“Everybody Loves Raymond” Producer Tom Caltabiano Says Ray Romano was ‘Tortured’ by the Show’s Name

"Everybody Loves Raymond" Producer Tom Caltabiano Says Ray Romano was 'Tortured' by the Show's Name

Roy Rochlin/Getty (2) Everybody Loves Raymondproducer Tom Caltabiano revealed that star Ray Romano initially didn't like the show's name He said Romano was "modest" and also thought the title could make the series an easy target for critics Caltabiano added that Romano so disliked the name that he called David Letterman and the president of CBS in an effort to get it changed before the show's 1996 premiere date Everybody Loves Raymondwriter and producer Tom Caltabiano revealed thatRay Romano, the series' star, was "tortured" by the name of the show. While speaking to theNew York Postat an event dedicated to the series at the Paley Center in New York City on June 16, Caltabiano explained why Romano was not initially a fan of the title. "Because Ray in real life is a modest guy, and he's like, 'Everybody loves Ray, what if the show stinks?' " Caltabiano said, recalling that Romano thought it could make the series an easy target for critics. "Thank God it was a hit," Caltabiano continued. "He had to make it a hit just to overcome that title!" The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Robert Voets/CBS The producer went on to say that Romano, 67, so intensely disliked the name of the show that he made multiple calls to high-profile people in the industry in an attempt to get it changed before the premiere in 1996. "He called[David] Letterman, and he called the president of CBS and said, 'Please, can we change the show name?' " he remembered. "So the president said, 'Look, if it's a hit, we'll change it.' And then it became a hit and the president says, 'Well, we can't change it now!' " Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. But were there any alternate options? An immersive Paley Center exhibit — "30 Years ofEverybody Loves Raymond: A Behind-the-Scenes Tribute" open until Sept. 7 — has a glass display case featuring possible alternate show titles scribbled by Romano. Some of the alternatives included, "Guy Named Ray," "Regarding Raymond" and "Ray." The series, which ran from 1996 to 2005, was both a critical and audience success. While speaking exclusively to PEOPLE at the Paley Center event, Romano said that he didn't expect to be on a long-running television series and had even started to think his career had peaked by the time he was offered the opportunity to develop one. "I wasa working standup comicbefore the show, and I was making a living doing standup — and let me just say this — I love doing standup. I'm passionate about it. I still am. I had three kids at the time, and there was a time where I thought if there's another level, maybe it'll happen now," he explains. Roy Rochlin/Getty Romano adds, "It was 11 years into my standup career, and it wasn't really happening, and then I was accepting, you know, that's okay. I'm doing what I love to do. And then I did a David Letterman spot, and when I did my standup on Letterman, they signed me to a deal to develop a show." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! "And here we are, and it changed my life," he says. "It changed my family's life, you know, I've made such great friends. It changed my career." In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE, Caltabiano shared what he would have done differently withEverybody Loves Raymondlooking back now. "I wish we did 10 more years," Caltabiano says. Read the original article onPeople

 

ONEEL MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com