Comedy ‘Big Bang Theory’ makes sentimental farewell
By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Sheldon and Amy won their Nobel Prize and the elevator was finally fixed in a sentimental finale on Thursday to television comedy series “The Big Bang Theory” that left fans in tears of delight.
Penny got pregnant, Amy got a makeover and Sheldon apologized to his long-suffering friends “for not being the friend you deserve” as the most-watched comedy on U.S. television ended its 12-year run.
“The Big Bang Theory,” the show about four brilliant but socially inept scientists that made geeks and comic book nerds pop culture cool, began in 2007 and went on to win 10 Emmy awards, four of them for Jim Parsons as quirky theoretical physicist Sheldon Cooper.
For the past seven years, it has been the No. 1 comedy on U.S. television with an audience of some 20 million people, and with fans as far afield as Russia and France.
Thursday’s one-hour series finale gave fans the kind of closure many had been hoping for, including the repair of the broken elevator in Sheldon’s apartment building that had been a running gag since 2007.
“I’m sobbing so much right now. not only because it’s the finale. they fixed the elevator,” tweeted a “Big Bang Theory” fan with the Twitter handle kylong.
Sheldon and his neurobiologist wife Amy (Mayim Bialik) won the Nobel Prize for physics; experimental physicist Leonard (Johnny Galecki) and wife Penny (Kaley Cuoco) announced they were pregnant, and hopeless romantic astrophysicist Raj (Kunal Nayyar) got a date with “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” actress Sarah Michelle Gellar.
But the most touching moments came when self-centered Sheldon put aside a long, prepared speech accepting his Nobel and turned to salute his friends in the audience.
“I apologize if I haven’t been the friend you deserve but I want you to know, in my way, I love you all,” he told them.
The final scenes sent fans into an emotional meltdown.
“Sheldon’s greatest speech ever. I’m smiling and crying at the same time,” wrote Vaughn Ramden on Twitter.
“I can’t stop sobbing like a baby at every single scene in the Big Bang Theory final episode,” tweeted James O’Grady.
“The Big Bang Theory” has transcended its pop culture origins. The show’s “Bazinga!” catchphrase, used by Sheldon when playing a prank or telling a joke, has inspired the name of a species of bee found in Brazil and a jellyfish found in Australia.
Over the years, the series saw cameos by the likes of British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking, Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, astronaut Buzz Aldrin, “Star Trek” actors William Shatner and George Takei, and Marvel comics legend Stan Lee.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)