The Wedding Bells is an American comedy-dramatelevision series that aired on Fox from March 2 to April 13, 2007. The series was greenlighted after the network became interested in a series centered on wedding planners. The network approached David E. Kelley to create the show, and he essentially remade a rejected pilot he created for ABC in 2004 entitled DeMarco Affairs which starred Selma Blair, Lindsay Sloane, and Sabrina Lloyd as three sisters who inherit a wedding planner service. Though the show had a moderately strong premiere, it faded in the ratings and was cancelled after seven episodes had been produced and five episodes were aired.
Plot
The Bell sisters, Annie, Jane and Sammy Bell, inherited "The Wedding Palace" after their parents' divorce. David Conlon, photographer for The Wedding Palace and ex-boyfriend of Annie's whose tension-filled dealings with her are clearly the result of pent-up sexual chemistry; and Russell Hawkins, Jane's husband and the company COO; round off the cast. Then there's wedding singer Ralph Snow, who always aspired to be the next Lenny Kravitz, but instead is stuck crooning endless cover songs and retro medleys for unappreciative wedding guests. Amanda Pontell adds to the frenzied scene as a former client who becomes a board member of The Wedding Palace.
B-plots through the brief run of the series
The relationship between Wedding Palace assistant Debbie and another wedding singer. Her biological clock is ticking and he is cautious about getting married again, as his first marriage ended badly.
The very rich Amanda Pontell's efforts to fit in with the three Bell sisters.
Sammy Bell's efforts to be seen as a whole woman, not just as a sexy woman.
Sibling rivalry between Jane and Annie -- there is a history of Jane's boyfriends becoming attracted to Annie—and Jane and Sammy—Sammy has read in Jane's diary that Jane is jealous of Sammy's breasts.
Had the series gone on, another secondary plot might have been about Russell's efforts to franchise the Wedding Palace. Christopher Rich played a potential investor with Las Vegas connections in the last aired episode.
A couple of episodes had Heather Tom and Nicholle Tom as buxom blonde sisters who would crash weddings. Debbie would inevitably throw them out.
The first two episodes of The Wedding Bells garnered poor reviews and low ratings. Critics cited the superficial relationships between the sisters as a weakness. Some claim that Kelley lacked the flair to write for women, after his successful run with Ally McBeal.