TV News: Kelsey Grammer On ‘Frasier’ Revival: “Life Takes Him In Another Direction UPDATE: Getting a Paramount+ Reboot”

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Kelsey Grammer On ‘Frasier’ Revival: “Life Takes Him In Another Direction”
By Erik Pedersen
E

The last time we saw Dr. Frasier Crane, he was landing at a Chicago airport in the series finale of NBC’s Frasier. As we await the Paramount Plus revival of the Emmy-laden sitcom, its once and future star gave a few hints about the upcoming series that follows the man Kelsey Grammer calls “the George Bailey of Television.”
In an interview on WNBC New York, Grammer offered some detail-challenged clues on what viewers can expect from the revival. He said the character, who moved from Boston to Seattle for the original series, will end up in another new place. “He thinks he’s gonna go off and do one thing, and sure enough, his life takes him in another direction,” Grammer said of the character he played for 20 consecutive TV seasons. “And he ends up rich beyond his dreams.”

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John Mahoney, who played Frasier’s dad, died in 2018, but what about Frasier‘s surviving co-stars David Hyde Pierce, Jane Leeves and Peri Gilpin? Grammer told WNBC that he has “reached out to everybody,” but so far, none has signed on. As for the absence of Mahoney’s Martin Crane, who appeared in of Frasier’s 263 episodes, Grammer said, “We intend to deal with that some in the first episode.”

Airing from 1993-2004 on NBC the Cheers spinoff that won the Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series in each of its first five seasons and finished its run with 37 Emmy Awards overall, include four for Grammer’s lead role. It was an out-of the-box hit, airing as the lead-out to Seinfeld in the season that sitcom caught fire and finish No. 1 among all primetime shows. Frasier would finish in the year-end top 20 in each of its first nine seasons, including four in the top 10.

The new incarnation of Frasier comes from writers Chris Harris (How I Met Your Mother) and Joe Cristalli (Life In Pieces), who will exec produce with Grammer, Tom Russo and Jordan McMahon. The series will be produced by CBS Studios in association with Grammnet Productions.

 

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The Frasier Reboot Will Be About How Frasier Gets ‘Rich Beyond His Dreams’
By Rebecca Alter@ralter

Photo: NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via
The perfect sitcom Frasier was always about how Dr. Frasier Crane (Kelsey Grammer) and his brother, Dr. Niles Crane (David Hyde Pierce), were two of the fanciest little men you ever did see. But the series reboot, which will stream on Paramount+, will reportedly take the show in a whole new direction: Frasier will be even richer than before. In an interview on New York’s NBC 4 on Thursday, Kelsey Grammer described Frasier’s journey in the upcoming season, saying, “He thinks he’s going to go off and do one thing, and sure enough, his life takes him in another direction. And he ends up rich beyond his dreams.” Of course, this could be a cryptic little twist from that old trickster, Grammer. He does also say in the interview that Frasier’s the “George Bailey of television.” So maybe Frasier won’t be rich in the way we think? Maybe it’ll be a fish-out-of-water story, and he’ll end up on a rural farm full of Jack Russell Terriers.

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Grammer says that the show will deal with the passing of John Mahoney in its first episode, and confirms what he also said in June: The Frasier reboot, tragically, will eschew its Seattle backdrop for “a new city.” That’s like if the Sex and the City reboot ditched its fifth character, New York, on top of ditching its best character, Samantha. Wherever Frasier goes, it better also have a Café Nervosa outpost and a thriving French restaurant scene.
 

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He’s Still Listening: Frasier Is Getting a Paramount+ Reboot
By Rebecca Alter, a news writer who covers comedy and pop culture
These guys. Photo: CBS Television
Finally, the perfect excuse to bust out the sherry while reclining in a hideous chair. After years of Kelsey Grammer being pissed off at writers for their terrible Frasier revival ideas, Deadline reports that the sitcom will indeed return for a new season of refined shenanigans. The multi-cam has been officially green-lit to series at Paramount+ as of October 4, though the streamer has not confirmed how many episodes will comprise the first season of this long-awaited revival. Chris Harris and Joe Cristalli (best known for their work in How I Met Your Mother and Life in Pieces, respectively) will lead the writing team.
As was originally reported in 2021, Grammer will, of course, reprise his role as the legendarily erudite radio host, although it seem like co-stars David Hyde Pierce, Jane Leeves, and Peri Gilpin will not be joining him. (John Mahoney, who portrayed the Crane patriarch, Martin, died in 2019.) Grammer has said in the past that he would refuse to do a Frasier revival unless Hyde Pierce, Leeves, and Gilpin were all involved, and he would want to see the “next iteration” of his character “looking for love in a new city.” Since then, Grammer has confirmed that the series will take place in a “new city” that isn’t Seattle.

