Cheers season 1 explained

Season Number:1
Bgcolour:
  1. E38181
Image Alt:Front cover of Region 1 DVD
Starring:Ted Danson
Shelley Long
Nicholas Colasanto
Rhea Perlman
George Wendt
Num Episodes:22
Network:NBC
Episode List:List of Cheers episodes

The first season of the American television sitcom series Cheers premiered on September 30, 1982, and concluded on March 31, 1983. It consisted of 22 episodes, each running approximately 25 minutes at length. The show was created and produced by director James Burrows and writers Glen and Les Charles, who previously worked on Taxi, another sitcom. Cheers was produced by Charles Burrows Charles Productions in association with Paramount Television. The concept and production design of the show were inspired by a public house in Boston, the Bull & Finch, which is now called Cheers Beacon Hill.

When it was first broadcast, critics praised the series as intelligent, sophisticated, cleverly written, well-cast, and well-timed. However, the Nielsen ratings for its original runs were very low. Typically, low ratings result in a show's cancellation, but before the season finale aired, the network renewed it for another season. Reruns of season 1 scored higher ratings than its first airing and the series earned award recognitions, including five Emmy Award wins in 1983. In later years, this season has still elicited positive reviews and is currently available on DVD.

Cast and characters

This season introduces six characters:

Episodes

See main article: List of Cheers episodes. Original air dates of episodes are not premiere dates for some areas of the United States. In those areas, episodes may have been broadcast at later dates,[2] but these dates are not included in this article. This series' original time slot was 9:00pm (Eastern)/8:00pm (Central). In January 1983, it was moved to 9:30pm ET/8:30pm CT due to lineup changes.

Specials

Production

Director James Burrows observed that this series is intended to be about the bar, where anybody comes in for any reason, not just drinks. The show was originally set in a hotel, a setting inspired by Fawlty Towers, Burrows's favorite British sitcom.[3] The producers narrowed the setting down to a hotel bar, but later evolved it into a neighborhood bar in Boston, according to Glen Charles, "because it was more cozy". The "athletic element" was added to the bar because the show's creators, Burrows and Charles brothers (Glen and Les) were sports fans.[4]

The show's bar setting was inspired by the Bull & Finch Pub in Boston. It was not filmed in the pub, but on the Stage 25 lot of Paramount Studios with the set decoration of Cheers.[5] The Bull & Finch Pub was later renamed Cheers Beacon Hill.[6] The entire season is set exclusively in the bar, its office, the bathroom, and the billiard room; no locations outside the bar were used until Diane Chambers' apartment is seen in the second season.[7]

In the pilot episode's original script, there were only four principal characters: Sam Malone, Diane Chambers, Carla Tortelli, and Ernie "Coach" Pantusso. Norm Peterson and Cliff Clavin were absent from the original script. George Wendt and John Ratzenberger had auditioned for the role of George, a character who would have been included in the ending scene of the pilot episode with just one line, "Beer." Wendt was cast as George, who evolved into Norm Peterson, while a know-it-all character Cliff Clavin was added at Ratzenberger's suggestion. Therefore, influenced by the casting of Wendt and Ratzenberger, the pilot script was revised before production began on the show. Wendt became part of the program's regular cast and continued until it ended. Ratzenberger was credited in almost every episode for his recurring appearances in season 1, and he became part of the regular cast in the following season.

Sam Malone was supposed to be an ex-wide receiver for the New England Patriots football team,[8] but Danson's casting led the program's writers to change Sam's former sporting role into a former relief pitcher for the Boston Red Sox baseball team, as Danson's build did not resemble that of a typical football player.[8] [9] [10] Nicholas Colasanto, director and actor who appeared in the 1980 film Raging Bull,[11] was cast as Coach. About 1,000 actors who were not widely known were auditioned for these characters, and Stephen Kolzak was in charge of casting.[12] According to Ted Danson, Perlman was the first actor to be hired for the show[13] and was cast as Carla. Perlman had previously appeared in Taxi as the girlfriend (ex-girlfriend during the show's final season) of Louie de Palma, played by her husband Danny DeVito. Danson and Long were cast as a romantic duo.[14]

