What’s Next After Meemaw & Dale’s Split? ‘Young Sheldon’ Stars Weigh In
Laughter has always been at the center of CBS’s Young Sheldon, the early-’90s-set prequel to The Big Bang Theory that explores the life of persnickety 12-year-old genius Sheldon Cooper (Iain Armitage) and his East Texas family. But heading into its 100th episode, TV’s No. 1 comedy has been pulling on the heartstrings as well.
In the March 10 half-hour, Sheldon’s live-wire grandmother Connie, aka Meemaw (fan favorite Annie Potts), was blindsided when her cantankerous boyfriend, sporting goods store owner Dale Ballard (Parenthood’s Craig T. Nelson), dumped her. “It was a little tough to watch,” admits cocreator Steven Molaro, but the twist fits the sitcom’s mission for Season 5. “We’re not shying away from letting this show become the dramedy that it can be,” he says.
What hurts the most about the split? The senior couple genuinely care for each other. “Dale fell in love with who Meemaw is, all of the rough edges and absurd qualities,” Nelson explains. But now, they’re moving at different speeds: He’s ready to slow down, retire and travel. She just used the profits from her booming business — a laundromat with an illegal gambling room in the back, purchased earlier this season — to buy herself a bright yellow Miata convertible that Dale can barely fit in. (“I’m crunched up like a pretzel,” Nelson jokes.)
“Meemaw definitely likes to be in the driver’s seat,” says Potts, who really wanted a Miata when the sports car was first released during her Designing Women run but deemed it too silly a splurge for a practical mom at the time. “When Steve called to let me know Meemaw was getting a new car, and that it was a Miata, I was like, ‘Yes! Thirty-five years later, I get the car of my dreams!’”
The breakup’s aftermath helps fulfill another wish for Potts, who says she made a rare request to Molaro last summer before the season began filming: “Could Meemaw be occasionally drunk and naughty?” she asked. “Because that’s really fun to play.” In the milestone March 31 episode, Dale and Meemaw are each reeling in their own hilarious way. He leans on his store’s recent hire, Sheldon’s grumpy dad George Sr. (Lance Barber). Says Nelson, “Dale reverts back to his emotional immaturity: ‘Is she asking about me? Is she talking about me? Did you see that car she bought? She’s ridiculous!’”
Meemaw, meanwhile, copes by confiding in Sheldon’s exasperated twin sister, Missy (Raegan Revord), and inviting her pious daughter Mary (Zoe Perry) to join her for an afternoon drink. The outing makes for a memorable family dinner later that evening. “Meemaw, who’s had quite a few beers, feels free to vent in front of the children just where she’s at regarding Dale,” Molaro teases. “It’s a fun scene.”
Whether or not the split sticks, Potts predicts we haven’t seen the last of Dale. “Mr. Nelson is awfully appealing, so they might want to keep him around,” she says with a grin. It was love at first sight for her when the Coach Emmy winner began recurring on the show in Season 3. “He was nervous, like a teenage bridegroom, which immediately endeared me because I knew he was a hard worker and we’re cut from the same cloth,” she says. (“It’s a sign I care,” Nelson says. “It’s so wonderful to find somebody you can play with.”)