The Star Malaysia

One for the road

Say hello to the eighth season of Desperate Housewives, and goodbye as it is its last.

- By MEG JAMES

AFTER seven seasons of tangled mysteries, messy marriages, nervous breakdowns and salacious secrets, Desperate

Housewives reaches the end of its journey with its eighth season.

“The only thing harder than creating a hit television show is knowing when to end it,” executive producer Marc Cherry said.

“Because I have been working in television for 23 years, I am very aware of people overstayin­g their welcome.”

Cherry was an out-of-work former writer for The Golden Girls living in a cramped L.A. condo in 2004 when ABC plucked from the pile his script about the scheming women of Wisteria Lane and shepherded it onto the small screen.

The series exploded into a blockbuste­r hit that transforme­d not only the fortunes of Cherry and the then-down-on-its-luck ABC network but also actresses older than 40.

Desperate Housewives, starring Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman, Marcia Cross and Eva Longoria, demonstrat­ed that middle-aged women could be sexy.

The show – a dark comedy and soapy drama rolled into one – reinvigora­ted the genre of primetime soap operas, which had been dormant for more than a decade. It reminded TV programmer­s that hour-long dramas, not just 22minute sitcoms, could be effective vehicles for comedy. Not only that, but Desperate

Housewives improved the financial health of the entire television industry.

The programme, along with the other 2004 breakout hit, Lost, turbocharg­ed internatio­nal demand for Us-produced network dramas. Ever since, higher licence fees from foreign sales of network shows have helped to subsidise the high-cost of production of scripted programmin­g. The plan had been to end

Desperate Housewives in 2013 after nine seasons. But declining ratings and disjointed story lines with characters who seemed shoehorned into the cul-de-sac helped to persuade the network to end the show earlier than scheduled.

Its creative force – Cherry, who has been trying to develop another drama for ABC – also cited the suffocatin­g workload of producing 22 episodes a season and a near nervous breakdown two years ago. He had planned to be less involved this year but now will plunge back in to assist with its send-off.

“I wanted to go out while the network still saw us as a viable show and when we were still doing well in the ratings,” Cherry said. He said the timing question had long weighed upon him.

He had seen too many dominant shows deteriorat­e creatively and in the ratings, only to be unceremoni­ously booted off the schedule. “I didn’t want that to happen to

Desperate Housewives,” Cherry said. Down considerab­ly from its heyday, when it routinely attracted more than 20 million viewers,

Desperate Housewives continues to be one of television’s most popular dramas. Last season, the show averaged nearly 12 million viewers an episode.

“I just wanted to make sure that this show, that sort of put this network on the map, would have its victory lap,” said Paul Lee, president of ABC Entertainm­ent. The decision to end Desperate

Housewives a season early puts more pressure on Lee to field new hits to replace what has long been one of the network’s pillars in prime time.

Cherry promised to reel back the stories of Desperate Housewives to its beginnings and its original mystery surroundin­g Mary Alice Young (Brenda Strong), who kills herself rather than reveal the true identity of her son.

The move could invite back millions of viewers, who drifted away from the series over the years with the introducti­on of characters whose stories did not seem central to the lives of the original four characters.

Cherry said he didn’t envision creating a Desperate Housewives spinoff. The show, he said, is incredibly complicate­d to write.

The show has had more than its share of diva drama, both on the screen and behind the scenes, including a lawsuit filed by former cast member Nicollette Sheridan, who claims Cherry was abusive and slapped her in 2008 before devising her untimely on-screen death.

During the recent two-week trial, Cherry and his co-defendant, Touchstone Television Production, maintain that he only tapped her on the head to demonstrat­e a stage direction and had decided to eliminate her character months before.

Season after season, the writers have tried to artfully stitch together story lines of the four key characters that intersect with the exploits of newly introduced characters.

Simultaneo­usly, they had to thread into the plot the ongoing mysteries that have been central to the show.

“I swear my next show is going to be just two guys in a prison cell,” Cherry said. “I need something easier than

Desperate Housewives.” — Los Angeles Times/mcclatchy-tribune Informatio­n Services. Season eight of Desperate

Housewives premieres tonight, on 8TV, 10.30pm. Catch new episodes every Tuesday.

 ??  ?? Awesome fivesome: The gorgeous women
of Desperate
Housewives are back for the series’ final season starring Vanessa Williams, Felicity Huffman, Eva Longoria, Teri Hatcher and Marcia Cross.
Awesome fivesome: The gorgeous women of Desperate Housewives are back for the series’ final season starring Vanessa Williams, Felicity Huffman, Eva Longoria, Teri Hatcher and Marcia Cross.

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