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Liz Feldman is an American comedian, writer, producer and director. She is best known as the creator and executive producer of the Netflix dark comedy series Dead to Me[1] and No Good Deed[2]. She also created the NBC sitcom One Big Happy and has written for 2 Broke Girls, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and Hot in Cleveland.

Key Information

Career

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In 1995, Feldman made her television debut as a performer and writer for All That on Nickelodeon. She is a graduate of Boston University and an alumna of improv groups The Second City and The Groundlings. She went on to write for Blue Collar TV, Hot in Cleveland, The Great Indoors, the 79th, 86th and 87th Academy Awards, 2 Broke Girls and The Ellen DeGeneres Show, for which she won four Emmy awards. She created the NBC sitcom One Big Happy starring Elisha Cuthbert, executive produced by Ellen DeGeneres.

From 2008 to 2017, Feldman hosted This Just Out, a YouTube talk show celebrating lesbian culture. The show was filmed at her kitchen table and featured LGBTQ and LGBTQ-friendly actors, comedians, writers, and musicians. Feldman has been an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ rights. In 2008, her joke about same-sex marriage ("It's very dear to me, the issue of gay marriage, or as I like to call it 'marriage', you know, because I had lunch this afternoon, not gay lunch. I park my car, I didn't gay park it.") went viral, recreated thousands of times across various platforms in the campaign against Prop 8, which sought to outlaw same-sex marriage.

In 2019, Feldman created and produced the Netflix dark comedy series Dead to Me, executive produced by Will Ferrell and Adam McKay.[3] The series starred Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini, and was produced by Gloria Sanchez Productions, the female-focused counterpart to Gary Sanchez Productions. Dead to Me premiered on Netflix on May 3, 2019.[4] NPR TV critic David Bianculli noted, “It’s [Liz Feldman’s] career-best work, and it’s the career-best work for Applegate and Cardellini.”[5] Season one of Dead to Me was fourth on Netflix’s “Top 10 Most Popular Series of 2019 in the United States.”[6] A second series was released on Netflix on May 8, 2020.[7] It received four Emmy® nominations, including Outstanding Comedy Series.[8] In July 2020, Netflix renewed the series for a third and final season.[9] On July 6, 2020, Netflix announced that it had entered into an exclusive multi-year development deal with Feldman, under which all of her future productions will be Netflix Original series.[10][11]

In 2020, Feldman won the WGA Award for Best Episodic Comedy for the pilot episode of Dead to Me.[12] In 2021, she was again nominated for a Writers Guild Award for Episodic Comedy, and the show received three SAG Nominations that year.[13] Feldman was also named to The Hollywood Reporter's "50 Most Powerful LGBTQ Players in Hollywood" list.[14] The final season of Dead to Me aired in November 2022. Christina Applegate was nominated for a Critics Choice Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series.[15]

In May 2022, Feldman announced her second show under her multi-year overall deal with Netflix: No Good Deed.[2] The show is a dark comedy about one family selling their house, and the three families desperately trying to buy it. In this high-pressure environment, mysteries and truths unravel, and cracks are exposed. Feldman executive produces alongside Will Ferrell, Jessica Elbaum and Brittney Segal of Gloria Sanchez Productions, Christie Smith, and directing producer Silver Tree. No Good Deed dropped on Netflix on December 12, 2024, spending its first weeks in the Netflix top three shows in the U.S. Feldman reunites with Linda Cardellini on the show, which also stars Lisa Kudrow, Ray Romano and Luke Wilson, Denis Leary, O-T Fagbenle, Teyonah Parris, Abbi Jacobson and Poppy Liu.[16] No Good Deed was included on Deadline's "The 7 Best Shows to Stream in December 2024."[17]

In 2025, Feldman will launch her new podcast alongside Jessi Klein, HERE TO MAKE FRIENDS. The show will focus on making new and meaningful friendships as an adult, with Feldman and Klein inviting on guests that they would like to befriend.

Awards and nominations

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References

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Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Liz Feldman (born May 21, 1977) is an American comedian, writer, producer, and director best known for creating and executive producing the Netflix dark comedy series Dead to Me (2019–2022), which centers on grief, friendship, and deception following a widow's encounter with a free-spirited woman harboring secrets.[1][2] She began her professional career as a stand-up comedian at age 16, later training with improv ensembles The Groundlings and Second City before transitioning to television writing.[2][3] Feldman garnered four Daytime Emmy Awards for outstanding writing and producing on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, where she contributed from 2003 to 2010.[4][5] Among her other notable works are the NBC sitcom One Big Happy (2015), a semi-autobiographical series about a lesbian couple navigating family dynamics, and the Netflix murder-mystery anthology No Good Deed (2024), which uses real estate rivalries to explore loss and betrayal.[6][2] She has also written for series including 2 Broke Girls and Hot in Cleveland, as well as Academy Awards broadcasts.[2]

