Be At Tv Er

Vanavond op tv de internetgids waarin u alle programmas netjes op een rij kunt vinden. Dus u hoeft nooit meer te zoeken naar de normale tv gids maar u zoekt met. The ER staff deals with the aftermath of the explosion including a severely injured doctor. Check out the latest news, reviews and interviews from your favorite TV series. Get exclusive content breaking TV news as it happens. Forum Contains New Posts Forum Contains No New Posts Forum is Closed for Posting. Whats on TV Tonight. Complete, customizable TV listings for your local broadcast, cable and satellite providers. Be At Tv Er' title='Be At Tv Er' />ER Episode Guide TV. Its Halloween night, and the interns continue to be paired with the residents. Gates teaching methods with Daria, and her responses, belittle Sam. A school fight results in a stabbing and a nose that wont stop bleeding, with Brenner treating the victims and being deeply affected by the truth behind their confrontation. The staff, especially Neela, are enthusiastic about a surprise visitor. Gates gets locked in a maintenance area with a quiet young boy. ER TV series Wikipedia. Not to be confused with ER. ER is an American medical drama television series created by novelist and medical doctor Michael Crichton that aired on NBC from September 1. April 2, 2. 00. 9, with a total of 3. It was produced by Constant c Productions and Amblin Television, in association with Warner Bros. Television. ER follows the inner life of the emergency room ER of fictional County General Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, and various critical issues faced by the rooms physicians and staff. The show became the longest running primetime medical drama in American television history. It won 2. 3 Primetime Emmy Awards, including the 1. Outstanding Drama Series award, and received 1. Emmy nominations, which makes it the most nominated drama program in history. ER won 1. Peabody Award, while the cast earned four Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Ensemble Performance in a Drama Series. ProductioneditDevelopmenteditIn 1. Michael Crichton wrote a screenplay based on his own experiences as a resident physician in a busy hospital emergency room. The screenplay went nowhere and Crichton focused on other topics. In 1. 99. 0, he published the novel Jurassic Park, and in 1. Steven Spielberg on the film adaptation of the book. Crichton and Spielberg then turned to ER, but decided to film the story as a two hour pilot for a television series rather than as a feature film. Spielbergs Amblin Entertainment provided John Wells as the shows executive producer. The script used to shoot the pilot was virtually unchanged from what Crichton had written in 1. The only substantive changes made by the producers in 1. Susan Lewis character became a woman and the Peter Benton character became an African American, and the running time was shortened by about 2. TV. 6 Because of a lack of time and money necessary to build a set, the pilot episode of ER was filmed in the former Linda Vista Hospital in Los Angeles, an old facility that had ceased operating in 1. A set modeled after Los Angeles County General Hospitals emergency room was built soon afterward at the Warner Bros. Burbank, California, although the show makes extensive use of location shoots in Chicago, most notably the citys famous L train platforms. Warren Littlefield, running NBC Entertainment at the time, was impressed by the series We were intrigued, but we were admittedly a bit spooked in attempting to go back into that territory a few years after St. Elsewhere. 9 After Spielberg had joined as a producer, NBC ordered six episodes. ER premiered opposite a Monday Night Football game on ABC and did surprisingly well. Then we moved it to Thursday and it just took off, commented Littlefield. ERs success surprised the networks and critics alike, as David E. Kelleys new medical drama Chicago Hope was expected to crush the new series. Spielberg left the show after one year as a producer, having made one critical decision with lasting effects the Carol Hathaway character, who died at the end of the original pilot episode script, was retained. Crichton remained executive producer until his death in November 2. Wells, the series other initial executive producer, served as showrunner for the first three seasons. He was one of the shows most prolific writers and became a regular director in later years. Lydia Woodward was a part of the first season production team and became an executive producer for the third season. She took over as showrunner for the fourth season while Wells focused on the development of other series, including Trinity, Third Watch, and The West Wing. She left her executive producer position at the end of the sixth season but continued to write episodes throughout the series run. Joe Sachs, who was a writer and producer of the series, believed keeping a commitment to medical accuracy was extremely important Wed bend the rules but never break them. A medication that would take 1. We compressed time. A 1. 2 to 2. 4 hour shift gets pushed into 4. But we learned that being accurate was important for more reasons than just making real and responsible drama. Woodward was replaced as showrunner by Jack Orman. Orman was recruited as a writer producer for the series in its fourth season after a successful stint working on CBSs JAG. He was quickly promoted and became an executive producer and showrunner for the series seventh season. He held these roles for three seasons before leaving the series at the end of the ninth season. Orman was also a frequent writer and directed three episodes of the show. David Zabel served as the series head writer and executive producer in its later seasons. He initially joined the crew for the eighth season and became an executive producer and showrunner for the twelfth season onward. Zabel was the series most frequent writer, contributing to 4. He also made his directing debut on the series. Christopher Chulack was the series most frequent director and worked as a producer on all 1. He became an executive producer in the fourth season but occasionally scaled back his involvement in later years to focus on other projects. Other executive producers include writers Carol Flint, Neal Baer, R. Scott Gemmill, Dee Johnson, Joe Sachs, Lisa Zwerling, and Janine Sherman Barrois. Game Iso Ps1 Winning Eleven on this page. Several of these writers and producers had extensive background in emergency medicine. Joe Sachs was a regular emergency attending physician, while Lisa Zwerling and Neal Baer had pediatrics backgrounds. The series crew was recognized with awards for writing, directing, producing, film editing, sound editing, casting, and music. Cast and charactersedit. Original cast of the show 1. Final season cast 2. Many notable guests such as Ray Liotta appeared in the series. The original starring cast consisted of Anthony Edwards as Dr. Mark Greene, George Clooney as Dr. Doug Ross, Sherry Stringfield as Dr. Susan Lewis, Noah Wyle as medical student John Carter, and Eriq La Salle as Dr. Peter Benton. 9 As the series continued, some key changes were made Nurse Carol Hathaway, played by Julianna Margulies, who attempts suicide in the original pilot script, was made into a regular cast member. Ming Na debuted in the middle of the first season as medical student Jing Mei Deb Chen, but did not return for the second season, she returns in season 6 episode 1. Gloria Reuben and Laura Innes would join the series as Physician Assistant Jeanie Boulet and Dr. Kerry Weaver, respectively, by the second season. In the third season, a series of cast additions and departures that would see the entire original cast leave over time began. Stringfield was the first to exit the series, reportedly upsetting producers who believed she wanted to negotiate for more money, but the actress did not particularly care for fame. She would return to the series from 2. Clooney departed the series in 1. Margulies exited the following year. Season eight saw the departure of La Salle and Edwards when Benton left County General and Mark Greene died from a brain tumor. Wyle left the series after season 1. Goran Visnjic as Dr. Luka Kova, Maura Tierney as Dr. Abby Lockhart, Alex Kingston as Dr. Elizabeth Corday, and Paul Mc. Crane as Dr. Robert Romano, all joined the cast as the seasons went on. In the much later seasons, the show would see the additions of Mekhi Phifer as Dr. Greg Pratt, Scott Grimes as Dr. Archie Morris, Parminder Nagra as Dr. Neela Rasgotra, Shane West as Dr.