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{{short description|Fictional character in the series Cheers}} {{Use American English|date=October 2013}} {{Use mdy dates|date=October 2013}} {{Use mdy dates|date=May 2012}} {{Infobox character | name = Rebecca Howe | series = [[Cheers]] | image = Rebecca Howe in Cheers episode Don't Paint Your Chickens.png | caption = Rebecca exclaiming, "I'm Doin' It, Babe!", in "Don't Paint Your Chickens" (season 7, episode 15) | alt = A brunette woman in a blue dress using both of her index fingers to point toward her view and wide away from each other. | first = "[[Home Is the Sailor (Cheers)|Home is the Sailor]]" <br>(season 6, episode 1) | last = "[[One for the Road (Cheers)|One for the Road]]" <br>(season 11, episode 25) | creator = [[Glen and Les Charles]] | portrayer = [[Kirstie Alley]] | gender = Female | occupation = Bar manager and [[waitress]] | spouse = [[List of Cheers characters#Don Santry|Don Santry]] (ex-husband) | family = [[List of Cheers characters#Captain Franklin Howe|Captain Franklin Howe]] (father)<br>[[List of Cheers characters#Susan Howe|Susan Howe]] (sister)<br>Rebecca (aunt) }} '''Rebecca Howe''' is a fictional character of the American television sitcom ''[[Cheers]]'', portrayed by [[Kirstie Alley]] and created by [[Glen and Les Charles]]. Rebecca appeared in 147 episodes of ''Cheers'' between 1987 and 1993 and in one episode of ''[[Wings (NBC TV series)|Wings]]''. She debuts in the season six episode "[[Home Is the Sailor (Cheers)|Home Is the Sailor]]" after [[Shelley Long]]—who played waitress [[Diane Chambers]]—left the show to pursue a movie career. Much of the show's humor in previous seasons had been based around the interaction and sexual tension between the womanizing, working-class main character, bartender [[Sam Malone]], and the high-class, snobbish Diane. Rebecca was intended to fill the gap as Sam's new female foil.<ref>{{cite news|title= One Last Round as 'Cheers' Finale Is Taped|work= The New York Times|date=April 2, 1993|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1993/04/02/news/one-last-round-as-cheers-finale-is-taped.html?scp=7&sq=Rebecca%20Howe%20kirstie%20alley&st=cse|access-date=August 17, 2010 | first=Robert | last=Reinhold}}</ref> After Sam sells the bar to a corporation, the audience learns Rebecca is the new manager of Cheers. She spars with Sam and frequently rejects his advances. She gradually becomes neurotic and falls in love with almost every rich man in [[Boston]]. With the exception of the late [[Nicholas Colasanto]], Alley was the only ''Cheers'' regular cast member who never reprised her role in the spin-off series ''[[Frasier]]'', even when her character Rebecca is briefly mentioned in the episode, "[[The Show Where Sam Shows Up]]".<!-- do not add additional details about Alley's refusal to appear in FRASIER without reliable sources--> For her performance as Rebecca, Alley won a [[Golden Globe Award]] in 1991 as the [[Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy|Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical Series]] and an [[Emmy Award]] in 1991 as an [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series|Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series]]. ==Role== Rebecca Howe is first seen at ''Cheers'' as the manager assigned by the bar's new corporate franchise owner, the Lillian Corporation. Elements of her back story are revealed over several years. She was born in [[San Diego]], one of four children. Rebecca's father ([[Robert Prosky]]) is an ex-Navy man and her mother was a concert cellist. Rebecca's sister Susan ([[Marcia Cross]]) is an actress and former Miss San Diego who has stolen her past boyfriends. Revealed in "The Last Angry Mailman" (1987), Rebecca was nicknamed "Backseat Becky" for her behavior as a party girl while at the [[University of Connecticut]]. In her early appearances, Rebecca appears as a confident, cool and collected businesswoman. Her behavior slowly becomes neurotic as the series progresses and her competent and driven façade crumbles away entirely by the series' end. ===Storylines=== {{quote box|width=20em|align=left|1=We thought of the part as a martinet, a bitch. Then we met [Alley] and there was this vulnerability, so we made her the neurotic woman of the [1980s].