|


|
ST. ELSEWHERE
 St. Elsewhere CAST
Dr.
Donald Westphall.................................. Ed Flanders
Dr. Mark Craig....................................... William
Daniels
Dr. Ben Samuels (1982-l983)....................... David
Birney
Dr. Victor Ehrlich..................................... Ed
Begley, Jr.
Dr. Jack Morrison .......................................David
Morse
Dr. Annie Cavanero (1982-1985) ................Cynthia Sikes
Dr. Wayne Fiscus ....................................Howie
Mandel
Dr. Cathy Martin (1982-1986) ...............Barbara Whinnery
Dr. Peter White (1982-1985) ......................Terence
Knox
Dr. Hugh Beale (1982-1983)......................... G.W.
Bailey
Nurse Helen Rosenthal .........................Christina
Pickles
Dr. Phillip Chandler ..........................Denzel Washington
Dr. V. J. Kochar (1982-1984) ............................Kavi
Raz
D. Wendy Armstrong (1982-1984).................. Kim Miyori
Dr. Daniel Auschlander .............................Norman
Lloyd
Nurse Shirley Daniels (1982-1985) ....................Ellen
Bry
Orderly Luther Hawkins............................ Eric Laneuville
Joan Halloran (1983-1984)....................... Nancy Stafford
Dr. Robert Caldwell (1983-1986) .................Mark Harmon
Dr. Michael Ridley (1983-1984)....................... Paul
Sand
Mrs. Ellen Craig...................................... Bonnie
Bartlett
Dr. Elliot Axelrod (1983-1998) ....................Stephen
Furst
Nurse Lucy Papandrao.......................... Jennifer Savidge
Dr. Jaqueline Wade (1983-1988) .................Sagan Lewis
Orderly Warren Coolidge (1984-1988)..........Byron Stewart
Dr. Emily Humes (1984-1985)................... Judith Hansen
Dr. Alan Poe (1984-1985)............................. Brian
Tochi
Nurse Peggy Shotwell (1984-1986)........... Saundra Sharp
Mrs. Hufnagel (1984-1985) ......................Florence
Halop
Dr. Roxanne Turner (1985-1987)................ Alfre Woodard
Ken Valere (1985-1986)............................ George
Deloy
Terri Valere (1985-1986)............................ Deborah
May
Dr. Seth Griffin (1986-1988) .................Bruce Greenwood
Dr. Paulette Kiem (l986-1988)................... France Nuyen
Dr. Carol Novino (1986-1988) .....................Cindy Pickett
Dr. John Gideon (1987-1988)......................... Ronny
Cox
PRODUCERS
Bruce Paltrow, Mark Tinker, John Masius, John Falsey, Joshua Brand
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
NBC
October 1982-August 1983
Tuesday 10:00-11:00
August 1983-May 1988
Wednesday 10:00-11:00
July 1988-August 1988
Wednesday 10:00-11:00
ST. ELSEWHERE
St.
Elsewhere was one of the most-acclaimed of the upscale serial
dramas to appear in the 1980s. Along with shows like Hill Street
Blues, L.A. Law, and thirtysomething, St. Elsewhere was
a result of the demographically-conscious programming strategies
that had gripped the networks during the years when cable TV was
experiencing spectacular growth. Often earning comparatively low
ratings, these shows were kept on the air because they delivered
highly desirable audiences consisting of young, affluent viewers
whom advertisers were anxious to reach. In spite of its never earning
a seasonal ranking above 49th place (out of about 100 shows), St.
Elsewhere aired for six full seasons on NBC from 1982-88. The
series was nominated for 63 Emmy Awards and won 13.
Set in a decaying urban institution, St. Elsewhere was often
and aptly compared to Hill Street Blues, which had debuted
a season and a half earlier. Both shows were made by the independent
production company MTM Enterprises, and both presented a large ensemble
cast, a "realistic" visual style, a profusion of interlocking stories,
and an aggressive tendency to break traditional generic rules. While
earlier medical dramas like Dr. Kildare, Ben Casey, and Marcus
Welby, M.D. featured godlike doctors healing grateful patients,
the staff of Boston's St. Eligius Hospital exhibited a variety of
personal problems and their patients often failed to recover.