At the time the show was being filmed, Rhea Perlman was pregnant. She told the producers during filming of the third of fourth episode (produced or aired), and the episodes were filmed out of sequence to allow Perlman to hide her pregnancy with a tray until the episode "Father Knows Last", after which Perlman's pregnancy was assimilated into her character Carla Tortelli, who was pregnant with her ex-husband Nick's child for the rest of the season. Perlman's daughter Lucy was born on March 12, 1983.[15]

Drinks and snacks in the show were neither alcoholic nor edible. The scotch was made from water, the beer was non-alcoholic and was made out of "less lingering ingredients" with salt to produce a foam, and the cheese puffs were not real. The bathroom did not have toilets and sinks. Canned laughter was not used on the show; live audience reactions were recorded on film.[16] From episode 13, each episode was preceded with the announcement, "Cheers is filmed before a live studio audience", and this continued during the remainder of the show's run.[17]

NBC praised the show when the network was given test experiments and ordered initial thirteen episodes to be produced.[18] The series' Nielsen ratings were low during this season, and the network tried to attract more viewers to the series. One episode was experimentally shot on videotape to lower production costs, but the producers were not satisfied with the results and continued to shoot the show on film.[19] NBC also produced a scripted Super Bowl sketch with sportscaster Pete Axthelm, which was broadcast during the Super Bowl pre-game segment on January 30, 1983, along with sketches for other NBC shows, including The A-Team. After efforts to improve the ratings failed, NBC approved production of nine more episodes,[18] and renewed the series for the next season.

Before "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", written by Gary Portnoy and Judy Hart Angelo became the show's theme song, Cheers producers rejected two of Portnoy's and Hart Angelo's songs. The songwriters had collaborated to provide music for Preppies an unsuccessful Broadway musical. When told they could not appropriate "People Like Us", Preppiess opening song, the pair wrote My Kind of People, intended to satirize "the lifestyle of old decadent old-money WASPs," but, to meet producers' demands, they rewrote the lyrics to be about "likeable losers" in a Boston bar. The show's producers rejected this song, as well as later songs that Portnoy and Angelo wrote. When Portnoy and Hart Angelo heard that NBC had commissioned thirteen episodes, they created "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", and rewrote the lyrics.[20]

Broadcasts

Cheers was first broadcast at 9:00pm (Eastern) / 8:00pm (Central) on Thursday during fall 1982, which later became NBC's Must See TV, which followed the hour-long musical series Fame and preceded another half-hour sitcom Taxi, and hour-long crime series Hill Street Blues. Cheers was scheduled against CBS's Simon & Simon and ABC's Too Close for Comfort.[21] Because of poor Nielsen ratings, NBC changes its Thursday schedule. Critically acclaimed comedy Taxi moved to Saturdays; critically panned Gimme a Break! moved to Thursdays at 9pm ET/8pm CT and Cheers was moved to the 9:30pm ET/8:30pm CT slot, still competing against Simon & Simon and ABC's It Takes Two.[22] Fame and Hill Street Blues remained in the same time slot. The overall performance of the season was 74th place out of "[ninety-nine] regularly scheduled shows".[23]

Despite low ratings and unsuccessful attempts to improve them, NBC renewed Cheers for a second season, which it announced in March 1983.[24] During mid-1983, reruns of the show's first season scored high ratings, most episodes reaching the top 20.[25] "No Contest" was rerun on July 14, 1983, at 9:30pm ET/8:30pm CT[26] and tied with Remington Steele in 12th place out of 65 programs in the ratings week of July 11, 1983.[27] "Let Me Count the Ways" was rerun on May 26, 1983,[28] and came 19th out of 63 programs with a 17.4 rating.[29] "The Boys in the Bar" aired again on July 28, 1983,[30] and scored a 12.8 rating and 23 share.[31]

In Sydney, Australia, the first season aired on Sundays on Network Ten from November 1983[32] to April 8, 1984.[33]

