Cheers season 8: Difference between revisions
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The eighth season of ''[[Cheers]]'', an American television sitcom, originally aired on [[NBC]] in the United States between September 21, 1989 and May 3, 1990. The show was created by director [[James Burrows]] and writers [[Glen and Les Charles]] under production team Charles Burrows Charles Productions, in association with [[Paramount Television]]. |
The eighth season of ''[[Cheers]]'', an American television sitcom, originally aired on [[NBC]] in the United States between September 21, 1989, and May 3, 1990. The show was created by director [[James Burrows]] and writers [[Glen and Les Charles]] under production team Charles Burrows Charles Productions, in association with [[Paramount Television]]. |
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In the 1990 [[42nd Primetime Emmy Awards]], this season won three Emmys: [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series|Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series]] ([[Ted Danson]]), [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series|Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series]] ([[Bebe Neuwirth]]), and Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or Special. It also won the [[Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy|Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy]] and [[Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy|Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy]] ([[Kirstie Alley]]) in the 1991 48th Golden Globe Awards. |
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==Background== |
==Background== |
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This season premiered on September 21, 1989 and aired at Thursday 9:00 pm Eastern / 8:00 pm Central slot. Besides ''Cheers'', other series in NBC's Thursday night lineup for the 1989–90 season were ''[[The Cosby Show]]'', ''[[A Different World]]'', ''[[Dear John (U.S. TV series)|Dear John]]'' and ''[[L.A. Law]]''. In January 1990, ''Dear John'' was shifted to Wednesdays, and the newer sitcom ''[[Grand (TV series)|Grand]]'' took the former's spot.<ref>{{cite news |title=NBC premieres comedy tonight |location=Bluefield, West Virginia |newspaper=[[Bluefield Daily Telegraph]] |agency=The Associated Press |date=January 18, 1990 |page=C-4 |via=NewspaperArchive.com |subscription=yes }}</ref> |
This season premiered on September 21, 1989 and aired at Thursday 9:00 pm Eastern / 8:00 pm Central slot. Besides ''Cheers'', other series in NBC's Thursday night lineup for the 1989–90 season were ''[[The Cosby Show]]'', ''[[A Different World]]'', ''[[Dear John (U.S. TV series)|Dear John]]'' and ''[[L.A. Law]]''. In January 1990, ''Dear John'' was shifted to Wednesdays, and the newer sitcom ''[[Grand (TV series)|Grand]]'' took the former's spot.<ref>{{cite news |title=NBC premieres comedy tonight |location=Bluefield, West Virginia |newspaper=[[Bluefield Daily Telegraph]] |agency=The Associated Press |date=January 18, 1990 |page=C-4 |via=NewspaperArchive.com |subscription=yes }}</ref> |
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Revision as of 18:15, 26 March 2019
Cheers | |
---|---|
Season 8 | |
![]() Region 1 DVD | |
Starring | Ted Danson Kirstie Alley Rhea Perlman John Ratzenberger Woody Harrelson Kelsey Grammer George Wendt |
No. of episodes | 26 |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | September 21, 1989 May 3, 1990 | –
Season chronology | |
The eighth season of Cheers, an American television sitcom, originally aired on NBC in the United States between September 21, 1989, and May 3, 1990. The show was created by director James Burrows and writers Glen and Les Charles under production team Charles Burrows Charles Productions, in association with Paramount Television.
In the 1990 42nd Primetime Emmy Awards, this season won three Emmys: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Ted Danson), Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series (Bebe Neuwirth), and Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or Special. It also won the Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy and Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy (Kirstie Alley) in the 1991 48th Golden Globe Awards.
Background
This season premiered on September 21, 1989 and aired at Thursday 9:00 pm Eastern / 8:00 pm Central slot. Besides Cheers, other series in NBC's Thursday night lineup for the 1989–90 season were The Cosby Show, A Different World, Dear John and L.A. Law. In January 1990, Dear John was shifted to Wednesdays, and the newer sitcom Grand took the former's spot.[1]
Cast and characters
- Ted Danson as Sam Malone, a womanizing bartender and ex-baseball player. While he still pursues many women but fails to impress some, especially classier ones, he does his efforts to retrieve buy back Cheers, which he sold to its current company, the Lillian Corporation, in the sixth season.
