In the aftermath of Garry Shadling’s unexpected death on Thursday, HBO has plans to bring his most treasured series back to the air.

An HBO spokeswoman confirmed to Entertainment Weekly that reruns of “The Larry Sanders Show,” a scathing satire of late-night TV talk programs, will return at some point to the cable channel and its streaming sites, although no timetable was announced.

According to the Wrap, Shandling was putting the finishing touches on a deal to bring his beloved series exclusively back to HBO at the time of his death at the age of 66.

“I loved Garry. We were fulfilling his wishes to see the show move to HBO,” Sony Pictures Television Chairman Steve Mosko told The Wrap.

“The Larry Sanders Show,” which aired from 1992 to ’98, was a show within a show starring Shandling as a neurotic talk-show host. It was considered incredibly influential and some of TV’s best comedy writers spent time in Shandling’s writers room, including Judd Apatow, Steve Levitan, Peter Tolan, and Carol Leifer.

The show was the first cable series to be nominated in major Emmy categories. It was once described by an EW critic as the “most brutally honest and hilarious portrait of Hollywood in television history.”

Following Shandling’s death, HBO released a statement saying, “Garry ushered in the modern period of original programming at HBO with his brilliant masterpiece, The Larry Sanders Show. All of us at HBO have a special place in our hearts for him, not only for his enormous talent but for his kindness and decency. We will miss him terribly.”