<ref>{{cite journal|first=J.D.|last=Reed|date=October 29, 1990|journal=[[People (magazine)|People]]|url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20113460,00.html|title=The Tears Behind the Cheers}}</ref>|2=— James Burrows|salign=right}} When she first meets bartender and ladies' man Sam Malone (Ted Danson), Rebecca's reaction to him is negative. Sam often tries to seduce her; in her first couple (or few) years at Cheers she always rejects his advances.<ref name=craig15>Craig 1993, p. 15</ref> In the [[Cheers (season 6)|sixth season]] (her debut season), Rebecca has a crush on her boss, Evan Drake ([[Tom Skerritt]]). Throughout the season she tries unsuccessfully to make Evan notice her until, toward the end of the season, Evan departs for Japan and is found to have a lover, so Rebecca is forced to let him go. In the [[Cheers (season 7)|seventh season]], after Evan's departure, his replacement fires Rebecca and promotes Sam to manager. Rebecca does occasional waitressing and eventually gets her job back. In the [[Cheers (season 8)|eighth season]], she dates millionaire [[Robin Colcord]] ([[Roger Rees]]), but Sam discovers that he intends to secretly retrieve information from Rebecca's computer to facilitate a corporate takeover, leading to their breakup. Rebecca finally falls for Sam after he saves her from Robin's scheme, and after three years of suppressed attraction the two have sex in the Cheers office, leaving it wrecked. Rebecca later confessed to Sam it was one of the most powerful moments in her life. However, the affair is short-lived because Sam becomes complacent about it. In the [[Cheers (season 9)|ninth season]], Robin—now a wanted [[white-collar crime|white-collar criminal]]—surrenders himself to the police and confesses his love for Rebecca. Meanwhile, Sam recovers his ownership of the bar just after the Lillian Corporation fires Rebecca. Sam rehires her as manager. Robin proposes matrimony to Rebecca after he is released from jail, and she accepts. In "The Days of Wine and Neuroses" (1991), Rebecca becomes drunk and confesses that she is questioning her feelings for Robin now that he has lost much of his fortune. In the following episode "Wedding Bell Blues" (1991), Rebecca jilts Robin at their wedding and tells him, "I only loved you for your money!" Robin leaves her, retrieving a stash of $6 million hidden in the bar office under Rebecca's desk. Later in the season, Rebecca decides to buy Cheers for herself after John Allen Hill becomes the new owner of the restaurant upstairs. John also owns the bar's back room. Using money from her father, Rebecca helps Sam buy the back room of Cheers, and the two co-own the bar. During the first half of the [[Cheers (season 10)|tenth season]], Sam and Rebecca try to conceive a child, but they realize they have no feelings for each other and then decide to stay friends (the arc was originally to write in Alley's pregnancy, but was scrapped when she unfortunately miscarried). Towards the end of the show, Rebecca does little work, often mentioned by [[Carla Tortelli]] ([[Rhea Perlman]]). In the [[Cheers (season 11)|eleventh and final season]], Rebecca's cigarette causes an enormous fire at Cheers, and she remorsefully uses her life savings to repair the bar. In "Look Before You Sleep" (1993), she is revealed to be the [[building superintendent]] of her apartment complex. In the penultimate episode "The Guy Can't Help It" (1993), Rebecca initially rejects the advances of plumber Don Santry ([[Tom Berenger]]), but Frasier orders her to give Don another chance. For weeks Rebecca and Don date each other. Sam tries to convince her that she is making a big mistake with Don. In the [[One for the Road (Cheers)|series finale]], she marries Don and resigns from Cheers to devote more time to her husband and to start a family. At first she regrets the marriage, but when Don later works for the Boston sewer department, she becomes happier with it. Alley appeared as Rebecca briefly in a fourth-season episode of ''[[Wings (1990 TV series)#Cheers tie-ins|Wings]]'' titled "I Love Brian". In the episode of the ''Cheers'' spin-off series ''[[Frasier]]'' called "[[The Show Where Sam Shows Up]]", Sam visits Frasier and tells him that Don left Rebecca after he made a fortune on a plumbing-related invention, and Rebecca was "back at the bar". When Frasier asks whether Sam means she is working at Cheers again, Sam replies, "No, she's just back at the bar." Alley opted not to appear on an episode of ''Frasier'' due to the sitcom being centered on two psychiatrists, which conflicted with her Scientology beliefs.