CBS The Early
Show
After nine years,
210 episodes, 65 Emmy
nominations and 12 Emmy
awards, the hit TV sitcom
"Everybody Loves Raymond"
comes to an end Monday night
on CBS.
The decision to quit now,
the show¡¯s star told The
Early Show co-anchor Hannah
Storm, was a creative one he
made with executive producer
Phil Rosenthal.
"We had done a lot of
stories and we were running
out of stories," says Ray
Romano. "And we did not want
to compromise it and leave
it fresh and leave when we
think we had done it all and
we thought it was at that
point."
Rosenthal said he never
considered expanding the
final episode beyond its
usual half-hour format.
"I saw a lot of shows that
did it and I wasn't crazy
about them. We always lived
as a half hour with rare
exceptions and I thought for
our purposes, that form of
story telling, a half hour
is right."
There is, however, a
one-hour special of
highlights scheduled
beforehand on CBS.
Both Romano and Rosenthal
mined their personal
experiences to provide
scripts for the show. In
fact, Romano says, the name
was coined by his brother.
"My brother, a New York
police cop, used to compare
my life to his and how hard
his life was: 'I got to
chase criminals and
everybody loves Raymond.'
Phil said we'll use it as a
working title and the name
stuck."
At the time, Rosenthal said
he had no great
expectations, just that
"someone would like the
script.
"And maybe we would get to
make a pilot," he said. "And
then for the pilot to go and
for us to last 13 episodes
and for us to get picked up
for the first season and to
go beyond that, every sickle
thing is a miracle."
The show was ranked 81st in
the first season, but midway
through, Rosenthal and the
cast knew they had something
special going.
"We felt like we had a
chemistry and we had a
uniqueness to us," Romano
said, "but no one thought,
you know, we were a sure
thing because of the
ratings. But the critics
were nice to us. The reviews
were good so they gave us a
longer chance you normally
get being in 80th place. You
know?"
Appearing with Romano and
Rosenthal were cast members
Peter Boyle, Patricia
Heaton, Doris Roberts, Brad
Garrett, and Monica Horan.
Roberts, who plays Ray¡¯s
mother, Marie Barone, says
many fans tell her she
reminds them of their own
mothers.
"I travel a lot and every
country I've gone to," she
said, "they yell and scream
and say, 'Thank you for the
humor. You bring it to my
home.' This is fabulous that
we do that. It's very
special because we all
respect each other. And most
importantly, we trust each
other."
Heaton observed that the
cast members lives changed
dramatically during the
course of the show. She,
Romano and Rosenthal all had
more children during those
nine years. As a result, the
cast became like family and
parting has been difficult:
"I actually got it all out
that final taping. And, you
know, sobbed and sobbed and
sobbed," she said.
The following are some
trivia facts about the show:
Number of episodes produced:
210
Number of children actress
Patricia Heaton had while
playing the role of Debra
Barone: 2
First time Peter Boyle
uttered the immortal line
"Holy Crap": Pilot episode
Number of "Letterman"
appearances by Ray Romano:
20 guest appearances and one
via phone.
Number of countries outside
the United States that air
"Everybody Loves Raymond":
169
Number of people who watch
"Everybody Loves Raymond" on
a weekly basis: 16.96
million
Why the "Where's Lunch" logo
at the end of each show is
unique: Its the only
changing logo on network
television. It features a
different plate of food at
the end of every episode. 