Joining Frasier in this new city will be his (often forgotten) son Freddy, played by Jack Cutmore-Scott. According to Variety, Freddy is a blend of his father and grandfather. “Years ago, Freddy rejected following in his father’s footsteps—dropping out of college to become a fireman—and he’s never looked back until now, when recent troubles have left him with no one to turn to in his life” the character description reads. Sounds Freddy will be cohabitating with his dad after a personal crisis, much like Frasier did in Seattle. Also joining the cast is Nicholas Lyndhurst as Alan Cornwall, an old college bro of Frasier’s who has become a professor. “British, boozy and larger than life, Alan has an intellect on par with Frasier’s—if only he ever felt like using it,” per Variety again. So he’s like a boy Roz? Fun.
 

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i'll wait for the black frasier remake. cause i like my frasier like i like my zod, my women and my tea. black!

 

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Kelsey Grammer's spiritualist friend says John Mahoney is 'very happy' with the new Frasier​

The sitcom legend discusses his return as Dr. Crane, reuniting with Bebe Neuwirth, and potentially revisiting where everybody knew his name.
By
Lester Fabian Brathwaite

Published on November 30, 2023










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Frasier

Kelsey Grammer as Frasier Crane. PHOTO:
CHRIS HASTON/PARAMOUNT+
Kelsey Grammer opens our interview with a quote from a poem by Jorge Luis Borges. Because of course he does.

For nearly 40 years, Grammer has played, rather to perfection, the ever erudite Frasier Crane, so in the public imagination, Grammer and Crane seem like one and the same. Though one can’t imagine Grammer having nearly as many disastrous dinner parties as his fictional counterpart.

Without resorting to hyperbole, Frasier Crane is one of the greatest television characters ever, and certainly one of the most resilient. Since debuting on the third season premiere of Cheers in 1984, Crane has almost always been on television, from his eight seasons on Cheers on CBS, to eleven seasons on his own titular show on NBC, to reruns of both in syndication and on streaming, and now with a reboot of Frasier on Paramount +.

Frasier

Kelsey Grammer as Frasier Crane.
CHRIS HASTON/PARAMOUNT+
In between, Grammer also slipped in a guest appearance as Crane on a 1992 episode of Wings, making him the first actor to be nominated for an Emmy for playing the same character on three different shows. So what keeps bringing Grammer back to the well of Frasier Crane?

“What's great about Frasier is, there's an old poem by Jorge Luis Borges that I used to read, where he talks about how Shakespeare could take all of creation and treat it like a bauble in his hand. And I always thought that's what Frasier's like,” Grammer tells EW.

“Frasier treats the universe like a bauble. It's like it's a magical gift that he can just go anywhere in the world with. He can go to the highest of highs and the lowest of lows, and we can enjoy the ride with him because it's always just a little bit funny. Which goes back to something I learned a long time ago from a very famous old actor, who said, ‘You have to give the audience a wink, and you just have to let them know they're safe, that this isn't that serious, that we're going someplace funny.’ And Frasier knows how to wink.”

Here, Grammer discusses bringing Frasier out of TV history retirement, reuniting with Bebe Neuwirth, his love of The Golden Girls, the original show’s gay sensibility, and the possibility of any future Cheers tie-ins.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: So what's it been like getting back in Frasier's shoes after all these years in this new phase of his life? And did you take any inspiration from your own life?

KELSEY GRAMMER:
Well, people used to ask me, "How could you play a character for so long?" And honestly, I thought, "Well, how can you live for so long?" It's as simple as, "Was life okay today?" "Yeah, it was. I got up in the morning and I found something new to do. I found something wonderful about life again today." And why I'm still here is why Frasier's still here. So the idea of putting him back on as a character was easy. He's endlessly fascinating because life is endlessly fascinating. I'm a bit of an optimist personally, so I guess that bleeds into the performance.