- Kirstie Alley as Rebecca Howe, a corporate bar owner and manager. After struggling to be noticed by her superiors of the Lillian Corporation, of which she is an employee, since her debut in the sixth season, she dates an English multimillionaire Robin Colcord, owner of her company's competitor, who plans to take over her company.
- Rhea Perlman as Carla Tortelli, a waitress and mother of eight children, including five from her first marriage. Her current husband, Eddie LeBec, dies in an accident while he saves someone. Then she learns that he married another woman who is pregnant with twins, while he is still married to Carla, committing bigamy.
- John Ratzenberger as Cliff Clavin, a postal carrier and loquacious bar know-it-all.
- Woody Harrelson as Woody Boyd, a dim bartender. He still dates a less-than-bright rich woman named Kelly Gaines, whose family disapproves him.
- Kelsey Grammer as Frasier Crane, a psychiatrist now married to Lilith. Their son Frederick is born.
- George Wendt as Norm Peterson, an accountant and a house painter.
Recurring characters
- Bebe Neuwirth as Lilith Sternin, a psychiatrist now married to Frasier. She gives childbirth to their son Frederick.
- Roger Rees as Robin Colcord, an English multimillionaire. He dates his love interest Rebecca, who works for his competitor Lillian Corporation, and a couple other women simultaneously. As revealed, he uses her to take over his competitor, but then he realizes that he loves her very much.
- Jackie Swanson as Kelly Gaines, a less-than-bright rich woman. She dates a bartender Woody, whom her family disapproves. Swanson reprises her role of Kelly in three episodes this season.
Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Ratings/share/ viewers/rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
169 | 1 | "The Improbable Dream, Part 1" | James Burrows | Cheri Eichen and Bill Steinkellner | September 21, 1989 | 24.1 / 39 / 36.4 mil. / #3[rat8 1] |
170 | 2 | "The Improbable Dream, Part 2" | James Burrows | Cheri Eichen and Bill Steinkellner | September 28, 1989 | 24.3 / 39 / 36.1 mil. / #3[rat8 2] |
171 | 3 | "A Bar Is Born" | James Burrows | Phoef Sutton | October 12, 1989 | 22.4 / 37 / 33.6 mil. / #3[rat8 3] |
172 | 4 | "How to Marry a Mailman" | James Burrows | Brian Pollack and Mert Rich | October 19, 1989 | 24.7 / 38 / 37.2 mil. / #1[rat8 4] |
173 | 5 | "The Two Faces of Norm" | Andy Ackerman | Eugene B. Stein | October 26, 1989 | 24.1 / 39 / 35.7 mil. / #3[rat8 5] |
174 | 6 | "The Stork Brings a Crane" | Andy Ackerman | David Lloyd | November 2, 1989 | 24.4 / 37 / 37.6 mil. / #3[rat8 6] |
175 | 7 | "Death Takes a Holiday on Ice" | James Burrows | Ken Levine and David Isaacs | November 9, 1989 | 24.3 / 38 / 36.2 mil. / #2[rat8 7] |
176 | 8 | "For Real Men Only" | James Burrows | David Pollock and Elias Davis | November 16, 1989 | 24.0 / 37 / 36.1 mil. / #4[rat8 8] |
177 | 9 | "Two Girls for Every Boyd" | James Burrows | Dan O'Shannon and Tom Anderson | November 23, 1989 | 16.5 / 31 / 28.4 mil. / #13[rat8 9] |
178 | 10 | "The Art of the Steal" | James Burrows | Sue Herring | November 30, 1989 | 25.4 / 40 / 37.1 mil. / #2[rat8 10] |
179 | 11 | "Feeble Attraction" | Andy Ackerman | Dan O'Shannon and Tom Anderson | December 7, 1989 | 24.2 / 38 / 36.2 mil. / #2[rat8 11] |
180 | 12 | "Sam Ahoy" | James Burrows | David Lloyd | December 14, 1989 | 22.5 / 36 / 33.3 mil. / #2[rat8 12] |
181 | 13 | "Sammy and the Professor" | James Burrows | Brian Pollack and Mert Rich | January 4, 1990 | 24.2 / 36 / 35.8 mil. / #1[rat8 13] |
