View Full Version : The Creator Of Friends Claims This Was The Show's Worst Guest Star


TMC
09-06-2022, 08:30 PM
https://www.nickiswift.com/993285/the-creator-of-friends-claims-this-was-the-shows-worst-guest-star/

Jean-Claude Van Damme was 'unprepared and arrogant' on set

Jean-Claude Van Damme (https://lebeauleblog.com/2014/01/12/what-the-hell-happened-to-jean-claude-van-damme/) made his guest appearance on "Friends" in 1996 in the second season episode entitled "The One After the Superbowl" (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0583439/) (which also happened to be the show's most-watched episode (https://www.interviewarea.com/frequently-asked-questions/which-friends-episode-is-most-watched) ever). In the episode, Van Damme played himself, the object of Monica and Rachel's affection (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FieIupzBAWM) after they run into him on set of one of his movies. They come to realize he is a "jerk," however, after he first flirts with Rachel instead of Monica, then decides to go on a blind date with Monica only because he believed she had agreed to a threesome with Drew Barrymore.

As it turns out, Van Damme was not that much different off-screen than he was on. In 2021, several "Friends" producers revealed that Van Damme made working on set very difficult, per the Hollywood Reporter (https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/the-one-we-wouldnt-normally-do-the-uncensored-story-of-the-friends-super-bowl-episode-4121546/). For one, he arrived on set several hours late, then snapped at producers when they asked him if he had any questions. Former NBC executive Warren Littlefield compared him to the Capuchin who played Marcel, saying that it would be appropriate to ask, "Who's more difficult to work with, him or the monkey?"

Michael Lembeck, who directed the two-part episode, called him "unprepared and arrogant," while creator and executive producer David Crane said that the version of himself he played in the episode "wasn't necessarily different than how he was in real-life." This became even more clear upon learning about his behavior around his female co-stars.

Jean-Claude Van Damme made his co-stars uncomfortable during kissing scenes

While speaking to The Hollywood Reporter (https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/the-one-we-wouldnt-normally-do-the-uncensored-story-of-the-friends-super-bowl-episode-4121546/), "Friends" executive producer Kevin Bright and director Michael Lembeck made some troubling revelations about how Jean-Claude Van Damme (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-DdxvUdarg) behaved on set during his guest appearance.

Apparently, Jennifer Aniston approached Lembeck during shooting and asked him to ask Van Damme "not to put his tongue in my mouth when he's kissing me." Lembeck did so, only to have Courteney Cox come up to him shortly thereafter and request the same thing. "I couldn't believe it!" Lembeck recalled. "I had to tell him again, but a little firmer." Bright said that they had to ask him to stop using tongue "several times."

These are not the first troubling accusations made against Van Damme. In 1993, the actor faced a lawsuit (https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-xpm-1993-12-24-9312240749-story.html) from a fellow female actor who alleged he conspired to set up a "sexual trap" for her on set of a movie, forcing himself on her while two other associates of his watched. Van Damme said at the time that this accusation was "totally without merit." Then, in 1997, per E! News (https://www.eonline.com/news/35567/van-damme-beat-me-wife-says), his wife, Darcy LaPier, who was in the process of divorcing him, accused him of serious physical abuse. According to the divorce filings, Van Damme was addicted to cocaine and regularly beat her — even to the point of hospitalization, leading her to feel "too afraid" for her safety to remain with him.