Reception

During the first broadcast of its first season in 1982–1983, Cheers received positive reviews.[34] Rick Sherwood called it "ever-charming".[35] Montreal critic Mike Boone from The Gazette called it "unpredictable" and the supporting characters "splendid".[36] Fred Rothenberg of the Associated Press called it the "funniest, most adult comedy on TV".[37]

Later reviews were more positive. Jason Bovberg from DVD Talk praised season 1's writing quality above its "odd assortment of [characters]" and gave its content four and a half stars out of five.[38] Steve Butts from IGN called this season "some of the best comedy writing and acting seen on television", praised the cast's performances, and gave it nine out of ten points.[39] Another IGN critic Cliff Wheatley called the pilot "Give Me a Ring Sometime" the ninth best Cheers episode and another episode "Truth or Consequences" fifth.[40] Stephen Tropiano from PopMatters called it "fresh and very funny", even for a very old show, but said that some situations seem "forced", especially for customers with no connections to main characters. He also wrote that the show has "witty dialogue, talented ensemble, and a premise reminiscent of 1930s screwball comedies", which compared with the most popular sitcoms of the 1970s—Three’s Company, Laverne and Shirley, and The Love Boat—"Cheers was a welcome change of pace.".[41]

Michael Speier from Variety magazine called it "clever and touching" with "fresh" stories and praised chemistry between Ted Danson and Shelley Long. Jonathan Boudreaux from the website TVDVDReviews.com wrote, "[w]hile the episodes are often outrageously funny, the show's humor is character-based. The laughs arrive from the personalities and foibles of the group rather than from wacky situations." He also wrote, "Cheers is probably one of the best TV series of all time."[42] Elizabeth Skipper from DVD Verdict rated the story 90 percent and acting 95 percent and wrote, "[t]here's nothing terribly unique about the series; it's ...  fueled by the sexual tension between the two leads and fanned by a well-rounded supporting cast, a portrayal of the attempts of a downtown boy to win over an uptown girl—it's all been done before."[43] Matt Brighton from Blu-ray Authority called the season's writing and directing "clever" and was "impressed at how this show has stood the test of time."[44] TV Guide called "The Tortelli Tort" a "classic episode".[45]

Accolades

The first season of Cheers received thirteen nominations for the Primetime Emmy Awards in 1983. It won five Emmy Awards, including an Outstanding Comedy Series. All the main cast except George Wendt, and John Ratzenberger, who was not part of the main cast, were nominated for, respectively, their own leading and supporting roles. Shelley Long won the award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series. Glen and Les Charles won an Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series award for the pilot episode "Give Me a Ring Sometime". Episodes "The Boys in the Bar" and "Diane's Perfect Date" were nominated for the same category. James Castle and Bruce Bryant won an Outstanding Individual Achievement of Graphic Design and Title Sequences for "Showdown, Part One". James Burrows won an Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series award for "Showdown, Part Two". The program's theme song, "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", was nominated for an Outstanding Achievement in Music and Lyrics award, but did not win.

The Television Critics Association voted Cheers the Best New Series of 1982–1983.[46] [47] The episodes "Give Me a Ring Sometime" and "The Boys in the Bar" won the Episodic Comedy category in the 36th Annual Writers Guild of America Awards in 1984.[48] "The Spy Who Came In for a Cold One",[49] and "Let Me Count the Ways" were nominated for the same award.[50] James Burrows won the Comedy Series category of the 36th Annual Directors Guild of America Award (DGA) for "Showdown, Part Two" in 1984;[51] he was DGA-nominated for "Sam at Eleven" but did not win in 1983.[52]

On Saturday, January 29, 1983, Cheers won the Golden Globe Award for Best Musical or Comedy Television Series of 1982, and Shelley Long won a Golden Globe Award as the Best Supporting Actress in Television.[53] Cheers did not win any Golden Globes for categories related to comedy television of 1983 at the 1984 ceremony.[54] On Thursday, March 17, 1983, Cheers won the Favorite New Television Comedy Program award at the 9th Annual People's Choice Awards.[55] [56]

