Hereās how āThe Connersā wrote Roseanne off the show
If you bet money that āRoseanneā spinoff āThe Connersā would take a page from its franchiseās playbook and reveal that the entire revival season that aired on ABC earlier this year had been a work of fiction, a figment of Darleneās imagination or some such, and that Roseanne Conner had been dead all this time ā well, sorry, you werenāt correct.
āThe Connersā premiered Tuesday night with some built-in interest. Viewers were no doubt curious to see how the show would write off its sharp-tongued matriarch after ABC fired Roseanne Barr, the controversial star who portrayed the character, from the revival of her hit TV show over a racist tweet this summer aimed at former Obama White House advisor Valerie Jarrett.
Reports had already circulated online ahead of the premiere about how the deed was done. So what actually happened to Roseanne Conner?
[Warning: this article contains spoilers from the series premiere of āThe Conners,ā which aired Tuesday night on ABC.]
The premiere episode of the spinoff series is set three weeks since āGranny Roseāsā funeral ā Roseanne has apparently died of a heart attack. The family is gathered around the kitchen table, wondering what to do with the abundance of casseroles overtaking the household ā and itās readily apparent that grief hasnāt stripped them of their penchant for one-liners.
Then just under five minutes in, the truth hits. Jackie (Laurie Metcalf) pulls Dan (John Goodman) aside to tell him she just got a call from a friend at the coronerās office. It seems the autopsy revealed that Roseanne actually overdosed on opioids ā as the rumors had predicted.
āItās not possible,ā Dan says. āWe knew she had a problem. She was only on pain pills for two days after [her knee] surgery. That was just ibuprofen. Itās gotta be wrong.ā
But Jackie is more pragmatic, saying the examiner supposes Roseanne must have taken the pills before bed, and given her health issues, it was a lethal combination.
While Dan is trying to make sense of it, Becky (Lecy Goranson) reveals she found pills in Roseanneās closet. They werenāt prescribed to her; they were prescribed to a woman named Marcy Ballinger (Mary Steenburgen).
āDamn. Thatās the only thing from momās closet that I wanted,ā Becky deadpans, cutting the tension of the scene.
RELATED: āThe Connersā producers are ready to move on without Roseanne ā on- and off-screen Ā»
The fatal outcome brings a tragic close to a storyline that began with the revival of āRoseanne.ā Last seasonās episode, āNetflix & Pill,ā explored Roseanneās dependency on the drug, which developed due to intense knee paināa story development that reflected the current opioid epidemic plaguing the U.S.
āIt was awkward the first day of shooting,ā executive producer Bruce Helford told The Times about the experience of moving on without Roseanne, the star and the character. āEverybody was feeling the oddness of it being different. But then it became, āOK, this is the family that America has loved watching and theyāre moving forward, and thereās been a turn of events thatās really made their lives change.ā
Helford and his fellow executive producers Dave Caplan and Bruce Rasmussen say the biggest challenge of the premiere was striking the right tone.
āThe thing we kept debating was how dark can we go, how dark is too dark?ā Helford said. āCan we make sure we still get our laughs that our audience wants and needs?ā
āThis was art imitating life,ā Caplan said. āThe Conners have always been a family that goes through difficulties, but comes out with their heads up. We were doing the same thing in making the show.ā
Asked how they think audiences will respond to how theyāve written off the character, the producers say it will be up for discussion.
āI think it will be highly debated,ā Rasmussen said. āI donāt think thereās any one attitude on this. It really depends on how you feel about her, about the show in general. There will be some tumult.ā
Added Rasmussen: āWe feel very comfortable with what weāve done. On this show, weāve learned not to predict because you really donāt know. Weāre hoping, of course, that people embrace the show the same way they embraced the other show.ā
Twitter: @villarrealy
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