St.
Elsewhere's content could be both controversial and surprising.
In 1983, for instance, it became the first prime-time series episode
to feature an AIDS patient. Six years before NYPD Blue began
introducing nudity to network television, St. Elsewhere had
shown the naked backside of a doctor (Ed Flanders) who'd
dropped his trousers in front of his supervisor (Ronny Cox) before
leaving the hospital and the show. It was also not uncommon for
principal characters to die unexpectedly, which happened on no fewer
than five occasions during the run of the series.
As
a medical drama, St. Elsewhere dealt with serious issues
of life and death, but every episode also included a substantial
amount of comedy. The show was especially noted for its abundance
of "in jokes" that made reference to the show's own ancestry. In
one episode, for example, an amnesia patient comes to believe that
he is Mary Richards from The Mary Tyler Moore Show, MTM Enterprises'
first production. Throughout the episode the patient makes oblique
references to MTM's entire program history. Later, in the series'
final episode, a scene from the last installment of The Mary
Tyler Moore Show is restaged, and the cat that had appeared
on the production logo at the end of every MTM show for eighteen
years, dies as the final credits roll.
St.
Elsewhere proved to be a fertile training ground for many of
its participants. At the start of the 1992-93 season, creators John
Falsey and Joshua Brand had a critically-acclaimed series on each
of the three major networks: Northern Exposure (CBS),
I'll Fly Away (NBC), and Going to Extremes (ABC). Writer-producer
Tom Fontana became the executive producer of Homicide: Life on
the Street with Baltimore-based film director Barry Levinson.
Other St. Elsewhere producers and writers went on to work
on such respected series as Moonlighting, China Beach, L.A. Law,
Civil Wars, NYPD Blue, ER, and Chicago Hope. Actor Denzel
Washington, virtually unknown when he began his role as Dr. Philip
Chandler, had become a major star of feature films by the time St.
Elsewhere ended its run.
St.
Elsewhere also exerted a significant creative influence on
ER, the hit medical series that debuted on NBC in 1994. While
the pacing of ER is much faster, both the spirit of the show
and many of its story ideas have been borrowed from St. Elsewhere.
-Robert
J. Thompson
FURTHER
READING
Barker, David. "St. Elsewhere: The Power of History." Wide Angle
(Athens, Ohio), 1989.
Feuer,
Jane, Paul Kerr, and Tise Vahimagi, editors. MTM-"Quality Television."
London: The British Film Institute, 1984.
Paisner,
Daniel. Horizontal Hold: The Making and Breaking of A Network
Television Pilot. New York: Birch Lane Press, 1992.
Tartikoff,
Brandon, and Charles Leerhsen. The Last Great Ride. New York:
Random House, 1992.
Schatz,
Thomas. "St. Elsewhere and the Evolution of the Ensemble Series."
In, Newcomb, Horace, editor. Television: The Critical View. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1976; 4th edition 1987.
Thompson,
Robert J. Good TV: The St. Elsewhere Story. Syracuse, New
York: Syracuse University Press, 1996.
Tinker,
Grant, and Bud Rukeyser. Tinker in Television: From General Sarnoff
to General Electric. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1994.
Turow, Joseph. Playing Doctor: Television, Storytelling, and
Medical Power. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.
See
also Marcus
Welby, M.D.; Medic;
Melodrama;
Workplace
Programs
Return to S index Return to main index |
|
Join our efforts to build a new world-class museum in Chicago. Click here to donate now. | |
More than 8,500 digitized TV and radio programs are available once again for public viewing in the MBC archives. Search the archives! | |
Starting or adding to your TV on DVD collection is the best way to enjoy your favorite shows. Choose from over 5,000 TV on DVD series, seasons, episodes and soundtracks. Visit the MBC store now! | |
Own the most extensive look at the history of television. Relive great moments and learn about the people and shows that made television what is today. Purchase the 2nd edition now! |
|