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The Cast and Crew of ‘St. Denis Medical' Found Joy and Warmth in the Show's Hospital Setting
The Cast and Crew of ‘St. Denis Medical' Found Joy and Warmth in the Show's Hospital Setting

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Cast and Crew of ‘St. Denis Medical' Found Joy and Warmth in the Show's Hospital Setting

'Hospitals are very sexy places.' The seasoned TV viewer probably knows that; from 'E.R.' to 'Grey's Anatomy' to 'The Pitt,' fictional hospitals are always teeming with attractive people and tense relationships — which is what makes them such fruitful narrative territory. NBC's 'St. Denis Medical' is no exception, as the cast and creative team told IndieWire as part of a virtual panel for Universal Studio Group's USG University. More from IndieWire 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 Trailer: A New Generation Rises as Carrie Coon Tries to Secure Her Status in High Society David Gauvey Herbert Reveals 'Ren Faire' Director Lance Oppenheim's Disarming Methods 'I always wondered: those medical dramas where people have sex in the on-call rooms, is that a real thing?' showrunner Eric Ledgin said. 'My friend who's an oncological surgeon assured me it's a very real thing.' That was the spark for Season 1, Episode 8 of the show, which opens with the St. Denis staff being summoned to a meeting after two of them are caught in the aforementioned on-call room. Hospital administrator Joyce (Wendi McLendon-Covey) hopes it'll be a quick and efficient conversation, but it ends up opening the floodgates regarding sex, gossip, and more. 'It gets Alex (Allison Tolman) in her head about is she having enough sex in her marriage — which was something that was very relatable to me and many married people,' Ledgin said. 'Then the room sort of piles on these ideas of, what if Joyce gets really paranoid that she's not in the loop, and it just was such a funny point of view for that character. One by one, it all comes together in the room of how to turn this into a story about our characters.' The break room is just one of many settings that showcase the work of production designer Elliot LaPlante, and how she and Ledgin worked to create 'the level of hospital' that St. Denis would be from a visual standpoint. 'This was not a cold, inner city hospital, and that allowed us to have a little bit more charm and a little bit more of a community feel, while keeping the balance of feeling real,' said Ledgin. For LaPlante, the show's Oregon setting took her back to her Pacific Northwest roots and to the atmosphere of that region. 'How do we bring the heart that we experience in these scripts to the visuals that we're seeing, and how do we make it as authentic as possible?' she said. 'What are those things that someone who is a medical professional will see and be like, 'Oh my gosh, that is right on. We have that in our hospital.' That's what we were always looking to find in all of our sets.' That extends to Joyce's office, cluttered with memorabilia from her time at the hospital and clues about how much time she devotes to work (as much as she wants to have a richer life outside). 'She sometimes does feel removed from things, but we wanted to get out that reminder [that] she still is integral into everything that's happening and has had such an impact on the community,' Laplante said. 'As we go on through the season, you just understand that Joyce is excluded from a lot of things, and it's because she is a disaster of a person,' McLendon-Covey offered. 'She sure wants to be a cuddly person, but she just isn't. All her plants have to be fake, because she doesn't have time to take care of them, and she has stuffed animals because those are her pets.' She and Tolman expressed gratitude for the stability of something like 'St. Denis.' The sets stay up, the departments have found their rhythm, and production rarely goes into overtime, making everyone 'able to be fully present and able to be pleasant at work for every single hour of every single day, because we weren't working crazy schedules, and we're working these coveted sitcom hours,' Tolman said. Even in a hospital, 'St. Denis' is a workplace comedy, a genre now comfortably depicted in the single-camera mockumentary style. The handheld cameras require minimal set up (cutting down prep time for someone like Tolman, who usually counts on her quick memory to learn lines on set), and performers develop a relationship with their camera operators, who function as moving pieces of the scene like anyone else. 'Whatever brand of gentle psychosis it is where you go through your life as if there was an audience — I've had that since I was a kid,' Tolman said. 'You can share things with the audience, and you can look at the camera and draw them in. There's all these opportunities to make other jokes and have other reactions, and then we get to surprise each other, and we get to surprise our writers and our directors. It just keeps it really alive.' Everyone from the 'St. Denis' team was eager to praise other departments, from the camera crew and writing staff to costume designer Alex Hester, producer Meg A. Schave, and more. As they prepare for Season 2, there was palpable excitement about working on the show with so much established. 'Normally we build something that is for a season and then it comes down,' LaPlante said about her job specifically. 'This set had to be waterproof. It had to be engineered. We built an ambulance bay with a 40-foot cantilevered awning, and we really had to be strategic throughout the Season of how we were able to shoot that area… I'm so glad it's done. It's ready to go for Season 2.' For Ledgin, his years of experience as a writer and executive producer led him to being a full-fledged showrunner — on unexpected levels. 'I am a little surprised by how much I couldn't get away from it, even when I went to sleep,' Ledgin said of the show's first season, which is now streaming in full on Peacock. 'It was in my dreams. I was waking up with an idea, and the problem was that I liked the idea so I had to actually get my phone and write it down. I was like, 'This is going to save me an hour tomorrow then I'm banging my head against the wall trying to think about what it was…' I think that was probably the biggest challenge that I am working on for Season 2.' IndieWire partnered with Universal Studio Group for USG University, a series of virtual panels celebrating the best in television art from the 2024-2025 TV season across NBC Universal's portfolio of shows. USG University (a Universal Studio Group program) is presented in partnership with Roybal Film & TV Magnet and IndieWire's Future of Filmmaking. Catch up on the latest USG University videos here or directly at the USG University site. Best of IndieWire 2023 Emmy Predictions: Who Will Win at the Primetime Emmy Awards? 2023 Emmy Predictions: Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special 2023 Emmy Predictions: Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series