But Frasier's got new challenges every time he turns around. Right now, of course, they are to get closer to his son [Freddy, played by Jack Cutmore-Scott], to make up for lost time, to move back to Boston to figure out what it was that he didn't quite pull off when he was there before. In one of the episodes, the character of Alan [Nicholas Lyndhurst] says something like, "Whatever happened to good enough? Whatever happened to, 'This'll do?'" Frasier's not that guy. He is going to fight for the rest of his life to find that indescribably perfect place. And whether or not he ever finds it, he's still going to keep searching.

Frasier

Kelsey Grammer as Frasier Crane and Jack Cutmore-Scott as Freddy Crane.
CHRIS HASTON/PARAMOUNT+
And has your approach to playing Frasier changed at all?

Well, he's a little mellower. He's a little less goofy about some things. He has certain knowledge now. He's now his dad. He's put on the role of his father and that's new to him, but I think he's ready for it. And as an homage to John Mahoney and to the role of Martin, we wanted to really include the fact that Frasier was now an orphan. That's what it comes down to. And now he's the guy that needs to live up to the role his dad showed him. It's a nice vibration, and it's lovely to have John kind of around in our subtext all the time. I have a lot of pretty "airy fairy" friends, and a lot of them are mediums or spiritualists or whatever. And I was talking to one of them who said, "Oh, by the way, John is very happy about this show." I said, "Well, I'm glad to hear that." [Laughs]

It was so nice seeing Bebe Neuwirth back as Lilith. Can you talk about working with her again? And do you have a hard time falling back into old rhythms, or is it very easy?

No, it's funny. It's not hard, no. You just rehearse a little. Bebe knows that character inside and out, and when she steps into the role of Lilith, she just steps into it. It's like putting on a set of gloves or just taking a shower — it's a real simple life activity. She knows how to act. She's really good at it. This character is one of the greats. She just puts her on and it's fantastic. And so their relationship is fun.

They have a child together, and they both have always been pretty responsible about that. In that nature is why we ended up having that episode to figure out what are we going to do with Frasier back in Boston where [Freddy's] mom has been all this time, and how are they going to share that? And it seemed like a perfectly appropriate thing to try to celebrate his birthday together, which didn't turn out so well.

Frasier

Kelsey Grammer as Frasier Crane and Bebe Neuwirth as Dr. Lilith Sternin.
CHRIS HASTON/PARAMOUNT+
With reboots, I think there's sometimes a tendency to want to change the formula of a show. Was there any point where you felt that Frasier should be maybe a single-camera show without a studio audience?

No. Nah. Multi-cam is a magnificent medium. It has been ignored lately or just not practiced lately. People have gone in another direction. Entertainment now is basically who can be the worst person in the world and who can say the meanest possible thing? Then that's how they get the most views, and we don't need it. We can just do a nice entertaining evening with the Cranes or the Crane-adjacent family and see what they come up with and recognize them in ourselves. I think that's always been the key of sitcoms. But the most famous shows were always sitcoms: Cheers, Seinfeld, Frasier, arguably. Friends, Cosby Show, The Jeffersons. Golden Girls. People still watch Golden Girls and say, "Oh my God, this show is wonderful." I do too. I'm sitting there like, "This is great."

You have a lot closer connection to these characters than I do, so do you have any ideas about what Niles and Daphne and Roz and all these characters are up to now in your own mind?

Well, we had all kinds of creative ideas about them, because originally, of course, I thought that I owed it to everybody that was in the previous show, the legacy cast, an opportunity to be in this one, but it just needed to be a different show, a different set of circumstances for all their lives. We had Niles being a professor somewhere and Daphne maybe living in New York. We had a whole bunch of ideas that possibly could've taken place. Frasier at one point was going to go to New York to discover something. When David and Jane and Peri basically looked like they weren't going to be part of the show, that's when Boston came up. That's when it seemed, "Oh, well, Frasier's got unfinished business to do in Boston. He left with his tail between his legs. He didn't fulfill his dream there. He didn't end up conquering the town the way he wanted to. So it's back to Boston we go."

Kelsey Grammer and Patrick Stewart from the original 'Frasier', the 2003 episode, The Doctor Is Out

Kelsey Grammer and Patrick Stewart from the original 'Frasier'.
CHRIS HASTON/PARAMOUNT+
One of the things I've always loved about Frasier is the gay sensibility of the show, because even watching it now, the gay humor has aged so well. It's never vindictive. A lot of shows from the '90s haven't aged as well. So can you talk about what about Frasier, whether it was the writers or whatever, contributed to that aspect of it?