Early life and education

Upbringing and early interests

Liz Feldman was born on May 21, 1977, in Brooklyn, New York.[7] Raised in a Jewish family in the borough, she participated in synagogue events from a young age, including a Purim play at age six where her older sister, then eleven, portrayed Queen Esther.[8] Feldman has referenced her sister Rebecca, a writer and director, in collaborative projects and family anecdotes, indicating a household environment that included creative pursuits.[9] Feldman's early interests centered on humor, with her material often rooted in observational comedy derived from family dynamics and personal observations.[10] She began performing stand-up comedy at age 16, focusing on routines that frequently targeted her parents, much to their disapproval.[10] This precocious engagement with live performance, conducted in local venues amid Brooklyn's urban setting, highlighted her innate draw toward witty, self-deprecating storytelling as a means of processing everyday experiences.[11]

Formal education

Feldman attended Poly Prep Country Day School in Brooklyn, New York, graduating in the class of 1995.[11] She subsequently pursued higher education at Boston University, earning a bachelor's degree in Television and Film Writing from the College of Communication in 1999.[3][11] This program equipped her with foundational skills in scriptwriting and media production, aligning with her aspirations in entertainment. However, Feldman's development in comedy emphasized self-directed improvisation over structured academic coursework, as she began exploring improv outlets that complemented rather than derived from her formal studies.[3]

Career

Early career in comedy and writing

Feldman initiated her professional comedy career as a stand-up performer at the age of 16.[2] In 1995, shortly after high school graduation, she debuted on television as both a writer and performer for the Nickelodeon sketch comedy series All That, contributing material and sketches to the program aimed at young audiences.[2][12] Relocating to Los Angeles to pursue further opportunities, Feldman trained and performed with prominent improv ensembles, including The Groundlings and Second City.[8] She invested nearly six years in The Groundlings' rigorous improv and sketch comedy programs, which emphasized character development and spontaneous performance, though she did not advance to the troupe's main company.[13][14] By the late 2000s, Feldman expanded into digital content creation, hosting the lesbian-themed video series This Just Out on AfterEllen.com from 2007 to 2010.[15][16] This vlog-format talk show, featuring discussions on queer culture and comedy sketches, helped cultivate a dedicated niche following within the LGBTQ+ community prior to her mainstream television writing roles.[17][18]

Contributions to established television shows

Feldman began her contributions to major daytime television as a writer and producer on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, which premiered in 2003 and became a syndicated staple known for its comedic segments and celebrity interviews.[8] Her role involved crafting monologue material and field pieces, helping the program secure multiple Daytime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Writing during her tenure, with Feldman personally earning four Emmys for Outstanding Writing for a Variety, Music or Comedy Series between 2006 and 2007.[2] [10] These accolades reflected the show's emphasis on quick-witted, audience-engaging humor in a collaborative writers' room setting.[19] In addition to daytime television, Feldman wrote for high-profile live events, including the 79th Annual Academy Awards telecast on February 25, 2007, hosted by Ellen DeGeneres, where she contributed to scripted comedic bits and presenter introductions amid the ceremony's 39.9 million viewers.[10] [3] This work extended to later Oscars, such as the 86th (2014) and 87th (2015), involving similar real-time adaptation to live dynamics and celebrity roasts.[2] Feldman later joined the staff of the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls as a writer and supervising producer starting in its 2011 debut season, participating in a team-based process to develop storylines centered on the protagonists' entrepreneurial struggles in a Brooklyn diner.[5] [20] Her contributions included scripting episodes that balanced rapid-fire dialogue with character-driven comedy, aligning with the show's format of 22-minute installments produced under tight network schedules.[21] She also wrote for the TV Land sitcom Hot in Cleveland during its 2010-2015 run, focusing on ensemble humor for aging actresses navigating Midwestern life.[2] These roles honed her skills in multi-camera comedy production within established ensemble casts and formulaic episode structures.[3]

