The Capital

Grammer is hoping to give ‘Frasier’ lengthy second life

- By Rodney Ho

A few years ago, Kelsey Grammer noticed the success of the “Roseanne” reboot on ABC, “The Conners,” and that got him thinking about bringing Dr. Frasier Crane, his signature character, back to TV.

“I saw the TV landscape cracking a little bit,” Grammer said in an interview with Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “People seemed to want some old-style entertainm­ent back again in the form of the multicam sitcom. That redoubled my sense that Frasier could go on forever. He’s just an interestin­g character to play.”

Frasier has been one of the longest-running continuous characters on TV in history. First, he was part of the regular crew on NBC’s “Cheers” for nine seasons set in Boston. He then found a new home as a radio psychiatri­st in Seattle on the successful spinoff show “Frasier” for 11 seasons until 2004.

In 2022, Grammer signed on with the Paramount+ streaming service for the official reboot of “Frasier,” with Frasier returning to Boston after his father’s death and leaving a successful “Dr. Phil”-style syndicated talk show for a teaching gig at Harvard University. He moves in with his firefighte­r son, Freddy, an echo of the time Frasier moved in with Martin Crane three decades earlier. (John Mahoney, who played Martin, died in 2018.)

“Frasier” debuted this past fall to mixed reviews, with a 56 out of 100 average on Metacritic from 37 critics. Aramide Tinubu of Variety said, “There is something so charming about dusting off and polishing up a past relic that makes it as refreshing as you remembered it.” But The New York Times’ James Poniewozik said “the reproducti­on has the predictabl­e beats of a mothballed 20th-century sitcom.”

“Whatever Frasier does, he does it 100%,” said Grammer, 68. “He is a pretty resilient character. We surround him in a new world. Old dog, new tricks.”

His goal as an executive producer working with the writers was to ensure that the reboot, even with a new cast, maintained the heart of the previous incarnatio­n. “If it’s a comedy without heart, without depth, those are laughs unearned,” he said.

Grammer believes the show would be an excellent fit on CBS, which has only two multicamer­a sitcoms on its current lineup: “The Neighborho­od” and “Bob Hearts Abishola.” CBS did air two episodes this past October to help inform people about its presence on Paramount+. But he said those types of decisions are above his pay grade.

To date, Paramount+ has not released viewership numbers for “Frasier,” but Grammer is confident that it will have a lengthy second life. And while the focus on the show hasn’t been on past characters — with the exception of an appearance in Season 1 of former work colleague Roz (Peri Gilpin) — Grammer isn’t against bringing some of the old gang back.

The one character he most wants Frasier to meet with again is Diane, his on-again, off-again squeeze on “Cheers,” played by Shelley Long. “I think she would be the most important person from ‘Cheers’ for Frasier to have a conversati­on with,” Grammer said. “There are some boxes he has not yet checked in his growth since coming back to Boston. He could get some closure with Diane.”

And while he was happy to do a quick “Cheers” reunion recently at the Emmys with Rhea Perlman, Ted Danson, George Wendt and John Ratzenberg­er, Long’s absence was felt: “A few days before, she decided not to come, which was too bad.”

 ?? GETTY ?? Kelsey Grammer, shown Jan. 15, assisted the reboot’s writers in maintainin­g the spirit of the original show.
GETTY Kelsey Grammer, shown Jan. 15, assisted the reboot’s writers in maintainin­g the spirit of the original show.

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