March 6, 2015 (2015-03-06) – January 25, 2019 (2019-01-25)
Release
May 12, 2020 (2020-05-12)
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is an American
sitcom created by
Tina Fey and
Robert Carlock, starring
Ellie Kemper in the title role. It premiered on March 6, 2015 on
Netflix and ran for four seasons, ending on January 25, 2019. An
interactive special premiered on May 12, 2020.
The series follows 29-year-old
Kimmy Schmidt (Kemper) as she adjusts to life after being rescued from a
doomsday cult in the fictional town of Durnsville,
Indiana, where she and three other women were held captive by Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne (
Jon Hamm) for 15 years. Determined to be seen as something other than a victim and armed only with a positive attitude, she decides to restart her life by moving to
New York City, where she quickly befriends her street-wise landlady
Lillian Kaushtupper (
Carol Kane), finds a roommate in struggling actor
Titus Andromedon (
Tituss Burgess), and gains a job as a nanny for melancholic and out-of-touch socialite
Jacqueline Voorhees (
Jane Krakowski).
Kimmy Schmidt (
Ellie Kemper) was in eighth grade when she was kidnapped by Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne (
Jon Hamm). He held Kimmy and three other women captive for 15 years in an underground bunker and convinced them that a
nuclear apocalypse had left them the sole survivors of humanity.
In the
first season, the women are rescued, and go on to appear on the Today Show in New York City. After the show, Kimmy decides she doesn't want to return to Indiana or be seen as a victim, so she starts a new life in New York City. Roaming around the city, she comes across landlady
Lillian Kaushtupper (
Carol Kane), who offers Kimmy a chance to room with aspiring actor
Titus Andromedon (
Tituss Burgess) in her downstairs apartment. However, to get the apartment, Kimmy has to find a job. When she tries to get a job at a nearby candy store, she sees a boy stealing candy. She pursues him back to his home and encounters his mother,
Jacqueline Voorhees (
Jane Krakowski), a Manhattan trophy wife, who mistakes her for a nanny, and whom Kimmy mistakes as someone trapped in a cult. Jacqueline hires Kimmy as a nanny for her 10-year-old son.[2] Kimmy As Season 1 continues, Kimmy falls in love with Dong (
Ki Hong Lee), a Vietnamese man from her
G.E.D. class; encourages Jacqueline to leave her cheating husband; helps Titus rediscover his dreams of stardom; goes to court to testify against the Reverend, and discovers how the world has changed in the 15 years she was held captive.
In the
second season, Kimmy is sick of working for Jacqueline and gets a job at a year-round Christmas store and then as an
Uber driver. She tries to get over Dong, who enters a
green card marriage with a much older G.E.D. student and is eventually deported. As Kimmy tries to move on, so do Titus and Jacqueline. Titus begins dating newly-out construction worker Mikey Politano (Mike Carlsen) and Jacqueline attempts adjust to life without a wealthy husband and returns to her
Native American heritage, devoting herself to force the
Washington Redskins to change their name. She begins dating socially awkward lawyer Russ Snyder (
David Cross) after she realizes that his family, who despise him, own the Redskins. Kimmy reunites with Gretchen and Cyndee to save them from joining another cult and getting married on television, respectively. When Season 2 ends, Titus leaves to be a performer on a cruise and Lillian protests the invasion of
hipsters in her neighborhood, while Kimmy makes amends with her mother (
Lisa Kudrow) after advice from her therapist (
Tina Fey) before receiving a phone call from the Reverend in prison, telling her that they need to get a divorce.
In the
third season, Kimmy proceeds with the divorce from the Reverend but hits a snag when she learns that a devoted fan (guest star
Laura Dern) wants to marry him. After getting her G.E.D., Kimmy decides to go to college. She happens into a
rowing scholarship at
Columbia University, where she is popular but fails academically. She forms a friendship with Perry (
Daveed Diggs), a philosophy and religion transfer student who, like Kimmy, does not fit in with the rich, elitist
Ivy League students. Titus returns from his stint on the cruise harboring a secret and, determined to come home to Mikey with money and a job, he records a novelty song called "Boobs and California" and auditions for Sesame Street. However, after being propositioned and sexually harassed by the puppet star of the series, Titus leaves and runs home to Mikey. However, Titus sees Mikey out with another man, and breaks up with him. Lillian is elected to the city council and attempts to block the construction of a supermarket chain for fear it will
gentrify the neighborhood. She later starts a relationship with the owner of the chain (
Peter Riegert). Meanwhile, Jacqueline and Russ marry and successfully execute their plan to force his family to change the name of the Redskins, but after Russ is run over by a car, he emerges from months in a body cast as a handsome heartthrob, earning his family's respect but turning his back on Jacqueline to gain their affection. After "Boobs in California" becomes a hit in Japan, Titus gets a mild burst of fame, which Jacqueline helps him negotiate. At the end of season three, Titus vows to win Mikey back from his new boyfriend, Jacqueline finds a new calling as Titus' agent, and Kimmy lands a job at a tech
start-up.