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://screenrant.com/frasier-cheers-rebecca-kirstie-alley-no-return-scientology-reason/|title= Frasier: Why Kirstie Alley's Cheers Character Rebecca Didn't Appear|first=Ana|last=Dumaraog|publisher=Screen Rant|date=September 15, 2020|accessdate=December 5, 2022}}</ref> == Creation and casting == [[File:KirstieAlley1994.jpg|right|upright|thumb|Kirstie Alley debuted as Rebecca Howe in 1987 after Shelley Long left the show as Diane Chambers.]] When Shelley Long decided to leave the show in 1987, ending the five-year [[Sam and Diane]] storyline, the creators wanted a new female lead and decided that she would not have blonde hair, would not resemble Long, and would be unknown to television viewers.<ref name="Long departed">"[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ilkiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=VKgFAAAAIBAJ&dq=sam%20diane%20cheers&pg=6797%2C3514391 Serve it yourself, Sam: Diane on her way out from Cheers]." ''[[The Gazette (Montreal)|The Gazette]]'' [Montreal] December 17, 1986. ''Google News''. Web. January 27, 2012.</ref> Kirstie Alley, one of the first actresses to audition for the role of Rebecca Howe, was championed by casting director Jeff Greenberg and seemed to be the ideal choice.<ref name="UCTV"/> Other actresses who auditioned for Rebecca included [[Sharon Stone]], [[Marg Helgenberger]], and [[Kim Cattrall]].<ref name="UCTV">{{cite video| url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0u3ZezDvv4U |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/0u3ZezDvv4U |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live| title=The 30th Anniversary of Cheers| author=University of California Television (UCTV)| publisher=YouTube.com| date=2014-01-13| access-date=2020-06-09}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Although Alley met all the criteria, the producers continued auditioning actresses for the part but none improved on Alley's portrayal of the character.<ref name="Harmetz 1C">Harmetz, Alijean (September 23, 1987). "[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=g79OAAAAIBAJ&sjid=7PsDAAAAIBAJ&dq=sam%20diane%20cheers&pg=1701%2C3967090 Changes on tap at 'Cheers']". ''[[The Ledger]]'' (Lakeland, FL): p. 1C+.</ref><ref name="gqraftery201210">{{cite news | url=https://www.gq.com/entertainment/movies-and-tv/201210/cheers-oral-history-extended?printable=true | title=The Best TV Show That's Ever Been | work=GQ | date=October 2012 | access-date=September 27, 2012 | author=Raftery, Brian}}</ref> The main reservation on the part of the network and producers was whether Alley would be funny enough to play the role, since she had a dramatic acting background rather than one in comedy.<ref>{{Cite news| url=https://ew.com/tv/2017/05/24/modern-family-casting-director-jeff-greenberg-brad-pitt/| title=Brad Pitt auditioned for Cheers and Other Tales from a Casting Director| author=Dan Snlerson| publisher=Entertainment Weekly| date=2017-05-24| access-date=2020-06-10}}</ref> Greenberg continued to advocate for her, and the Charles brothers were able to watch a clip from a comedy Alley had just completed, ''[[Summer School (1987 film)|Summer School]]'', and consult the director [[Carl Reiner]], to judge Alley's comic skills. Reiner praised Alley and assured Glen and Les Charles that she was the right choice.<ref name="UCTV"/> According to ''Cheers''{{'}} co-creator and executive producer [[James Burrows]], Diane Chambers, Rebecca Howe's predecessor, was conceived as an executive businesswoman.<ref name="Dusty Saunders 1987">Saunders, Dusty. "[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=wfJJAAAAIBAJ&sjid=6YQMAAAAIBAJ&pg=1028%2C6034731 Many changes in store for `Cheers']." ''[[The Vindicator]]'' [Youngstown, OH] July 31, 1987, Mahoning Columbiana ed: 12. ''Google News''. Web. January 30, 2012.