THE stars of a much-loved 90s sitcom are reuniting for a special – 30 years on from its debut.
It will be held on a soundstage recreating the beloved show’s living room set.

Everybody Loves Raymond aired from 1996 to 2005[/caption]
Ray Romano starred as the lead character Ray Barone[/caption]
The surviving main cast is coming together for a special[/caption]
Everybody Loves Raymond premiered on CBS in September 1996 and ran for nine seasons.
The premise followed sarcastic Italian-American sportswriter Ray Barone (Ray Romano) and his family living in Long Island.
Romano, 67, and show creator Phil Rosenthal will host the 90-minute reunion special.
Other stars appearing include Patricia Heaton (Debra), Brad Garrett (Robert) and Monica Horan (Amy).
Real-life siblings Madilyn (Ally) and Sullivan Sweeten (Michael) round out the line-up.
Meanwhile, the reunion will also pay tribute to late cast members Doris Roberts and Peter Boyle.
The pair, who played Ray’s parents Marie and Frank, passed away in 2016 and 2006, respectively.
Everybody Loves Raymond: 30th Anniversary Special will air on November 24 at 8pm on CBS.
In addition, it will also be streaming on Paramount+.
The popular show won 15 Primetime Emmy Awards out of 69 nominations.
It comes another iconic sitcom cast recently got back together for a new project.
Scrubs became a fan favourite and cult classic after it first debuted on screens in 2001.
After 15 years, the original main cast reunited for the first table read for their upcoming ABC reboot.
The reunion featured the original series creator Bill Lawrence and OG stars Donald Faison, Sarah Chalke, Zach Braff, Judy Reyes and John C. McGinley.
The new series will follow JD Dorian (Braff) and Christopher Turk (Faison), who scrub in together for the first time in a long time.
Scrubs first came to an end in 2010 but last year, the show’s creator, Lawrence, teased that the comeback was imminent.
Speaking to The Independent, Lawrence said: “We’ve been talking about it. We all spend time with each other in real life, but everybody is so talented from that show that they’re all working.
“We’ve really started to entertain the idea about getting the band back together because we all feel like we do have some stories to tell.
“People in the medical community are heroes right now. They certainly aren’t doing it for the money.”

Ray Romano and Patricia Heaton[/caption]