Joey Tribbiani
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| Joey Tribbiani | |
|---|---|
| First appearance | The Pilot (Friends) |
| Last appearance | Joey and the Wedding (Joey) |
| Cause/reason | End of Series |
| Created by | David Crane |
| Portrayed by | Matt LeBlanc |
| Episode count | 236 (Friends)/46 (Joey) |
| Information | |
| Occupation | Actor |
Joseph "Joey" Francis Tribbiani, Jr. (born January 9, 1968) is a fictional character on the popular US television sitcom Friends (1994–2004), and the title character in the spin-off, Joey (2004-2006), and is played by Matt LeBlanc.
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Joey comes from an Italian American[1] family of 8 children, of which he is the only male. He is one of the "Friends" that moved home the most number of times, having changed apartments two times in the series (and only beaten by Rachel, with five moves, and Ross with three): once, when he and Chandler moved into what is usually Monica's apartment after winning it from her in a game in "The One with the Embryos" and then moved back with Chandler into his own apartment; another time, he moved to his own lavish apartment away from Chandler, with whom the psychotic Eddie moved in, but shortly moved back afterwards. Joey is a "stereotypical" actor: oversexed, under-educated and constantly looking for work. He was ordained a minister in The One with the Truth About London, and officiated at both Monica and Chandler and Phoebe and Mike's weddings. It is revealed in The One After "I Do" that Joey has size seven feet, and in The One with Ross and Monica's Cousin it is revealed that Joey is circumcised.
The character of Joey is known for his simple-mindedness, trouble with understanding negative criticism of his acting (even once believing a description of his performance as "abysmal" was positive), love of food (particularly meatballs sub sandwiches as well as the "Joey's Special"... two pizzas) and his success with women, which generated the popular catchphrase "How you doin'?" (his pickup line). However, he is something of an idiot savant in matters of romance. This is directly alluded to in the episode "The One Where Ross Dates a Student", when Chandler, referring to Joey, says "A hot girl's at stake and suddenly he's Rain Man." In another example, Joey made up an anecdote referred to as the "Europe story"; apparently, anyone who hears it will immediately want to have sex with the teller. ("The One with the Videotape")
Joey has a career in acting that has been marked by both success and humiliating failure. His roles varied from neurosurgeon on a popular soap opera to being the headshot in a public health poster for VD, and even being a one-time butt double.
Joey's most famous acting role (and longest lasting) was as Dr. Drake Ramoray on the serial drama Days of Our Lives. However, when he claimed in an interview that he wrote many of his own lines, the writers of the show became annoyed and killed him off a few episodes later (he fell down an elevator shaft). His character later returned to Days of Our Lives in a bizarre plot line which resurrected him. In Season 7 of Friends, Joey was up for a Soapie for Best Returning Male Character. He lost, so he tried to steal one. Joey's agent was Estelle Leonard.
Other known roles of Joey's during the run of Friends include a spot in a commercial for "Lipstick for Men" that only aired in Japan; a leading role in the World War I period film "Over There"; and a starring role in a very short-lived cop show called "Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E." In terms of stage work, he appeared in a play called "Boxing Day" in which his character of "Victor" goes to outer space, and Monica and Chandler once discussed having seen Joey in a version of Macbeth.
In addition to the quick cancellation of "Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E.", Joey also had some other remarkably bad luck in terms of his acting career. He filmed a role in a Law & Order episode that was cut from the completed episode -- Joey was only seen as a corpse in a body bag. He was also cast in the independent film "Shutter Speed", but that film shut down before photography began. As well, he was fired from a Burger King commercial. Later, on the spin-off show Joey, Joey turned down a role in a sitcom called "Nurses" to star in a different series pilot; his pilot did not get picked up, while "Nurses" became a huge hit.