In the
fourth and final season, Kimmy is working at Giztoob, the tech company started by a former classmate at Columbia, and Jacqueline is representing Titus as his agent. After acting in an anti-bullying performance for a middle school, Titus gets a job as director of the school play pretends to write and star in a superhero television show called The Capist, starring
Greg Kinnear in an attempt to impress Mikey, and briefly joins the cast of Cats. Meanwhile, Lillian's boyfriend Artie dies and she is put in charge of his adult daughter's trust. Kimmy reunites with Donna Maria, who is now a successful businesswoman. Outraged and inspired by
men's rights activists, Kimmy writes a children's book that empowers girls and encourages boys to be kind. Season 4 features two episodes that veer from the main plot. In the first, a standalone
mockumentary episode, Jacqueline's former
boy toy Doug, a.k.a. DJ Fingablast, creates a
true crime documentary called Party Monster: Scratching the Surface, which sympathizes with the Reverend and paints Kimmy and the other Mole Women negatively. The second episode, "Sliding Van Doors", presents an
alternate universe in which Kimmy is never kidnapped, Titus does not audition for The Lion King in 1998, Jacqueline does not marry Julian Voorhees, and Lillian runs a Latin street gang. The series concludes with each of the main four characters finding success and purpose in new ventures, with Titus reuniting with Mikey and becoming a film star, Jacqueline finding both success and love with rival agent Eli (
Zachary Quinto), Lillian becoming the new voice of the
New York City Subway, and Kimmy's book becoming a huge success. The final scene of the series features Kimmy opening a roller coaster based on her book series, where a young girl tells her that her books make her feel safe.
The series was followed by a interactive sequel film, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs the Reverend, in which Kimmy, about to be married to British Prince Frederick (
Daniel Radcliffe) realizes that Reverend Richard had a second bunker where he had trapped additional girls, and returns to Indiana to rescue them and put her past behind her once and for all.
Ellie Kemper as
Kimberly "Kimmy" Cougar Schmidt, the titular character. Armed with only unflagging optimism, a childlike sense of wonder and an eighth-grade education, she attempts to regain the life that was taken from her and navigate her way through the unfamiliar struggles of New York life.[3]
Tituss Burgess as
Titus Andromedon (born Ronald Wilkerson), Kimmy's gay, flamboyant roommate and an aspiring actor and singer. Melodramatic and self-absorbed, Titus nevertheless cares deeply for, and is very protective of Kimmy. Despite his talent and ego, he is plagued by self-doubt after years of rejection in the business.[3] Titus hails from
Chickasaw County, Mississippi, and moved to New York City in 1998.
Carol Kane as
Lillian Kaushtupper, Kimmy and Titus' odd landlady. A proud born-and-bred New Yorker with a long, complex criminal history, she fights against the possible
gentrification of her neighborhood (although it soon becomes clear that she hates any form of progress or technology). Despite her willingness to do anything to make a buck, she has a very big heart and will go out of her way to help her tenants.[4]
Jane Krakowski as
Jacqueline White (formerly Voorhees; née Jackie Lynn White), a wealthy and insecure socialite who hires Kimmy as a nanny. Despite coming across as arrogant, condescending and out of touch, she is very fond of (and heavily reliant on) her new employee, who helps her gain perspective on her unhappy marriage. She is secretly of
LakotaNative American descent and is
passing for white. As the series progresses, she gradually reconnects with her family and her culture. She is the mother of Buckley Voorhees and the former step-mother of Xanthippe Lannister Voorhees. Her ex-husband is Julian Voorhees.[5]
Recurring
Sara Chase as Cyndee Pokorny, Kimmy's best friend from the cult.
