TV show's Ratings
News
- 'Cheers' and 'Sex And The City' actress Frances Sternhagen dies aged 93 NME November 30, 2023
- Frasier Return Series Pilot Honors John Mahoney, "Cheers" Nod & More Bleeding Cool News September 7, 2023
- ‘Cheers’ Cast and Creators Walk Down Memory Lane, Pay Tribute to Late Kirstie Alley at ATX TV Festival Reunion Variety June 3, 2023
Country | |
Runtime | 23 min – 1 hr 10 min |
Premiere: World | September 30, 1982 |
Premiere: USA | September 30, 1982 |
Channel | NBC (21:00, United States) |
Digital: World | December 17, 2018 |
Parental Advisory | Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking, ... |
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Production Companies | |
Description
The regulars of the Boston bar "Cheers" share their experiences and lives with each other while drinking or working at the bar where everybody knows your name.Сast and Crew
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Spin-off: 2 Remake Version
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Critique: 48
Cheers stumbles occasionally, to be sure… Yet missteps are the exception, not the rule, on Cheers. For four seasons now, the show has offered us th...
The humor in Cheers is what I call "lateral humor." Most of the laughs come not so much from the main theme of the series, but rather fro...
Cheers, without question, is still the best situation comedy on television. Its only competition comes from CBS' Newhart.
The premise doesn’t sound like much, but the production team pulled off a well-crafted and endearing pilot. [Shelley] Long, who’s...
As Cheers writers had done so often over the course of 275 episodes, the Charles brothers danced up to the edge of easy sentiment, then s...
The edge is off. The excitement is gone. The unbearable tension is now bearable… [But], to be sure, even a diminished Cheers is still superior...
Simply put, Cheers is the best comedy series on television. It sparkles with the sort of sophisticated writing and superb ensemble acting reminisce...
Like Taxi, Cheers is a little too clever for its own good. The writers shoehorn nearly a dozen "offbeat" characters into the feverish half-hou...
The original and appealing setting for Cheers, its quick and clever script and refreshing acting, all lead one to wonder why the U.S. can’t p...
Although it is pure comedy, Cheers is a lot like Hill Street [Blues] in that it is busy, sophisticated and very clever, but brilliantly simple...
What follows is sweet, sexy, witty, totally captivating comedy, written by people who know something about life and love and acted by a cast w...
It’s an obvious set-up for a smart ensemble comedy, set up by some of the smartest ensemble writers in the business.
Sam, Diane, a mostly lovable and funny bunch of regulars and occasional outsiders create an atmosphere in which nothing is more valued than quick w...
The season-opening episode of Cheers is a splendidly funny half-hour of television comedy… The whole episode is handled with the sort of wit...
I love the way this pilot shows how these particular characters end up spending so much time together.
[Cheers] is the funniest program to appear in a long while, save for the short-lived Police Squad earlier this year.
The second season of Cheers is still one of the strongest that the sitcom had to offer, now that the 'sit' had been firmly established, allowing th...
After all the hype… it would be a miracle if the last episode of Cheers could still move you. But then Cheers has always been at least a minor mira...
The cast was uniformly in top form under Burrows' astute direction. Cheers' went out with high humor, dignity, and sentiment as it settled accounts.
We’re talking world-class TV comedy here. Cheers gives every indication of belonging up there with MASH, Barney Miller, WKRP and, of course...
Creators Jim Burrows and Les and Glen Charles have done for Cheers what they did for Taxi: execute a comedy that is at once terrifically funny...
Cheers went out the way it came in: with grace, good humor and, above all, class.
[Kirstie] Alley is excellent. So Cheers is still excellent and worth a good laugh. So much, of course, depends on the writing, and the script...
There was really no reason to worry about Cheers. It is one show that has enough quality to age well and increase in value.
Refusing to preach, "Cheers" offered a kind of refuge from contemporary upheavals and anxieties, not totally ignoring them, but also not letti...
There were some missteps but, for the most part, the last, expanded serving of Cheers paid off in some very big and satisfying ways.
It’s more than two decades old now, but this screamingly funny classic hasn’t dulled one iota.
There have been great final episodes in the past, but last night’s final Cheers was a masterpiece.
The real charm of the series is in its exceptional writing and fine ensemble acting. If you like Taxi, you should certainly enjoy Cheers. Four star...
What makes the show highly watchable three decades on is the cracking quality of the dialogue, the comic acting and the weird, yet likeable charact...
It’s a good natured show, laid back and sufficiently flexible to sustain a high degree of self parody while enjoying the capacity t...
I’m excited to see where that confidence, bolstered by a few pieces of Academy hardware (the Emmys also honored Long, James Burrows, and...
An excellent show, then, well worth raising our glasses to. Cheers!
Just walking in the door, you know that Cheers, NBC’s new wise-cracking comedy set in a sports-crazy bar in Boston, will be a warm and w...
When the Emmy Awards are presented again in September, it is unlikely that Cheers will be chosen as the outstanding comedy scries for the third str...
It is a brilliantly witty script and, particularly given the limitations of its setting, a masterpiece of the genre.
Sam (Ted Danson) falls off the wagon, Diane (Shelley Long) falls into the arms of her analyst, and Cheers is off on its third, potentially best, se...
Here’s looking at Cheers, which deserves to become the toast of the new season.
Ted Danson is remarkably good as Malone, countered at every turn by the equally brilliant Shelley Long as Diane.
The show ended sentimentally but without sappiness. Love was mentioned and so were shoes. It was, simply, perfect.
Cheers is the gem of the fall season, a new series without a weak spot.
Whether they’re there to escape loneliness (Cliff), their nuclear families (Norm), to meet women (Sam, the owner) or out of some yearning for...
This is a good year for Cheers: tight writing, good performing. Last week’s dream episode was itself a dream, and the continual spa...
Besides the exceptional wit of the writing and the care with which this character comedy has been crafted, the main asset Cheers possesses is its n...
No working-class hangout ever looked so good. Cheers, the new neighborhood bar over at NBC, has all the sleaze of a salon, not a saloon...
This is one of those projects that rapidly clicks into place. The basic concept is workable. The script, by the Charles brothers, is sharp and live...
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