However, it's not all bad. In Joey, it is revealed that Joey's character of Dr Ramoray died again on Days of Our Lives when a nurse stabbed him while he was operating on her husband ("Joey and the Wrong Name"). He won a Daytime Soap Award for "Best Death Scene". In later Joey episodes, Joey landed a starring role on the prime time soap "Deep Powder"; when he got fired from that job, he almost immediately bounced back by snagging a leading role in the big-budget action picture "Captured".
Joey briefly mentions to the gang that Al Pacino is his idol. In Friends, Joey has the poster for the 1983 Al Pacino film Scarface in his apartment room. The same poster is seen in his house in "Joey". He also mentioned his favorite movie is Die Hard.
Joey was also employed (briefly) at Central Perk as a waiter. Facing a dry spell in his career as an actor, Joey was persuaded by Gunther to take a job serving coffee. At first Joey tried to hide the fact of his new job from his friends, but they eventually figured it out. He did not like the work but, true to his nature, soon found a way to use his position to meet and ingratiate himself to attractive women by giving them free food, a practice to which Gunther quickly put a stop. He didn't take his job very seriously and spent a lot of his working hours sitting and talking to his friends. Eventually he was fired for closing the coffee house in the middle of the day to go to an audition while Gunther was running a personal errand. Rachel later persuaded Gunther to give Joey back his job, but once he found more steady acting jobs he eventually just stopped showing up. His absence was barely noticed.
Another one of Joey's careers when he was low on money was a sperm donor. He was donating for an experiment a hospital was having and as payment at the end of 2 weeks the hospital would give any donors a 700 dollar check. This was later mentioned when Monica was trying to get over her break up with Richard Burke. She decide she wanted a baby so she was looking for sperm donors and realized that one of the applicants was Joey.
Joey shared an apartment with his best friend Chandler Bing and together they buy a chick and a duck later on in the series. A long-running gag depicted Joey and Chandler occasionally fighting with each other like an old married couple, with Chandler often assuming the wife role while Joey assumed the husband role, suggesting homosexual undertones in their friendship (this eventually ended when Chandler became permanently paired with Monica). Joey moved out temporarily when he found success as Dr. Drake Ramoray, but soon moved back in together. Chandler and Monica made it clear to Joey that their new home would have a specially designated "Joey room".
When Chandler moved out to pursue a relationship with Monica, Joey was joined by Janine (Elle MacPherson). He formed a stronger bond with Rachel Green during her pregnancy by Ross Geller. He eventually fell in love with Rachel and dated her for a time; however, nothing came of it and the two returned to being just good friends. By the series' finale, Rachel and Ross resumed their romance.
He also offered to stand up for Ross and Chandler when they were being bullied at Central Perk, and he allowed Monica to hire and fire him so as to prove to her employees that she was not a pushover. When he discovered that Monica and Chandler had developed a romantic relationship, he agreed to keep it a secret until the two were ready to reveal it to the rest of their group. He also called Chandler moments after suspecting Monica of having an affair with a mystery male he had heard in her apartment. He is also the only one that knew that Chandler is afraid of dogs and that Ross doesn't like ice cream.
Joey's relationships with the other Friends have always been very friendly. He is best friends with Chandler, and Ross is a close second, if not tied. Rachel and the other women on the show have been the object of many sexist comments on Joey's behalf, especially Monica. Chandler once put it, "Your long-standing offer to have sex with my wife is much appreciated." Notwithstanding this apparent boorishness, however, he always enjoyed a close relationship with Monica, Rachel and Phoebe.
In the end of the series, Joey was the only Friend that ended up without a lover or a spouse, even though he is the one that dated most women.
Joey has a close relationship with Rachel, also having been attracted to her twice in the series. Although his affection was unreturned in Season 8, once they actually dated in a later season.
