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How (and Why) John Larroquette Landed Back in ‘Night Court’

As the classic sitcom reboots this month, its famed bad-boy lawyer shares what it’s like behind the scenes – this time at 75

spinner image John Larroquette stars in Night Court
Jordin Althaus/NBC/Warner Bros. Television

John Larroquette, 75, costarred in Bill Murray’s 1981 Stripes, created the excellent addiction-themed comedy The John Larroquette Show (1993-96, with David Crosby as a guest actor), won his fifth Emmy on The Practice (1997), earned a 2011 Tony Award for Broadway’s How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, and narrated four Texas Chainsaw Massacre movies — for the historic first one, he was paid with a matchbox of marijuana. Now he’s reviving his most famous role, Dan Fielding on Night Court (1984-92, and new on NBC, Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET). It’s produced by The Big Bang Theory star Melissa Rauch, who plays Judge Abby Stone — the daughter of the original Judge Harry Stone (played by the late Harry Anderson).

Larroquette talks to AARP about what it’s like to fit himself into his old attorney’s suit.

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spinner image Melissa Rauch and John Larroquette talking to each other in the courtroom in Night Court
(Left to right) Melissa Rauch and John Larroquette
Jordin Althaus/NBC/Warner Bros. Television

What’s new with Night Court’s most eloquently sarcastic attorney?

He’s 35 years older. He still thinks he's the smartest person in the room. But his heart has grown cold over the years, and Abby [Rauch] has the ability to put a small campfire under it and warm him up somewhat. And because she is Harry Stone’s daughter, he feels obligated to try and help her navigate the shoals of being at work at 2 in the morning in the middle of Manhattan.

Is Dan Fielding still hilariously arrogant?

He is older, not quite as insecure, not as much a misanthrope. He thinks most of humanity is a small waste of space, as opposed to a huge waste of space. And wants to help the ones who aren't.

He used to leer at women — very ’80s, less acceptable nowadays.

To have a character as libidinous as he was back then just wouldn’t work. Society has changed, what we think is funny has changed. You have to present a different kind of comedy today.

spinner image John Larroquette holds a blue You Can Do It water bottle in a scene from Night Court
Jordin Althaus/NBC/Warner Bros. Television

So Night Court’s high-IQ caveman isn’t such a bad guy anymore?

Even back then he was sometimes very, very bad, and sometimes very, very good, like getting Judge Stone to come back when he was going to quit, or delivering babies in an elevator. I don’t think he was ever bad. He was needy and wanted people to love him, and was not very adept at showing his own emotions.

The new Night Court received 80 percent positive reviews from critics. Do fans still remember you from the old show?

At the dry cleaning counter, the person who’s 60 goes, ‘Oh, nice to see you!’ and the one in his or her 20s says, ‘Who’s that old man?’ There are five phases to an active career. The first phase is ‘John who?’ The second is ‘Get me John Larroquette.’ The third is ‘Get me a John Larroquette type.’ The fourth is ‘Get me a young John Larroquette.’ And the fifth phase is ‘John who?’ It seems like I haven't quite reached the fifth phase yet, but thanks to Melissa Rauch, I'm between four and five.

It's very rare to reprise a character after so many decades. How does it feel?

It was both interesting and frightening to do a character one did a lifetime ago. The physical comedy I easily was able to accomplish in the ’80s I can't approach now without an ambulance standing by. I can't jump over railings or tie myself in a pretzel. But the idea was intriguing — how this person has changed.

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And how have you changed?

When I was 35 I probably couldn’t have done King Lear and now certainly I can't do Hamlet. So it all changes. It moves with you.

spinner image Harry Anderson stars as Harold Harry T. Stone and Melissa Rauch stars as Abby Stone in their respective Night Court series
(Left to right) Harry Anderson as Harold "Harry" T. Stone and Melissa Rauch as Abby Stone.
Frank Carroll/NBC via Getty Images; Jordin Althaus/NBC/Warner Bros. Television

How does the original Judge Stone compare with the new one?

Harry’s Judge Stone, regardless of pulling hamsters out of his pocket or making red noses appear on all of us in the courtroom, always took the job seriously. Even though there were a lot of high jinks, you always got to the heart of the case, and cared about the people involved. And even though Abby’s not the most by-the-book judge, she takes the job seriously too.

So Night Court is part madcap comedy, part touching drama?

The difference between comedy and drama is that drama is an ordinary person in an extraordinary circumstance, and comedy is extraordinary people in ordinary circumstances. On Night Court, they’re extraordinary; they’re all eccentric, all slightly not all there in one way or another. They’re larger than life. But it’s a very normal environment — a courtroom. It’s not a circus.

When COVID shut down your last hit series, The Good Fight, you almost retired to your rural spread 30 miles from Portland, Oregon, right?

I did tell everybody who represents me that I’d be happy to do something on or off Broadway again. But for on-screen roles, the road gets narrower — not as narrow as for a lady actor as she gets older, but for men as well. There are only so many cantankerous neighbor parts, and I wasn’t happy with that. I live in a beautiful place and enjoy being on my tractor. Then this goddamn Melissa Rauch pried me off my John Deere tractor back to L.A. I’ve been eminently fortunate in my life as an actor. No complaints here! And this is maybe a nice way to cap it off.

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