Everybody Loves Raymond (season 1)
The first season of the American sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond originally aired on CBS from September 13, 1996 until April 7, 1997 and consists of 22 episodes. Created and ran by Philip Rosenthal, the series revolves around the squabbles of the suburban Long Island Barone family, consisting of titular Newsday sportswriter Ray Romano, wife Debra, parents Marie and Frank, and brother Robert. Madylin Sweeten and her two brothers, Michael and Sawyer Sweeten, also star as the children of Ray and Debra.
Produced by HBO Independent Productions, Where's Lunch, and Worldwide Pants, the season features episodes written by Romano, Rosenthal, Jeremy Stevens, Tucker Cawley, Kathy Ann Stumpe, Lew Schneider, Tom Paris, Bruce Kirschbaum, Steve Skrovan, Carol Gary, and Stephen Nathan; and directed by Jeff Meyer, Rod Daniel, Michael Lembeck, Alan Kirschenbaum, Howard Storm, and Paul Lazarus. The season, despite having strong critical support, had incredibly low ratings due to its place in the Friday night death slot, although the show did significantly better once moved to Monday in March 1997. It and the following season were also the only two of the entire series to not receive Primetime Emmy Award nominations, although the first season received four Viewers for Quality Television nominations.
Production
The first season of Everybody Loves Raymonds was produced by HBO Independent Productions, creator Philip Rosenthal's company Where's Lunch, and Worldwide Pants, a company owned by David Letterman. Television executives offered Ray Romano several development deals for a sitcom immediately after he performed on Letterman's late-night talk show in the middle of 1995, which led to the creation of Everybody Loves Raymond. With the exception of the pilot shot at Universal City Studios, the season was filmed at Hollywood Center Studios; it was also the only season of the show to be shot there, as all of the later seasons were shot at Warner Bros. Studios.Rosenthal's first concept for Everybody Loves Raymond
Two opening sequences are used in for the season: one depicting Ray Barone describing the premise of the show while getting stuck in a playhouse set, and another one of him talking while his family members move behind him on a conveyor belt.
Cast
Main
- Ray Romano as Raymond "Ray" Barone
- Patricia Heaton as Debra Barone
- Brad Garrett as Robert Barone
- Doris Roberts as Marie Barone
- Peter Boyle as Francis "Frank" Barone
- Madylin Sweeten as Alexandra "Ally" Barone
- Sawyer Sweeten as Geoffrey Barone
- Sullivan Sweeten as Michael Barone
Supporting
- Monica Horan as Amy McDougall
- Andy Kindler as Andy
- Kevin James as Kevin Daniels
- Tom McGowan as Bernie Gruenfelder
- Maggie Wheeler as Linda Gruenfelder
- Shamsky II
- Katherine Helmond as Lois Whelan
- Robert Culp as Warren Whelan
- Victor Raider-Wexler as Stan
- Len Lesser as Garvin
- Joseph V. Perry as Nemo
- Tina Arning as Angelina
- Dave Attell as Dave
- Phil Leeds as Uncle Mel
- Jean Stapleton as Alda
Reception
Reviews
John P. McCarthy of Variety gave the pilot a mixed review, criticizing the lack of "major neuroses, "stellar wit or unique personality" in the lead protagonist; bland direction; "washed-out look;" and the writing not going beyond "domestic pandemonium and squabbles." However, he also praised the performances of the parents, particularly Boyle's "diabolical air." Very early in the season, Ken Tucker wrote that while writing wasn't "top-notch," it had a very unique protagonist, "a beleaguered family man, but one who’s happy about it" and "accepting his responsibilities." The Los Angeles Times, reviewing the pilot, claimed the performances indicated a "promising" series, "even though its premise and characters may not wear well with time."The New York Times reported Everybody Loves Raymond to be CBS's "most critically praised new show of the season." Entertainment Weekly critic Bruce Fretts opined that while it started as a "predictable" and "witty distillation of Romano’s stand-up act," it progressed into a "fascinatingly humane portrait of suburban dysfunction," specifically "the struggle of a grown man trying to separate from his parents and establish his own family." On Rotten Tomatoes, the season holds a 67% "Fresh" rating based on six professional reviews. Jeffrey Robinson, reviewing the season in 2004, wrote, "the plotlines are a little hollow and seem like every other sitcom, but it has a wonderful cast and some hilarious dialogue that really make this series a winner."
Both contemporaneous season reviews and retrospective pieces about the entire series spotlighted the Fruit of the Month Club sequence.
Ratings
When Everybody Loves Raymond first aired in September 1996, CBS' scheduling strategy was having series with bankable stars perform at times that usually garnered the most viewers. Shows such as the Bill Cosby-starring Cosby, the Ted Danson-starring Ink, and the Rhea Perlman-starring Pearl aired new episodes Monday night; this resulted in Everybody Loves Raymond, which starred an unknown Romano with only a first-time show-runner and a production company only associated with Letterman, being put in the Friday night death slot.During the fall 1996 season, Everybody Loves Raymond ached both in ratings and focus group test scores of episodes rated by 25 members at ASI Research in North Hollywood. With scores often being "average" or "below average," focus group members disliked the unlikeable characters, "thin" stories, lack of a contemporary tinge, and unclear categorization. Recalled test session conductor Lynne Gross, "The comment I remember occurring most often was that it was a one-joke show—nothing but a bunch of mother-in-law jokes."
The network tried to persuade Rosenthal to make the show more "hip" and "edgy," but Rosenthal refused.
According to CBS president Les Moonves, the low ratings concerned network executives: "If the show is as good as we think it is, why isn't it improving like a tenth of a rating point every week? Just show me a little tick--that it's heading in the right direction." Nonetheless, CBS had faith the show would be successful in the future; one episode that aired on November 29 gained 24% in ratings, and another special that aired on a Monday did far better than the other episodes." CBS vice president Kelly Kahl stated in a December 1996 interview, "it is outperforming what we had last year in that time period. This is a baby step forward, which is what CBS is aiming for." The New York Times suggested CBS didn't want to cancel to series because doing so would "offend" Letterman, who owned Worldwide Pants, one of the show's production companies; and Heaton explained the series' low budget motivated the network to keep at it.
Following the poor performances of what were suppose to be popular Monday night series, Everybody Loves Everyday was moved into in the Monday slot in March 1997, playing alongside Cosby. As a result, the series went up to a 12 ranking and doubled its average rating to 12.1, higher than Ink.