Chris Perfetti, Danielle Deadwyler, more join 2026 Emmy Comedy Roundtable

Chris Perfetti, Danielle Deadwyler, more join 2026 Emmy Comedy Roundtable


When actors from TVโ€™s top comedy series recently gathered for The Envelopeโ€™s Emmy Comedy Roundtable, any lessons theyโ€™d learned over the years about how not to break quickly went out the window โ€” this yearโ€™s guests made each other laugh early and often.

Contributing to the hilarity were Danielle Deadwyler, whose English professor in HBOโ€™s โ€œRoosterโ€ has her life disrupted by a bestselling writer; Donald Faison, who reprises the role of Christopher Turk, now chief of surgery, in the revival of ABCโ€™s medical sitcom โ€œScrubsโ€; Sabrina Impacciatore, who embodies the vain managing editor of a failing regional newspaper on Peacockโ€™s โ€œThe Paperโ€; Justine Lupe, who plays Morgan, a flighty but loyal sister and podcast co-host in Netflixโ€™s rom-com โ€œNobody Wants Thisโ€; Lamorne Morris, who portrays New York City journalist Robbie Robertson in Prime Videoโ€™s Depression-set โ€œSpider-Noirโ€; and Chris Perfetti, who features on โ€œAbbott Elementaryโ€ as awkward but well-intentioned social studies teacher Jacob Hill.

In the course of our conversation, participants discussed surviving bad reviews, what fans misunderstand about comedy and, yes, how they keep a straight face during funny scenes (if not on The Envelope roundtable). Read excerpts from the conversation below.

What is the last thing that made you laugh out loud, whether it was meant to be funny or not?

Lupe: I have a one-and-a-half year-old. Sheโ€™s just starting to talk. She doesnโ€™t really say a lot of words at once, but she started doing this thing where, when sheโ€™s going poop, she just goes, โ€œOh, wow. Oh, wow.โ€ And every time itโ€™s just so cute.

Justine Lupe.

Perfetti: I also do that when I poop, so please tell her itโ€™s normalโ€ฆ I donโ€™t know, guys. Itโ€™s scary times. I donโ€™t find myself laughing out loud very much anymore. I guess to that end, I watch Jimmy Kimmelโ€™s monologue every night and I think that itโ€™s pretty drop-dead gorgeous. Itโ€™s so funny, and heโ€™s using that platform in such a gorgeous way.

Faison: My daughter was playing a volleyball game against a very formidable opponent. Iโ€™m just going to put it out there: LeBron Jamesโ€™ daughter. She was serving and pushed everybody back with her serve. Boom! Everybody backs up. Now sheโ€™s got everybody out of bounds, then she taps it real soft and it falls in front of them. I laughed out loud. I was just so impressed, and my daughter looked at me like, โ€œYou motherโ€”. Donโ€™t you enjoy that!โ€

Impacciatore: A couple of days ago I was fighting with my boyfriend and it was a very bad fight and I really wanted him to understand my reasons. I was trying to put on my trousers and unfortunately I put two legs in one [side]. He started to laugh so loud and I was so upset. And then I started to laugh loud too. But itโ€™s horrible when it happens, because Iโ€™m a very serious person when I fight.

Donald, the last season of โ€œScrubsโ€ concluded in 2010. Now Dr. Turk is back working at the hospital with his buddy J.D. (Zach Braff) and a lot of the original cast. What was it like stepping back into that world?

Faison: When the pandemic happened, Zach and I did a rewatch podcast of โ€œScrubs,โ€ and thatโ€™s where all of this started to formulate again. In doing the rewatch podcast, we researched what the fans liked, what we liked, and what we thought was funny. And we were very honest about it. If it sucked, we said it sucked. Then the T-Mobile [ad campaign with Faison and Braff] happened. So for the past five or six years, Iโ€™ve been playing Turk to Zach Braffโ€™s J.D. When the revival came around, it was easy to slip back in because we had been doing this banter for so long. The only thing thatโ€™s different is that heโ€™s older, but maturity has not set in with him yet. Heโ€™s a 50-year-old kid whoโ€™s really good at cutting people open and training younger people, but for the most part, heโ€™s still silly.

Chris, โ€œAbbott Elementary,โ€ which follows several teachers at an underfunded public school in Philly, is heading into its sixth season. That means youโ€™ve been playing Jacob for quite some time. Do you ever find the line between your personalities blurring?