Lauren Adams as Gretchen Chalker, a willing member of the cult, who believes everything she was told.
Sol Miranda as Donna Maria Nuñez, a cult member who pretends to not speak English during her time in the bunker, and is later revealed to be using the "Mole Woman" name to advertise her
mole sauce.
Jon Hamm as Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne, the man who imprisoned Kimmy, Cyndee, Gretchen and Donna Maria in an
underground bunker for fifteen years and led them to believe that they had survived the end of the world.
Mike Carlsen as Mikey Politano,[6] an
Italian-American construction worker who questions his sexuality after hitting on Kimmy in season 1. In season 2, he starts dating Titus, and they have an on-again, off-again relationship for the remainder of the series.[7]
Dylan Gelula as Xanthippe ("Zan") Lannister Voorhees, the pretty, popular and bratty stepdaughter of Jacqueline, who is later revealed to be hiding her high achieving, 'good girl' personality. She is the older half-sister of Buckley Voorhees. After her father (Julian) divorces Jacqueline, she is sent to Connecticut to move back in with her mother, and only appears in one episode in season 2. She returns in season 3, attending
Columbia University, where Kimmy starts college.[8]
Tanner Flood as Buckley Voorhees, Julian and Jacqueline's hyperactive, violent son. He is the younger half-brother of Xanthippe.[9]
Amy Sedaris as Mimi Kanassis, a rather dim-witted and annoying acquaintance of Jacqueline's who is desperate to regain social status after her divorce.
Mike Britt (seasons 1–2, 4) as Walter Bankston, a witness to the raid on the Bunker, whose remixed interview (set to music by
The Gregory Brothers) serves as the show's theme song. Bankston is loosely based on Charles Ramsey, one of the rescuers of the captives of the
Ariel Castro kidnappings.[10][11]
Ki Hong Lee (seasons 1–2) as Dong Nguyen, Kimmy's GED study buddy and love interest. An illegal immigrant from
Vietnam, he spends much of the show hiding from the authorities under the name "Richard Pennsylvania". In Season 2, he was caught and later deported to Vietnam by the authorities.
Adam Campbell (season 1) as Logan Beekman, a wealthy acquaintance of Julian's, who becomes intrigued by Kimmy after discovering she has no idea he is from one of New York's richest families. They briefly date before his jealousy over Dong spoils their romance.
Andy Ridings (season 1) as Charles, Buckley's tutor, who has a crush on Kimmy.
Susanna Guzman (season 1) as Vera, Jacqueline's housekeeper in season 1 and thus, Kimmy's co-worker. She believes Kimmy looks like "
Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers".
Jason Kravits (season 1) as Gary Dubbin, Jacqueline's incompetent divorce lawyer.
Brandon Jones (seasons 1–2) as Brandon Yeagley, Cyndee's childhood crush and later ex-fiancée.
Julie Tice-Bubolz (seasons 1–3) as Yuko, a humanoid robot.
John Ellison Conlee (seasons 1–2) as Rick, a cast member at Professor Dracula's, a Times Square theme restaurant where Titus works.
Suzan Perry (seasons 1–2) as Sonja, an old and unusual student in Kimmy's GED class who marries Dong so that he can stay in the United States.
Tim Blake Nelson (seasons 1, 4) as Randy Peterson, Kimmy's stepfather, a very incompetent state trooper who met, and later married, Kimmy's mother while searching for and failing to locate the missing Kimmy.[12]
Robin Rieger (seasons 1, 4) as Carla Tuesday, a Durnsville reporter who covers the Mole Women's rescue and the Reverend's trial.
Tina Fey (seasons 2–3) as Dr. Andrea Bayden, an alcoholic psychiatrist who begins treating Kimmy for the issues she developed from her experience in the bunker. She has a Jekyll-and-Hyde-type personality between her sober-daytime-self and her drunk-nighttime-self.
Fred Armisen (seasons 2–3) as Robert "Bobby" Durst, a former flame of Lillian's. This character is a humorous representation of accused serial killer
Robert Durst. Armisen returns in season 4 as "Robertina", Durst's sister, in the alternate universe.
Anna Camp (seasons 2–3) as Deirdre Robespierre, a wealthy, intelligent and dangerously bored trophy wife who becomes Jacqueline's rival.
