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Small Screen: Murphy Brown ready for new political battles

LOS ANGELES 鈥 The last episode of Murphy Brown that aired in 1998 was titled 鈥淣ever Can Say Goodbye.鈥 It sounded like nothing more than a sweet way for the CBS comedy to end its 10-year run, but turned out to be very prophetic.
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Candice Bergen, left, and Tyne Daly engage in a heated discussion on Murphy Brown. Political, social issues and the role of journalism will be central themes when the sitcom, starring Bergen as a skeptical TV reporter, returns Thursday a6 9:30 on CBS.

LOS ANGELES 鈥 The last episode of Murphy Brown that aired in 1998 was titled 鈥淣ever Can Say Goodbye.鈥 It sounded like nothing more than a sweet way for the CBS comedy to end its 10-year run, but turned out to be very prophetic. After an extended absence from television (that would be two decades), Murphy Brown returns Thursday with most of the original cast reprising their roles.

To put this return into a little bit of perspective, when Murphy Brown launched, Ronald Reagan was president.

Now, the 248th episode of Murphy Brown is ready to air. Brown (Candice Bergen) returns to the broadcast news world after a brief retirement to find things have change because it is a world of 鈥渇ake news,鈥 24-hour news cable channels and social media.

The gap between the end of the original run and the new launch was almost a decade shorter because interest in the show emerged when Sarah Palin was running with John McCain on the Republican ticket in 2008. There was talk of doing six episodes then but that never happened. Plus, series creator Diane English and Bergen were not 100 per cent certain they wanted to bring the series back because they felt they had already done their best work with the show.

A reawakening of Murphy Brown became a topic again last year but it took English nine months to write a script that she was certain would be a proper way to bring the series back. Members of the original cast 鈥 Faith Ford, Joe Regalbuto and Grant Shaud 鈥 contacted each other during the time English was writing in hopes of hearing any good news. They finally got the word the show was a go.

Bergen stresses that this isn鈥檛 just a trip down nostalgia lane.

鈥淭hey built Murphy鈥檚 townhouse on the soundstage in the studio in Queens, and we came onto the sound stage and saw Murphy鈥檚 townhouse for the first time, and we all got tears in our eyes. And Murphy was so important to all of us, and so to be back there, we鈥檙e just grateful,鈥 Bergen says.

鈥淐an I just say that the script of the first episode is so ambitious and so fearless? During the taping, I turned to Joe at one point, and I said, 鈥楾his show has no fear of anyone because we really stick our heads in the lion鈥檚 mouth,鈥 鈥 Bergen says.

That fearlessness is toward what Brown sees as a divided nation where the press is a constant target. She can鈥檛 sit quietly and let this unfold and recruits her 鈥淔YI鈥 team: lifestyle reporter Corky Sherwood, investigative journalist Frank Fontana and former news producer Miles Silverberg.

Murphy Brown always existed in the real world of politics even to the point of U.S. vice-president Dan Quayle condemning Brown for being a single mother. English promises the new episodes also will reflect the real world with the focus being how the First Amendment is under attack.

The original cast members have worked on other projects during the past 20 years but Ford鈥檚 heart has always been with Corky Sherwood. She鈥檚 excited to be able to slip back into the role that now has her a little older, less married and a lot happier.

鈥淐orky has been through some stuff and we will find that out as we go along,鈥 Ford says. 鈥淚 slipped back into the character the first time we read the script. The spirit of Corky never left me, obviously. By the time we started shooting with the audience, she really came out.

鈥淭he fact she has been through some hard knocks gives me some more subtext to play with her.鈥

The big change is the casting of Jake McDorman to play Brown鈥檚 son, Avery. In the original series, Dyllan Christopher and Haley Joel Osment portrayed the character. The grown up Avery is just as quick to share his views but he does it as the liberal voice on a conservative-leaning network. That doesn鈥檛 stop the old 鈥淔YI鈥 team from continuing to act as a surrogate family for Avery.

McDorman says, 鈥淔or him to kind of maintain his kind of ethos on a network where he鈥檚 the liberal voice is going to be is really interesting to play.鈥