Perfetti: The line between Chris and Jacob is definitely blurring. When we first started, I was shocked that Lorraine Ali Quinta [Brunson] saw me as this person. We werenโ€™t alike at all, but I trusted that she saw something [in me] she wanted to exploit. Now, I would be so lucky to steal some of what heโ€™s got going on. Heโ€™s unbelievably loyal and ambitious and really comfortable in his own skin. He leads from that place. And I need to shut the hell up and stop telling the writers things about my own life because now theyโ€™re showing up in the show. So truly the line between Chris and Jacob is getting weirder.

Chris Perfetti.

Danielle, โ€œRoosterโ€ takes place at a fictitious college. You actually have several degrees, including multiple masterโ€™s. Did you draw on your own experience in academia for โ€œRoosterโ€?

Deadwyler: I was a student, and thatโ€™s a very different dynamic than being an administrator or a professor. But I dig education. I dig the intention of the environment, the debate, the ongoing pushing of the self and weaving that into your personal life. Itโ€™s all super connected. So I just brought that to the show.

Youโ€™re renowned for your work in intense films like โ€œTillโ€ and โ€œThe Piano Lesson.โ€ Do you use a different muscle for comedy?

Deadwyler: I was always saying to the [โ€œRoosterโ€] team, โ€˜Hey, guys, I feel good. I can breathe. I have energy to do things. Is that normal for people?โ€™ So yes, itโ€™s a completely different muscle. But [co-star] Steve [Carell] says this beautiful thing that characters donโ€™t know whether theyโ€™re in a comedy or a drama. And thatโ€™s about as true as it gets. You bring full rigor and development and discipline to the making of a role, regardless of what genre.

Justine, how much do you relate to your character Morgan in the interfaith romantic comedy โ€œNobody Wants Thisโ€? Or is it more like you want to fix her?

Lupe: I donโ€™t know if I want to fix her because thatโ€™s whatโ€™s compelling about her. I have so much fun playing the mess of Morgan. I relate to her. I started off where she was kind of a semiautobiographical story of [show creator] Erin Fosterโ€™s relationship with her sister, Sara. Then immediately the ship left the dock when I took the character. Justine has now taken over this idea of who this person is, and itโ€™s a lot more sloppy and unbridled. The mess of her is actually me, because Iโ€™m a little bit sloppy as a person.

The show really captures the relationship between siblings, and sisters in particular.

Lupe: I identify with the idea of being someone whoโ€™s evolved past their original home life, and then going back into circumstances with your family, and regressing immediately. I wanted to play with that dynamic. Morgan might think that sheโ€™s evolved past certain things and then the minute sheโ€™s codependent with her sister, they devolve back into the bratty kid-like versions of themselves that are like picking on each other. I know the feeling, when you go back home and youโ€™re like, โ€œWow, have I grown up at all?โ€

Lamorne, โ€œSpider-Noirโ€ is based on a Marvel comic and is set in an exaggerated version of 1930s New York. Audiences have the choice to watch the series in black and white or in color. How does the tone change between the two styles?

Morris: I watched both and they both have their own unique qualities. I would say the way folks should watch it is the way we traditionally watched TV as a people. You start in black-and-white and then when color was introduced, you would go back and watch those same films when they added color to it. While weโ€™re filming it, [I was thinking] โ€œHow are they gonna make this visual effect look cool in black-and-white?โ€ And then you watch it in black-and-white and you go, โ€œWhat the fโ€”?!โ€ And I go back and watch it in color and go, โ€œHoly โ€” it looks great in color, too.โ€ Everything down to the wardrobe [and] the set design, you watch it in black-and-white and it looks bold and as vivid as if it were in color. But then when you watch it in color and you go, โ€œHoly crap, that house is blue, that suit is orange.โ€ So just go watch it in both versions.

Lamorne Morris.

Sabrina, your character in โ€œThe Paperโ€ wants to be the managing editor of the Toledo Truth Teller, but sheโ€™s really all about the clickbait. How much did you know about that conflict in modern journalism?

Impacciatore: I made sure not to know anything about it because Esmeralda doesnโ€™t have a clue. Esmeralda is not a real journalist. Esmeralda is there for some mysterious reasons that Iโ€™m trying to figure out. Sheโ€™s the queen of bullโ€”, so I made sure not to know anything about journalists. And because I had played Valentina in โ€œWhite Lotus,โ€ I wanted to make sure that this character is going to be completely different from her. She must be out loud, she must be big. So I made some choices about her, for example, the nails. I still have these nails because Iโ€™m still shooting, but usually I donโ€™t have long nails. But these nails started to make me think in a different way, to move my hands in a different way. Like these are guns, weapons to manipulate people. [Touches Morris with her nails.]

Morris: Consider myself manipulated.

