ABC greenlit a half-dozen new series on Friday, bringing the network's total of newcomers for the 2009-10 TV season to eight.
Make the jump to see what, in addition to the previously ordered comedy Modern Family and the action-drama Flash Forward, is new to ABC's schedule.
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Frasier and Back to You alum Kelsey Grammer is coming back to TV.
The five-time Emmy winner has signed on to headline a sitcom for ABC, Variety reports. To be shot multi-camera, the as-yet-untitled series will center around Grammer's corporate executive who ...
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Fame is looking good the second time around for Kelsey Grammer, Megan Mullally and Debbie Allen.
The trio, along with Bebe Neuwirth and Charles S. Dutton, has been tapped to star in the remake of the 1980 classic as ...
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After a week in a New York hospital, five-time Emmy winner Kelsey Grammer is happy to be going home. The actor's publicist, Stan Rosenfield, on Tuesday morning told TVGuide.com, "Kelsey Grammer is out of the hospital, feeling great and about to resume normal activities at home."Grammer, who in June suffered a minor heart attack, was again hospitalized last week upon feeling faint in the midst of the Swing Vote promotional tour. It was speculated that his new heart medication may have been to blame.TVGuide.com shared with Grammer the well-wishes of our readers, posted to this blog throughout his hospitalizations. "He and his wife Camille want to thank everyone who expressed concern," says Rosenfield. "They appreciated the kind words." Matt Mitovich
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As well-wishes and support from fans and costars such as Swing Vote's Kevin Costner pour in, Kelsey Grammer continues to recover from the faintness which landed him back in the hospital several weeks after he suffered a mild heart attack. "Kelsey is just fine," his publicist, Stan Rosenfield, tells TVGuide.com. That said, Grammer's camp has decided to curtail further detailed updates, and instead let the next big news be the good word that the beloved TV vet is well enough to return home. "We will let you know when he leaves the hospital," says Rosenfield.Grammer was promoting Swing Vote in New York when he felt faint and was taken to the hospital as a precaution/for observation. By some accounts, his heart medication could have been to blame. — Matt Mitovich
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