David Cross/
Billy Magnussen (seasons 2–3) as Russ Snyder, a rich pro-bono attorney who Jacqueline pursues and
black sheep of his family. In season three, Russ is hospitalized after being run over by a car and his physical appearance is altered. He is played by Cross pre-accident and Magnussen post-accident.
Josh Charles (seasons 2–3) as Duke Snyder, Russ' favored brother, who tries to seduce Jacqueline.
Doug Plaut (season 2) as Terry, Kimmy's boss at the year round Christmas Store.
Chris Northrop (seasons 2-4) as Meth-Head Charlie, Kimmy and Titus' neighbor.
Kenan Thompson (seasons 2–4) as Roland Peacock, Lillian's deceased husband.
Derek Klena (seasons 2–4) as Doug / DJ Fingablast, a dog masseur and amateur
DJ hired by Jacqueline to become her trophy boyfriend. He later makes the fictitious
true crime documentary "Party Monster: Scratching the Surface" based on the Reverend.
Lisa Kudrow (seasons 2, 4) as Lori-Ann Schmidt, Kimmy's absentee mother.
Rachael Meyers (season 3) as Josie, a member of the
Columbia University rowing team, roommate of Xanthippe and newfound friend to Kimmy.
Chris Parnell as Junior (season 3, special), the son of one of the owners at the
NFL Owners' Meeting and founder of the unsuccessful music festival "Festeroo"
Peter Riegert (seasons 3–4) as Artie Goodman, an upscale grocery chain owner who initially engages in a feud with Lillian, before they begin a relationship.
Noah Robbins (seasons 3–4) as Zach, Kimmy's classmate at Columbia and later boss at Giztoob.
Bill Barretta (seasons 3–4) as Lonny Dufrene and Mr. Frumpus, a puppeteer who works on a fictionalized version of
Sesame Street and his puppet character.
Judah Friedlander (season 3) as Gordy, a conspiracy theorist musician who hires Titus to record the song "Boobs in California".
Michael Benjamin Washington (season 3) as Ruben, a gay church choir director and Titus' love interest.
Greg Kinnear (season 4) as himself, an actor who Jacqueline eventually represents.
Bobby Moynihan (season 4) as Fran Dodd, a men's rights activist and bridal shop employee.
This section is missing information about renewals. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the
talk page.(January 2019)
The show was created by
Tina Fey and
Robert Carlock when
NBC executives asked them to develop a show for
Ellie Kemper.[14] Fey said that they found an "innocence" about Kemper's face, but also noted a "strength" to it.[14] One idea was for the show to center on Kemper's character waking up from a coma, but this idea was abandoned in favor of the cult-survivor storyline.[14] Kemper has stated that her inspiration for her portrayal of Schmidt was the recovery of
Elizabeth Smart.[15]
The show was initially under development for NBC under the title Tooken.[16][17] NBC ultimately sold the series to Netflix.[18] Fey said that this was partly due to NBC's "not feeling confident about watching comedies". Prior to the sale, NBC planned to air the series as either a mid-season replacement or as a summer series.[14] It was sold to Netflix with a two-season order.[19]
On June 13, 2017, it was renewed for a fourth and final season,[20][21] with the first six episodes premiering on May 30, 2018.[22] The second half was released on January 25, 2019.[23] On May 8, 2019, it was announced that it would return with an
interactive special, which premiered on May 12, 2020.[24][25]
Casting
Casting announcements for the remaining roles were made in March 2014, with
Tituss Burgess cast as Kimmy's roommate, Titus,[3] and
Carol Kane as Kimmy's and Titus's landlady, Lillian.[26]
Shortly afterwards,
Sara Chase was cast Cyndee, Kimmy's closest friend during their years in the cult; and Lauren Adams as Gretchen, a 10-year member of the cult who believes everything she is told.[27]Jane Krakowski was later cast as Jacqueline Voorhees, a wealthy Manhattanite who hires Kimmy as a nanny.
