Kirstie Alley was gifted a SHOTGUN by the Cheers cast when she joined the sitcom for season six

The Cheers cast welcomed Kirstie Alley to the show with a very unusual gift.

George Wendt, 74, recalled the funny story during a panel at the Cheers reunion at the ATX TV Festival in Austin, Texas.

Wendt said that he and fellow cast member John Ratzenberger, 76, were asked to get a gift for the actress — who died in December after a battle with cancer — when she joined the show in Season six . 

The actors played, respectively, Norm Peterson and Cliff Clavin on the long-running and beloved sitcom.

‘We were having dinner right before the show, and we said, ‘Oh jeez, we should have got her something, right?’ And ‘Yeah, like some flowers or something…’ Wendt said. ‘So, [Ted Danson] says, ‘I can’t, I got a thing I got to do.’ And [Rhea Perlman], “no.”‘

New cast member present: Kirstie Alley was surprised with a gift shotgun when she joined Cheers in season six

Memories: George Wendt (R) recalled working with John Ratzenberger (L) to find the gift during a panel at the Cheers reunion at the ATX TV Festival in Austin

Memories: George Wendt (R) recalled working with John Ratzenberger (L) to find the gift during a panel at the Cheers reunion at the ATX TV Festival in Austin

So by process of elimination Wendt and Ratzenberger were tasked with finding a gift, and they decided to drive through a very ‘trendy area’ on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. 

‘Going past all these places and we go past Big 5 Sporting Goods and John goes, ‘you wanna buy her a shotgun?,” Wendt said.

‘And, like you, I laughed for about five minutes,’ he continued. ‘And then immediately pulled into the parking lot, and we bought her a freakin’ shotgun.’

He added: ‘John and I were never tasked with the gifts again.’

Ratzenberger also said that Wendt took the joke the extra mile.

‘I think you even wrote on the card, “You’re gonna have to shoot your way out,”‘ he said.

Wendt and Ratzenberger recently reunited almost 30 years after the series finale to see the bar where everybody knows your name one last time. 

The bar went up for auction alongside a plethora of memorabilia from iconic television shows last month in Dallas. 

‘It was fantastic, so great to see the bar,’ Wendt told Boston’s WHDH. 

Shenanigans: 'We were having dinner right before the show, and we said, 'Oh jeez, we should have got her something, right?' And 'Yeah, like some flowers or something…' Wendt said. 'So, [Ted Danson] says, 'I can't, I got a thing I got to do.' And [Rhea Perlman], "no."'

Shenanigans: ‘We were having dinner right before the show, and we said, ‘Oh jeez, we should have got her something, right?’ And ‘Yeah, like some flowers or something…’ Wendt said. ‘So, [Ted Danson] says, ‘I can’t, I got a thing I got to do.’ And [Rhea Perlman], “no.”‘

Everybody knows your name: So by process of elimination Wendt and Ratzenberger were tasked with finding a gift, and they decided to drive through a very 'trendy area' on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles

Everybody knows your name: So by process of elimination Wendt and Ratzenberger were tasked with finding a gift, and they decided to drive through a very ‘trendy area’ on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles

Shotgun: 'Going past all these places and we go past Big 5 Sporting Goods and John goes, 'you wanna buy her a shotgun?,'' Wendt said. 'And, like you, I laughed for about five minutes,' he continued. 'And then immediately pulled into the parking lot, and we bought her a freakin' shotgun'

Shotgun: ‘Going past all these places and we go past Big 5 Sporting Goods and John goes, ‘you wanna buy her a shotgun?,” Wendt said. ‘And, like you, I laughed for about five minutes,’ he continued. ‘And then immediately pulled into the parking lot, and we bought her a freakin’ shotgun’

‘I get a lot of letters to this day about ‘Thank you, we went through a bad time when my father was dying, and the only joy in his life was watching your show,” Ratzenberger said. ‘So, it really does mean a lot, so to see this, it meant a lot.’ 

Wendt also revealed that he stays in touch with his fellow Cheers cast members. 

‘We catch each other in bits and pieces,’ he said.

‘It’s kind of hard,’ he continued. ‘It’s like herding cats trying to get us all together.’

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