I did a cover of a magazine with Phil Hartman years ago [with the headline "More Than Friends: How Sitcoms Became the New Gay Art Form"] with the implication being that most of the writers in Hollywood at that time were gay, apparently. I don't know exactly what it was, but they were picking up on the sensibility, of course, that what was going on with Frasier was a sort of unspoken gay element. And we sort of relished in it. It was fine. It was fun.

One of my favorite moments was when Frasier says, "Is it perfect? No, but I've always wanted to be part of a power couple." He was going out with Patrick Stewart and they were sort of dating. The thing about Frasier, it was always just a celebration of people and different kinds of people in different lives and the way they related to one another. And it was so tongue-in-cheek about how their cultured sensibility sort of screamed of a gay sensibility. And of course, we had some very colorful people writing on the show at the time, so it seemed like a natural outcropping.

Do you have any ideas for Frasier storylines in the future that you would love to do?

You know what? We have not done any storylines yet. We have not had a chance to even sit down and talk. The very first conversation I had was just last week where I said, "Let's start thinking about what we want to do next time, next year." And so we don't know what the next year is exactly because no one's told us. So we're just waiting. In my mind, we're going to do another 100, another 150 shows in the next seven or eight years. That's my hope, and that we have a real library of the newer Frasier as well to turn to.

Frasier

(l-r) Nicholas Lyndhurst, director James Burrows, Anders Keith, Jess Salgueiro, Kelsey Grammer, Jack Cutmore-Scott and Toks Olagundoye on the set of 'Frasier'.
CHRIS HASTON/PARAMOUNT+
Since you're back in Boston, obviously the question is, is anyone from Cheers going to pop up?

I don't think it would be right for us to go back to the bar. I think we made reference to the bar, and it is not what it once was, and most of those characters would've moved on. It might be a very interesting idea to try to find some connection to one of them or somehow see them on the show. I don't know. It could be Rhea [Pearlman], it could be Ted [Danson] if there was a willingness and if there's a story worth telling, but it would have to be worth it. I imagine that Frasier might be interested in sorting out or visiting the past a little bit. Maybe the next Christmas show we could do A Christmas Carol, and he goes back to the ghost of Cheers past so he sees the mistakes he made at Cheers. That might be kind of interesting, and then use clips. I just thought of that now. It might be a fun idea.
 

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Frasier and Niles Were Supposed to Open a Theater Together​


But when David Hyde Pierce said no, the reboot creators had to evolve.​


By Devon Ivie, a staff writer covering classic rock and TV
aa366e15dceeb1304db556520d1771d81b-Frasier-102.rhorizontal.w1100.jpg

“It would be weird to make Niles the new Maris.” Photo: Paramount+
Kelsey Grammer had been wanting to reboot Frasier for a while. We first got rumblings that sherry’s most reliable buyer would return to screens in 2018, and now, five years later, his third act takes him back to the city that started it all: Boston. Richer and jeans-ier than ever, Frasier wants to make an earnest effort to reconnect with his son Freddy (Jack Cutmore-Scott) and takes a job as a psychology professor at Harvard to remain close by. The department’s chair Olivia (Toks Olagundoye) and an old limey chum Alan (Nicholas Lyndhurst) are the KACL stand-ins, while Freddy’s friend and roommate Eve (Jess Salgueiro) possesses a Daphne-esque zany-but-no-bullshit energy. Frasier’s nephew David (Anders Keith) also flutters around with a long list of allergies just like his dad. And that brings us to the Niles of it all.
As showrunners Joe Cristalli and Chris Harris tell it, getting David Hyde Pierce to reprise his role for the new Frasier was, of course, a priority. Discussions stretched out to solidify a narrative for the character — including one about a black-box theater, more on that in a bit — before Hyde Pierce decided there was nothing left to do with Niles. “He’s not the bad guy in this, and he was so lovely about it,” Cristalli says. Ultimately, his absence presented the duo with an opportunity to start a fresh story from scratch, which is layered on one main theme. “For both his professional world and personal relationships,” Harris explains, “it feels like it’s a time for Frasier to be giving back.”

