D'Arcy Carden
D'Arcy Beth Carden (born Darcy Beth Erokan; January 4, 1980) is an American actress and comedian best known for her Emmy-nominated portrayal of the all-knowing artificial being Janet in the NBC sitcom The Good Place (2016–2020).[1][2][3] Born in Danville, California, to an American mother and a Turkish immigrant father from Istanbul, Carden grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area with early interests in performing arts and sports, aspiring to become a rock star, actress, or baseball player.[4][5] She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in theater from Southern Oregon University before relocating to New York City in the early 2000s to pursue an acting career, initially focusing on improv comedy and stage work.[6][7] Carden's breakthrough came with The Good Place, where her role as the omniscient yet quirky Janet earned her a 2020 Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, along with a Critics' Choice Television Award nomination and a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series (2020). She later received another SAG nomination for ensemble performance in Barry (2023).[8][9][10] Following this, she gained acclaim for playing hitwoman Natalie in HBO's dark comedy Barry (2018–2023) and as outfielder Greta in Amazon Prime Video's A League of Their Own (2022), a role that drew on her childhood love of baseball.[2][11] Transitioning to theater, Carden made her Broadway debut in 2023 as Alicia in Larissa FastHorse's satirical comedy The Thanksgiving Play, earning a Drama League Award nomination for Distinguished Performance.[12] In recent years, she has expanded into film and additional television projects, including supporting roles in the musical comedy Dicks: The Musical (2023), the Netflix dramedy A Man on the Inside (2024), and the romantic comedy series Nobody Wants This (2024) as Ryann.[9] As of 2025, Carden has joined the final season of Hulu's The Handmaid's Tale in a recurring role, stars as Brooke in Peacock's drama The Five-Star Weekend, leads alongside Will Forte in the Australian crime comedy series Sunny Nights, appeared in the film Sketch, and guest-starred in FX's Adults.[11][13][2][14] On a personal note, Carden has been married to actor and producer Jason Carden since 2010; the couple resides in Los Angeles.[15][1]Biography
Early life
D'Arcy Carden was born Darcy Beth Erokan on January 4, 1980, in Danville, California.[1][16] She is the daughter of Dennis Erokan, a Turkish immigrant born in Istanbul who moved to California as a child and later pursued acting in local community theater, and Lori Engelfried, an American of German and Ashkenazi Jewish descent.[17][18][16] Her parents co-founded the Bay Area Music (BAM) magazine in the 1970s, fostering a household immersed in music and performing arts from an early age.[19] Carden's bicultural heritage, blending her father's Turkish roots with her mother's American background, shaped her early sense of identity, as she later reflected on the diverse cultural influences in family discussions of heritage and ethnicity.[18] Growing up as the middle child among three siblings in the suburban town of Danville, she was exposed to theater as a toddler, often attending local Fantasy Forum plays while sitting on her mother's lap, which sparked her initial fascination with performance.[20] Carden's childhood in Danville was marked by a growing interest in the performing arts, influenced by her family's creative environment. At San Ramon Valley High School, where she enrolled as a freshman, she discovered her passion for acting through drama teacher Mark Cornfield's class, who recognized her talent and became a key mentor during her formative years.[20] This experience ignited her early involvement in school theater activities, providing a supportive outlet for her comedic inclinations and stage presence amid the routines of suburban life. She graduated from San Ramon Valley High School in 1998, having honed an appreciation for improvisation and ensemble performance that would later define her career path.[21][22] After high school, Carden attended Southern Oregon University, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts in theater in 2002.[7] She then relocated to New York City in the early 2000s to pursue an acting career. Around age 12, Carden modified the spelling of her first name from Darcy to D'Arcy, adding the apostrophe as a stylistic choice inspired by D'Arcy Wretzky, the bassist of the Smashing Pumpkins, to better align with her personal identity and prevent common mispronunciations.[17] This change reflected her emerging sense of self amid the cultural and artistic influences of her upbringing.Personal life
