How old is niles from frasier
Charles, Prince of Wales was born November 14, , but this was before Elizabeth ascended the throne. Alternatively, a third "Queen Elizabeth" might have been intended, or the joke from "Back Talk" was simply historically inaccurate. In the episode "The Late Dr. Crane" a local Seattle news station incorrectly reports that Frasier died of a heart attack. Frasier's picture is shown on the screen with the dates In the episode "Are You Being Served? In the same episode, a second birthday contradiction appears: His mother's journal indicates that as of April, she was pregnant with Frasier, making a March birthday impossible.
Frasier has one younger brother, Niles David Hyde Pierce , who, like Frasier, was also named after one of his deceased mother's lab rats.
The episode "Party, Party" suggests a May birthday. In a trailer made for the British television network Channel Four, Frasier says that he was born on the 4th day of the 4th month. Improve this answer. I found the source for Niles' age. Episode 3. Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Version labels for answers.
She appeared only as a guest star. John Mahoney and Peri Gilpin appeared as unrelated characters on Cheers during that show's final season.
In addition, Peri Gilpin appeared on an episode of Wings , which is set in the Cheers and Frasier universe. Each season of the show can be distinguished by the color of "Frasier" in the opening title frame. George Wendt suggested he reprise his role from Cheers by doing an episode in which his character Norm, along with John Ratzenberger as Cliff, made a series of prank calls to Frasier's Kelsey Grammer radio show.
Ultimately, Norm and Cliff appeared on this show together under a different scenario during season nine. All seasons, except for season four, contained twenty-four episodes. The "missing" episode in season four was due to a production interruption after Kelsey Grammer Frasier had an automobile accident, and subsequently checked himself into the Betty Ford clinic. In an episode of Cheers , Frasier tells the gang that his father was a research scientist and has passed away.
When Ted Danson guest-starred on the show in as Sam Malone, the continuity error was explained away by having Frasier admit that he made up the story because "We'd had a fight and I was mad at him. Kelsey Grammer was asked to shave the beard he had grown during the final season of Cheers , because the producers felt he wouldn't look young enough to be John Mahoney 's Martin Crane's son. The show was originally written with Frasier as an only child references had already been made to this in Cheers , but one of the producers saw a headshot of David Hyde Pierce and commented that he looked exactly like Kelsey Grammer did when he first started to appear on Cheers Presumably as a nod to this, in season two, episode sixteen, "The Show Where Sam Shows Up", one of the first things Sam Malone says when he first meets Niles is how Niles looks exactly like Frasier did when he first knew him back in Boston.
Moose the dog played Eddie until he retired at the age of ten at the end of season seven. His son, Enzo took over the role. Moose had been bred with the idea of achieving a look-alike replacement when it became obvious that this show would have a long run. Enzo had two siblings, a sister named Miko, who was too small to play Eddie, and Moosie, who had noticeably different markings.
Peri Gilpin Roz ended up adopting Moosie. David Hyde Pierce 's streak was unbroken. As of , Kelsey Grammer played Frasier Crane for twenty years. This is one of the longest periods that an actor or actress has played the same character on American prime time non-soap opera television.
Fellow record holders include James Arness of Gunsmoke , who also played Marshal Matt Dillon for twenty years straight. The producers made certain there were no stools in the coffee shop to purposefully distance it visually from the Cheers bar.
The K is a prefix for almost all U. The show's creators originally envisioned Daphne as a Latina, similar to Rosie Perez. Kelsey Grammer Frasier was originally disappointed, because he felt that having an English housekeeper would make the show similar to Nanny and the Professor But he changed his mind after a meeting with Leeves.
David Hyde Pierce trained as a classical pianist for years before becoming an actor; thus, whenever Niles is shown playing the piano, it's usually Pierce's own playing that is heard.
Contrast Kelsey Grammer , who mimes to a professional recording when Frasier plays the piano. The original premise for the series was to revolve around Frasier Kelsey Grammer and his co-workers at the radio station. While thinking of new ideas, David Lee was arranging for health care for his elderly father, who had had a stroke, and he came up with a premise based on that. Lee was also inspired by the vast personality differences between him and his father. Bulldog was portrayed as a womanizer on the series, though Dan Butler , who played Bulldog, is gay.
When Frasier Kelsey Grammer violates his code of ethics, his stomach turns. When Niles David Hyde Pierce violates his code of ethics, his nose bleeds. The one hundredth episode of this show is the only episode to be filmed on the streets of Seattle. After Cheers had finished filming, the bar was taken down and the sets for this show were built in its place.
In , the cast reunited for the show's 20th anniversary. Niles' alma mater is Yale, which is David Hyde Pierce 's alma mater in real life. The two dogs who portrayed Eddie, Moose and later his son Enzo, did not get along at all and could not be in the same room without barking and snarling at each other.
To make sure the viewers did not view Frasier Kelsey Grammer as a family deserter, the writers made sure that Frasier reiterated that he missed his son Frederick Trevor Einhorn in the pilot episode. In one episode, after a night at the opera watching "Rigoletto" by Verdi, Frasier remarks to his date that the finest soprano to sing the role of "Gilda" was "The great Matilda De Cagney".
Matilda de Cagny is the animal trainer who owns Moose , the dog who played Eddie. According to Lisa Maxwell , she auditioned for the role of Daphne. But due to a misunderstanding with her agent, she was under the impression that she was already cast in the role, and did not know it was an audition.