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FINAL DRAFT OCT. 16, 2023

Frasier and Niles Were Supposed to Open a Theater Together​


But when David Hyde Pierce said no, the reboot creators had to evolve.​

Portrait of Devon Ivie
By Devon Ivie, a staff writer covering classic rock and TV
aa366e15dceeb1304db556520d1771d81b-Frasier-102.rhorizontal.w1100.jpg

“It would be weird to make Niles the new Maris.” Photo: Paramount+
Kelsey Grammer had been wanting to reboot Frasier for a while. We first got rumblings that sherry’s most reliable buyer would return to screens in 2018, and now, five years later, his third act takes him back to the city that started it all: Boston. Richer and jeans-ier than ever, Frasier wants to make an earnest effort to reconnect with his son Freddy (Jack Cutmore-Scott) and takes a job as a psychology professor at Harvard to remain close by. The department’s chair Olivia (Toks Olagundoye) and an old limey chum Alan (Nicholas Lyndhurst) are the KACL stand-ins, while Freddy’s friend and roommate Eve (Jess Salgueiro) possesses a Daphne-esque zany-but-no-bullshit energy. Frasier’s nephew David (Anders Keith) also flutters around with a long list of allergies just like his dad. And that brings us to the Niles of it all.
As showrunners Joe Cristalli and Chris Harris tell it, getting David Hyde Pierce to reprise his role for the new Frasier was, of course, a priority. Discussions stretched out to solidify a narrative for the character — including one about a black-box theater, more on that in a bit — before Hyde Pierce decided there was nothing left to do with Niles. “He’s not the bad guy in this, and he was so lovely about it,” Cristalli says. Ultimately, his absence presented the duo with an opportunity to start a fresh story from scratch, which is layered on one main theme. “For both his professional world and personal relationships,” Harris explains, “it feels like it’s a time for Frasier to be giving back.”

In the spirit of that, we presented the duo with seven quotes from Frasier’s premiere episode to learn more about how they got to their final draft, rejected jokes and all.

“It’s charming — it reminds me of a sort of place where one would wrestle a cartoon rat for a crust of bread.”​

The episode begins with Frasier landing in Boston following the funeral of his father, Martin, to check in with son, Freddy, while guest-lecturing for a pal’s Harvard psych class. Here, Frasier observes Freddy’s modest but well-decorated Boston apartment, which he shares with Eve and, we later learn, her baby. The rhythm and sharpening of the reboot’s joke-telling has an unusual genesis: Cristalli used to run a now-deleted Twitter account where he imagined Frasier dialogue in a modern-day setting.
Joe Cristalli: The show had been off the air for about a decade before I started the Twitter feed. I did it for a couple of years to zero acclaim. I had 2,000 followers. It was a fun way to spend time. But when Kelsey came out and said, “I want to do the revival,” I made my agents send this Twitter page to his producers. I also had a Frasier spec script I wrote in 2014. They responded, “Oh yeah, we can meet with this guy. He obviously knows the DNA of Frasier.” I was around 30 years old and a staff writer. It’s like, “We’re not giving you the reins to Frasier off this.” So Chris, who had been a showrunner for a long time, came in. I met him on How I Met Your Mother. We wrote the pitch and the pilot together. He gets no credit
 

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Frasier and Niles Were Supposed to Open a Theater Together



But when David Hyde Pierce said no, the reboot creators had to evolve.

Portrait of Devon Ivie
By Devon Ivie, a staff writer covering classic rock and TV
aa366e15dceeb1304db556520d1771d81b-Frasier-102.rhorizontal.w1100.jpg

“It would be weird to make Niles the new Maris.” Photo: Paramount+

Kelsey Grammer had been wanting to reboot Frasier for a while. We first got rumblings that sherry’s most reliable buyer would return to screens in 2018, and now, five years later, his third act takes him back to the city that started it all: Boston. Richer and jeans-ier than ever, Frasier wants to make an earnest effort to reconnect with his son Freddy (Jack Cutmore-Scott) and takes a job as a psychology professor at Harvard to remain close by. The department’s chair Olivia (Toks Olagundoye) and an old limey chum Alan (Nicholas Lyndhurst) are the KACL stand-ins, while Freddy’s friend and roommate Eve (Jess Salgueiro) possesses a Daphne-esque zany-but-no-bullshit energy. Frasier’s nephew David (Anders Keith) also flutters around with a long list of allergies just like his dad. And that brings us to the Niles of it all.
As showrunners Joe Cristalli and Chris Harris tell it, getting David Hyde Pierce to reprise his role for the new Frasier was, of course, a priority. Discussions stretched out to solidify a narrative for the character — including one about a black-box theater, more on that in a bit — before Hyde Pierce decided there was nothing left to do with Niles. “He’s not the bad guy in this, and he was so lovely about it,” Cristalli says. Ultimately, his absence presented the duo with an opportunity to start a fresh story from scratch, which is layered on one main theme. “For both his professional world and personal relationships,” Harris explains, “it feels like it’s a time for Frasier to be giving back.”
In the spirit of that, we presented the duo with seven quotes from Frasier’s premiere episode to learn more about how they got to their final draft, rejected jokes and all.

