Tamera Mowry-Housley on Where She Hopes ‘Sister, Sister’ Twins Would Be Today

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It’s arduous to consider that basic sitcom Sister, Sister was as soon as on the chopping block. It may have simply fizzled out when the present received axed by ABC after two seasons in 1995. The comedy that launched the careers of Tia and Tamera Mowry began within the TGIF lineup earlier than being shuffled alongside.

A brand new community known as The WB would save the sequence. Execs noticed one thing within the story of twins separated at start and reunited after 14 years alongside their adoptive dad and mom Lisa Landry (Jackée Harry) and Ray Campbell (Tim Reid).

Now Tamera Mowry-Housley, who today is married with youngsters of her personal, remembers how daunting it felt as a youngster starring on the present. The comedy went on to have 119 episodes over the course of six seasons. Not to say a number of Kids’ Choice and NAACP Image Awards.

Sister, Sister - Tim Reid, Tia Mowry, Tamera Mowry, Jackee Harry

©Paramount Television/Courtesy Everett Collection

“I feel so honored and blessed to have had that opportunity,” Mowry-Housley advised TV Insider. “And additionally to listen to the likes of Keke Palmer and Yara Shahidi say, ‘Your show inspired me to be an actress today. I saw a girl who had my hair. I saw a woman of color on TV. The coolest thing about Keke and Yara is our show was already [rerunning] on Disney Channel when they were growing up.”

Thanks to syndication and now streaming, the beloved series continues to welcome new audiences. Along with her sis, Mowry-Housley has enjoyed a successful career in all facets of entertainment. Yet not a day goes by the 44-year-old isn’t requested about Sister, Sister. The star is happy with the present’s lasting affect.

“It still resonates with the characters and the family, life lessons,” she stated. “I realized Sister, Sister was something special when we were canceled from ABC and thought the show was done. I was devastated. I had so much fun. When The WB wanted to pick us up, I can remember asking what the hell was The WB. When someone says The WB, I feel old.”

When just about each prime present from this period dusted off on the planet of reboots and revivals, Sister, Sister stays a holdout. A number of instances through the years it appeared followers probably hadn’t heard the final, “Go home, Roger.” For Mowry-Housley, it’s all about timing. Adding, “[Tia’s] booked. I’m booked.” That doesn’t imply she hasn’t given a narrative some thought.

“For one I know they would be together. I know they would be happy with whatever they are doing,” she stated. “I know that those two girls would never settle. Tia’s character was the studious one. I think it would be cool to see them swap.

Tamera Mowry and Tia Mowry - The WB Television Network Celebrated It's First 100-Episode Achievement With 'Sister, Sister' The Star's Of The Sitcom

Getty Images

She continues: “It would be nice to see Tia Landry kind of something like a photographer for National Geographic or something like that. Tamara Campbell was like the wild, crazy one. I would love to see her as this amazing stay-at-home mom. Someone who just wanted to quit everything and be there for her kids. Just do a fun little swap, giving people moments you wouldn’t think happened to the characters.”

The Dr. Seuss Baking Challenge host is aware of no matter route a possible Sister, Sister revival takes, it might have to be a fragile stability. A strategy to attraction to a broader viewers with the present exploring themes primarily based on the world the 2 live in right now.

“I mean we’re in our 40s now. I’d love to see them a little more sophisticated, raw and real. At the same time, you don’t want to be too real and raw that viewers can’t watch it,” Mowry-Housley defined. “Of course, I would like them to tackle real issues. It’s interesting we’re still talking about race. We were talking about race when we were doing the show, too. I would love to talk about raising kids now where social media kind of dictates everything. Bullying, social media bullying, I would like to see that explored. Being mixed race, how to handle that in this day and age? So many things that we can tackle.”

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