TV

Aisha Tyler says ‘Friends’ casting reflected attitude that “only white stories sold”


Aisha Tyler has reflected on the lack of diversity in the casting of Friends as it celebrates its 30th anniversary.

Tyler appeared in the ninth and tenth seasons of the hit sitcom as Charlie Wheeler, a palaentologist who is romantically involved with both Joey (Matt LeBlanc) and Ross (David Schwimmer). She was the first Black recurring character in the show.

In an interview with The Independent, Tyler said she used to hear passers by yell “Black girl from Friends!” 

“It was such a common refrain at the time,” she said. “It wasn’t like it was just something that people looked back at later and said, ‘Wait a minute.’ No, at the time, people talked quite a bit about the fact that, for a show that was set in the heart of Manhattan, it really lacked diversity. But we didn’t have social media back then, so it wasn’t the large-scale conversation that it became later.”

She continued: “There was nothing in the writing of my character or in the stage directions that indicated that Charlie was supposed to be a woman of colour. I know that David has said that he really pushed for that [more diversity] and I think that’s wonderful.

“But what I liked was that they just wrote this smart, sexy character and she happened to be Black and they weren’t trying to seismically change what the show was, but they were aware of the fact that it didn’t feel totally representative of the world as it existed then or had existed for many, many, many decades. So I knew that me coming on the show was an aspect of that self-reflection.”

Tyler added that she saw Friends’ lack of diversity as symptomatic of the wider TV and film industry that believed “only white stories sold”.

'Friends' cast
Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matt LeBlanc, Lisa Kudrow, Matthew Perry and David Schwimmer of “Friends” CREDIT: Getty/Photo by Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

“I mean, that’s just been the attitude in Hollywood for a long time,” she said. “They’d say people won’t watch a show with these characters, and now we all know that’s not true. But that perspective still persists and there are still people who will say, well, that movie won’t sell overseas if it has a Black lead, and that movie won’t sell in these markets if it has a gay lead.

“Or they say, ‘We have our one Black show. We don’t need another one.’”

On one occasion, Tyler was rejected due to filmmakers having already cast a Black character: “I’m like, ‘Have you never seen two Black people in the same room in the real world? Is there just one of us? Are we like Superman and Clark Kent? When I leave the room, does Kerry Washington come in? And then you find out later we’ve been exchanging masks?’ It’s just ridiculous!”

Fortunately, Tyler said she believes things are improving as “more women and more people of colour and other excluded groups, and the LGBTQAI community, get behind the camera and tell their stories”.

“We know that great stories are human stories, and they’re varied and diverse and compelling and people want to learn about people and have experiences that they haven’t had before,” she added.

In other news, it was revealed earlier this month that Matthew Perry’s manager has reportedly retired following the actor’s death.





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