The Rehearsal (TV series)
The Rehearsal is an American docu-comedy television series created, written, directed by and starring Nathan Fielder. It premiered on HBO on July 15, 2022, to critical acclaim. It was renewed for a second season in August 2022, which premiered on April 20, 2025.
Premise
The Rehearsal features Nathan Fielder, as a fictionalized version of himself, helping ordinary people rehearse upcoming difficult conversations or life events through the use of sets and actors hired to recreate real situations. The situations can be trivial, like confessing to a lie about educational history, or more complex, like raising a child. Fielder commissions extravagant sets with every detail recreated, and hires actors to inhabit these sets and practice different dialogue trees with his clients dozens of times to try to prepare them for every variable. Information used to train the actors and build the sets is often collected without the subjects' knowledge.Production
The premise for The Rehearsal developed from Fielder's series Nathan for You. In preparation for the earlier series, Fielder and his team role-played scenarios to predict how real people might react to his ridiculous suggestions, an exercise that often proved inaccurate. Fielder was inspired by the futility of the human impulse to control one's own future, which he found "really funny."Some of the humor in The Rehearsal is derived from its extravagant sets. In the first episode, Fielder constructs a perfect duplicate of the bar in which the subject's difficult conversation is to take place. He also constructs a duplicate of the subject's house to practice their first conversation.
In the second season, Fielder constructed a large-scale replica of George Bush Intercontinental Airport on a soundstage in California, expanding the show’s use of meticulously detailed simulations. The production team recreated portions of the airport after being unable to film extensively in restricted areas of the real terminal, opting instead to build a controlled environment that could accommodate repeated rehearsals and filming. The replica included airport lounges, restaurants, signage, and staff areas, and functioned as the primary setting for a season-long storyline centered on airline communication and pilot coordination. The airport set was later repurposed within the series as "Nathan's Airport", a simulated travel environment for neurodivergent participants, including children with autism, allowing them to rehearse navigating the sensory and social demands of air travel in a controlled setting. Airport officials in Houston publicly expressed intrigue at the project, noting the unusual degree of fidelity with which their facility was recreated for the series.
Release
The series was first teased in 2019 as part of Fielder's deal with HBO. The title The Rehearsal was revealed in June 2021. In June 2022, a teaser was released, and a poster showing a release date of July 15, 2022.Reception
Critical response
The series has received critical acclaim, with some praising it as one of the best new series of 2022. For the first season, the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 95% approval rating based on 58 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "The Rehearsal gives Nathan Fielder carte blanche to take his absurdist comedy to the limit, which he pushes even further past with deadpan aplomb in what might be his most uncomfortably funny feat yet." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 86 out of 100 based on 23 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".The Rehearsal appeared in the top ten on numerous publications' "Best of 2022" lists, including first for IndieWire, The Ringer, and ScreenCrush, among others.
For the second season, Rotten Tomatoes reported a 98% approval rating based on 45 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Never fear, Nathan Fielder is here to solve air travel safety and further his frustrated quest for human connection in a second Rehearsal that's just as audacious, cringey, and uproariously funny as the first." Metacritic assigned a score of 88 out of 100 based on 22 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
Analysis
In The New York Times Critic's Pick review, James Poniewozik wrote that "the show has a philosophical core: Is it ever possible to truly understand another person?" Voxs Alissa Wilkinson likewise called the show "an excellent reminder that we know much less about others than we think we do," and compared it to the writings of Leslie Jamison and Martin Buber.The show's blurring of simulation and reality have drawn comparisons to the Charlie Kaufman film Synecdoche, New York and the Tom McCarthy novel Remainder. The series has been described as a spiritual successor to Nathan for You, since both shows share a premise of Fielder helping average people in humorous ways. Vulture described Fielder's "willingness to screw with people" and put them in situations that might embarrass them or cause them to do things that are out of character being the core thread of his work.
In a review for The New Yorker, critic Richard Brody characterized the show as disingenuous, taking this "willingness to screw with people" too far. Brody contended that while Fielder is focused on exerting control over his subjects, his "cruel and arrogant gaze" overshadows the series' comedic and dramatic elements. However, Brody embraced moments in season 2 as achieving true artistic excellence.
Many critics viewed the show as a critique of the exploitive and disingenuous nature of reality television, with writer Israel Daramola of Los Angeles Review of Books calling it "a commentary on...the inherent phoniness of reality television as well as the faults and constrictions of acting as representation of real life."
The series' central idea of rehearsing and performing social interactions resonated with many autistic viewers, who viewed it as an analogy for masking. Variety writer Daniel D'Addario highlighted the series' ultimate message that "all of us are performing, all the time." Fielder references the article in season two.
Accolades
| Award | Year | Category | Nominee | Result | |
| Cinema Eye Honors | 2022 | Heterodox Award | Nathan Fielder | Nomitated | |
| Gotham Independent Film Awards | 2022 | Breakthrough Nonfiction Series | Nathan Fielder, Dave Paige, Dan McManus, and Christie Smith | Nomitated | |
| Independent Spirit Awards | 2023 | Best New Non-Scripted or Documentary Series | Nathan Fielder, Dave Paige, Dan McManus, Christie Smith, Carrie Kemper, and Eric Notarnicola | Won | |
| Primetime Emmy Awards | 2025 | Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series | Nathan Fielder | Nomitated | |
| Primetime Emmy Awards | 2025 | Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series | Nathan Fielder, Carrie Kemper, Adam Locke-Norton, and Eric Notarnicola | Nomitated | |
| Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards | 2025 | Outstanding Picture Editing for a Single-Camera Comedy Series | Adam Locke-Norton | Nomitated | |
| Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards | 2025 | Outstanding Picture Editing for a Single-Camera Comedy Series | Stacy Moon | Nomitated | |
| Television Critics Association Awards | 2023 | Outstanding Achievement in Reality Programming | The Rehearsal | Nomitated |