DVD release

Season 1 of Cheers was released on Region 1 DVD on May 20, 2003, twenty years after its season finale and ten years after the series finale, "One for the Road", were broadcast on television.[57] Elizabeth Skipper of DVD Verdict rated video quality 80 percent and the sound quality 65 percent, but called the menu settings "ugly" and uninspiring, and the special features "lackluster" and consisting mostly of compilation clips of this season.[43] Jonathan Boudreaux of TVDVDreviews.com found the video "clear and sharp", and found the sound quality similar to that of the television broadcast.[42]

Cheers: The Complete First Season
Set DetailsSpecial Features
  • 22 episodes
  • 4-disc set
  • 1:33:1 aspect ratio
  • English - Stereo
  • Closed captioning (Region 1)
  • Subtitles: Danish, English, Spanish, French, Italian, Norwegian, Swedish (Region 2)
  • Setting The Bar: A Conversation with Ted Danson
  • Love at First Fight: Opposites Distract
  • Coach Ernie Pantusso's Rules of the Game
  • I'll Drink to That: Stormin' Norm-isms
  • "It's a Little Known Fact..." Cheers Trivia Game
Release Dates
Region 1Region 2Region 4
May 20, 200324 November 200315 January 2004

Notes

References

Ratings notes

According to Los Angeles Times, ratings from 1982 to 1983 were based on 83.3 million households with at least one television set. "Television Ratings" column list is located at Part VI, "Calendar" section. Below sources originated from Los Angeles Times, republished in microfilm copies, which may be located in your local library.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Cheers provides tough education. January 23, 1983. August 24, 2012. Google News Archive. Buck. Jerry. Associated Press. The Modesto Bee. p. 3, TV Magazine.
  2. News: October 14, 1982. Television (Thursday). Anchorage Daily News. August 29, 2012 . . The pilot episode, "Give Me a Ring Sometime", aired on October 14, 1982, in Anchorage, Alaska.
  3. News: Cheering Up Cheers. November 19, 1982. 3. September 19, 2012 . Google News . The Rome News-Tribune.
  4. News: We'll Cry In Our Beers As Sam, Diane Split . 29 April 1984 . 14 . . Meade, Peter . Editions of April 27–29, 1984, are bundled in the webpage. Article is located at page 85 in Google.
  5. News: Lehman, Betsy. Cheers 'to the Real Cast'; Beacon Hill Pub Goes Hollywood - via TV. Boston Globe. October 1, 1982. . ProQuest: .
  6. News: 'Cheers' pub reincarnated. September 1, 2001. Ferdinand, Pamela, from The Washington Post. G2. June 21, 2012. Bangor Daily News. Google News.
  7. News: 30. The Bulletin. Cheers Surges from Ratings Slump. United Press International. September 30, 1983. July 7, 2012 . Google News Archives . This source explicitly mentions the first appearance of Diane Chambers's apartment without implications.
  8. News: Meade . Peter . We'll Cry In Our Beers As Sam, Diane Split . . 29 April 1984 . 14 . Editions of April 27–29, 1984, are bundled in the webpage. Article is located at page 85 in Google.
  9. News: Carter, Bill. 6. May 9, 1993. The New York Times. Why 'Cheers' Proved So Intoxicating .
  10. Book: Balk, Quentin . Falk, Ben . Television's Strangest Moments: Extraordinary but true tales from the history of television. 166 . London . Robson–Chrysalis . 2005 . 1-86105-874-8.
  11. News: Nick Colasanto Dead at 61; Played Bartender in 'Cheers'. The New York Times. February 14, 1985. December 27, 2011.
  12. Web site: October 2, 2012. My thoughts on GQ Cheers article. ...by Ken Levine. Levine refers Stephen Kolzak as "Steve Kolzak".
  13. Setting the Bar: A Conversation with Ted Danson. DVD. 2003. Paramount Pictures. Danson, Ted. Cheers: The Complete First Season.
  14. Ted Danson, On Life (And 'Death') After 'Cheers' . NPR. September 17, 2009. Fresh Air from WHYY. Danson, Ted. David Bianculli.
