home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1497>
- <title>
- Oct. 31, 1994: Television:Angels with Dirty Faces
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 31, 1994 New Hope for Public Schools
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/TELEVISION, Page 75
- Angels with Dirty Faces
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Its doctors aren't glamorous and its stories aren't pretty,
- but ER is the season's surprise hit
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--Reported by Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Doctors are television's perfect heroes. From Richard Boone
- in Medic through doctors Casey, Kildare and Welby to the bustling
- gang in St. Elsewhere, they have wielded their power like benevolent
- dictators. With a flick of the scalpel, they can make decisions
- of life and death, and with a consoling word reconcile people
- to either. They are privy to their patients' closest secrets,
- deepest fears, most traumatic life moments. Dressed in white,
- they watch over them like angels. And when they make their bedside
- pronouncements, they do it from above, like God.
- </p>
- <p> The doctors on ER, however, are somewhat different. They don't
- look very glamorous, for one thing. Rushing with their gurneys
- through the busy Chicago emergency room where they work, they
- wear frazzled expressions and five-o'clock shadows. Patients
- come and go so quickly--a gunshot victim here, a drug overdose
- there--that the doctors have little time to accept congratulations,
- grieve over failure or make speeches about the wonderful work
- they do.
- </p>
- <p> But these TV doctors are miracle workers nonetheless. ER, created
- by best-selling author Michael Crichton (Jurassic Park, Disclosure),
- made its debut on NBC in mid-September with a cloudy prognosis.
- Hour-long TV drama had been in a long-term slump, pushed aside
- by the proliferating prime-time magazines. ER was scheduled,
- moreover, opposite the season's one other new medical drama--CBS's Chicago Hope, which boasted bigger stars (E.G. Marshall,
- Mandy Patinkin) and the kind of high-pitched melodramatics that
- viewers seem more comfortable with. Yet ER was instantly a huge
- hit. In its first five weeks, the show has drawn an average
- Nielsen rating of 18.3, ranking in the top five among all prime-time
- series. It trounced Chicago Hope so thoroughly that the rival
- show had to slink away to another time slot. To be sure, ER
- gets a major boost from NBC's powerful Thursday-night lineup,
- anchored by Seinfeld. But that didn't help a limping L.A. Law
- in the same time slot last season; ER has improved on that show's
- audience by 43%.
- </p>
- <p> Some have attributed ER's success to Americans' current anxiety
- about health care. A more likely explanation is simply that
- it supplies something that's been missing from TV for years.
- Medical dramas have long been out of fashion; the last successful
- one, St. Elsewhere, was less concerned with the nuts and bolts
- of medical care than with often baroque interpersonal drama
- and nuthouse comedy. ER has rediscovered the primal appeal of
- the doctor show, and a new generation of viewers is eagerly
- watching.
- </p>
- <p> If that were all ER had going for it, then Chicago Hope would
- be a big hit too. But ER is probably the most realistic doctor
- show TV has ever done. That realism goes beyond the graphic
- operating-room scenes and rapid-fire medical jargon ("O.K.,
- we gotta go with it--5,000 units heparin, tPA 10 milligrams,
- push. Sixty over one hour. Let's get another EKG. Keep him on
- the monitor..."). The show's hopped-up pace and jumbled texture--stories start, stop and overlap seemingly at random--set
- it apart from almost anything else on the air. "There's a rhythmic
- instinct to slow down in television," says Crichton. "But our
- show had to go as fast as the real thing. We got rid of the
- pauses, those actors' moments, the hanging looks that mean nothing.
- Medical shows have been at the Marcus Welby pace: meet a patient,
- portray the disease of the week and finish with some heart-wrenching
- solution. Here we just rip people in and out."
- </p>
- <p> Actually, that is a good description of the adrenaline-pumped
- two-hour premiere episode. Since then, ER has settled back into
- more conventional storytelling, with predictable character developments,
- comic interludes and some unwelcome sentimentality. On last
- week's episode, surgeon Mark Greene (Anthony Edwards) brought
- his young daughter to the hospital, and her wise-child observations
- were enough to induce diabetic shock. (Talking to a little girl
- whom her father has just treated: "My daddy's your doctor."
- "(Will) he help make me better?" "That's what doctors do.")
- Still, the show has retained its grungy immediacy, without the
- hand-held-camera affectations of NYPD Blue, its only rival as
- TV's best dramatic series.
- </p>
- <p> The script for ER had been sitting in Crichton's trunk since
- 1974, when the former Harvard medical student wrote it as a
- movie screenplay. It languished until the late 1980s, when Steven
- Spielberg read it and got interested. But Spielberg was more
- interested in another Crichton project--Jurassic Park--and
- ER sat around for a few more years, until someone at Spielberg's
- Amblin Productions suggested turning it into a TV pilot. "Almost
- nothing was changed," says Crichton, "except cleaning up the
- language."
- </p>
- <p> Crichton has stayed closely involved in the series, taking part
- in some story meetings and watching the "dailies"--footage
- from each day's shooting. "I get notes on dailies that he's
- written at 4 a.m.," says fellow executive producer John Wells,
- a former China Beach hand who was brought in to run the show.
- Spielberg too has been a surprisingly active presence. Supervising
- producer Robert Nathan says that for one episode he wrote, Spielberg
- sent him three-page memos on each draft of the script. Later
- Spielberg watched the rough cut and offered more suggestions.
- "He was amazing," says Nathan. "He would look at a scene and
- say, `I think Take 2 was a little dryer.' He remembered everything
- from the dailies two or three weeks earlier."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the authenticity of its hospital scenes, ER has not
- escaped criticism from the medical community. Dr. Gerald P.
- Whelan, a member of the American Board of Emergency Medicine,
- complained in the Los Angeles Times that ER shows untrained
- medical students doing procedures they would never be allowed
- to perform in a real emergency room. "The American public is
- being presented with a picture of emergency medical care that
- is 20 years outdated," he wrote. Dr. Lance Gentile, an emergency-room
- physician who is on the ER staff as writer and technical consultant,
- dismisses such complaints. "These groups are concerned with
- the public's perception of emergency medicine," he says. "The
- fact is that in real-life emergency rooms, supervised students
- do give medical care."
- </p>
- <p> ER is populated by journeymen TV actors who redefine that overused
- term, "ensemble cast." Anthony Edwards (who had a recurring
- role in Northern Exposure and supporting roles in such films
- as Top Gun) is probably first among equals, but with his thinning
- hair, glasses and unassuming manner, he never steals a scene.
- George Clooney, as playboy pediatrician Dr. Doug Ross, is the
- most traditional hunk of the bunch, but the actor is self-effacing
- to a fault. "The writers are so good that even I can't screw
- up," he says. "For an old TV actor, it's great to have Steven
- Spielberg and Michael Crichton come by and talk to you. It's
- so nice to be on a quality show. You can hold your head high."
- </p>
- <p> All of TV is high on ER's success. The show is giving another
- boost to the comeback of serious TV drama. It has shown that
- the networks can still create hits without the help of surefire
- time periods. And it has proved that viewers will try something
- challenging when given a chance. As Crichton relates, "People
- in the entertainment business said, `Viewers won't understand
- this show.' Finally, there's a recognition that people are smart."
- Television sometimes is too.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-