Development of original series

Feldman created her first original series, the NBC sitcom One Big Happy, which premiered on March 17, 2015, and ran for one season of eight episodes. The show centered on a lesbian couple navigating parenthood after one partner artificially inseminates with sperm from her gay best friend, emphasizing unconventional family dynamics and interpersonal conflicts.[22] Drawing from her own close friendships and relationship experiences, Feldman infused the narrative with authentic character depth, portraying the protagonists as multifaceted individuals rather than stereotypes.[23] Executive produced by Ellen DeGeneres, the series marked Feldman's transition from staff writing to showrunning, granting her greater oversight in blending humor with relational realism.[24] Transitioning to streaming platforms, Feldman developed Dead to Me for Netflix, which debuted on May 3, 2019, and concluded after three seasons on November 17, 2022. This dark comedy explored grief, friendship, and deception through the bond between a widowed mother (Jen) and a free-spirited widow (Judy), whose relationship unravels amid secrets including a hit-and-run incident.[25] Though the plot was fictional, its emotional core stemmed from Feldman's personal encounters with loss—including the sudden death of a cousin and close friends—as well as fertility challenges during her attempts to conceive around age 40.[26] Netflix's model afforded Feldman substantial creative autonomy as showrunner, enabling her to incorporate narrative twists, morally complex choices, and female-centric perspectives without traditional network constraints.[3] The series highlighted ambiguous ethics, such as characters rationalizing lies and crimes amid trauma, reflecting Feldman's intent to depict grief's nonlinear, unflinching reality.[27]

Recent projects and directing

Feldman's latest television project is the Netflix limited series No Good Deed, which premiered on December 12, 2024, consisting of eight episodes. The black comedy centers on three families in Los Angeles competing to buy the same 1920s Spanish-style villa, each believing it will resolve their personal crises, only to uncover the property's history of murder and concealed family secrets.[28][29] Starring Lisa Kudrow, Ray Romano, and Linda Cardellini, the series blends real estate intrigue with themes of grief and deception, portraying the housing market's competitiveness as a catalyst for exposing unresolved losses.[30] In No Good Deed, Feldman serves as creator, writer, and showrunner, continuing her pattern of crafting narratives around interpersonal absurdities and emotional undercurrents, this time through the lens of urban property disputes and familial dysfunction. The plot revolves around sellers Paul and Lydia Morgan (Ray Romano and Kudrow) hiding a past tragedy from prospective buyers, including a couple played by Cardellini and another by Abbi Jacobson, heightening tensions via escalating bids and revelations.[31] This project marks her return to Netflix following Dead to Me's conclusion in 2022, emphasizing how domestic spaces symbolize deeper psychological burdens rather than mere material gain.[30] Feldman has increasingly incorporated directing into her workflow, helming episodes across her created series to maintain creative control over tone and pacing, though specific credits for No Good Deed align primarily with her producing and writing roles. Her directing efforts reflect a shift toward visually underscoring thematic absurdities in modern life, such as the frenzy of high-stakes home purchases amid personal turmoil, with no announced projects beyond this series as of late 2024.[7][31]

Personal life

Marriage and family

Feldman married musician Rachael Cantu on April 13, 2013.[32] The couple marked their tenth wedding anniversary in 2023.[33] They reside in Los Angeles, where they purchased a historic Spanish Mediterranean-style home in the Los Feliz neighborhood for $4.75 million in 2021.[34][35] Following their marriage, Feldman pursued family expansion amid fertility challenges, undergoing procedures she later described as akin to a "Greek tragedy" marked by pain and prolonged difficulty.[26] These struggles, which began around the time of their union and extended over years, ultimately led Feldman to accept that she could not carry a pregnancy herself.[36][37] Feldman and Cantu have one child.[38]

Influences on creative work

Feldman's series Dead to Me (2019–2022) draws directly from her experiences with grief, including the deaths of close friends and a family member, which she processed through writing the show's exploration of loss and emotional healing.[27][39] She has described the project as originating from a need to make sense of these personal losses, with themes of unresolved mourning—such as the protagonist Jen's trauma from her mother's death by cancer—mirroring her own cathartic intent.[27][40] Her prolonged struggles with infertility, spanning six years and involving invasive procedures, miscarriages, and repeated setbacks, informed the resilience and relational dynamics depicted in Dead to Me, particularly the bonds formed amid adversity.[26][37] Feldman characterized this phase as a "Greek tragedy," with the emotional toll paralleling the characters' navigation of friendship as a lifeline during vulnerability and reproductive challenges.[26][40] As an openly lesbian writer and producer, Feldman integrates LGBTQ perspectives into her narratives, reflecting her public advocacy for related rights through authentic character portrayals and thematic inclusivity in projects like Dead to Me.[41] This approach stems from her personal identity and experiences in same-sex family-building, which underscore motifs of chosen family and perseverance without overt didacticism.[41][30]