Joey has a close relationship with Phoebe. When she was a surrogate mother for her brother's triplets, he offered to eat no meat until the babies were born, so that Phoebe could eat that meat instead. Also, when the Friends realize that the group may have to split up, Phoebe and Rachel conspired to form a separate group by themselves, but Phoebe insists that Joey come to their new group as well. Phoebe's loyalty is proved again when she states that she could live in Las Vegas, since it has everything she needs, "Including Joey!" He in turn invites her to live with him in the mansion he expectes to own when he becomes rich from having a hand twin. Phoebe also once says to her friends, "When the Revolution comes, I'll have to kill you all." After a moment's pause, she adds, "Not you, Joey." The two also try to meet once a month for dinner in order to discuss the other Friends. When Phoebe was upset because she'd turned thirty-one without having had the perfect kiss, Joey kissed her so that she could cross that off of her list. In one episode, when Joey believed Phoebe to be pregnant, he proposed marriage, claiming the world is too scary for a single mother alone.
Joey's age is not consistently treated. In "The One with the Birth", which aired on May 11, 1995, Joey says he is 25. In "The One Where Joey Moves Out", which aired less than a year later in February, 1996, Joey says he is 28. The latter would put his birth in 1967 or early 1968, which allows him to be older than Chandler, which he must be if the events in "The One Where They All Turn Thirty" are correct. In "The One With Russ", which aired in January, 1996, Joey says he has been acting for 10 years. This is consistent with birth in 1967 or 1968, assuming he began his acting career at about age 18. In "The One with Joey's Fridge", Joey refers to his activities during spring break in 1981 and Monica comments "You were 13", likewise consistent. In "The One With Ross's New Girlfriend", Joey, confused about whether Franky the tailor did Joey's first suit when he was 15 or 16, asks, "All right, when was 1990?" Joey can't have been 15 or 16 in 1990 and be 28 in 1996. However, it is possible that Joey had simply confused the years. In "The One With The Red Sweater" (2001) Chandler says that Joey is 32, which would put Joey's year of birth at 1969. In "The One with Monica's Thunder" (2000), Rachel says Joey is 31. By the first season of Joey, Michael reveals that Joey is 35.
After the 2003/2004 final season of Friends, Joey Tribbiani became the main character of Joey, a spin-off TV series, where he moved to L.A. to polish his acting career. His sister Gina Tribbiani and her son Michael were two other central characters of the show. Gina is a straightforward woman who proudly dresses in revealing clothing. Michael is a shy science major at Cal Tech who is not good at socializing with women. Joey becomes good friends with an attractive female attorney named Alex, who, along with her husband, a travelling musician named Eric, is Joey's landlord. Joey hires a new agent named Bobbie Morgenstern, who is herself rather boorish, and not very sympathetic to Joey. Michael, wanting to get out on his own away from his mother, moves in with Joey, though Gina is still a frequent presence at Joey and Michael's apartment (still appearing to do Michael's laundry, for example).
Lucy Liu eventually joins the cast as the executive producer of Deep Powder. Joey also begins a romantic relationship with a neighboring photographer named Sarah (Mädchen Amick), his first ongoing relationship that lasts more than one episode since his fling with Rachel on Friends. This too, however, ends when Sarah leaves Joey for her new job in Washington.
Following Sarah's departure, Alex separates from Eric and finds solace in the arms of Joey, but this too does not last.
Then, after being killed off Deep Powder, for being too demanding, because he thought "America loves me" Joey got his first real big break on the blockbuster movie Captured.[2]
He later buys a house that burns down and sees his sister reunited with the father of her child. As the series ends he is in a committed relationship with Alex and watches his sister marry the father of her child creating a new family.
Joey's final line was, to Alex, "There it is, you did it".[3]
- ^ In the episode, of Friends, titled "The One Where They All Turn Thirty", Joey reveals that he is 1/16th Portuguese
- ^ In the episode, of Joey, titled "Joey and the Big Break (Part 1 and 2)", Joey gets fired from Deep Powder and gets a leading part in Captured.
- ^ Joey, Joey and the Wedding
| Friends | |
|---|---|
| Characters | Rachel Green · Monica Geller · Phoebe Buffay · Joey Tribbiani · Chandler Bing · Ross Geller · Recurring characters |
| Guest stars · Episodes · Central Perk | |