  15. News: Buck, Jerry. The Press-Courier. TV Week, p. 7. July 23, 2012 . . April 24, 1983. Rhea Perlman Mixes Real Life with Series. Oxnard, California.
  16. News: Beers are fake, but Cheers aren't canned. Rothenberg, Fred. Associated Press. WV11. February 16, 1983. Deseret News. Salt Lake City. July 16, 2012 . .
  17. News: There's no reason why 2 living room couch potatoes can't wash dishes — or is there?. D.L. Stewart. December 26, 1988. Pt. 3, p. 1 ("Good Morning"). July 16, 2012 . . Milwaukee Sentinel.
  18. News: Shelley Long cheers up. Meade, Peter. 20. 14 January 1983. 24 February 2012. Rome News-Tribune. Rome, Georgia.
  19. Web site: Another thing about Cheers you didn't know. https://web.archive.org/web/20120805051444/http://kenlevine.blogspot.com/2012/03/another-thing-about-cheers-you-didnt.html. live. Levine, Ken. Ken Levine (TV personality). March 18, 2012. ...by Ken Levine. July 16, 2012 . . August 5, 2012.
  20. Web site: The Story Behind the Cheers Theme. January 18, 2013. GaryPortnoy.com. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20130118024640/http://www.garyportnoy.com/. Click "The Cheers Story".
  21. News: Tonight (Thursday). 26. Kentucky New Era. December 9, 1982. September 18, 2012 . Google News Archive .
  22. News: 5C. Cheers gets low place in ratings because of Simons' competition. Judy Flander. Wilmington Morning Star. January 6, 1983. September 18, 2012 . Google News Archive .
  23. News: Boston Globe. September 3, 1983. Bednarski, P.J.. 0743-1791. Why NBC Repeats Look Like New Shows. . The author worked for Chicago Sun-Times at the time of publication.
  24. News: D7. March 13, 1983. Cheers for a second season. Associated Press. Beaver County Times. June 28, 2012. Beaver County, Pennsylvania.
  25. News: 37. Cheers Boosted by Reruns. September 22, 1983. Reading Eagle. July 6, 2012 . Google News Archives . Scott, Vernin. United Press International.
  26. News: Today's Television. July 14, 1983. July 20, 2012. Google News Archive. The Pittsburgh Press. C-10.
  27. News: Smith, Sally B. NBC Moves Past ABC in Prime-Time TV Ratings. The New York Times. C-23. July 21, 1983. .
  28. News: Television Times, p. 37. Thursday, May 26, 1983. Los Angeles Times. May 22, 1983.
  29. News: June 2, 1983. p. 12, Pt. VI (Calendar). Television Schedule. Los Angeles Times.
  30. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=75ozAAAAIBAJ&sjid=nDIHAAAAIBAJ&pg=7021%2C3186534 "Television (Schedule)"
  31. "NBC Wins Nielsen Race." Miami Herald August 3, 1983: 7B. NewsBank. Web. June 13, 2012. . Article at MiamiHerald.com: .
  32. News: Lift-Out TV Guide, p. 63. Sunday's programs. November 20, 1983. The Sydney Morning Herald. July 25, 2012 . Google News Archive . The show might have premiered on November 13, 1983.
  33. News: Lift-Out TV Guide, p. 61. Sunday's programs. April 8, 1984. The Sydney Morning Herald. July 25, 2012 . Google News Archive . For some reason, some episodes were skipped during the period of November 1983 and April 1984. They might have been aired after episodes of the second season were broadcast.
  34. News: Thomas, Jack. Television Jack Thomas; Worst of the Worst. Boston Globe. June 28, 1983. .
  35. News: Sherwood, Rick. September 15, 1983. June 28, 2012. 0163-402X. Cheers episode is charming. Wilmington, North Carolina. 5C. Wilmington Morning Star. Rick Sherwood's article appears in other newspapers, according to Google search results.
  36. News: Boone . Mike . Cheers! Sam and Diane's breakup is a TV event worth drinking to . . 2 May 1984 . E12 .
  37. News: E11. October 13, 1983. Rothenberg, Fred. Anchorage Daily News. Love won't spoil Sam and Diane on Cheers. November 25, 2020. January 3, 2013. https://archive.today/20130103083410/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=UHEoAAAAIBAJ&sjid=n6cEAAAAIBAJ&pg=1635,6890976. dead.
