known as the mind behind some of the most impactful comic book properties this century, from The Walking Dead to Invincible. But the prolific writer and comic book mogul has talents with the pencils as well.

Kirkman is behind a variant cover for Youngblood No. 100, which The Hollywood Reporter can debut.

The comic is a milestone issue for the Rob Liefeld-created title, one that comes 34 years after Liefeld launched the book. Liefeld asked a number of artists contribute covers, including a several of Liefeld’s Image Comics co-founders, with whom he launched the company in 1992.

“I rarely ask anybody for anything. I hate getting turned down. I’m as sheepish as anyone else,” Liefeld tells THR of asking artists to contribute. But after learning Liefeld had asked his Image founders to participate, “Robert is like, ‘What about me?’” recalls Liefeld.

Youngblood launched in 1992 from Image and was the first title outside of Marvel or DC to bow at No. 1 and sell more than 1 million copies. Liefeld returned to the character after a lengthy hiatus in 2025, and is planning on continuing his run.

Also contributing covers for the June 10 issue are Todd McFarlane, Erik Larsen, Jim Valentino, Whilce Portacio, and Image CEO Marc Silvestri (below), which Liefeld said was so good that he felt he should retire from drawing Youngblood.

Recalls Liefeld: “I texted mark immediately, ‘I can not draw these characters. This is humiliating.’”

Marc Silvestri’s Youngblood No. 100 cover

Marc Silvestri

Robert Kirkman’s Youngblood No. 100

Robert Kirkman

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‘The White Lotus’ Season 4 Updates & News: Everything We Know So Far

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Cue a likely new version of the opening credits song for The White Lotus, because Season 4 is in the works, though it doesn’t look like the song will sound the same as that of Season 3.

After the first three seasons of the HBO drama, set in Hawaii, Italy and Thailand, respectively, the fourth season will head back to Europe with some cast already assembled.

For everything we know about The White Lotus Season 4, read on.

When will The White Lotus Season 4 come out?

A release date won’t be available for some time, as the full cast has not yet been assembled nor has Season 4 begun production.

Where will Season 4 of The White Lotus take place?

Deadline first reported that the luxurious hotel chain series that features wealthy guests has opened up a location in France for the fourth season.

RELATED: Composer Cristobal Tapia de Veer Reacts To Winning Emmy For His Third & Final Season Of ‘The White Lotus’ Following Contentious Exit

Mike White and HBO selected Château de La Messardière in Saint-Tropez as the hub setting for the next installment of the murder mystery series. The setting of the Cannes Film Festival will provide a backdrop for the fourth installment.

The iconic Martinez and the Airelles Château de la Messardière in Saint-Tropez have been named the White Lotus Cannes and the latter the White Lotus du Cap, respectively. Bernad called the Martinez “a beautiful place that perfectly captured what we were going for” and noted that White will use selected locations to influence his scripts.

Interior filming is taking place in Paris due to the busy tourist season in Europe.

What will Season 4 of The White Lotus be about?

“Early on, Mike talked about wanting to do Season 4 as the life of an artist – the loneliness and the pain,” teased executive producer David Bernad while at Canneseries last month. “That’s a throughline that runs throughout the season. As we located the show at the Cannes Film Festival, this idea of fame popped up, and who has the world’s attention? Who can grab it, and who is the plus-one in a relationship? What are the things that satisfy us? Is it the love of an intimate partner, the love of strangers? What do we prioritize in people?”

Bernad also teased that Season 4 would be “the most personal and the funniest” to date.

“It really examines the things we value as people and what is attractive to us, and how fame can be corrosive and dictate your choices in life,” he added. “Some of the characters are existentially reflecting on those choices, some are reflecting on the choices and sacrifices they made as artists, and some are just starting to enter into this world of fame. Mike does a brilliant job of capturing how relationships can be corroded.”

