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St elsewhere
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  1. #ST ELSEWHERE PROFESSIONAL#
  2. #ST ELSEWHERE SERIES#

Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University, stated "More than any other series in the history of American television, St. Episodes that departed from the show's usual format included one doctor's journey to heaven where he met God and another structured like the play Our Town. Carlin," his neurotic character from The Bob Newhart Show. A highlight was a scene in a psych ward featuring actor Jack Riley as "Mr. For that episode the writers included dozens of references to the classic series and other MTM productions. Another recurring patient, the amnesiac John Doe number six, became convinced he was "Mary Richards" from the Mary Tyler Moore Show. Eligius for an entire season only to die in a freak accident when her bed folded up on her. The harshly realistic tone of the series was tempered by the writers' willingness to experiment with the show's form and their frequent use of black humor and pop culture references. You always felt they could've killed anybody off. Howie Mandel, who played a resident, reflected that the characters were as vulnerable as real people when he said: "I could get hit by a car and killed on my way to work and so could Fiscus (Mandel's character). Over the years main characters left the show through such means as committing suicide, being murdered, going to prison, and contracting fatal diseases. To heighten the sense of reality, the writers routinely placed their main characters in life-threatening situations from which they did not always survive. A 1983 episode contained one of network television's first dramatic presentations of the AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) crisis. In 1986, executive producer Bruce Paltrow said of the series: "The original concept was to try to do an ensemble medical drama in a real way, with a kind of spontaneity and snap-and comedy." The intense realism of the series was evident in its willingness to frankly address such issues as breast cancer, rape, infertility, impotence, and addiction. That the series was set in a large, decaying urban institution, featured a large and diverse cast, and continued plots over a number of episodes caused many to initially consider the series as little more than "Hill Street Blues in a hospital." Many young residents, who confronted their own problems, surrounded them. The show's narrative center was held by three veteran physicians: Daniel Auschlander (Norman Lloyd), a liver specialist faced with liver cancer Donald Westphall (Ed Flanders), a widowed chief of staff raising an autistic son and Mark Craig (William Daniels), a brilliant and heartless heart surgeon.

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Their stories presented flawed doctors trying, and often failing, to provide the best medical care in less than ideal circumstances. They assembled a core group of young producers and writers, including Bruce Paltrow, Mark Tinker, John Masius, and Tom Fontana, who crafted a program distinctly different than previous medical dramas featuring noble and perfect physicians. Joshua Brand and John Falsey, staff writers on the basketball series The White Shadow, were encouraged to create the series after hearing of a friend's experiences as an intern at the Cleveland Clinic. Unlike its namesake, however, the series had a distinguished pedigree. Elsewhere" is derived from medical school jargon for a hospital that serves as a dumping ground for patients not wanted by more prestigious medical facilities. Elsewhere was widely hailed as one of television's most literate and original programs.

#ST ELSEWHERE PROFESSIONAL#

Although the series often struggled with mediocre ratings, its strong appeal to the demographically important baby-boomer and upscale urban professional audiences allowed the idiosyncratic show to remain on the air. Mixed in with the often tragic storylines were oblique in-jokes, subtle bawdy humor, and countless intertextual references to other works of popular culture. Each episode offered a realistic look at the fallibility of doctors, the stresses of being hospitalized, and the ethical dilemmas inherent in the practice of medicine. Eligius, an inner city Boston teaching hospital. The series, which ran on NBC from 1982 to 1988, focused on the lives of the doctors, nurses, and patients at St. Of the many programs that presented the issues surrounding major medical institutions, none was more unique, ambitious, and unpredictable than St. Kildare, Medical Center, Chicago Hope, and ER have long been one of the most popular television show formats.









St elsewhere