St. Denis Medical Cast, EP Weigh In on Serena-Matt Tension, Tease ‘Off the Rails' Season Finale — Watch
St. Denis Medical Cast, EP Weigh In on Serena-Matt Tension, Tease ‘Off the Rails' Season Finale — Watch

Yahoo

time18-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

St. Denis Medical Cast, EP Weigh In on Serena-Matt Tension, Tease ‘Off the Rails' Season Finale — Watch

Just six episodes into its freshman run, St. Denis Medical's strong vital signs earned it a quick Season 2 renewal. But before the NBC comedy's hospital staff can make it to a completely new season, they'll have to survive a finale that, as star Allison Tolman puts it, sends things 'off the rails' at the titular medical center. 'The finale of this season is the most 'oh no' [that nurse Alex feels],' Tolman recently told TVLine at the SCAD TVfest in Atlanta. 'And it's warranted. A lot of times, when Alex is worked up about something, it's like, 'Girl, calm down.' But in the finale, things really have gone off the rails, and her high alert is warranted.' More from TVLine SNL50: Watch All the Highlights From the Star-Studded Anniversary Special SNL50: The Anniversary Special: How to Watch the Live Celebration Online SNL50: The Homecoming Concert: Every Revived Character, Every Musical Guest and Every Song Performed - Grade It! Tolman, whose full interview with us can be viewed in the video above, couldn't share much more about what transpires at the end of Season 1. We suspect, though, that the hospital's financial situation — a season-long issue for the underfunded St. Denis — might play a significant role as the inaugural season winds down, as co-showrunner Eric Ledgin hinted. 'It's not that they're about to go under. It's more that they can't have any nice things,' Ledgin tells us. 'They never have enough to go any further, and Joyce's hope is so far outsized compared to what they actually have. That's a tension we play with a lot in the first season, and all I'll say is we won't necessarily be playing that same tension in the second season.' And while we're on the subject of tension: There's been a little of that — of the will-they-won't-they variety, to be more specific — between nurses Serena and Matt, no? 'There's a long way to go, in Season 1, even,' admitted Kahyun Kim, who plays Serena on the sitcom, adding that more 'complex feelings' are in store for the colleagues as Season 1 continues. Ledgin was ever-so-slightly more forthcoming about the Serena-Matt situation, promising that 'something will happen' between the pair in upcoming episodes. 'There will be movement. There won't be nothing,' Ledgin teased, before adding with a laugh, 'Is that vague enough?' St. Denis Medical airs Tuesdays at 8/7c on NBC. Best of TVLine Summer TV Calendar: Your Guide to 85+ Season and Series Premieres Classic Christmas Movies Guide: Where to Watch It's a Wonderful Life, Miracle on 34th Street, Elf, Die Hard and Others What's New on Netflix in June

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