During the heady days of NBC’s blockbuster TV sitcom run, “Mad About You” highlighted the everyday trials of triumphs of newly married couple Paul Buchman (Paul Reiser) and Jaime Buchman (Helen Hunt). Running from 1992 to 1999, the show won several Emmys and a loyal fan base.
When asked why they had chosen to bring the show back after years of speculation of a followup, Helen Hunt told ET that timing was everything. “We realized that our daughter [Mabel], who was born the last year of the original show, would be leaving home, and so suddenly, empty nest ... seemed like we could write about that,” she said.
Reiser joked about the pair getting older. “Plus, if we waited any longer, we would be dead,” he added.
The other factor that helped inspire the duo to get back into it was the success of other sitcom reunions on Primetime TV. “We agreed for 20 solid years that it was a terrible idea and we must never do it, and then [...] ‘Will & Grace’ was good,” Hunt said.
Once they agreed that they wouldn’t be betraying the old dynamic, but rather bringing it back with a new concept, they felt comfortable going ahead with the show. In the first episode, “The Kid Leaves,” Reiser himself wrote the teleplay, and Hunt directs, showing just how invested they are in the new series.
Hunt noted that the new show doesn’t just work because of the math for the Buchmans’ daughter growing up but also because it mirrors their own lives. “Paul just went through empty nest. I’m about to go through it. So we knew there would be 12 stories in there somehow,” Hunt said.
Reiser added that in both cases, what drew the actors and viewers in was the dynamic between the couple. “The kick off to [the original] show was, ‘You just got married,’ and now you realize there’s two knuckleheads, just you two in a room,” Reiser said. That loving and occasionally bickering dynamic that produced so many laughs remains with one difference. “We realized, once the kid leaves there, we’re back to [the same], except we’re older,” he added.
Quinn, who will co-star in Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s “Little Women,” said that she had never seen “Mad About You” before auditioning for the show, even though it was her aunt’s favorite show. “[My] hope for it is that it brings two generations together and for families to watch it and find it funny and connect with it,” said Quinn.
She describes the family as still just as “tight-knit” as before but “struggling” with her character leaving home and going off to college, a feeling any parent can sympathize with. In preparing for the role, Quinn focused on the final season, which prominently features her character. “There is so much history there so it was really nice for me to have all of that as research for my character,” she said.
In a world that’s increasingly complex and unfamiliar, there are sure to be many who find comfort in a old favorite.