Jon Cryer would return for a “Two and a Half Men” reunion in a heartbeat — and would be happy if costar Charlie Sheen is involved.
However, the “Pretty in Pink” star, 58, hasn’t heard from Sheen, also 58, in recent years.
Cryer spoke to Entertainment Tonight on Monday about a possible future revival of the hit CBS sitcom, saying: “I’m not going to rule anything out, but I haven’t talked to Charlie.”
He then expressed his happiness over the “Spin City” alum and “Two and a Half Men” creator Chuck Lorre’s recent reconciliation.
“I’m really glad they made up… I can only say for Chuck, clearly,” Cryer gushed. “He has the enormous relief of somebody who’s been able to rekindle a friendship that was really meaningful to him.”
Cryer went on: “He and Charlie were very, very close for the first few years of ‘Two and a Half Men’ and that they’ve managed to reconcile is really lovely.”
“I have not spoken to Charlie. I don’t know that he knows my number anymore. But anything could happen.”
Cryer portrayed Alan Harper while Sheen played his brother Charlie Harper on the series.
The show aired from 2003 until 2015, with the “Wall Street” actor departing in 2011. Sheen was fired at the time and was then replaced by Ashton Kutcher.
Lorrre, 71, and Sheen also embarked on a feud for several years until the two men patched things up earlier this year, with the “Anger Management” star appearing on Lorre’s new Max show “Bookie.”
Sheen got candid with the Post about his nervousness about making amends with Lorre.
“The anxiety that I had prior to our first chat was a tsunami,” Sheen said in November.
“Chuck got on the phone and couldn’t have been more lovely or engaging. It was so healing … and it was so surreal when the little voice in your head keeps saying, ‘This can’t be happening,’” he continued.
Sheen added: “It was just so refreshing and liberating. I felt like so much weight had been lifted. It was hard for me to reach out [to Chuck] just because of the amount of shame I’ve lived under for all these years.” (Sheen plays a fictional version of himself on the series.)
The “Big Bang Theory” creator, for his part, told the Post: “It’s easy to forget that we worked together for eight-and-a-half years and made 170 episodes of television and had a lot of fun, more often than not.”
“It was time to put all that craziness behind us.”
“Bookie,” which follows the world of sports gambling, premiered on Nov. 30.
This post was originally posted by NYPost
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