182 | 14 | "What Is... Cliff Clavin?" | Andy Ackerman | Dan O'Shannon and Tom Anderson | January 18, 1990 | 24.7 / 37 / 37.7 mil. / #1[rat8 14] |
183 | 15 | "Finally! Part 1" | James Burrows | Ken Levine and David Isaacs | January 25, 1990 | 25.0 / 37 / 37.9 mil. / #3[rat8 15] |
184 | 16 | "Finally! Part 2" | James Burrows | Ken Levine and David Isaacs | February 1, 1990 | 22.7 / 34 / 33.4 mil. / #2[rat8 16] |
185 | 17 | "Woody or Won't He" | Andy Ackerman | Brian Pollack and Mert Rich | February 8, 1990 | 22.8 / 35 / 34.5 mil. / #2[rat8 17] |
186 | 18 | "Severe Crane Damage" | Andy Ackerman | Dan O'Shannon and Tom Anderson | February 15, 1990 | 23.3 / 35 / 35.2 mil. / #2[rat8 18] |
187 | 19 | "Indoor Fun with Sammy and Robby" | Andy Ackerman | Phoef Sutton | February 22, 1990 | 23.6 / 36 / 35.8 mil. / #1[rat8 19] |
188 | 20 | "50–50 Carla" | James Burrows | David Lloyd | March 8, 1990 | 23.4 / 36 / 34.4 mil. / #2[rat8 20] |
189 | 21 | "Bar Wars III: The Return of Tecumseh" | James Burrows | Ken Levine and David Isaacs | March 15, 1990 | 22.1 / 35 / 32.6 mil. / #1[rat8 21] |
190 | 22 | "Loverboyd" | James Burrows | Brian Pollack and Mert Rich | March 29, 1990 | 23.8 / 38 / 35.5 / #2[rat8 22] |
191 | 23 | "The Ghost and Mrs. Lebec" | James Burrows | Dan Staley and Rob Long | April 12, 1990 | 19.7 / 33 / 30.1 mil. / #2[rat8 23] |
192 | 24 | "Mr. Otis Regrets" | Andy Ackerman | Ken Levine and David Isaacs | April 19, 1990 | 21.9 / 35 / 32.9 mil. / #1[rat8 24] |
193 | 25 | "Cry Hard" | James Burrows | Dan O'Shannon and Tom Anderson | April 26, 1990 | 21.2 / 34 / 31.8 mil. / #2[rat8 25] |
194 | 26 | "Cry Harder" | James Burrows | Story by : Bill Steinkellner Teleplay by : Cheri Eichen, Bill Steinkellner and Phoef Sutton | May 3, 1990 | 21.1 / 33 / 30.8 mil. / #3[rat8 26] |
Production
In November 1989 actor Roger Rees told a news agency Knight-Ridder Wire about Robin Colcord, the character whom Rees portrayed:
They needed a fillip, to give them a boost, someone to drive Sam [Malone] crazy. Robin's there to be dashing, sexy, irritating. He's not as charming and nice as he appears to be at first sight. He's sort of the villian of the piece. He's a megalomaniac millionaire. He's got an airline and a helicopter fleet. It's very much Donald Trump.[2]
In January 1990, actor Rees said that he had not based "the character on anyone", despite "speculation that Colcord was a British version of Trump," wrote Phil Kloer of Cox News Service.[3]
Critical reception
Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly graded the season an "A-", calling it "still awfully funny" and praising supporting characters but criticizing development of characters Sam Malone and Rebecca Howe.[4] Jeffrey Robinson of DVDTalk rated the season's content three and a half stars out of five and its replay value four out of five.[5]
Accolades
In the 42nd Primetime Emmy Awards (1990), this season won three Emmys: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Ted Danson), Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series (Bebe Neuwirth), and Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or Special.[6] Before his eighth nomination and Emmy win, Danson had seven consecutive Emmy nominations for the role of Sam Malone and a nomination for his leading role in a 1984 television film Something About Amelia.[7] Danson also won a Golden Globe award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series (Musical or Comedy) in the 47th (1990)[8][9] and 48th Golden Globe Awards (1991).[10][11] The 1990 season also won the Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy and Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy (Kirstie Alley) in the 48th Golden Globe Awards (1991).[10][12]
