I know there’s a current revival version of the series Night Court but I haven’t watched it. I do know that it stars John Larroquette from the original series and that Marsha Warfield has appeared as a guest star.
But Larroquette and Warfield are the only two main cast members from the original series who are still alive. Has the new series ever acknowledged these deaths and are the characters these actors portrayed also dead in the series?
I had low expectations when I heard about this reboot, but I have been surprised how much I like it. Of course they reference Harry since the new judge is his daughter and Roz did make an appearance, but I don’t remember them mentioning any of the other former characters. I had not given a thought until now.
For a bit of trivia, Marsha Warfield who plays Roz is now older than both the actors she replaced as bailiff.
I don’t know… it is 30-ish years later. I mean, Richard Moll was 80, Markie Post was 70, Charles Robinson was 75, and Harry Anderson was 65. So all senior citizens, with only two of them being on the young end of that age range.
The Cheers cast was about 5 years younger or so on average, with most being 75 or 76 now. Kirstie Alley was 71 when she passed however.
I think the thing with the Babylon 5 curse is that the oldest one of the cast members who died was in their mid 60s, with Richard Biggs dying in his mid-40s. That’s more unusual than having cast members in their 70s and 80s passing away. It’s like if ALL of the cast members on Night Court had died earlier than Harry Anderson did.
Yep, you are right. Biggs was such a massive shock, I had no idea we’d lose Garibaldi, Vir, Zack, Delenn, Sinclair, and even poor Zathras.
Biggs, Doyle, Furlan, O’hare were pretty big shocks, though I had no idea Michael O’Hare was having a lot of psychological problems in addition to any physical health issues.
To answer the OP, they haven’t mentioned the deaths of any of the past cast members that I can recall. They mention Harry frequently because the current judge is his daughter, but don’t talk about the way he departed this mortal sphere. It seems like there could be a joke about how his last trick didn’t go as planned, but they don’t really need to go there.
I can see future episodes making references to past cast members, like maybe an indention in an upper door jamb being the result of a giant bailiff not ducking, but otherwise I don’t think they’re going to delve too much into the past.
I agree. With Dan Fielding as the only returning character, there’s no real reason for him to reference any of the other characters, as nobody else knew them anyway.
If they choose to, it’ll be something like you say, where there’s a Bull-height dent in a door jamb that needs to be explained. They’ve already eliminated any sort of Dan pining for Christine, as they went into his having married someone named Sarah who was the actual love of his life. I don’t really see any sentimental ways that Mac, Christine, or Bull could really show up in the show at this point.
Richard Moll made it clear he had no desire to appear in the Night Court reboot, so I can see the producers simply not mentioning the character at all. As long as they’re playing the nostalgia card, it would be nice to have some mention of what happened to Christine Sullivan, though.
It’s a movie not a TV series and I mentioned this in another thread. Carnal Knowledge was released in 1971 - fifty-two years ago - and the entire cast is still alive, along with the script writer.
Me too but the canned laughter kills the mood for me. I dream of a glorious future where the laugh track is a separate audio track that can be shut off.
I didn’t recognize Brent Spinner of Start Trek fame until it was pointed out. I’m not sure why but that makes me smile when I see reruns of him on the show. I always loved the Wheelers anyway.
All I’m saying is that everyone in that cast who has died was well into senior citizen-hood when they passed. Markie Post dying at 70 and Harry Anderson were earlier than I’d have expected, but not way outside the bounds of the usual range. Charles Robinson and Richard Moll were both right around the average life expectancy for men (77.5 years).
B5 on the other hand had almost no one die within the usual old person range.