Megan Dodds was originally cast before Krakowski replaced her.[5]
Music
The show's theme song, "Unbreakable", was produced by
The Gregory Brothers and written by Jeff Richmond.[28] It is a tribute to The Gregory Brothers'
YouTube show Songify the News –
auto-tuned news interviews that became popular
videos. It specifically parodies the mannerisms of
Antoine Dodson in the "
Bed Intruder Song". Richmond also wrote "Peeno Noir", a song performed by character Titus Andromedon during season 1, episode 6.[29]
Artwork
Artwork for the show's opening sequence was produced by a team at
Pentagram that included feminist artist
Deva Pardue.[30]
The show has been widely acclaimed by television critics, who have praised the writing and cast.[31][32][33]
Season 1
On
Rotten Tomatoes, the first season has a rating of 95%, based on 55 reviews, with an average rating of 7.5/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Blessed with originality and a spot-on performance from Ellie Kemper, The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is as odd as it is hilarious."[34] On
Metacritic, the first season has a score of 78 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[31]
Scott Meslow of The Week called the series "the first great sitcom of the streaming era", praising its wit, edge, and feminist tone.[35] Brian Moylan of The Guardian noted that it is "the sort of show that could benefit from multiple viewings, because the jokes are so packed in you’re sure to miss something while laughing."[36]TV Guide named it the "best new comedy of 2015".[37]IGN reviewer Max Nicholson gave the first season an 8.3 out of 10 'Great' rating, saying "Tina Fey and Robert Carlock's Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is another winner in Netflix's original series catalog. Not only is it charming and funny, but it's unabashedly kooky, and Ellie Kemper nails the lead role."[38]
Some reviewers have criticized the show's portrayal of
Native Americans, with Vulture referring to a prominent Native American subplot as "offensive".[40][41]BuzzFeed wrote that the show has a "major race problem" and cited the lack of a plurality of portrayals of Native Americans as the main issue with the subplot, stating that "the way Native Americans are represented on this show matters. It's not one representation among a cornucopia of representations; it's the single mainstream representation in years."[42]The Daily Beast stated that when it comes to race, “especially in its portrayal of a key Vietnamese character, the show leaves much to be desired.”[43]
In the wake of the controversy, Tina Fey responded: "I feel like we put so much effort into writing and crafting everything, they need to speak for themselves. There's a real culture of demanding apologies, and I'm opting out of that."[44]
Season 2
On Rotten Tomatoes, the second season holds a 100% approval rating, based on 24 reviews, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Not letting up in season two, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is still odd in the best of ways, wonderfully building on its unique comedy stylings and brilliantly funny cast."[45] On Metacritic, the second season has a score of 82 out of 100, based on 16 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[32]
There was controversy surrounding the third episode from this season, “Kimmy Goes to a Play!,” which involved the use of
yellow-face and the name of a group of Asian-Americans who were critical of yellow-face. The group is referred to as "Respectful Asian Portrayals in Entertainment", or "R.A.P.E" for short. The Asian-Americans shown protesting against yellow-face in the episode are conveyed as unlikable buffoons. Anna Akana criticized the use of yellow-face and the R.A.P.E. acronym during her 2016 Asians in Entertainment Key Note speech. Alex Abad-Santos wrote, “The odd thing about this episode is that it's another Tina Fey project that paints Asian people, specifically Asian women, as crappy characters. [...] The plot feels like a pointed, ironic response to anyone who has criticized Fey's past projects for being lazy and racist.”[46]
Season 3
On Rotten Tomatoes, the third season holds a 97% approval rating, based on 29 reviews, with an average rating of 8.11/10. The site's critical consensus states: "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt continues to thrive with a comically agile cast, notable guest stars, and a forceful influx of funny."[47] On Metacritic, the third season has a score of 78 out of 100, based on 12 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[33]
The third season was nominated for five Primetime Emmy Awards.[39]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the fourth season holds a 94% approval rating, based on 32 reviews, with an average rating of 7.77/10. The site's critical consensus states: "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt ends with a final season that's as topical as it is cheerily irreverent."[48] On Metacritic, the fourth season has a score of 85 out of 100, based on 6 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[49]
The fourth season was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards.[39]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. the Reverend special has an approval rating of 94%, based on 32 reviews, with an average rating of 7.81/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Kimmy and company return as resilient as ever in a fun and fast paced special that makes excellent use of its interactive capabilities to produce maximum fabulosity."[50]
The special was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards.[51]
^While the theme song was written and composed by Jeff Richmond, Schmoyoho had composed a longer version for the show, with the help of Richmond via Netflix.