Carden married actor, writer, and producer Jason Carden on July 31, 2010, after the pair met through mutual friends on a group trip to Disneyland. The couple, who share a background in comedy and improv, have maintained a supportive partnership, with Jason providing emotional encouragement during D'Arcy's early career challenges in New York and the transition to Los Angeles. Their relationship is characterized by mutual respect within overlapping professional circles in the entertainment industry, including collaborations in sketch and improv performances.[23][20] In 2013, Carden and her husband relocated from New York City to Los Angeles to advance her television career and following Jason's job opportunity on the West Coast. Prior to this move and while establishing herself in acting, Carden worked full-time as a nanny for comedian Bill Hader's two eldest daughters from 2010 to 2013, a role that provided financial stability during her pre-fame years and introduced her to key industry connections. The family settled in the Silver Lake neighborhood, where they focused on building a balanced life amid career demands.[24][25][26][20] The Cardens have no children, prioritizing career stability and personal fulfillment while expressing intentions to start a family through IVF in the future. They were devoted pet parents to their rescue pit bull, Penny, whom they adopted and who became a central part of their home life until her passing from cancer in 2022; Penny often appeared in family moments and provided comic relief during remote work interviews. Carden's non-professional interests include practicing Pilates for physical and mental well-being, planning international vacations—particularly to Greece—and participating in outdoor activities suited to California's landscape.[27][28][29][30][31] Carden has engaged in philanthropy, notably supporting arts education through charity events like a 2019 improv performance benefiting InsideOUT Detroit, an organization providing performing arts programs for LGBTQ+ youth. She has also raised funds for entertainment industry workers via auctions and competed on Celebrity Jeopardy! in 2025, donating $30,000 to a charity aiding vulnerable populations. Her involvement reflects a commitment to community support, influenced in part by her Turkish heritage through her father, Dennis Erokan.[32][33][34][20]Career
Early career
After earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts in theater from Southern Oregon University in 2002, Carden relocated to New York City to pursue a professional acting career.[7] She initially joined the musical comedy troupe Venus Rising and appeared in the 2001 production Seven Hearts, a show about friends navigating life in San Francisco.[35] Upon arriving in the city, Carden faced significant challenges, including sharing a cramped two-bedroom apartment with four roommates and taking on various day jobs such as waitressing, temping in offices, nannying, and serving as a tour guide for sightseeing buses to make ends meet.[36][37] Her early years were marked by frequent auditions with little success, compounded by an ineffective agent who often overlooked her, leading to a period of uncertainty as she wandered between open calls without a clear path forward.[38] In 2004, a friend's invitation to an improvisational sketch comedy show at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre (UCB) proved transformative, prompting Carden to enroll in classes the following day and commit to improv training.[39] She became a longstanding member of the troupe, honing her skills in long-form improvisation and sketch comedy, which provided a supportive community and creative outlet during her lean years. Carden performed regularly on stage at UCB, joining Harold teams for improv ensembles and Maude teams for original sketch work, including the 2009 group Stone Cold Fox, where she contributed to monthly shows blending writing and performance.[40] This immersion in New York's comedy circuits gradually built her confidence and network, shifting her focus from straight theater to comedic improvisation as a foundation for future opportunities.[41] Carden's initial professional credits emerged from this UCB base, starting with web series and short-form content like UCB Comedy Originals (2009–2013), where she appeared as herself in various sketches, and the casting series Rhonda Casting (2009–2011) as Rhonda Basmati.[42] She also took on minor roles in short films, such as Ashley Is Single Again (2011), and booked national commercials to supplement her income during this period. By 2014, these efforts led to her first notable television guest spots, including a recurring role as the quirky Gemma on Comedy Central's Broad City (2014–2019), a series created by fellow UCB alumni Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson. These early appearances, spanning 2005 to 2015, represented a slow but steady accumulation of experience in comedy circuits, laying the groundwork for her transition to larger roles without immediate mainstream breakthrough.[25]Major television roles