</ref> Eventually, Diane evolved into a pretentious, college-educated waitress. After Long's departure, the producers created Rebecca Howe as the businesswoman.<ref name="Cheers toast Howe">"[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=TOZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=gOEDAAAAIBAJ&dq=sam%20diane%20cheers&pg=5563%2C1118776 Crowd at `Cheers' toasts new season with new boss]." ''[[The Register-Guard]]'' [Eugene, OR], ''TV Week'': 13. ''Google News''. Web. January 27, 2012.</ref><ref name="Kathryn Baker">Baker, Kathryn. "[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=1LIjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=TyUEAAAAIBAJ&dq=sam%20diane%20cheers&pg=5187%2C718316 Long's departure has `Cheers' cast on edge]." ''[[Times-News (Hendersonville, North Carolina)|Times-News [Hendersonville, NC]]]'' September 5, 1987. ''Google News''. Web. January 27, 2012.</ref> Despite concerns about losing Long, ratings rose after Alley's debut.{{r|gqraftery201210}} Rebecca began as a martinet and a "smart, tough businesswoman". However, the writers were not thrilled with the character and did not find her funny. Writer [[Ken Levine (screenwriter)|Ken Levine]] said, "In one episode though, she had to fall apart for some reason and was hysterical. We realized that the more neurotic, insecure, and sexually frustrated she was—the funnier she was. So the character evolved in that direction."<ref>{{cite web|date=July 8, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130121110517/http://kenlevine.blogspot.com/2011/07/my-favorite-kirstie-alley-scene.html|author=Levine, Ken|url=http://kenlevine.blogspot.com/2011/07/my-favorite-kirstie-alley-scene.html|archive-date=January 21, 2013|url-status=live|access-date=July 21, 2012|work=...by Ken Levine|author-link=Ken Levine (TV personality)|title=My favorite Kirstie Alley scene}}</ref> {{blockquote|1=Rebecca has made a lot of mistakes in the corporate structure. She's going to be fired by the corporation, unless she handles Sam's bar correctly. She's not a ditz, but she has a neurotic side. She's volatile and eccentric, so when she loses it emotionally, she really loses it. She's either strong and in control or way out there.<ref name=sanello1987>Sanello, Frank. "[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FYIyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=y-YFAAAAIBAJ&dq=cheers%20kirstie-alley&pg=5435%2C4304352 Cover Story: Kirstie Alley]." ''[[Lawrence Journal-World]] TV Update'' [Lawrence, KS] 19 September 1987: 3. ''[[Google News]]''. Web. 8 May 2012.</ref>|2=Kirstie Alley|3=''Lawrence Journal-World'', 1987}} ==Reception== ===Popularity=== According to a telephone survey of 1,011 people by the Times Mirror Center for the People and the Press (now [[Pew Research Center]]) conducted on April 1–4, 1993, Sam Malone was a favorite of 26% and Rebecca was a favorite by 6%. Twenty-one percent said Sam should marry Diane Chambers, 19% said he should marry Rebecca, 48% wanted him to stay single, and 12% had "no opinion" on this matter.<ref name="Gazette survey">Mills, Kim I. "TV viewers glad Sam stayed single." ''[[The Daily Gazette|The Sunday Gazette]]'' [Schenectady, NY] May 2, 1993: A3. ''Google News''. Web. January 21, 2012 [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=UpYxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RuEFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1185%2C331083]. The margin of error in the survey was ±3, according to the polls. In this web source, scroll down to see its headline.</ref><ref name="Morning Call survey">Leefler, Pete. "Show Piles Up Viewer Cheers." ''[[The Morning Call]]'' [Allentown, NY] May 2, 1993: A01. Web. January 17, 2012. [https://web.archive.org/web/20120724214649/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/mcall/access/92139221.html?dids=92139221:92139221&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT]. {{subscription required}}</ref> When asked which character should be spun off, 15% voted for Sam, 12% voted for [[Woody Boyd]] ([[Woody Harrelson]]), 10% voted for [[Norm Peterson]] ([[George Wendt]]), and 29% voted no spin-offs.<ref name="Morning Call survey"/> 2% of those questioned said [[Frasier Crane]] ([[Kelsey Grammer]]){{mdash}}whose own spin-off ''Frasier'' debuted in September 1993{{mdash}}should have his own show.