  38. Web site: DVD Talk. Cheers: The Complete First Season. May 28, 2003. July 21, 2012. Bovberg, Jason.
  39. News: IGN. July 21, 2012. Cheers: The Complete First Season Review. Butts, Steve. June 18, 2003.
  40. Web site: Cliff . Wheatley . 2014-05-30 . Top 10 Cheers Episodes . IGN .
  41. Web site: Tropiano, Stephen. PopMatters. July 21, 2012. Cheers: The Complete First Season. June 23, 2003.
  42. Web site: Boudreaux, Jonathan. Cheers: The Complete First Season DVD Review. https://web.archive.org/web/20110615061944/http://www.tvdvdreviews.com/cheers.html. July 6, 2003. June 15, 2011. Internet Archive Wayback Machine.
  43. Web site: July 14, 2003. Cheers: The Complete First Season. DVD Verdict. Skipper, Elizabeth.
  44. Web site: Brighton, Matt. Cheers: The First Season. July 21, 2012. Blu-ray Authority. January 28, 2012 .
  45. Book: 54. TV Guide: TV on DVD 2006: The Ultimate Resource to Television Programs on DVD. 2005. 0-312-35150-X. Guide. T. V..
  46. News: Thursday, July 7, 1983 . The Pittsburgh Press. July 3, 1983. July 20, 2012 . Google News Archive . TV12 . Scroll the page right at upper half to find the page that has a schedule, and find Cheers.
  47. News: Critics Like Cheers. TV section, p. 14. Final. The Miami Herald. July 10, 1983. NewsBank . Record no: 8302240041.
  48. Web site: Cheers - The Boys in the Bar. The Writers Guild Foundation. July 22, 2012. 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131105034547/http://librarycatalog.wgfoundation.org/title/titleAwards.ashx?id=2387. November 5, 2013. mdy-all.
  49. Web site: Cheers - Spy Who Came In For a Cold One, The. 2010. July 22, 2012. The Writers Guild Foundation. https://web.archive.org/web/20140531105852/http://librarycatalog.wgfoundation.org/title/titleAwards.ashx?id=3318. May 31, 2014. dead. mdy-all.
  50. Web site: July 22, 2012. 2010. Cheers - Let Me Count the Ways. The Writers Guild Foundation. https://web.archive.org/web/20140531105851/http://librarycatalog.wgfoundation.org/title/titleAwards.ashx?id=2916. May 31, 2014. dead. mdy-all.
  51. Web site: 36th Annual DGA Awards Honoring Outstanding Directorial Achievement for 1983. Directors Guild of America. 1984. July 25, 2012. To skim list down, click "ALL" and then "Comedy Series".
  52. Web site: 35th Annual DGA Awards Honoring Outstanding Directorial Achievement for 1982. Directors Guild of America. 1983. July 25, 2012. To see all nominees, click "Winners and Nominees". Then, to skim down the list, click "ALL" and then "Comedy Series".
  53. News: Gandhi Dominates Golden Globe Awards. United Press International. January 31, 1983. July 25, 2012 . Google News Archive . Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. 30.
  54. News: Associated Press. January 30, 1984. Globe winners at a glance. Ottawa Citizen. 60. July 25, 2012 . Google News Archive . Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
  55. News: August 20, 2012. 6. The Daily Record. Burt, Barbara People's Choices. Ellensburg, Washington. August 20, 2012 . Google News Archive . United Press International.
  56. And the 9th Annual "Favorite New Television Comedy Program" People's Choice is...Cheers!. Web. March 11, 1983. P&G Productions, Inc.. August 20, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20140531105256/http://search.peopleschoice.com/v/26948921/and-the-9th-annual-favorite-new-television-comedy-program-people-s-choice-is-cheers.htm?q=cheers. May 31, 2014. dead. mdy-all.
  57. Web site: July 20, 2012. TVShowsOnDVD.com. Cheers - Season 1. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110916072733/http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/releases/Cheers-Season-1/2322. September 16, 2011. mdy-all.