RELATED: ‘The White Lotus’ Season 4’s Cannes Film Festival Trip Will Explore “The Life Of An Artist,” Says EP David Bernad

Bernad revealed the inspiration for Season 4 as a shared experience of his and Mike White’s with a waiter and maître d at a restaurant in Cannes. The encounter convinced them that they had found their Season 4 setting, and they canceled all other location scouting.

“The energy around it was so intoxicating and this season will have elements of that, he said. “It’s really about the people’s stories, them navigating Cannes, and the ups and downs of the festival. It’s the beating heart of everything in this season.”

Who will be in the cast of The White Lotus Season 4?

The latest round of casting netted Ben Kingsley (The Thursday Murder ClubWonder Man), Max Minghella (The Handmaid’s TaleThe Social Network) and Pekka Strang (Mister 8Dogs Don’t Wear Pants) in recurring roles.

Comedic actors Max Greenfield and Kumail Nanjiani are also among the heavy hitters who have joined the next iteration of the drama series alongside Chloe Bennet, Charlie Hall and Jarrad Paul as recurring characters.

RELATED: Steve Coogan On Why Mike White Cast Him In ‘The White Lotus’ & Helena Bonham Carter’s Exit: “The Whole Part Was Rewritten From Scratch”

Helena Bonham Carter was originally confirmed to star, as Deadline first reported she was in talks to join the fourth season. Alexander Ludwig and AJ Michalka joined the new season shortly after that news. Carter’s role is now being recast and rewritten after production on the fourth season has begun, Deadline first reported. Deadline then broke the news that Laura Dern, who has previously worked with creator Mike White, will replace Carter.

Deadline reported that Chris Messina had been offered a role in the fourth season as well, and he is now confirmed to star as well. Marissa Long was the newest addition before Sandra Bernhard joined the cast in February. Character roles are under wraps.

RELATED: ‘The White Lotus’ S4 Adds Max Greenfield, Kumail Nanjiani, Chloe Bennet, Charlie Hall & Jarrad Paul

French actors joining the cast as likely locals for Season 4 include  Vincent Cassel (Ocean’s movies, Jason Bourne), Corentin Fila (Being 17, Escort Boys) and Nadia Tereszkiewicz (Forever Young, Heads or Tails)

Recurring cast members announced in March 2026 include Americans Heather Graham (They Will Kill You, Chosen Family), Rosie Perez (The Flight Attendant, Your Honor) and Ben Schnetzer (The Madison, Y: The Last Man), the Scandinavian duo of Tobias Santelmann (Detective Hole, The Last Kingdom) and Frida Gustavsson (Faithless, Vikings: Valhalla), and French actress Laura Smet (Eager Bodies, The Bridesmaid).

Who will be the connecting character for The White Lotus Season 4?

No word yet on who is set to recur as a character who has already appeared in a previous season of the series, which is a trend that the second and third installments have followed. Jennifer Coolidge bridged Seasons 1 and 2, and Natasha Rothwell appeared in Seasons 1 and 3. Jon Gries appeared in all three seasons. Charlotte Le Bon is a strong contender for Season 4’s connecting character because she speaks French, and she is Jon Gries’ character Greg’s new girlfriend.

Though Laura Dern previously had an uncredited voice cameo in Season 2, she will be playing a brand new character in Season 4.

RELATED: Laura Dern Joins ‘The White Lotus’ Season 4, Reuniting With Series Creator Mike White

Carrie Coon shared with Deadline that she would be willing to come back on one condition.

“I would certainly be open to it. I would prefer to work in the snow,” she said, alluding to her six months in Thailand in the humid heat. “It was the hottest I’ve ever been in my life, and it’s only getting hotter.”

Who else is behind The White Lotus Season 4?

Season 4 is created, written, and directed by Mike White. Executive producers include White, David Bernad, and Mark Kamine.  

RELATED: Jason Isaacs On His Golden Globes Nomination For ‘The White Lotus’: “I’ve Been Lucky To Be Around Brilliant Writing”

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