Actor John Ritter Dead

ToTBellHop

Well-Known Member
back week and a half for Disney--Big Thunder and losing probably the best sit-com actor on ABC now. He will be missed, and I must admit, I, too, am shocked by this--he was so young and LOOKED even younger. His family shall remain in my prayers.
 

RogueHabit

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by Catch 22
It's terrible when someone dies that way, totally unexpected, torn down by a relatively minor heart defect that could possibly have been fixed if it had been found.
I stand myself corrected on this point. According to the report on E! the defect is his heart is one that doctors have no way of detecting.

It would have been John Ritters 55th birthday next week, and his wedding anniversary. :cry:
 

DMC-12

It's HarmonioUS, NOT HarmoniYOU.
Wow... so they are NOT going to shelve the series :eek: I was betting that they would... instead... they are killing off his charater on the show as well.


CREDIT: Reuters & Yahoo!


http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/030916/leisure_abc_1.html

LOS ANGELES, Sept 16 (Reuters) - ABC said on Tuesday it was reshaping its hit comedy show "8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter" following the sudden death of main star John Ritter, and taking the TV family through the loss of a beloved father.

Saying it was entering "uncharted waters" for prime-time network television, ABC executives said all those associated with the show, including Ritter's widow Amy Yasbeck, wanted to continue.

But since there was no question of replacing Ritter as the stay-at-home TV dad with two troublesome teenage daughters, the network decided to write real life into the storyline.

"Future episodes will take viewers into the Hennessy household as they experience the loss of a beloved father and construct a new life," Lloyd Braun, chairman of the ABC Entertainment Television Group, told reporters.

Ritter, 54, collapsed in Burbank last Thursday while filming the fourth episode of the upcoming second season of the show. He died in hospital of a previously undetected heart ailment.

His death not only robbed American audiences of a favorite TV star but left the ailing ABC network facing a tough choice days before launching its new prime-time lineup in which "8 Simple Rules" was considered a linchpin.

The show proved to be ABC's highest-rated comedy in 2002, placing a respectable 43 among nearly 190 prime time shows. It helped the network, which trails CBS, FOX and NBC in ratings, reestablish itself as the home of family-friendly comedies.

ABC had been widely expected to shelve the series given the central part played by Ritter's character in the comedic father-daughter dynamic.

But executives said they would go ahead on Sept. 23. as scheduled with airing the three new episodes of "8 Simple Rules", and then air repeats while the writers and cast worked on the comedy show's sudden transformation into tragedy.

"We are going some place that no other show has gone, but it feels right," said Susan Lyne, president ABC Entertainment.

"We don't pretend to have a roadmap here; as in life, we will take it an episode at a time and find laughs where they feel natural and right," Lyne said.

ABC said it had not yet figured out how Ritter's TV character would die, nor many other details of how what started as a laugh-a-minute sitcom would continue to win ratings as a large as life tragedy.

Few TV sitcoms have found a formula for success after the death or departure of key actors. CBS tried writing in the death of the character played by comedian Redd Foxx in "The Royal Family" after the actor's own death a month after the show premiered in 1991, but the series did not catch on.

ABC admitted that a ratings-friendly transition of "8 Simple Rules" would be unprecedented for network television but executives declined to specify how long they would give the series to succeed.

"We are committed to returning this show and having it continue as a dominant show on our network but we all realize this is uncharted territory," Braun said.
 

SewIn2Disney

Well-Known Member
Yessss!!!!
:sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy: :sohappy:


I will be supporting the show 100% and hope you all will too!
 

Goofster

Member
Yeah, when watching the special, which I thought was very good, and showed how wonderful of a person John Ritter was, I definitely don't think the show could've had John Ritter replaced by someone else, and after only one season, I just loved the show and john Ritter so much, but now it wil be interesting to see how the family deals witht the loss and how they can keep the comedy. I don't know, but i'll be watching and hoping for it's success.
 

tigsmom

Well-Known Member
I'm glad they decided to go on, but I'm not sure how successful it will be. He was the show. I enjoyed the special...what a very special person he was. I grew up watching Threes Company and love to watch the re-runs.
 

SpongeScott

Well-Known Member
What a great tribute to John. My heart goes out to his TV kids, but especially to his real family. I'm glad to see the show continue and it will be interesting to see how this will be handled.
 

VinnieG

New Member
Out of respect they should scrap 8 rules, it will not be the same. I think Disney should think on this one .I know I will not watch it without him he made the show. Like some one else mentioned they are pulling a Darren.
 

Invero

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by VinnieG
Out of respect they should scrap 8 rules, it will not be the same. I think Disney should think on this one .I know I will not watch it without him he made the show. Like some one else mentioned they are pulling a Darren.


Actually, they are doing it will full support of his wife... I would think he'd want the show to go on.

And they're not pulling a Darren... they're going have the character pass away, and have the family deal with those issues.
 

Erika

Moderator
Originally posted by VinnieG
Out of respect they should scrap 8 rules, it will not be the same. I think Disney should think on this one .I know I will not watch it without him he made the show. Like some one else mentioned they are pulling a Darren.

I was one of the ones who mentioned a Darren, but this is not it. I am glad they are continuing. It is difficult to say what a person would or would not have wanted, but the John Ritter that everyone is portraying seems to be the kind of guy who would have wanted everyone to keep going. It's bad enough for them that they have lost a close coworker and friend without having to start all over again, scattered all over the place--- especially the kids, who have not yet made big enough names for themselves to find work so easily.
 

SpongeScott

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by VinnieG
Out of respect they should scrap 8 rules, it will not be the same. I think Disney should think on this one .I know I will not watch it without him he made the show. Like some one else mentioned they are pulling a Darren.
I respectfully disagree with you on this. As the above article mentioned, ABC is going into unchartered waters with this and it will be interesting how this all pans out. Weaving the comedy in with a tragic event will be a challenge, but this is a first for TV and let's see what they can do with this. Who knows how many "real" families they may help who could be dealing with very similiar issues.
 

VinnieG

New Member
Scrapping the show now to me would be better.There have been many other shows that dealt with a death in the family I do not think this will help any beter.Shows do not last when a situation like this happens when they replace when the main lead character really passes away and try to replace him with a different character.Remember Chico and the Man when Freddie Prinz died they tried to replace him and the show failed. The shows premise was about the overprotective father and the show to me will not seem to work.
 

Dr Albert Falls

New Member
The best "death" TV show had to be Sesame Street, when the real Mr. Hooper passed away. I still remember the episode of Big Bird asking everyone when he'd be coming back, and all the adults struggling to help him understand.
 

Invero

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by Dr Albert Falls
The best "death" TV show had to be Sesame Street, when the real Mr. Hooper passed away. I still remember the episode of Big Bird asking everyone when he'd be coming back, and all the adults struggling to help him understand.

I remember that :( :(
 

Erika

Moderator
Originally posted by Dr Albert Falls
The best "death" TV show had to be Sesame Street, when the real Mr. Hooper passed away. I still remember the episode of Big Bird asking everyone when he'd be coming back, and all the adults struggling to help him understand.


I remember that, too. It's my first clear memory of dealing with death. Mr Hooper had been one of my favorite characters.

Edit: Here is a link to the conversation between Big Bird and the other characters: http://www.reallyrics.com/lyrics/S021200010036.asp
 

netenyahoo

New Member
The special was really good. I was crying when the kid actors were crying. It is so sad! I loved the episode where John
Rritter's character was telling the younger daughter how beautiful she was to help cheer her up. I think Disney would be smart to release the 1st season on DVD with the tribute to John. They should also release Threes Company on DVD too.
 

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