47°F
weather icon Clear
TV

‘Friends’ creator David Crane impressed by Las Vegas fan experience

Of everyone who visited the “Friends” Fan Experience at New York-New York on Saturday, David Crane may have come away the most impressed.

“It’s unbelievable,” he said. “Looking at this Lego Central Perk, it feels like someone took your childhood home and made it out of Legos, with everything you ever loved and cared about.”

Coming from anyone else, that might sound deranged. But Crane, who created the sitcom with his longtime friend Marta Kauffman, spent 10 years of his life on that coffee shop set. Seeing it immortalized, full-size, in roughly 975,000 Lego bricks by artist Nathan Sawaya clearly left a mark.

“I just wanted to be here and see it, and I’m so glad I did,” Crane said. “Because it’s the most impressive, loving tribute to the show.”

In addition to hanging out at the Lego set, fans could take part in several interactive elements, pose for selfies on the famed orange couch and meet Katie, the capuchin monkey who starred as Marcel.

Phoebe’s Yellow Cab Escape Room, a trivia challenge set inside a fully operational taxi parked on the hotel’s Brooklyn Bridge, proved difficult even for Crane. The writer, who also co-created the Matt LeBlanc vehicle “Episodes,” was baffled by the presence of a blue bra on the cab’s front seat. (It was an homage to the undergarment Phoebe sacrificed so Joey could use the underwire to break into the locked taxi in the season three episode “The One Without the Ski Trip.”)

“I don’t watch the show, so a lot of these things, I haven’t seen in 25 years,” Crane admitted. “If anyone picked me for, like, some trivia contest, they would be making a huge mistake.”

The event, along with a new “Friends”-inspired show at the Fountains of Bellagio and a special performance by Blue Man Group, were part of the extended celebration of the show’s 25th anniversary.

“How much people care about the show, I mean, that just blows me away,” Crane said. “We started 25 years ago, but we finished 15 years ago. And the fact that we’re still here doing this, I mean, you don’t get that. What other show gets that? It’s amazing.”

Contact Christopher Lawrence at clawrence@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4567. Follow @life_onthecouch on Twitter.

THE LATEST
Actor Peter Sarsgaard drawn to thunderbolt moments

“I don’t want to gear up,” says the 53-year-old star of the new historical drama “September 5.” “I like to be surprised by life.”

Nicole Kidman treasures piece of life-changing advice

“For me in my life, it’s still about discovering,” the 57-year-old actor says. “At every age, you don’t know what you don’t know.”

Linda Lavin, star of the sitcom ‘Alice,’ dies at 87

She died in Los Angeles on Sunday of complications from recently discovered lung cancer, her representative, Bill Veloric, told The Associated Press in an email.

Sportscaster Greg Gumbel dies from cancer at 78

Greg Gumbel, a longtime CBS sportscaster, has died from cancer, according to a statement from family released by CBS on Friday. He was 78.