Impacciatore: Iโ€™m the opposite. I have no filters in life. I am my own worst enemy. Iโ€™m too transparent. I donโ€™t know how to hide feelings. So I thought, โ€œWhat does she do?โ€ Because itโ€™s a documentary, she thinks one day she will be a star. So I have her have hair like Rita Hayworth the first day I arrived on set. They were looking at me like, โ€œWhat is she doing?โ€ They didnโ€™t get it, so I had to explain that she wants to be a star. Once you start to play a manipulative person, you see manipulation everywhere. Itโ€™s like now Iโ€™m losing a bit of innocence, because I donโ€™t trust anybody anymore. Now randomly I say, โ€œAre you trying to manipulate me?โ€

Danielle Deadwyler.

โ€œThe Paperโ€ and โ€œAbbott Elementaryโ€ are mockumentaries. Does it make a difference in how youโ€™re performing when itโ€™s shot in that style?

Perfetti: On our best day, weโ€™re trying to dupe people into believing that itโ€™s real life. But similarly, I think Jacob thinks that he will be the star of this documentary whenever it comes out. Heโ€™ll be an executive producer on it. So thereโ€™s very much an element of having one foot in the audienceโ€™s experience. His outrage is heightened because he knows itโ€™s being captured on film. I grew up doing plays and so itโ€™s an easy dynamic to borrow from. When youโ€™re on stage, even on your best days, you always have even a pinkie in the audienceโ€™s experience. You have to be able to be in conversation with them. The mockumentary format really allows for that and I think it informs the show in a really beautiful way.

Impacciatore: The first time that I watched โ€œThe Office,โ€ I thought, โ€œThis project is incredible, but the light is so horrible. I will look so ugly.โ€ I was trying not to be chosen for this project because I was so scared to be so ugly. So when I arrived on set as the character, I brought my own ring light and I said, โ€œGuys, Esmeralda, because she knows sheโ€™s in a documentary, she needs her own lighting.โ€ I got away with it. To me, comedy is a very serious thing.

What do audiences underestimate or misunderstand about what it takes to make a comedy?

Deadwyler: The assumption is that youโ€™re being funny, and itโ€™s not that at all. When you [Chris] just talked about doing plays, I was thinking theater is the thing that enabled me to really lean into the joy and transition into working on โ€œRooster.โ€ Thereโ€™s a rhythm and a quality of engagement that I learned completely in the theater world that applied to the gelling and the cohesion of โ€œRoosterโ€ in all of the scenes. So leaning into drama enables you to lean into the hilarity or the quirkiness or awkwardness of humor.

Morris: If the script is funny, itโ€™s going to be funny if youโ€™re an actor playing it real. And obviously you have throughout history those characters who know how to add to that, who can ham it up in such a way. Chris Farley and those guys. The Belushis, the Will Ferrells. They can take something really funny and just say, โ€œIโ€™m gonna add my stamp to it so when you see this type of humor, you know it was from me.โ€ Then you have your Judd Apatows of this world who can create a funny environment and all the actors are basically playing it real and playing it straight.

Faison: People think youโ€™re actually that funny or youโ€™re that quick and you can come up with those jokes that fast. But really youโ€™re saying somebody elseโ€™s words and youโ€™re being somebody else. Somehow I got labeled as a stand-up comic. Iโ€™ve never done stand-up in my life, but Iโ€™ve been in so many comedies that people think, โ€œHe must be funny in real life.โ€ I imagine Jack Black must hate going outside because everybodyโ€™s, โ€œDo that skandosh, sliggidy, diggity thing that you do!โ€

Donald Faison.

Deadwyler: They want you to do that you do for drama, too.

Morris: โ€œMake me cryโ€?

Deadwyler: They want you to give them the feeling that they know you for, because thatโ€™s all theyโ€™ve witnessed of you. They want me to ride a horse. They want me to cry. And itโ€™s like, โ€œIโ€™m just trying to get these chicken wings and go home.โ€

And trying to break out of that, whatever that is, and move on to the next thing that you want to do.

Faison: For a long time it was very difficult as an actor to do anything else other than comedy, because you could get typecast. Thatโ€™s something that happens right away. You could be the best friend for the rest of your life if youโ€™re not careful.

Morris: I came up in traditional comedy. Second City, Chicago. When I was a kid, I didnโ€™t care about anything else other than like making people laugh. So in plays and things, I was always cast as the comic relief, back in my ham-it-up days. Up until the beginning of my TV career with โ€œNew Girl.โ€ I didnโ€™t know who I wanted to be on that show. I didnโ€™t know who I was and Iโ€™m thankful to the staff for just allowing me to grow into that character. But what I grew into was a fโ€” clown. I just was like, โ€œOh man, I get to do this for seven years.โ€ I loved every minute of it.

