Friends fans are horrified after discovering a ‘mortifying’ fact about Courteney Cox and David Schwimmer’s ages.
The hit sitcom, which ran between 1994 and 2004, was one of the biggest shows on TV.
Even though it’s now been off our screens for almost 20 years, people are still talking about it and watching it!
And now, fans of Friends have come to a horrifying revelation about Courteney Cox and David Schwimmer’s ages.
The comedy followed the lives of six young friends, who lived in Manhattan and navigated the trials and tribulations of their late 20s and early 30s.
And because we keep on rewatching the classic show, it seems as though the actors will forever remain around that age, in our eyes.

But the fact is, time keeps marching on, and now the Friends stars are a far cry from the fresh faces that first burst onto our screens nearly 30 years ago.

Aniston – the youngest cast member after the late Matthew Perry – is now 55 years old, LeBlanc is 56 and Kudrow is 60.
And when it comes to Cox and Schwimmer’s age, people have been left feeling depressed!
“Time goes too fast!” one person comments.
A third adds: “No, no, nooooooooo! Where has the time gone?!”
While another gets more nostalgic, commenting: “We are all getting old, so glad I had my teen/early 20s with this group of friends.”

It turns out that Cox and Schwimmer are now about the ages their onscreen parents were when the show began!
Elliot Gould is now 85 years old while Christina Pickles is 89, meaning that when Friends began in 1994, they were around 55 and 59 years old.
Cox is actually older than her former on-screen sibling and is now 59 years old.
Schwimmer is now 57 years old, making him older than Gould would have been when he started playing Ross’ dad.
And speaking of the beloved parents of Friends, the pair were recently interviewed about their time on the sitcom, in which they shared they’re ‘extremely grateful for the experience’.
In an interview with E! News, Gould said: “… the opportunity and the success and to be able to work with new, younger people, I mean, who have become iconic on their own right, it’s a wonderful evolutionary aspect to my existence. And I’m extremely grateful for it.”