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  1. Cheers is the Spanish version of the popular 1980s American sitcom of same name created by Cyrus James Garcia Andres. It was produced by Plural Entertainment and Tom Collins and broadcast by Telecinco. It was first aired on 11 September 2011, and follows the same theme as its American counterpart.

  2. Cheers: With Alberto San Juan, Antonio Resines, Alexandra Jiménez, Pepón Nieto. Spanish version of the American show "Cheers."

    • (142)
    • 2011-09-11
    • Comedy
    • Cheers Almost Didn’T Make It Through Season one.
    • The Bull & Finch Pub, on Which Cheers Is Modeled, Is Now called Cheers
    • Sam Malone Was Originally A Professional Football Player.
    • Ted Danson Attended Bartending School.
    • Norm and Cliff Weren’T Intended to Be Regular characters.
    • Norm Peterson Is Based on A Real guy.
    • Norm’s Never-Seen Wife Vera Is Voiced by George Wendt’s Real Wife.
    • John Ratzenberger Improvised Many of Cliff’s Fun Facts.
    • Some of The Dialogue Came from Real Bar Conversations.
    • Cheers Wasn’T Afraid to Tackle Social issues.

    Like many of television’s greatest success stories (e.g. Seinfeld), Cheers was not an immediate hit. It premiered on September 30, 1982 to dismal ratings—77th placeout of 100 shows that week, according to Nielsen. It was NBC’s entertainment president at the time, Brandon Tartikoff, who saved the show from cancellation during its first season.

    Talk about life imitating art. After it was decided that the series would be set in a bar instead of a hotel, co-creators Glen and Les Charles decided the locale should be moved to New England. “Boston was chosen partially because only five short-lived television shows claimed the city and the East Coast pubs were real neighborhood hangouts,” wrote...

    In the script’s earliest incarnations, Sam Malone was an ex-football player, which made sense considering that Fred Dryer—the former NFL defensive end who would go on to star in Hunter—was a top choice to play the role of Sam (opposite Julia Duffy as Diane; William Devane was also a strong contender). Ultimately, it was the chemistry between Ted Da...

    Danson spent two weeks at a bartending schoolin Burbank, California as part of his training to play Sam.

    Both George Wendt and John Ratzenberger auditioned for the same role in the pilot, a minor character named George who had a single line: “Beer!” The character’s name was changed to Norm Peterson when Wendt was cast. But Ratzenberger wasn’t about to give up so easily. “As I was leaving the office after the audition, I turned around and asked them, ‘...

    In 2012, co-creator Les Charles told GQ that Norm was based on a real person. “I worked at a bar after college, and we had a guy who came in every night. He wasn't named Norm, [but he] was always going to have just one beer, and then he'd say, ‘Maybe I'll just have one more.’ We had to help him out of the bar every night. His wife would call, and h...

    Though she’s only credited in one episode, George Wendt’s wife, Bernadette Birkett, provided the voice for Norm’s wife, Vera. Birkett did make one appearance on the show—as a love interest of Cliff’s—in season three.

    Many of the random (and untrue) facts that Cliff Clavin offers up were ad libbed by Ratzenberger. “After a couple of years on the show they realized they could trust me not to mess it up,” Ratzenberger told Deseret News in 1993. “So little by little they've let me just sort of run off. Because I know when to stop … It's easy to improvise comedy. It...

    In order to nail the bar talk aspect of the series, the creators regularly visited barsin the Los Angeles area to eavesdrop on patrons’ conversations. In the series premiere, there’s an argument about the sweatiest movie ever made, which was lifted from one of these overheard conversations.

    Cheers’ writers never shied away from taboo topics such as alcoholism or homosexuality, through they always had a sense of humor about them. The season one episode “The Boys in the Bar,” in which one of Sam’s former teammates announces that he is gay, earned writers Ken Levine and David Isaacs a GLAAD Media Award.

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  4. Cheers is the Spanish version of the popular 1980s American sitcom of same name created by Cyrus James Garcia Andres. It was produced by Plural Entertainment and Tom Collins and broadcast by Telecinco. It was first aired on 11 September 2011, and follows the same theme as its American counterpart.

  5. Overview. Cheers is the Spanish version of the original series. It was produced by Plural Entertainment and Tom Collins and broadcast by Telecinco. It was first aired on 11 September, 2011. It follows the same theme as Cheers. Alberto San Juan. 9 Episodes. Antonio Resines. 9 Episodes. Alexandra Jiménez. 9 Episodes. Pepón Nieto. 9 Episodes.

  6. Cheers is the Spanish version of the original series. It was produced by Plural Entertainment and Tom Collins and broadcast by Telecinco. It was first aired on 11 September, 2011. It follows the same theme as Cheers. Cast. Alberto San Juan. Nicolás "Nico" Arnedo. Antonio Resines. Félix Simón de Aguirre. Alexandra Jiménez. Rebeca Santaolalla.

  7. 4 seasons available (95 episodes) Top-rated, 28-time Emmy-winning half-hour comedy series centering on the colorful characters who frequent a Boston bar owned by a former Red Sox pitcher. more. Starring: Ted DansonRhea PerlmanGeorge Wendt. Creators: Jim BurrowsGlen CharlesLes Charles.

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