“It’s charming — it reminds me of a sort of place where one would wrestle a cartoon rat for a crust of bread.”

The episode begins with Frasier landing in Boston following the funeral of his father, Martin, to check in with son, Freddy, while guest-lecturing for a pal’s Harvard psych class. Here, Frasier observes Freddy’s modest but well-decorated Boston apartment, which he shares with Eve and, we later learn, her baby. The rhythm and sharpening of the reboot’s joke-telling has an unusual genesis: Cristalli used to run a now-deleted Twitter account where he imagined Frasier dialogue in a modern-day setting.
Joe Cristalli: The show had been off the air for about a decade before I started the Twitter feed. I did it for a couple of years to zero acclaim. I had 2,000 followers. It was a fun way to spend time. But when Kelsey came out and said, “I want to do the revival,” I made my agents send this Twitter page to his producers. I also had a Frasier spec script I wrote in 2014. They responded, “Oh yeah, we can meet with this guy. He obviously knows the DNA of Frasier.” I was around 30 years old and a staff writer. It’s like, “We’re not giving you the reins to Frasier off this.” So Chris, who had been a showrunner for a long time, came in. I met him on How I Met Your Mother. We wrote the pitch and the pilot together. He gets no credit for that Twitter feed.

Chris Harris: Let the record show that it was just Joe.
Joe Cristalli: For every really good joke I was proud of there were 28 “jokes” that just got you to the next good one. The reason I deleted it is because I knew at some point the show would come out and people would say, “They gave Frasier to this guy? Him?” I didn’t need to see that Buzzfeed list of, Look at these jokes this guy wrote. I tried to cram so many in, and rightfully so, they’re always denied at the script phase. “You’re serving shark for dinner?” It’s like, why is Frasier saying that? He’s saying that so I can get to some shitty punchline. That feed was invaluable for me to creatively work on the tone of the show, but I don’t think any of those jokes have rightfully made it into the show.

Chris Harris: I don’t know if there are specific rules for writing jokes for Frasier. At some point early on, we started to get a sense that we were flowering up everything too much. We were writing every single line as if it was Shakespearean dialogue — every sentence contained twists and turns. We needed to pull back because when you watch the original, not everything he says is tortured or erudite. You’ve got to pick your moments. You don’t want to eat all the desserts.
Joe Cristalli: Kelsey gracefully told us a couple of times, These are too many words, boys. Frasier’s dialogue is quick and succinct. If you can say it in three words, say it in three words.

“With your help, we could turn the Harvard psych department into the Harvard of psych departments.”

Frasier’s lecture is a smash hit, and Olivia begs the psychiatrist, now a household name thanks to his television show, to take employment at the Ivy League school. Frasier only intended to stop in the city for a few days while en route to Paris to begin a new academic pursuit of Pierre de Marivaux. Olivia approaches him after class, which is usually taught by Frasier’s old Oxford classmate Alan.
Chris Harris: The idea that Frasier actually had a relatively successful couple of decades was Kelsey’s idea. It’s a really interesting way to hit that character: What if he gets a lot of the things he always wanted? As opposed to him being down on his luck and needing to start over. He had massive success in the TV world, but he’s at a time in his life where he’s like, Now what? The one area where he didn’t live up to what he wanted was his relationship with his son, especially coming off the death of his own father. He feels like he can and should do better. One of the ongoing things of the series is Frasier trying to be the good father — trying to be the father he saw in his own dad.
Professionally, he’s had wealth and fame. He thinks he needs more respect, but where he’ll find joy is taking some of that wisdom and helping the next generation.

Joe Cristalli: It’s amazing I was able to get all of that into one joke. I did a really good job.

“I’m not gonna stand here and let you insult me. I’ll insist you do it over drinks.”

