BURBANK, Calif. — The Warner Bros. back lot has lent its sets and streets to some of the most storied musicals in Hollywood history: “42nd Street,” “The Music Man,” “Bye Bye Birdie.”

On a March day, another show was being fashioned here, though “Stars Hollow: The Musical” is unlikely to join that pantheon any time soon. But that won’t matter for the millions of fans of “Gilmore Girls,” who have sojourned in that idyllic (albeit fictional) Connecticut town during its initial run on the WB from 2000 to 2007 or since Netflix picked up all 153 episodes two years ago.

The musical, filled with enthusiastic but talent-challenged townspeople, is one of the story lines in “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” a new, four-part mini-series Netflix will release on Nov. 25. More important, the revival is the inspiration of the show’s creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino, and her husband and collaborator, Daniel Palladino. A decade after a contract dispute led to their departure from the show, they actually get to wrap up the story on their own terms.

The entire, sprawling cast — including its stars, Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel, and supporting actors who’ve gone on to fame elsewhere, like Melissa McCarthy and Milo Ventimiglia (“This Is Us”) — has returned. So has the show’s fizzy cocktail of rapid-fire repartee, pop culture savvy and heartfelt drama about mothers and daughters and relationships.