When Three’s Company star Suzanne Somers realized she was becoming more and more popular on the 1970s sitcom, she eventually asked for a pay raise once her contract on the show was up for renewal.
As a result of her daring request, her contract was not renewed, she was made to finish out her final episodes apart from her co-stars Joyce DeWitt and John Ritter, and neither spoke to her for decades.
Somers asked for a raise
The actor was being paid $30,000 an episode while Ritter received $150,000 for each show. As Somers said in 2020, the experience caused strife for her personally and with her cast mates.
“I probably would have never left network series,” she said. “I would have kept on going and probably been in every sitcom after that were it not to end the way it ended. But I was ostracized. So I went away.”
Somers ended up making her way in Las Vegas in the 1980s, headlining her own show.
The Chrissy Snow actor thought Ritter wouldn’t speak to her again
In her memoir Two’s Company, Somers revealed that Ritter called her a month before his 2003 death from an aortic dissection.
Ritter then invited her to appear on his then-new comedy series.
“He said, ‘I’m doing a show called 8 Simple Rules and there’s a dream sequence and I want to have a nightmare, and in my nightmare, you… are in the dream.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, I’d love to work with you again, but… This isn’t the way I want to come back, a nightmare. Really?’”
The two ended their call with sincere plans to collaborate on a project at some point but it wasn’t meant to be.
“We probably would’ve found a project, which would’ve worked,” she wrote. “I always thought Jack Tripper should’ve married Chrissy Snow anyway and that should be the spin off. I’m glad I had that resolution with him. Really glad.”
Somers and DeWitt’s reconciliation after decades of silence
After Somers left Three’s Company in 1980, over 30 years would pass before she and DeWitt would speak again. But speak they did.
The blonde actor invited her former co-star to appear in 2012 on her Breaking Through web show and made up for lost time.
Admitting she was feeling “a little nervous,” Somers invited DeWitt out and the two embraced, with the Janet Wood actor saying, “Thank you for creating this opportunity, babe.”
There were apologies and explanations for past misunderstandings.
Awkward at times, Somers said, “In a group of serious actors, I probably pissed you all off” as DeWitt laughed.
By the end of their conversation Somers, invoking the show’s theme song, asked DeWitt to “come and knock on my door again, ok?”