It seems that the Full House nostalgia may have been limited only to fans.
As we previously reported, the stars of Fuller House have been making the rounds on various talk shows for the upcoming series and have been routinely hitting nostalgic fans right in the feels.
According to The Huffington Post, however, Fuller House stars Candace Cameron-Bure, Jodie Sweetin and Andrea Barber didn't give much thought to the retro characters they portrayed in the 20 years that passed between Full House's cancellation in 1995 and the reboot of the show, which will be available on Netflix Friday, Feb. 26.
"I didn't think about D.J. after the show ended. I never gave it a second thought," Cameron-Bure revealed.
"Fans always ask about that stuff, like we must go home and watch all 192 episodes every night," said Sweetin, who plays middle-child Stephanie Tanner.
But Sweetin also explained that putting these roles out of their minds after the original end of the show may have helped them in portraying their characters for the reboot.
"We get to fill in 20 years of their lives," she said. "We start there and find out what happened in between."
There had been murmurings of a Full House reunion for years, but those plans did not come to fruition.
"The problem was that no one wanted to do a movie or a reunion special," Cameron-Bure said, "because they're never done well... This series gives us room to explore the characters."