When you get recognized out in public or somebody knows they know you from something, who have you been misidentified as? Or do they simply call you by your characterโ€™s name?

Faison: I was at sushi once and it was actually another famous person that came up to me, Iโ€™m not gonna say their name. And he looks at me and goes, โ€œAlfonso?โ€ I said, โ€œNope.โ€ And he hightailed it out so quick. I was like, โ€œI gotta call Alfonso Ribeiro and tell him that somebody thought that I was him at a restaurant.โ€ Iโ€™m glad to be recognized, but I am not Alfonso Ribeiro.

Morris: People think Iโ€™m everybody, but thereโ€™s one guy I get. Malcolm Barrett. This has been going on for 15 years. A good friend from theater school, we did every play together, he called me when I moved to L.A. and was like, โ€œDude, congratulations on your AT&T commercial!โ€ I was like, โ€œWhat AT&T commercial?โ€ And heโ€™s like, โ€œThe one where youโ€™re playing Pop-a-Shot basketball.โ€ And Iโ€™m like, โ€œThatโ€™s not me.โ€ Years later, everyone, people would come up to Malcolm all the time and say, โ€œCongrats on โ€˜New Girl.โ€™โ€

Perfetti: I cannot go to Philadelphia because I suddenly now have 5 million new family members. I donโ€™t get mistaken for an actual person, but I do love the moment where you pass them on the sidewalk or on the subway and you see the wheels churning in their mind.

Lupe: I have a yoga teacher that still calls me Willa [her character from โ€œSuccessionโ€]. Iโ€™ve been going to her for like a year and sheโ€™ll be like, โ€œAnd Willa, you want to move into down dog.โ€

Justine, youโ€™ve been referred to as a scene-stealer more than once for your work in โ€œSuccessionโ€ and โ€œNobody Wants This.โ€ What do you make of that?

Lupe: That was the thing about โ€œSuccession.โ€ I started when I was 26 and I felt like I got to be a fly on the wall in so many incredible scenes with all-star actors. To even be even seen among that kind of company, it makes me so happy. I feel the same way about โ€œNobody Wants This.โ€ I look around and Iโ€™m like, โ€œWow, these are just incredible people that Iโ€™m working with.โ€ So itโ€™s nice to know that people are even registering my existence.

Perfetti: Willa is responsible for what I think may be one of the funniest TV moments ever. I canโ€™t remember which season where you read your reviews and throw the iPad overboard, but it lives in my mind rent-free. The sound you make, the way that you just kind of stare off into the distance afterward, itโ€™s one of the greatest things Iโ€™ve ever seen.

Do you read reviews of your work?

Morris: I did a movie called โ€œSandy Wexlerโ€ with Adam Sandler and he said to me, โ€œHey buddy, when a film comes out, donโ€™t read the reviews.โ€ Heโ€™s like, โ€œWho cares? We got our own thing going.โ€ โ€ฆ It allowed him to stay true to who he is for his fan base, which is larger than life. If you start caring so much about what people think about your art, itโ€™s going to change what got you there in the first place. Thatโ€™s what Jamie Foxx talked about after winning an award, you donโ€™t want to switch it up all of a sudden because everybody looks at you like youโ€™re this great actor, you won this thing, and you start doing things differently.

Impacciatore: On set, if someone gives me a feedback about something that he liked, I donโ€™t want to hear that because it feels like a trap. And I donโ€™t want to know what worked and what didnโ€™t work because I want to be free. I want to explore things. Reading a review โ€ฆ itโ€™s something rational that is describing something irrational. Like to me, acting is an irrational act. Itโ€™s wild when it happens. Itโ€™s going somewhere else and not even knowing what you did.

Sabrina Impacciatore.

Faison: I tend to not look at reviews. This was the first time ever in my life โ€ฆ when โ€œScrubsโ€ came out this time around. Itโ€™s because we made it for the fans. It was strictly for the fans. So when we put it out and the critics were very nice this time around, that was cool. And then you get to Reddit and Instagram and youโ€™re waiting for them to be like, โ€œYou guys suck!โ€ โ€œHow dare you?!โ€ And that didnโ€™t show up. It was like, well, Iโ€™m gonna read the reviews then.

Lupe: I once had a critic call me a โ€œbargain-basement Gwyneth Paltrow.โ€

Morris: Youโ€™re like, โ€œGwyneth Paltrow, you say?โ€

Lupe: As long as the word Gwyneth is in there, Iโ€™m OK.

Morris: If someone calls me โ€œa bootleg Eddie Murphy,โ€ Iโ€™m retiring.

