Kelsey Grammer to return as Frasier in reboot of hit comedy - Actor is ‘gleefully anticipating’ the return of the comedy, which is being rebooted after 17 years

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The hit 90s TV comedy Frasier, starring Kelsey Grammer as a snobbish radio advice-show host, is to return to television nearly two decades after it last aired. Grammer said he would reprise his role in a revival of the series, which ran for 263 episodes between 1993 and 2004.

Frasier, a spin-off of the TV series Cheers, was one of the most successful shows of the 90s and 00s, winning five consecutive Emmy awards for outstanding comedy series and running for 11 seasons. The series followed Grammer’s character, who returns to Seattle to care for his elderly father, with his pretentious psychiatrist brother, Niles Crane.

"There has long been a call from fans for its return, and that call is now answered,” David Stapf, president of CBS Studios, said in a statement.

Grammer added that he “gleefully [anticipated] sharing the next chapter in the continuing journey of Dr Frasier Crane”.

The series, produced by CBS Studios, will air on the new streaming service Paramount+ in the US, with a date yet to be confirmed.

In 2018 it was reported that Grammer was pitching a reboot to studios, which would see his character return in a new setting. In an interview published that year, Grammer said the series was “not going to be [set in] Seattle. It’s not going to be the same Frasier. It’s going to be the man in his next iteration. Hopefully that’ll be something people like watching. But I think it’ll be funny.”

No mention was made in Wednesday’s announcement of whether his co-stars David Hyde Pierce (Niles Crane) or Jane Leeves, who played Daphne Moon, would be joining the revival. The British actor John Mahoney, who played Frasier’s father, Martin, died in 2018 of complications from throat cancer.

Grammer, Hyde Pierce and Leeves reunited with their fellow cast members Peri Gilpin, Dan Butler and Bebe Neuwirth in April 2020 for an hour-long interview to raise money for performers affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

Frasier made its debut in 1993 and concluded in 2004. Its return is the latest in a series of revivals and reboots of hit TV shows from two or three decades ago, including Sex and the City, Dexter, Roseanne, Gossip Girl, and Will & Grace.
 
Frasier was awesome. A real intelligent comedy filled with numerous artistic, literary, and philosophical references. One of a kind, for sure.

I can't help but think however any reboot in this era will lay the name of the character and its legacy in wokedom, so by principle I'd have to say this isn't a good thing.

If somehow the series is awesome, that's great. Bring it on.
 
I give the article a lunacy rating. What would an old man Fraiser story be about? Him living with Frederick where he criticizes his son for everything? I don't think it'll work out like Sanford & Son because Fraiser's fatal flaw in his personal life is failing to see the obvious. So if he's got to be the Martin Crane of the show, he can't fill it because he doesn't have street smarts and when his advice goes horribly wrong, the audience will ask "Why are you listening to this old man, Freddy?"

Also, Roz can't tell dirty jokes anymore because of how old the character would have to be. It would make her horribly immature seeing as how Alice would be in her thirties at this point and the subtext of Roz-Alice scenes was that Roz was too old to be engaging in hook-up culture anyways.

Niles and Daphne's story is already done. Messing with that heavily ever after is some Han Solo-Leia Organa-tier of fucking with the lore.

"Darius Grouch the Third The Rumble!"
 
I give the article a lunacy rating. What would an old man Fraiser story be about? Him living with Frederick where he criticizes his son for everything? I don't think it'll work out like Sanford & Son because Fraiser's fatal flaw in his personal life is failing to see the obvious. So if he's got to be the Martin Crane of the show, he can't fill it because he doesn't have street smarts and when his advice goes horribly wrong, the audience will ask "Why are you listening to this old man, Freddy?"

Also, Roz can't tell dirty jokes anymore because of how old the character would have to be. It would make her horribly immature seeing as how Alice would be in her thirties at this point and the subtext of Roz-Alice scenes was that Roz was too old to be engaging in hook-up culture anyways.

Niles and Daphne's story is already done. Messing with that heavily ever after is some Han Solo-Leia Organa-tier of fucking with the lore.

"Darius Grouch the Third The Rumble!"
I could see it done as a mini-series kind of thing. Four or five episodes catching up with everyone and having some kind of family adventure thing maybe center it around the loss of their father.

An entire series seems...doomed but I would love to be surprised.

Some people really need to learn when to let go...lookin' at you Trailer Park Boys.
 
Frasier was awesome. A real intelligent comedy filled with numerous artistic, literary, and philosophical references. One of a kind, for sure.

I can't help but think however any reboot in this era will lay the name of the character and its legacy in wokedom, so by principle I'd have to say this isn't a good thing.

If somehow the series is awesome, that's great. Bring it on.
Would it be woke? I mean Kelsey Grammer is a Republican.
 
Would it be woke? I mean Kelsey Grammer is a Republican.
If it has any chance at airing it'll have to be, unless he finally does a webseries or something on his own dime after seeing his ideas run through the human centipede production companies and shit out as something worse.
 
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