“That's the fanciest sentence I've ever heard, and I used to watch Frasier."— Kimmy Schmidt (played by Ellie Kemper), in Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Season 1, Episode 2, “Kimmy Gets a Job!,” original air date Mar. 6, 2015, teleplay by Sam Means, directed by Tristram Shapeero
Guess what? Kimmy’s going to add to her treasure trove
of highfalutin language. Seventeen years after signing off on his gig as a
Seattle radio psychiatrist, Frasier Crane will be contributing more pearls of
wisdom, in a “reboot” of the sitcom that will help anchor ViacomCBS's new
streaming service Paramount+.
Kelsey Grammer (pictured
here with an actor equally adept with allusion-heavy dialogue, David
Hyde Pierce as younger brother Niles) will step into his Emmy-winning role for
the 21st season. This will break the tie he set when leaving the
show with James Arness (as Gunsmoke’s Matt Dillon) for playing the
longest-running character in primetime TV (a record since broken by Richard
Belzer and Mariska Hargitay on Law and Order: Special Victims Unit).
You have to ask what is leading Grammer to take up his
career-defining role again. Is he short of money? Just antsy after so long in COVID-enforced isolation? Over the years, he has tried valiantly to escape typecasting on the tube
and onstage, in performances well-received (Boss) and panned (a
disastrous 13-performance Broadway revival of Macbeth 21 years ago). After so much time, is he finally saying the heck with the struggle?
The great risk is this: to what extent can he bring
together the talents that made his spinoff of Cheers such a success—not just
the wonderful supporting cast, but also the directors and writers (you know—the creators of those
pretentious, persnickety lines that Kimmy remembers so vividly)?
This last factor is a far greater risk than what one
might expect. Even the hugely talented Peter Falk had an extremely difficult
time when he returned to Columbo more than a decade after finishing the
series in the Seventies. Most fans would agree that the second incarnation of
the show was inferior to the original, largely because of often lackluster
scripts.
Oh, well. As a worshipper of Shakespeare, Frasier (and
Grammar) will undoubtedly say: “Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once
more.” Let's just hope he won't follow up, several unsuccessful episodes later, with "You can't go home again."
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