Patricia Heaton joked she wants to know “where’s my reboot?” because of Hollywood’s latest TV trend — but confessed an Everybody Loves Raymond or The Middle revival would be a hard pass on her end.
“Why didn’t I ever get on a show that could be rebooted?” Heaton, 66, playfully asked during an interview with Yahoo! Entertainment published Tuesday, February 18. “Because it seems like everybody [else is].”
While Heaton teased that she felt left out, she revealed she has no real desire to reboot Everybody Loves Raymond, which originally aired from 1996 to 2005.
“It was just sort of perfection — and you don’t wanna mess with perfection,” Heaton, who portrayed Ray Romano‘s TV wife, Deborah Barone, on the comedy all nine seasons, explained.
While much of the younger cast, including Romano, who played Raymond Barone, are still acting, Heaton noted the older stars aren’t still with them.
“You know, we’ve lost so many cast members, you couldn’t reboot it because it won’t be the same show,” she said.
The 90s sitcom was based on the comedy of Romano and followed Ray and Deborah’s life as the parents of three kids. Ray’s dad, Frank (the late Peter Boyle), and mom, Marie (the late Doris Roberts), lived next door and had no issue butting into their daily lives — and neither did Ray’s older brother, Robert (Brad Garrett).
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Doris Roberts, Patricia Heaton, and Ray Romano in ‘Everybody Loves Raymond.’ CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection
Romano previously told Yahoo! Entertainment that he didn’t like the idea of reviving Everybody Loves Raymond either, saying he was “a little protective” of the series.
“Just because it was very personal to me,” he explained in December 2024. “I mean, it was based on my life, and I was such a part of the creative side of it and all.”
Heaton might not want to film another version of Everybody Loves Raymond, but that doesn’t mean she doesn’t think about the show often.
“It was so much fun because almost everybody [on the cast] was having kids. Ray had kids while we were on the show. And I did, Brad Garrett did, Monica Horan did, Johnni Macke Philip Rosenthal [as well]. So it was a crazy busy place,” the actress exclusively told Us Weekly on Wednesday, February 19, while attending the New York premiere of The Unbreakable Boy.
She recalled the sitcom being “so much fun” to do. “The scripts were so good and Phil created a really wonderful atmosphere,” Heaton gushed. “He’s a big foodie, as you know. So the food was always great. We had a great time.”
Heaton joked, “I did not have to do any research or acting. I was furious at my own husband that entire time, so I channeled my anger and got paid to express it on TV.”
Since her time on Everybody Loves Raymond, Heaton has been on several TV series. The Middle, which ran on ABC from 2009 to 2018, is probably her second-biggest role of her career. Despite its success, Heaton told the outlet on Tuesday that she has “the same” feelings about rebooting it.
Heaton called the show “perfection,” especially because of how they “wrapped it up.”
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Neil Flynn, Patricia Heaton, Charlie McDermott, Eden Sher, and Atticus Shaffer in ‘The Middle.’ Richard Foreman/ABC/Courtesy Everett Collection
“We got to flash-forward in the lives of the Heck family and see where they all ended up, it was so beautiful, and I think people have such a good feeling about the show,” she recalled.
Heaton portrayed the matriarch, Frankie Heck, for all nine seasons. The comedy followed the daily mishaps of the hot mess Heck family — which also includes dad Mike (Neil Flynn), sons Axl (Charlie McDermott) and Brick (Atticus Shaffer) and daughter Sue (Eden Sher) — as they lived in the small town of Orson, Indiana.
While Heaton doesn’t want to mess with a good thing, she noted that The Middle has had a “resurgence on TikTok” where kids are “rediscovering or discovering it for the first time,” calling it “a beautiful thing.”
Heaton concluded, “It’s like a great work of art — you don’t need to go in there and touch it up or change it or do anything to it. Just let it be what it is. And the wonderful thing about TV and about streaming [is] you’ll be able to enjoy it as much as you want.”
Heaton exclusively told Us on Wednesday that while she’s put Everybody Loves Raymond and The Middle in her rearview mirror, she’s not done with sitcoms. “I’m developing — trying to develop some other ensemble comedies for myself,” she revealed.
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