Carden's portrayal of Janet in The Good Place marked her breakthrough as a leading comedic actress, beginning as an encyclopedic AI assistant in the afterlife bureaucracy and evolving across four seasons into a multifaceted entity grappling with emotions, autonomy, and existential questions. This character arc allowed Carden to blend deadpan delivery with emotional depth, particularly in episodes where Janet reboots or assumes human forms, highlighting themes of artificial intelligence gaining sentience. Her performance drew praise for subverting traditional female sidekick tropes, with critics noting how Janet's non-gendered identity—"not a girl"—challenged binary norms and contributed to the show's exploration of feminist issues in comedy. For this role, Carden received a Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series in 2020. In HBO's dark comedy Barry, Carden recurred as Natalie Greer, an aspiring actress and classmate in Gene Cousineau's acting workshop, whose arc evolves from ensemble foil to a more layered figure navigating ambition, betrayal, and the cutthroat entertainment industry. Her chemistry with series co-creator and star Bill Hader, stemming from their shared improv roots at Upright Citizens Brigade, infused Natalie's scenes with authentic awkwardness that amplified the show's blend of violence and wry humor. Carden's subtle portrayal of Natalie's quiet frustrations and moral ambiguities added emotional grounding to the ensemble, earning acclaim for enhancing the series' satirical take on Hollywood aspirations. Carden further demonstrated her range in ensemble comedies through supporting turns, such as Gemma in Broad City, where she played a quirky, high-strung friend injecting chaotic energy into the leads' misadventures, and as Greta Gill in A League of Their Own, embodying a fiery, no-nonsense outfielder whose tough exterior masks vulnerability in the all-women's baseball league. These roles showcased her ability to pivot from broad humor to nuanced interpersonal dynamics within group settings, often drawing on her improv training to heighten comedic timing. Critics' Choice and Screen Actors Guild Awards nominations underscored Carden's rising profile, including a 2020 Critics' Choice nod for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series tied to Janet and SAG ensemble nominations for The Good Place (2018, 2019, 2020) and Barry (2023). These accolades, alongside her Emmy nod, cemented her reputation in prestige television, where her versatile comedic timing bridged whimsical fantasy and gritty satire.Film and theatre work
Carden's film career features supporting roles that leverage her comedic versatility and timing, often portraying relatable, eccentric characters in ensemble casts. In the 2016 comedy-drama Other People, directed by Chris Kelly, she played Jessica, a quirky friend offering humorous support amid family struggles with illness.[43] Her performance added levity to the film's exploration of grief and relationships. In 2019, Carden appeared as Rebekah, a dedicated news producer navigating workplace tensions, in the biographical drama Bombshell, which dramatized the Fox News scandals involving Roger Ailes.[44] The role highlighted her ability to convey professional poise under pressure alongside stars like Charlize Theron and Nicole Kidman. She further demonstrated her range in musical formats with a cameo as a neighbor in the 2023 absurd comedy Dicks: The Musical, directed by Larry Charles, where her brief appearance contributed to the film's over-the-top satirical energy.[45] On stage, Carden honed her skills through improvisational comedy early in her career, performing regularly at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York, which emphasized her roots in live ensemble work.[46] Her Broadway debut came in 2023 with the lead role of Alicia, a well-intentioned but misguided teacher, in Larissa FastHorse's The Thanksgiving Play at the Helen Hayes Theater.[7] The production satirized efforts to create culturally sensitive educational theater about Thanksgiving, earning critical praise for Carden's nuanced portrayal of earnest idealism clashing with historical insensitivity.[47] For this performance, she received the Theatre World Award for Outstanding Debut on Broadway or Off-Broadway and a nomination for the Drama League Award for Distinguished Performance.[12][48]Recent projects