Awards and recognition

Emmy Awards

Feldman earned four Daytime Emmy Awards as part of the writing and producing team for The Ellen DeGeneres Show, recognizing contributions to its scripted segments and overall content in a category historically dominated by long-running syndicated talk programs.[2][5] These victories occurred during the show's peak syndication years, amid competition from established daytime formats where Ellen's team secured multiple wins for innovative monologue writing and special class material, highlighting Feldman's role in crafting humorous, audience-engaging scripts.[42][43] Specific accolades included the 2006 Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Special Class Writing, awarded to the Ellen writers for exceptional comedic sketches and topical humor.[5] In 2007, the team won both Outstanding Talk Show and Outstanding Special Class Writing, crediting Feldman's input on monologue development and producer oversight in a field where fewer than 10% of nominees typically prevail annually.[44] A further win came in 2008 for Outstanding Writing for a Talk Show, underscoring sustained excellence against peers like The View and Live with Regis and Kelly.[43] These team-based honors reflect the rigorous peer-voted process of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, where writing categories emphasize originality and execution under daily production constraints.[45] Beyond wins, Feldman received Primetime Emmy recognition in 2020 as executive producer of Dead to Me, nominated for Outstanding Comedy Series in a highly competitive field of 30 entrants, though it did not secure the award against winners like Schitt's Creek.[46] Additional Daytime Emmy nominations for Ellen writing came in 2010 and 2011, affirming consistent output but no further victories.[43] No Emmy wins or personal nominations are recorded for her subsequent projects, such as pilots for One Day at a Time or No Good Deed, distinguishing her early daytime successes from later primetime endeavors.[47]

Writers Guild Awards and other honors

Feldman won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Episodic Comedy in 2020 for the pilot episode of Dead to Me, which she solely wrote.[48] This marked the first such win for a female LGBTQ+ writer in the category, recognizing her script's tight structure and character-driven humor amid grief.[49] The Dead to Me writing team, including Feldman, received a 2020 nomination for New Series at the Writers Guild Awards, though it did not win.[50] In 2021, Feldman shared a nomination for Best Episodic Comedy for the episode "It's Not You, It's Me," co-written with Kelly Hutchinson, highlighting sustained writing quality across the series.[51] These honors reflect a pattern of one WGA win against multiple nominations for Feldman, emphasizing peer validation of her episodic scripting prowess over broader series development.[43] No additional major writing-specific awards, such as Peabody, were documented beyond these Guild recognitions.

Reception and controversies

Critical acclaim for major works

Dead to Me (2019–2022), Feldman's Netflix series co-starring Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini, garnered positive critical reception for its narrative structure, performances, and tonal balance. The series holds an 89% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, aggregated from 118 reviews, with Season 1 at 86% (51 reviews) and Season 2 at 96% (47 reviews).[52][53][54] It earned a Metacritic score of 68 out of 100 based on 38 critics, who commended its impeccable acting, writing, and pacing suited for binge-watching, describing it as unfolding "slowly but assuredly."[55] Reviewers highlighted the show's bingeability and plot twists, praising its "gloriously dark, twisted and unpredictable" comedy that subverted expectations across 10 episodes per season.[56] The leads' performances were lauded for shining in a "darkly funny" portrayal of grief, effectively merging emotional depth with humor.[57] Viewership metrics underscored its popularity, with 30 million households watching in the first month of release.[58] Feldman's subsequent series No Good Deed (2024), featuring Lisa Kudrow and Ray Romano, received acclaim for its ensemble cast and satirical take on loss intertwined with real estate dynamics. It achieved an 80% Rotten Tomatoes approval rating from 41 reviews, with an average score of 6.5/10.[59] Metacritic assigned it 63 out of 100 from 23 reviews, noting the top-notch cast in a drama-comedy format emphasizing interpersonal tensions.[60] Critics appreciated its exploration of themes like betrayal and inheritance through sharp, character-driven scenarios.[61]

Criticisms and debates

Critics have faulted the third and final season of Dead to Me for rushing its narrative resolution and mishandling key character arcs, particularly that of Judy Hale (played by Linda Cardellini), whom reviewers described as underserved in a plot that prioritized contrived closure over emotional depth.[62][63] The season's attempt to tie up multiple subplots, including the investigation into Steve Wood's disappearance, was criticized as convoluted and lacking sufficient escalation of stakes, resulting in a finale that felt manipulative and abrupt rather than earned.[64][65] Debates have centered on the series' reliance on predictable twists and uneven tonal shifts between dark comedy and melodrama, with some outlets noting that while early seasons maintained surprise through escalating reveals, later episodes recycled familiar beats without innovation, diminishing tension in a binge-release format that demands sustained momentum.[62] Fan responses to the ending, which culminated in Judy's off-screen death from a brain aneurysm, were polarized; while some appreciated its realism in addressing unresolved grief, others condemned it as a disservice to the character's arc and an emotionally exploitative ploy, arguing it undermined the friendship at the show's core without providing cathartic payoff.[66] Broader discussions have questioned Feldman's pattern of centering narratives on female protagonists navigating trauma, loss, and moral ambiguity, though such critiques remain limited and often tied to specific execution flaws rather than thematic overreliance; no substantial evidence of personal controversies involving Feldman has emerged in public discourse.[65]

References

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