Dr.
Frasier Crane (played
by Kelsey Grammer): “You're a psychiatrist, you know what it's like to
listen to people prattling on endlessly about their mundane lives.”
Dr.
Niles Crane (played
by David Hyde Pierce): “Touche. And on that subject, I heard your show
today.”—Frasier, Season 1, Episode 1,
“The Good Son,” teleplay by David
Angell, Peter Casey and David Lee, directed by James Burrows, air date
September 16, 1993
Frasier,
which premiered on this date 20 years ago, could have been a mildly successful
spinoff, the way that Rhoda and Lou Grant sprang from The Mary Tyler Moore Show, or crashed
and burned in virtually no time, like After M*A*S*H. Who
would have thought the offspring of Cheers'--with psychiatrist-barfly Frasier Crane landing in Seattle, all the way on the other side of Boston--would last 11 seasons and 263 episodes in its own right?
Part of the show’s longevity, I’m convinced, is the
mantra recalled by co-creators Casey and Lee, on the first season DVD: “No
stupid characters, no stupid jokes.” Moreover, they gave their audience credit
for intelligence by letting scenes run longer than the norm and by high-end pop-culture
references (e.g., the anecdote in this episode on film star Lupe Velez’s death).
Casting was critical because of the interplay of
characters. Surprisingly, the normally marvelous Lisa Kudrow did not work out
well as Roz, so the role of Frasier’s feisty assistant ended up going to Peri
Gilpin.
Even more critical, of course, was the casting of David Hyde Pierce as Niles. The surprising resemblance between Pierce and Kelsey Grammer
was probably the most felicitous case of a supporting actor looking like the
series’ star since Vikki Lawrence appeared on The Carol Burnett Show.
It allowed the creators of Frasier to depart from
the normal comic instinct of creating friction with opposite characters. That
wouldn’t have to worry about a source for that—it would be supplied, in spades,
by Frasier’s father Martin, a blunt, decidedly plebeian cop shot in the line of
duty and now requiring home care.
No, the creation of Niles—and his brilliant
embodiment by Pierce—enabled the show to create a fraternal doppelganger for
Frasier. When the brothers did disagree about something, it was like Frasier arguing
with himself. And when Niles got his own
double—in the episode when home health aide Daphne Moon dates a guy who looks,
talks, and even acts like Frasier’s persnickety brother—the results were enough
to create a perfect comic storm. ("I can't talk now, Duke," an astonished Martin tells a caller. "I'm in the Twilight Zone!")
(The picture accompanying this post was shot in Cafe Nervosa--a great place for psychiatrists to go trolling for clients, of course...)
(The picture accompanying this post was shot in Cafe Nervosa--a great place for psychiatrists to go trolling for clients, of course...)
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