In 2024, Carden launched the podcast WikiHole, where she hosts panels of comedians exploring interconnected Wikipedia entries through trivia games and discussions of bizarre historical or cultural topics, such as the origins of Fuddruckers or cicada life cycles.[49] The series, produced by Smartless Media, has featured guests including Ike Barinholtz, Lisa Gilroy, and Ted Danson, helping to broaden Carden's profile in comedy beyond acting by showcasing her improvisational skills and enthusiasm for eclectic knowledge.[50] Carden's 2025 television roles include a series regular turn as Brooke Kirtley in Peacock's drama The Five-Star Weekend, an adaptation of Elin Hilderbrand's novel centered on a food influencer's retreat with friends, announced in June.[9] She also stars opposite Will Forte in the Australian crime comedy Sunny Nights, playing siblings who relocate to Sydney for a spray tan business that spirals into underworld intrigue, with the eight-episode Stan Original securing international distribution deals in October ahead of its December 26 premiere.[51] In 2025, Carden recurred as Aunt Phoebe in the final season of Hulu's The Handmaid's Tale.[11] Additionally, Carden appears in the fantasy comedy film Sketch, directed by Seth Worley, as Liz Wyatt alongside Tony Hale's Taylor Wyatt, a couple dealing with their daughter's animated drawings coming to life; the film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2024 and was released theatrically on August 6, 2025, following promotional interviews that month. Highlighting her ties to former The Good Place collaborators, Carden made a brief cameo as Professor Della Denunzio in the Netflix series A Man on the Inside, starring Ted Danson as an undercover investigator in a nursing home; the appearance in season 1, which debuted in November 2024, underscored ongoing professional connections from her past ensemble work.[52] Carden appears as Ryann, Joanne's friend, in the romantic comedy series Nobody Wants This (2024–2025), and attended the Los Angeles premiere of season 2 at the Egyptian Theatre in October 2025, reflecting her active involvement in industry events.[53]Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role | Billing |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | The To Do List | Movie Patron | Supporting[1] |
| 2015 | Gravy | Shannon | Supporting[1] |
| 2016 | Other People | Joanne Mulcahey | Supporting[1] |
| 2017 | The Disaster Artist | Chanty | Supporting[1] |
| 2018 | Game Night | Sarah | Supporting[1] |
| 2018 | Papi Chulo | Susan | Supporting[1] |
| 2019 | Greener Grass | Miss Human | Supporting[1] |
| 2019 | Let It Snow | Kira | Supporting[1] |
| 2019 | Bombshell | Tracy Eilers | Supporting[1] |
| 2020 | Happiest Season | Sloane | Supporting[1] |
| 2021 | Thunder Force | Pal | Supporting[1] |
| 2021 | Ride the Eagle | Audrey | Supporting[1] |
| 2022 | Am I OK? | Brittany | Lead[1] |
| 2022 | The People We Hate at the Wedding | Phyllis | Supporting[1] |
| 2022 | Shotgun Wedding | Harriet | Supporting[1] |
| 2023 | Dicks: The Musical | Eve | Supporting[1] |
| 2024 | She Taught Love | Laura | Supporting[1] |
| 2024 | A Man on the Inside | Susan | Supporting[54] |
| 2024 | The Gutter | Skunk | Supporting[1] |
| 2024 | Turn Me On | Woman in a Suit | Supporting[55] |
| 2025 | Sketch | Liz Wyatt | Supporting[56] |
Television
Carden began her television career with guest appearances and recurring roles in comedy series, gradually transitioning to lead parts in acclaimed shows. Her breakthrough came with the role of Janet in the NBC sitcom The Good Place, for which she received critical praise and award nominations.[57]| Year(s) | Title | Role | Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Inside Amy Schumer | Various | 1 |
| 2014–2019 | Broad City | Gemma | 5 |
| 2016 | Crazy Ex-Girlfriend | Eyebrows Girl | 1 |
| 2016–2020 | The Good Place | Janet | 53 |
| 2017 | Veep | Lisa | 1 |
| 2018–2023 | Barry | Natalie Greer | 20 |
| 2022 | A League of Their Own | Greta Gill | 8 |
| 2022 | Loot | Luciana | 1 |
| 2024–2025 | Nobody Wants This | Ryann | 4 |
| 2024 | The Handmaid's Tale | Aunt Phoebe | 3 |
| 2025 | The Five-Star Weekend | Brooke Kirtley | Series regular |
| 2025– | Sunny Nights | Vicki | Series regular |
Web series and podcasts
D'Arcy Carden began her digital media career with contributions to web-based sketch comedy through the Upright Citizens Brigade (UCB), where she performed in numerous online shorts and videos during the 2000s and 2010s. These included appearances on platforms like Above Average, a comedy video site produced by Broadway Video, featuring her in various humorous sketches that showcased her improvisational skills.[40] She starred in the UCB-produced web series Hello Dum Dum (circa 2010), a comedic short-form series highlighting absurd everyday scenarios, and Rhonda Casting (early 2010s), a satirical take on the casting process in entertainment. Carden also co-wrote and starred in Terrible Babysitters (2013–2014), a web comedy series about inept childcare providers, which was distributed online through UCB channels and independent platforms. These projects allowed her to blend her theatre improv roots with short-form digital content, often collaborating with fellow UCB performers.