DVD release
Cheers: The Complete Eighth Season | |||||
Set Details[5] | |||||
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Release Dates | |||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
June 13, 2006 | August 6, 2012 | April 27, 2009 |
References
- ^ "NBC premieres comedy tonight". Bluefield Daily Telegraph. Bluefield, West Virginia. The Associated Press. January 18, 1990. p. C-4 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Winfrey, Lee (November 17, 1989). "Roger Rees: From Bard to Cheers". The News Herald. Panama City, Florida. Knight-Ridder Wire. p. 26D from The Entertainer pullout section (week of November 17–23, 1989) – via NewspaperArchive.com.
- ^ Kloer, Phil (January 28, 1990). "Roger Rees hard to figure on Cheers". The Lowell Sun. Lowell, Massachusetts. p. 16 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
- ^ Tucker, Ken (June 15, 1990). "Cheers review". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
- ^ a b Robinson, Jeffrey (June 18, 2006). "Cheers – The Complete Eighth Season review". DVD Talk. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
- ^ "Complete list of winners". The New Mexican. Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Associated Press. September 17, 1990. p. A-8 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
- ^ "L.A. Law, Tracey Ullman big winners at Emmy Awards". The Associated Press. September 17, 1990. p. A-8 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
- ^ "Born on the Fourth of July dominates Golden Globes". The News Herald. Panama City, Florida. January 22, 1990. p. 3A – via NewspaperArchive.com.
- ^ "Winners & Nominees 1990—Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy". Golden Globe Awards. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
- ^ a b Horn, John (January 21, 1991). "Dances with Wolves takes 3 Golden Globes". The Lowell Sun. Lowell, Massachusetts. The Associated Press. p. 12 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
- ^ "Winners & Nominees 1991—Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy". Golden Globe Awards. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
- ^ "Winners & Nominees 1991". Golden Globe Awards. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
Ratings sources
According to many newspapers, including the main source USA Today, the 1989–90 Nielsen ratings are based on 92.1 million households that have at least one television.
- ^ September 27, 1989. Record no. 214331.
- ^ October 4, 1989. Record no. 215742.
- ^ October 18, 1989. Record no. 218595
- ^ October 25, 1989. Record no. 220074.
- ^ November 1, 1989. Record no. 221508.
- ^ November 8, 1989. Record no. 222932.
- ^ November 15, 1989. Record no. 224364.
- ^ November 22, 1989. Record no. 225766.
- ^ November 29, 1989. Record no. 226865.
- ^ December 6, 1989. Record no. 228257.
- ^ December 13, 1989. Record no. 229628.
- ^ December 20, 1989. Record no. 230948.
- ^ January 10, 1990. Record no. 234602.
- ^ January 24, 1990. Record no. 237376.
- ^ January 31, 1990. Record no. 239189.
- ^ February 7, 1990. Record no. 240525.
- ^ February 14, 1990. Record no. 241948.
- ^ February 21, 1990. Record no. 243308.
- ^ February 28, 1990. Record no. 244938.
- ^ March 14, 1990. Record no. 247753.
- ^ March 21, 1990. Record no. 249195.
- ^ April 4, 1990. Record no. 252035.
- ^ April 18, 1990. Record no. 254889.
- ^ April 25, 1990. Record no. 256312.
- ^ May 2, 1990. Record no. 257677.
- ^ May 9, 1990. Record no. 259054.