<ref>"Mixed Reaction to Post-Seinfeld Era." ''Pew Research Center for the People & the Press''. ''[[Pew Research Center]]'' May 10, 1998. Web. February 10, 2012 [http://www.people-press.org/1998/05/10/mixed-reaction-to-post-seinfeld-era/]</ref> According to a 1993 article from ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'' magazine, newspaper columnist [[Mike Royko]] chose Diane to marry Sam, novelist [[Jackie Collins]] picked Rebecca, actress [[Zsa Zsa Gabor]] chose both as Sam's potential partners. Tennis player [[Martina Navratilova]] found Sam too good for either of them. Novelist and archaeologist [[Clive Cussler]] said [[Carla Tortelli]] ([[Rhea Perlman]]) was "Sam's best bet."<ref>{{cite web |last=Lipton |first=Michael A. |title=Lights Out at Sam's Place |work=[[People (magazine)|People]] |date=May 24, 1993 |url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20110481,00.html}}</ref> === Critical reaction === A syndicated television columnist from Chicago in 1989 said that in her second season on the show, Rebecca was "nothing more than an annoying presence on a program otherwise populated with lovable wackos".<ref>{{cite news|title=Kirstie Alley May Lose ''Cheers'' Lead to 'Another Woman'|page=21|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gtBRAAAAIBAJ&pg=6971%2C7023079|newspaper=[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]|date=March 23, 1989|access-date=July 17, 2012}} First name of author is Gary, but surname is illegible in this online edition.</ref> Bill Carter of ''[[The New York Times]]'' in April 1990 said Rebecca was "hard-on-the-outside-mush-on-the-inside".<ref>{{cite news|title= TELEVISION; The Tonic That Keeps 'Cheers' Bubbling Along|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=April 29, 1990|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1990/04/29/arts/television-the-tonic-that-keeps-cheers-bubbling-along.html?pagewanted=print&src=pm|access-date=August 16, 2010 | first=Bill | last=Carter}}</ref> J.D. Reed of ''People'' magazine in October 1990 called her a "neurotic overachiever".<ref>{{cite journal|title=The Tears Behind the Cheers|issue=17|url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20113460,00.html|volume=34|date=October 29, 1990|access-date=July 26, 2012|author=Reed, J.D.|journal=[[People (magazine)|People]]}}</ref> Rick Marin of ''[[The Washington Times]]'' in November 1990 praised Kirstie Alley for bringing life into Rebecca Howe and making Rebecca a sympathetic "loser" who is full of ideals but lacks success, and her bringing more [[physical comedy]] than Shelley Long did.<ref name=marin-rick>{{cite news|at=page 1, section E (Life)|author=Marin, Rick|newspaper=The Washington Times|date=November 8, 1990|location=Washington, D.C.|title='Cheers' Celebrates 200 Epsidoes: Why Kirstie Alley is better than Shelley Long}} Record no. at ''[[NewsBank]]'': R0073388 {{registration required}}.</ref> Steve Craig from the [[University of North Texas]] in 1993 considered Rebecca a parody of [[femininity]] for rejecting Sam's advances and attempting to marry a tycoon.<ref name=craig15/> Columnist Faye Zuckerman in 1991 praised Rebecca's "broad range of talents" as a character.<ref>{{cite news|first=Faye|last=Zuckerman|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SmIfAAAAIBAJ&dq=shelley-long%20cheers&pg=3773%2C992790|page=C2|date=May 9, 1991|title=''Cheers'' repeats 200th episode|work=[[Gadsden Times]]}}</ref> [[Bill Simmons]], who wrote for [[ESPN]] in 2002, considered her one of his two least favorite characters, along with [[Lilith Sternin]].<ref name=simmons>{{cite news|url=https://proxy.espn.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/020221|archive-date=December 10, 2008|date=February 21, 2002|author=Simmons, Bill|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081210085522/http://proxy.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons%2F020221|title=Page 2: Dear Sports Guy...|work=[[ESPN]]|access-date=June 20, 2012|url-status=live|df=mdy-all}}</ref> In 2006, Lance Mannion in his ''Typepad'' blog said Rebecca wanted to be "part of a world the gang at Cheers could never join. To be part of the gang, she would have to give up her too high opinion of herself, just as Diane had to." Mannion praised Kirstie Alley for physical comedy and her comical scenes with Ted Danson in the series.