[40] In addition to live-action web work, Carden has provided voice acting for animated digital shorts, including roles in episodes of Poorly Drawn Lines (2021), an adaptation of the web comic series, where she voiced characters in surreal, bite-sized animated stories aired on FXX but originating from online content.[61] Turning to audio, Carden hosts WikiHole with D'Arcy Carden, a comedy trivia podcast launched in March 2024 by Wondery Media. The series features Carden leading panels of comedians, such as Ike Barinholtz, Lisa Gilroy, and Drew Tarver, as they navigate Wikipedia "rabbit holes" by guessing connections between seemingly unrelated entries, blending humor with trivia on topics like fast-food chains (e.g., Fuddruckers) and cultural icons (e.g., Bruce Springsteen).[50][62] Episodes typically run 45–60 minutes and emphasize collaborative improvisation, earning a 4.5/5 rating on Apple Podcasts based on over 300 reviews as of late 2025.[50] The podcast marked Carden's first major hosting role, building on her comedy background to create engaging, interconnected explorations of internet lore.[63]Theatre
Carden began her formal theatre training at Southern Oregon University in Ashland, Oregon, where she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in acting in 2002 and participated in various university stage productions as part of the Oregon Center for the Arts program.[7] Following graduation, she returned to the Bay Area and performed in several regional theatre productions with companies like Contra Costa Musical Theatre and Town Hall Theatre Company. Notable early credits include playing a role in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at the Lesher Center for the Arts in Walnut Creek, California (October 3–November 8, 2003), and appearing as Tiger Lily in Peter and Wendy at the Town Hall Theatre in Lafayette, California (December 1–31, 2005). Other representative works from this period encompass The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940 (January 27–February 20, 2005), Five Women Wearing the Same Dress (May 11–June 10, 2006), and Let's Go to Casablanca! (May 26–June 23, 2007), all at the Town Hall Theatre, where she was credited under her maiden name, D'Arcy Erokan.[64] In the mid-2000s, Carden relocated to New York City and immersed herself in the improvisational comedy scene at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre (UCB), becoming a longtime ensemble member and performer in ongoing shows from approximately 2006 to 2010.[39] She contributed to UCB's signature long-form improv format in productions such as ASSSSCAT, a weekly show featuring guest monologists and ensemble improvisation that has run since 1997, as well as other ensemble-driven sketches and teams during this foundational phase of her career.[25] These experiences honed her skills in spontaneous performance and collaboration, influencing her transition to scripted roles. Carden's Broadway debut came in 2023 with the role of Alicia, a Los Angeles-based actress brought in for cultural consultation on a school play, in Larissa FastHorse's satirical comedy The Thanksgiving Play, directed by Rachel Chavkin at the Helen Hayes Theater.[65] The Second Stage Theater production ran from March 25 to June 4, 2023, earning critical acclaim for its examination of cultural representation in American education.[66]Awards and nominations
| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Gold Derby TV Awards | Comedy Supporting Actress | The Good Place | Won | [67] |
| 2018 | INOCA TV Awards | Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | The Good Place | Won | [68] |
| 2019 | Gold Derby TV Awards | Comedy Supporting Actress | The Good Place | Won | [10] |
| 2019 | Gold Derby TV Awards | Comedy Supporting Actress of the Decade | The Good Place | Nominated | [10] |
| 2020 | Astra TV Awards | Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | The Good Place | Nominated | [10] |
| 2020 | Critics' Choice Television Awards | Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | The Good Place | Nominated | [69] |
| 2020 | Gold Derby TV Awards | Comedy Supporting Actress | The Good Place | Nominated | [10] |
| 2020 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | The Good Place | Nominated | [1] |
| 2020 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series | The Good Place | Nominated | [70] |
| 2023 | Drama League Awards | Distinguished Performance | The Thanksgiving Play | Nominated | [48] |
| 2023 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series | Barry | Nominated | [70] |
| 2023 | Theatre World Awards | Outstanding Debut Performance | The Thanksgiving Play | Won | [71] |
| 2024 | Astra TV Awards | Best Guest Actress in a Comedy Series | Barry | Nominated | [10] |
| 2025 | Astra TV Awards | Best Guest Actress in a Drama Series | The Handmaid's Tale | Nominated | [10] |