Following Frasier’s successful lecture, the personalities of his soon-to-be colleagues emerge: Alan, a tenured professor, frequently gloats about how he can never be fired due to his position. He’s a regular target of barbs from Olivia, his superior in Harvard’s psychology department. Once Frasier commits to joining the Ivy, he purchases the building containing Freddy’s apartment with Eve and John and insists Freddy move into his new, larger apartment.
Joe Cristalli: Kelsey told us Frasier never had a really good friend, and we should find him one. On Cheers, he was on the outside looking into all those people; on Frasier, he had Niles, but that’s a brother. He wanted a relationship with an old friend that he could go back and forth with in a way different and distinct from Niles. As soon as you see Alan interact with Frasier, he’s a completely different version of anything we’ve seen as a foil for him. And speaking of foils, that’s the Olivia character. We began writing Olivia as more of an adversary to Frasier and Alan — the boss they’re going up against. But she’s so funny being chummy and poking fun at those guys that she pivoted her character. We don’t want her on the outside looking in at these guys. We want her right in the trenches with them.
It was always the idea to do the two worlds — like KACL and the home life, where you had Martin and Daphne and Niles and Frasier, and then Frasier and Roz and the wonderful cast of players at the radio station. We wanted that with the university. David, Niles and Daphne’s son, is supposed to be able to go back and forth with Frasier from the university to his home life. We wanted to give Freddy someone to play off who lived with him, and Jess was so good. She evolved Eve’s character to being a confidant for both Frasier and Freddy. She sees Freddy’s issues, she sees Frasier’s issues, and she’s able to be a go-between between them, in the way Daphne was with Frasier and Martin. Jess’s part in the pilot was not as big as it became. She kept being great at everything, so we gave her more and more and more.

“You can’t tell me it’s not Sahara dry in here.” “Now you remind me of your father.”

David Hyde Pierce, who played Frasier’s brother, Niles, in the original series, turned down a role in the reboot. Enter David, son of Niles and Daphne, an anxious, flighty freshman at Harvard who serves as a bridge between Frasier’s personal and professional lives.
Joe Cristalli: We talked to David Hyde Pierce a couple of times. He was in a tough position. Everybody wants to see him as Niles, but he doesn’t want to step back into those shoes. He felt like he didn’t have anything new to bring to the character. He read versions and gave us notes and thoughts, and he acknowledged it was funny and we found the tone the original did so well. It just wasn’t for him.
Once that happened, it freed us up a little bit. By allowing us to take Frasier and put him with a whole new cast and location, it gives us the ability to stand on our own two feet. Yes, we have to live up to the incredibly high standards of Frasier, but with a little more leniency. This can live in the same universe as Frasier and Cheers without being Frasier or Cheers.
Chris Harris: We went through many incarnations. The university was in some versions and not in other versions, and there was a theater in one of them. It felt like, what’s giving meaning in this next stage of life?
Joe Cristalli: For a long time, the idea was that Frasier and Niles were going to run a black-box theater, like how they bought that restaurant and brought it back to life. But it’s hard for Frasier and Niles to run the theater when you don’t have Niles, so we had to step back from that.
Chris Harris: It would be weird to make Niles the new Maris.
Joe Cristalli: Which we did talk about.

“You missed your grandfather’s funeral. He had everything planned to the last detail and you missed it. The police send-off. Daphne’s toast. Bulldog’s ‘Ave Maria’!”

Frasier plans to treat his son to a home-cooked steak dinner, which is quickly crashed by Eve, David, Alan, and Olivia. When the father and son finally get a few moments alone, Frasier berates Freddy for skipping the funeral of his grandfather, Martin, which was a grand affair attended by family and friends in Seattle. Honoring the death of John Mahoney, as well as his character, was a priority for Cristalli and Harris although the original plan for a grand funeral scene was cut.

