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Presenter Ed Asner (L) looks on as the ensemble cast of the TV series ''The Office'' (2nd L-R) Steve Carrell, Oscar Nunez, Rainn Wilson and Angela Kinsey accept the Future Classic award at the taping of the 6th annual TV Land Awards in Santa Monica June 8, 2008. REUTERS/Fred Prouser

Presenter Ed Asner (L) looks on as the ensemble cast of the TV series ''The Office'' (2nd L-R) Steve Carrell, Oscar Nunez, Rainn Wilson and Angela Kinsey accept the Future Classic award at the taping of the 6th annual TV Land Awards in Santa Monica June 8, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Fred Prouser

LOS ANGELES | Tue Aug 21, 2012 4:28pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Award-winning comedy "The Office" will end its run on U.S. television in 2013 after eight years as part of a "creative decision" caused by the departures of several key cast members, executive producer Greg Daniels said on Tuesday.

Daniels told reporters in a conference call that the ninth season, starting on September 20, will bring back many familiar faces to NBC's mockumentary workplace comedy.

"This year feels like the last chance to really go out together and make an artistic ending for the show that pays off a lot of the stuff that has mattered most to fans with the core characters," Daniels said.

"This will be the last season of 'The Office' and we are planning a very big exciting last season. We are going to have a lot of familiar faces coming back," he added.

The ending of the show follows the exit last year of lead actor Steve Carell, who portrayed bumbling office manager Michael Scott, as well as a decrease in audience size from a high of about 8 million in 2008 to around 4 million earlier this year.

"The Office" has won four Emmy Awards and was adapted from the British series of the same name created by comedian Ricky Gervais.

Daniels, who developed the show for American TV, said the decision to end the series was made because of the success enjoyed by many of the cast members outside the program.

Rainn Wilson's sycophantic Dwight Schrute is getting a spin-off series, Mindy Kaling has developed and stars in upcoming comedy "The Mindy Project," and screen couple John Krasinski (Jim Halpert) and Jenna Fischer (Pam) have both carved out movie careers on the back of their "Office" fame.

"It didn't seem we could count on getting that many people back for a Season 10," Daniels said.

"We had debated whether to reboot it. It was a bit of a difficult decision. The format is a very strong format," Daniels said, but the potential loss of key characters would mean "the show would be changed to such a degree it wouldn't be the same show."

"Certainly we are not leaving for any reason other than the ones I have described. The show has been healthy and valued by NBC," he added.

Daniels said the final season would tie up many of the characters' story lines, including the identity of those shooting the documentary at the Dunder Mifflin Paper Company that gave "The Office" its unique tone.

"We are going to Roy's wedding ... we are telling some crazy Dwight stories, there is a lot of drama in the Jim and Pam story this year," he said. "The ending should be pretty cool."

Asked whether Carell would return for the final season, Daniels was noncommittal, saying he would welcome the actor back for some episodes but did not wish to pressure him.

NBC is owned by cable operator Comcast Corp.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; editing by Bob Tourtellotte, M.D. Golan and Matthew Lewis)

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