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lancemannion.typepad.com/lance_mannion/2006/06/shelley_what_we.html|date=June 21, 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130817195224/http://lancemannion.typepad.com/lance_mannion/2006/06/shelley_what_we.html|url-status=live|archive-date=August 17, 2013|first=Lance|last=Mannion|title=Shelley, what were you thinking?|work=Typepad.com|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Josh Robertson of ''Complex'' website in 2013 included Rebecca and Sam at number 13 on his list of "The 25 Most Sexual Sitcom Couples of All", said Rebecca "may not have been as good for the comedy on ''Cheers'', but she was way more attractive than Diane".<ref>{{cite news|title=The 25 Most Sexual Sitcom Couples of All Time|url=http://www.complex.com/pop-culture/2013/04/the-25-most-sexual-sitcom-couples-of-all-time/sam-malone-and-rebecca-howe-on-cheers|date=April 16, 2013|work=Complex|first=Josh|last=Robertson}}</ref> ''[[Screen Rant]]'' critic Simone Torn in 2019 wrote that Rebecca's transformation from "a smart, goal-oriented businesswoman" to "a poorly-written woman who only cared about frivolous matters" has been one of "[ten] things from ''Cheers'' that have not aged well." Torn further wrote that Rebecca "became a gold-digger and an active complainer who was more cartoonish in nature[.]"<ref>{{cite web |first=Simone |last=Torn |date=August 20, 2019 |title=10 Things From Cheers That Have Not Aged Well |url=https://screenrant.com/cheers-not-aged-well/amp/ |website=Screen Rant |access-date=August 20, 2019 }}</ref> This role earned Kirstie Alley a [[Golden Globe Award]] in [[48th Golden Globe Awards|1991]] as [[Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy|the Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical Series]].<ref>{{cite news|title=''Dances with Wolves'' shuts out gangster movies at Golden Globes|access-date=July 31, 2012|date=January 21, 1991|page=22|agency=[[The Associated Press]]|newspaper=[[Bangor Daily News]]|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=NK1JAAAAIBAJ&pg=2236%2C1859045|location=[[Bangor, Maine|Bangor]], [[Maine]]}}</ref> It also earned her an [[Primetime Emmy Award|Emmy Award]] in [[43rd Primetime Emmy Awards|1991]] as an [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series|Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series]].<ref>{{cite book|page=462|chapter=Appendix: Emmy Nominations and Awards|author=Bjorklund, Dennis A|edition=e-Book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pEN6sTeG20AC|title=Cheers TV Show: A Comprehensive Reference|date=September 2014|publisher=Praetorian Publishing|isbn=9780967985237}}</ref> == Notes == {{Reflist}} === References === * Craig, Steve. "[https://web.archive.org/web/20070625104942/http://www.rtvf.unt.edu/html/craig/pdfs/gender.PDF Selling Masculinities, Selling Femininities: Multiple Genders and the Economics of Television]." ''The Mid-Atlantic Almanack'' 2 (1993): 15–27. ''[[Internet Archive]] Wayback Machine''. 1–21. Web. January 14, 2011. * Harmetz, Alijean. "Changes on tap at `Cheers'." ''[[The Ledger]]'' [Lakeland, FL] September 23, 1987: 1C+. ''Google News''. Web. January 27, 2012. [https://www.nytimes.com/1987/09/20/arts/television-can-kirstie-alley-keep-the-cheers-bar-open.html Original ''The New York Times'' article] == External links == * {{cite news|title= TELEVISION; But Wait, There's Some Life Yet in the 'Cheers' Gang|work= The New York Times|date=December 20, 1992|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1992/12/20/arts/television-but-wait-there-s-some-life-yet-in-the-cheers-gang.html?scp=4&sq=Rebecca%20Howe%20kirstie%20alley&st=cse|access-date=August 17, 2010 | first=Anita | last=Gates}} {{Cheers}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Howe, Rebecca}} [[Category:Television characters introduced in 1987]] [[Category:Cheers characters]] [[Category:Fictional characters from San Diego]] [[Category:Fictional waiting staff]] [[Category:Fictional businesspeople]] [[Category:American female characters in sitcoms]]
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