Joe Cristalli: We saw the funeral in one version of this show. We were still in Seattle and had the whole cast. One of the jokes was Bulldog walking up to the coffin and being very sad and saying, This stinks. This is total BS. I remember being furious that that wasn’t my joke. It was Chris’s joke.
Chris Harris: Joe’s the expert. He’s seen every episode multiple times. I’ll occasionally joke, “Yeah, who’s Gil Chesterton again?” We did have a whole Seattle first act, but it was right to move on from that and start the way we did. I think everyone felt a little sad that we didn’t give a moment to John Mahoney.
Joe Cristalli: It would’ve been too hard to have that funeral scene and not see Niles or Daphne. If you’re going to do the funeral scene, you have to see those people. It would’ve been heartbreaking and silly to try to explain it, “Oh, Niles is caught in a hot-air balloon somewhere and couldn’t make the funeral.” It never would’ve worked in the way we envisioned it.
Chris Harris: It was always Kelsey’s intention, and ours too, to make the pilot about Martin and his influence. Frasier realizes he hasn’t been the father he imagined himself to be at the same time he loses his own dad. When Kelsey is playing Frasier talking about his dad, you see a lot of that real emotion. Kelsey is thinking about John Mahoney because he was such an important and beloved figure to everyone who was part of that show. We’ll see reverberations of that through the season.
Joe Cristalli: You look at the original series, and you saw Freddy 11 times. But to be fair, it’s always presented as a good relationship. Frasier’s on the phone, he’s just coming back from Boston, he’s doing the holidays. Kelsey was very firm on this from the beginning: Frasier is a good father and wants to be a good father, but the distance between them grew. I don’t think you can call him a deadbeat dad.
Chris Harris: He went out for cigarettes.
Joe Cristalli: It’s not like Freddy was being raised by wolves. He was with Lilith — well, it’s kind of like being raised by wolves. Frasier’s trying to rectify a lot of things that happened in the past. We’d be lucky to see Bulldog again, but we have to figure out our show first before we start leaning on that very valuable crutch. On the original Frasier, nobody from Cheers showed up until at least season three. They moved him to Seattle to get away from Boston, so you wouldn’t have that crutch. We do see Roz and Lilith again this season. If we’re lucky enough, seasons two, three, four, and five is when you’ll see Gil and Bebe Glazer and Bulldog. I want to see Daphne and Niles again. If they want to do it, they’ll be welcome with open arms.

“Sherry saw me, and I can’t say no to her.”

Frasier’s tastes have changed since 2004. He doesn’t drink sherry exclusively, gravitates toward more casual clothing, and has a different standard for interior design. Here, he encounters disappointment in the selection at the professors’ local dive.
Joe Cristalli: That should have been my joke. Somehow Chris swooped in and took it. It’s such a good example of the character evolving because he has sherry but doesn’t drink it all the time anymore. Just like on Cheers, he drank a lot of beer. On Frasier, he drank a lot of wine and sherry. Now he’s back to wine and beer.
Frasier is always two steps ahead of everybody. He’s the most evolved person in the room; he’s the smartest guy in the room. When Glenda Revelo, our production designer, showed us a new apartment, it’s different from the neutral tones and the eclectic feel of the old apartment by design because this is what he would have now. He’s on the cutting edge. When Glenda showed us the Rorschach wallpaper, she was like, I know you guys know nothing about design, but trust me, this is on the cutting edge. It’s the same with the clothes. He’s not going to wear the cardigans and tweed jackets he wore on Cheers. He’s not going to wear the big Armani suits he wore on Frasier. He’s very smart, very rich, very fashion-forward, and very design-forward. Frasier knows what fashion is now.
Yes, you can complain that he’s wearing jeans even though he wore jeans in the original show. This is what he’ll be wearing. He’s more comfortable in his clothes now, literally, and more comfortable in his skin. He doesn’t have to prove anything. That’s who the guy is. He can still get very uppity about something very minor. What’s the word you used, Chris?
Chris Harris: More contemplative.
Joe Cristalli: We’ve talked about this with Kelsey: What do you bring from that old apartment? Frasier would buy all new stuff except for the grand piano. The grand piano goes with him wherever he goes.

“I’m no stranger to an underperforming dinner party.”

Another Frasier banger, as he watches his plan to bond with Freddy go south. This line was a nod to the audience.
Joe Cristalli: This is my favorite joke in the pilot. I don’t think anybody thought it was going to get a big laugh. You can’t do a farce dinner party that goes awry without acknowledging it. The way Kelsey performs, staring off into the distance, is pitch-perfect for the character. No matter how hard he tries, Frasier is going to step in it. Acknowledging the past in a very succinct way is fun for any fan. James Burrows gave a big laugh on that one, and he rarely laughs.
Chris Harris: The whole audience erupted. They were waiting for that. It felt like a collective moment of, We understand, and we’re happy. Every glancing reference to the past does very well. We try not to overuse it, but the audience wants to feel like this is a continuation. They want to be in all of the past traumas he’s referencing. Yes, “traumas.”
Joe Cristalli: We’ve got to be judicious with those references because you drop them out there and they’ll get giant laughs, but they can’t be shameless laughs. You have to earn them.
Chris Harris: It’s a nice way to wrap up the season too, isn’t it?
Joe Cristalli: That’s just a soupçon of another dinner party.
 
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