She criticized the script and made suggestions on improving it, which the show's writers did not like, so she did not get the part. The show's creators originally planned for the show to take place in Denver, Colorado. But in late , Colorado passed an amendment that repealed anti-gay discrimination laws. It was later declared unconstitutional by the U. Supreme Court. The creators did not agree with the amendment and decided to move the show's setting further west to Seattle.
The creators did not want the show to take place in Boston, Massachusetts, as Cheers had, because they did not want NBC to ask for frequent guest appearances from that show's characters. One of the recurring jokes in the series was the fact that just about everyone knew that Gil Chesterton Edward Hibbert was gay except Gil. Despite various innuendos surrounding his character's sexual orientation, Gil never formally came out. When asked about his sexual orientation directly, he insisted that he was heterosexual, and happily married to a woman.
David Hyde Pierce 's Niles Crane is a stuffy milquetoast with a mad passion for his father's live-in therapist. In his previous series, The Powers That Be , he played a stuffy milquetoast with a mad passion for the maid.
The glass sculpture to the right of Frasier's Kelsey Grammer 's fireplace is a piece made by Dale Chihuly , a well-known glass sculptor, whose studio is based in Tacoma, Washington just south of Seattle. During season eight, Jane Leeves ' pregnancy was disguised by a storyline involving a severe overeating disorder, and later, her maternity leave was accounted for by having Daphne go to a health spa to cope with her weight problem.
In , "Paramount Studios" made a deal with Kelsey Grammer to star him in his own series after " Cheers " ended. The idea of Grammer continuing the role of Frasier in the new series didn't come up until later in the show's development.
Peri Gilpin was the only main cast member not to recieve an Emmy nomination for her work on the series. Martin's John Mahoney 's former occupation of being a police officer was suggested by show writer Ken Levine.
Levine's father and grandfather were police officers. Leeves claimed that the accent was tailored to imply that Daphne had come of age in Manchester, but had since spent a great deal of time in the United States. As the series progressed, we learned that Frasier Kelsey Grammer and Niles David Hyde Pierce were named after two lab rats their mom was using in an experiment when she was pregnant with Frasier.
Frasier the rat had already died when Frasier the human was born. In season six, episode eight, "The Seal Who Came to Dinner", the passcode to Maris' seaside home is described as her "ideal weight", and "what she weighed at her debutante ball" during her pageant years. The series of numbers that Niles punched in would mean that Maris, at that time, was 45 pounds and 12 ounces Niles' David Hyde Pierce 's wife Maris is never seen at least her face or heard from in the entire series.
The same thing is mentioned about Vera, the wife of Norm Petersen in Cheers We only hear of Maris from Niles about what is wrong about her. This method is used again when Martin meets the girl he has been watching from across the street via his telescope. Kirstie Alley was the only surviving regular cast member of Cheers not to appear on Frasier.
Alley explained in an interview that appearing on a show which appeared to portray or endorse psychiatry went against her beliefs as a practicing Scientologist. Daphne Jane Leeves is the only main character whose age is never disclosed though her birthstone is revealed to be sapphire in Frasier: Roz and the Schnoz Niles is also extremely rational.
Niles has a IQ, well above the Mensa median which is typically around the low s. Niles has a long list of phobias and medical conditions, many of which are clearly psychosomatic. Most prominently, he is quite mysophobic, given to wiping his hands after human contact and wiping down chairs in public places before sitting on them. He has nose bleeds when he tells a fib, and he faints at the sight of blood. When he gets stressed, he is prone to panic attacks and fits of hyperventilation which have, on more than one occasion, seen him lose consciousness.
He also suffers from a long list of allergies, some of which are exceedingly rare. He is seemingly hopeless at sports, barely able to catch objects even after simple throws.
However, in some episodes he is shown to be fair at basketball. On one occasion, while attending a basketball game, he is fortuitously invited on court during the game's intermission to try his skill or luck at scoring from half court, and much to the astonishment of his brother and father and himself , Niles makes the impossible throw. The brothers are often seen coming or going to squash matches, though Martin once commented in disbelief, "You have to wonder what happens on that squash court.
He is a fair fencer, and has had some lessons in kickboxing, apparently being only two moves away from being "quite threatening". On other occasions he has expressed interest in lifting weights and taking karate lessons, but these ventures are typically laughed at by his father and brother and often amount to nothing. He is also a master speller, having come close to winning the national spelling competition as a youth. Although the exact date of Niles' birth is never revealed, he's roughly two years younger than Frasier.
Like Frasier, Niles was named for one of his mother's lab rats. As a result, he was quite close to his older brother, and at the same time fiercely competitive with him.
Like Frasier, Niles also preferred fine arts, music, and intellectual pursuits to activities like sports, though he excels in sports like squash and croquet.
He subsequently attended the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, England, where he was a postdoctoral fellow while completing his professional training.
This further highlights the close competitive relationship with his brother, Frasier, who attended Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts as an undergraduate, then Harvard Medical School for both his M. Niles describes his profession as "the saving grace of my life" [1] and is greatly respected professionally. He runs his own Jungian practice Frasier is a Freudian and has had his research published in several psychiatric journals. Niles often compares his own career to that of his brother, and early in the series makes frequent wisecracks about the "pop psychiatry" that Frasier practices through his radio show.
Over the course of the show his remarks dwindle to occasional jabs for the purpose of humor. It is revealed that Niles lashed out at his brother due to jealousy, as he felt that he did not receive the praise and recognition due for his hard work, whereas Frasier's face is seen on "the side of buses. Niles becomes a much more confident, laid-back person as time goes on.
He develops a backbone after separating from his loveless marriage with Maris, and after losing his wealth, and his social circle, and his home. These experiences make him much more self sufficient and less obsessed with his image.