Faison: โ€œHe kind of reminds me of a poor manโ€™s Richard Pryor.โ€ Why, thank you.

Lupe: There was like a part of me where I was like, โ€œWell, if I can make it through that, then whatever. Who cares? Itโ€™s just fun to hear peopleโ€™s perceptions of what youโ€™re putting out there. How people interpret it. Because sometimes you canโ€™t see the forest through the trees. If you have enough perspective, itโ€™s interesting to hear the dialogue about the things that youโ€™re working on.

Deadwyler: If itโ€™s productive, I find that critical analysis is useful. But if itโ€™s critical stabbing, thatโ€™s useless to me.

Faison: I have a question for all of you guys. When it comes to acting on set, do you prefer to see what you just did or do you prefer to trust what the director says? When it comes to comedy, I wanna see what the fโ€” we are doing just to make sure weโ€™re in the rhythm.

Lupe: I donโ€™t watch it in the moment. Iโ€™ve gotten easier on myself watching things after theyโ€™re released. When I first watched my work, I just wanted to like, in all honesty, tear my face off. It was really a tough experience.

Morris: If I trust the director, I never look at the monitor. No knock on, like first-time directors, because I work with a lot of first-time directors that I trust, but there are some from time to time that just go, โ€œItโ€™s great,โ€ every take. And so sometimes I have to go, โ€œJust give me a second, let me see.โ€ … A couple of times [theyโ€™d tell me], โ€œEverything you did was brilliant.โ€ And I know for a fact it wasnโ€™t. So now I donโ€™t trust sโ€” you say.

The Envelope's 2026 Emmy Comedy Roundtable

The Envelopeโ€™s 2026 Emmy Comedy Roundtable: Lamorne Morris, from left, Justine Lupe, Chris Perfetti, Danielle Deadwyler, Donald Faison and Sabrina Impacciatore.

Chris, the cast on โ€œAbbottโ€ are so good at bouncing lines off one another. How are you not breaking all the time, or are you?

Perfetti: Itโ€™s certainly gotten harder as weโ€™ve gotten closer. Weโ€™re all trying to make each other break now. But weโ€™re pretty good. The show is sort of made on the fly and weโ€™re constantly throwing jokes away or trying to see how far we can push something. I think a lot of what we find funny on โ€œAbbottโ€ is people trying to avoid pain. Even when itโ€™s ridiculous, it doesnโ€™t feel too hard to keep our feet on the ground. Weโ€™re also so blessed with the mockumentary [format]. The story is very much told by the camera. So Iโ€™m always on, and something that comes up in that take might make it into the final cut because thereโ€™s three cameras going at all times. But Quinta probably breaks the most because โ€ฆ she genuinely forgets about some of the jokes that she writes. And so when she hears it again, it takes her by surprise.

Lupe: There is something to that energy of people enjoying being in that kind of space with each other, like on the verge of laughing. Riding the line of being just about to break, itโ€™s so much fun. The chemistry between them is so palpable. When you see a break like that, youโ€™re like, โ€œWow, theyโ€™re really enjoying each other.โ€

Morris: [Itโ€™s hard when] Iโ€™m literally loopy, itโ€™s late and I know this actor Iโ€™m working with is a fโ€” killer. I start laughing before we roll, and Iโ€™m like, โ€œThis is gonna be so difficult.โ€

Lupe: And then itโ€™s like that thing when youโ€™re like a little kid, where someoneโ€™s like, โ€œStop laughingโ€ and it makes it worse because you are trying so hard not to laugh.

Impacciatore: If there is that moment where we can break, there is a real abandonment and there is a real freedom … Itโ€™s the most beautiful feeling about being an actor. Itโ€™s about feeling less lonely.

Faison: Danielle, youโ€™re working with Steve. First of all, heโ€™s gonna break everybody. Iโ€™m pretty clear that everybody on setโ€™s gonna laugh because heโ€™s just got that. But has anybody made him break yet? And who is that person? I know if I made Steve Carell break in the middle of a scene, Iโ€™m dancing for a while. Iโ€™m gonna be calling my mom like, โ€œYo, he fโ€” laughed at my joke!โ€

Deadwyler: I know that they wilded out the day the bed broke [during a fight scene with co-star Phil Dunster]. But I have not seen him break in that way. He is so rigorous. Heโ€™s about building the character, building a dynamic, trying to tell a full story.

Lupe: He also must have so much practice from โ€œThe Office.โ€

Deadwyler: Heโ€™s strong.

Faison: I laugh harder at โ€œSaturday Night Liveโ€ when they break than when they keep it together.

June 4, 2026 cover of The Envelope for The Emmy Comedy Roundtable

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