
In case you forgot, ABC is
making a new “Roseanne.”
The news surrounding this epic reboot has been surprisingly scanty. Among other tidbits not yet made public is the show's premiere date. An ABC spokesman
says the date will be announced soon. It will likely be a midseason premiere early in the new year.
The last (and only) communique about the
new “Roseanne” from the ABC publicity department was issued on October 17. The release reported that the cast, writers and producers had convened on a sound stage for the new show’s
first table read. As the kids are fond of saying today: Yay.
The picture above is from this momentous table read. It's the only photo from the new “Roseanne” that a columnist can
find on the ABC press Web site. There are a slew of photos from the old “Roseanne” there, however.
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In the table-read photo, the cast seems to be really enjoying themselves,
although that could be fake since these people are actors -- and at least some of them are really good at it.
One thing I noticed: John Goodman looks as if he has taken off a few pounds. He
looks great. Way to go, John.
Table reads are not really very interesting, but those of us curious about how this “Roseanne” revival is proceeding will have to take what we can
get.
Another story about the new “Roseanne” suddenly appeared the other day in the trades. On the Hollywood Reporter Web site, the story's headline made it seem more
newsworthy than it actually was.
“ ‘Roseanne’ revival order extended at ABC,” the headline said. A look at the story revealed that this “extension” amounted
to just one additional episode -- bringing the show’s initial order to nine. Yay again.
When the premiere date for this new “Roseanne” becomes known and then draws nearer,
you can expect the p.r. campaign to rev up a bit. Look for cast members -- starting with Roseanne herself -- to make the talk-show rounds and get interviewed in the celebrity magazines.
The
New York Times will do a predictable feature on the show that will attempt to examine it in some sort of cultural context. This feature -- most likely to appear on a Sunday -- will be very long,
full of details, and very dull -- just like all Times features and stories about TV.
Hopefully, Roseanne, now 65, will answer the burning question about this new version of her old
sitcom: Why is she doing this?
As she has admitted many times in the past, her old show drove her nuts. It also made her fabulously wealthy, and unless she has somehow frittered it all away
(which is doubtful), she doesn’t need to do this new show to shore up her finances for retirement.
It has been just shy of 30 years since she first burst on the scene to introduce the
first “Roseanne.” She came onstage at the Marriott Marquis theater at the ABC upfront in May 1988 (my own first TV upfront season as a journalist) and brought the house down.
We
all know what happened next. “Roseanne” lasted nine seasons, during which she made almost constant headlines for so many things --- including her battles with show-runners and her network,
her marriage to Tom Arnold, and the notorious rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” that she delivered in San Diego in 1990 before a Padres-Reds game.
I met her for the first and
only time in March 2007. In our interview, she was candid about the toll the old show took on her.
“It was extremely long hours and there was a fight constantly and I fought back
constantly and that always takes something out of you,” she said. “It came at a great cost to my nervous system and my family.
“In the last two years of my show, I had carte
blanche to do whatever I wanted to do. And I just kept pushing it and kept pushing it. Maybe I pushed it too far. Some people say I did, but, you know, the point was I did it and nobody will do it
again. ...
“When I was done, they were like: ‘We’re going to manufacture our own stars and the networks will own all production.’ Television changed.”
And
so, into this new world of television in which everything has “changed,” here comes Roseanne for one more try, as time goes by.