The Niagara Falls Review

Barr defends sitcom’s Trump stance

Roseanne shows ‘realistic portrait of working-class people’

- LYNN ELBER

PASADENA, Calif. — Roseanne Barr said her character’s support for U.S. President Donald Trump in the revived sitcom Roseanne is a reflection of her own views and also true to the show’s roots.

The sitcom brings the Conner family and the life of the country up to date when it debuts March 27 on ABC.

“I’ve always attempted to portray a realistic portrait of the American people and of workingcla­ss people,” Barr said Monday. “And in fact it was working-class people who elected Trump.”

The show also seeks to address the polarizati­on that has split families, she said, calling such divisivene­ss “not American.”

Its extended family represents a “full cross-section of ideas and beliefs,” said Bruce Helford, among the executive producers and actors taking part in a Q&A with TV critics. “There’s no agenda on anybody’s part but to get honest feelings out there, and within a family that’s relatable,” Helford said.

Sara Gilbert, who’s among the original returning cast members, echoed him.

“People feel like they can’t disagree and still love each other and talk to each other. It’s a great thing to have a family divided by politics but still filled with love,” Gilbert said.

Barr was pushed to defend her character’s support for Trump in light of what a reporter called his racism and xenophobia. The question followed a clip from the original show in which her character vehemently decries her son’s apparent racism.

“Well, that’s your opinion,” Barr told the reporter, adding Trump says “a lot of crazy (expletive).”

“I’m not a Trump apologist,” she said. “There are a lot of things he’s said and done I don’t agree with, like there’s probably a lot of things Hillary Clinton has done and said that you don’t agree with. No one’s brainwashe­d into agreeing with 100 per cent of what anybody says, let alone a politician or a candidate.”

Asked if she’d support Oprah Winfrey or, say, activist-actress Susan Sarandon for president, Barr said she herself would be a better president than either of them or, possibly, even Trump.

The new Roseanne reunites Barr with John Goodman, Laurie Metcalf and other original cast members, somehow getting past that Goodman’s character, Dan Conner, was said to have died when the series ended its 198897 run.

In a clip from the new show, Conner is shown being awakened in bed by Barr because she fears he’s dead.

“I thought it was a clever way to do it, handle it and get it out of the way,” Goodman told critics.

 ?? RICHARD SHOTWELL/INVISION/AP ?? Laurie Metcalf, left, Roseanne Barr and John Goodman participat­e in the Roseanne panel during the Disney/ABC Television Critics Associatio­n Winter Press Tour on Monday in Pasadena, Calif.
RICHARD SHOTWELL/INVISION/AP Laurie Metcalf, left, Roseanne Barr and John Goodman participat­e in the Roseanne panel during the Disney/ABC Television Critics Associatio­n Winter Press Tour on Monday in Pasadena, Calif.

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