Houston Chronicle

TELEVISION: New ‘90210’ is a nostalgia bender with a meta twist.

- By Yvonne Villarreal

VANCOUVER, Canada — Like most attempts at wrangling old friends for a gathering, this one started with a group text. But those can become a graveyard of noncommitm­ents, so to persuade their former “Beverly Hills, 90210” co-stars to reunite on the small screen, Tori Spelling and Jennie Garth (aka Donna Martin and Kelly Taylor) opted for a more personaliz­ed touch: They made gift bags.

“I was like, ‘Really? We’re giving them gift bags?’ ” Garth recalls, looking over to Spelling, who concocted the idea.

“And I was like — ‘It’s funny! It’s cute!’ ” Spelling says.

In the minutes before their formal pitch to the actors at CBS Television Studios, which owns the rights to the series, the duo scrambled to assemble the giveaways. The contents included a snow globe as well as Barbie and Ken dolls haphazardl­y fashioned to resemble the characters — a Sharpie helped achieve Brandon Walsh’s dark coif and sideburns; one doll’s mane was cut to mimic Andrea Zuckerman’s chin-length bob. Not that it mattered in the end.

“They didn’t even care!” Spelling says.

But the gang eventually agreed to the homecoming that takes TV’s nostalgia bender to blurred vision levels.

Nearly 30 years before “Euphoria” and “13 Reasons Why” were making headlines for their complex, mature portraits of teenage life, “Beverly Hills, 90210” was laying the foundation for the genre as we know it. Its then-revolution­ary exploratio­n of the social and sexual drama of high school life became appointmen­t viewing on a then-fledgling Fox and turned its mostly littleknow­n cast into celebritie­s who incited mall mobs. It aired for 10 seasons and spawned both a successful spinoff, “Melrose Place,” and a CW reboot, “90210.”

Now Kelly, Donna, Brandon, Brenda, Steve, David and Andrea are back on TV screens — sort of. Premiering Wednesday on Fox, the six-episode, mockumenta­rystyle “BH90210” features Garth, Spelling, Jason Priestley, Ian Ziering, Gabrielle Carteris, Brian Austin Green and Shannen Doherty playing heightened versions of themselves as they work to get a reboot of the prime-time soap off the ground. If that sounds more complicate­d than the Season 4 subplot involving Dylan’s stepsister, think of it as “Curb Your Enthusiasm” meets a “Beverly Hills, 90210” reunion.

“We felt like we needed something different because everyone’s doing reboots,” says Garth, seated next to Spelling during a break from shooting on a recent day. “This show was groundbrea­king when it started, so we were trying to think of what could be the new version of that.”

Garth and Spelling, who previously teamed for the 2014 ABC Family sitcom “Mystery Girls,” had been looking for another comedic project to work on together, and, as alumni of a landmark teen soap, the cast has long been followed by questions about a reunion. With the help of Chris Alberghini and Mike Chessler, both of whom worked with Spelling on her meta comedy “So Notorious,” they began hashing out ways to merge the ideas last spring.

The twist, they say, presents an opportunit­y to spoof the dynamics of coming into — and surviving — fame in the ’90s and to play with fans’ perception­s of the behind-the-scenes drama that fueled gossip columns throughout the show’s run.

“It was before social media,” Alberghini says. “So you’d hear about wild nights at the Roxbury, or whatever was going on. That almost seems quaint by today’s standards.”

The series’ hybrid vision is on display in June during a full day of shooting on set in Vancouver. One moment, the cast members tap into their exaggerate­d personalit­ies for a scene in which they meet with network executives about the reboot. Later, they’re roaming the halls of Vancouver Technical Secondary — masqueradi­ng as West Beverly High — in peak-’90s attire: vests, pleated pants, collared shirts with loud prints and Keds.

Green can’t help but poke fun at it all while making a dash to the food truck near the soundstage during a break for lunch: “Nobody’s going to watch this,” he says playfully. “This is a stupid idea.”

Jokes aside, news of the reboot — and its unusual premise — has drawn mixed reactions from fans: excitement to see their faves, misgivings that it will sully the memory, and plain old confusion about what they’re in for. After all, no one forgets their first TV love. And for many, “Beverly Hills, 90210” was just that.

It’s not lost on the cast and producers that fan expectatio­ns are high. Episodes will include a healthy amount of Easter eggs — on the day of the Times’ visit, there were references to some of Kelly’s most memorable moments on the show: the fire, the New Evolution, and getting shot at LAX, to name a few.

“It’s a balance,” Spelling says. “We are definitely trying to service the fans and give them what we call ‘fan candy’ while also making it something new for us.”

 ?? Fox ?? The band is back together for “BH90210,” the 2019 reboot of “Beverly Hills, 90210.” From left, Jason Priestley, Gabrielle Carteris, Ian Ziering, Brian Austin Green, Jennie Garth and Tori Spelling.
Fox The band is back together for “BH90210,” the 2019 reboot of “Beverly Hills, 90210.” From left, Jason Priestley, Gabrielle Carteris, Ian Ziering, Brian Austin Green, Jennie Garth and Tori Spelling.

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