Gregory House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Dr. Gregory House
First appearance "Pilot"
Created by David Shore
Portrayed by Hugh Laurie
Information
Date of birth June 11, 1959 (1959-06-11) (age 49)[1][2]
Specialty Infectious disease and nephrology[3]
Occupation Head of the Department of Diagnostic Medicine
Family John House (step-father; deceased)
Blythe House (mother)
Address New Jersey, United States
Religion Atheist
IMDb profile

Gregory "Greg" House, M.D., is a fictional character and protagonist of the American medical drama House. Portrayed by Hugh Laurie, the character is a maverick medical genius who heads a team of diagnosticians at the fictional Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. House's character has been described as a "misanthrope", a "cynic" and a "curmudgeon."

On the series, the character's unorthodox diagnostic approaches, radical therapeutic motives, and stalwart rationality has resulted in much conflict between him and his colleagues.[4] House is also often portrayed as lacking sympathy for his patients, a practice that allots him the time to solve pathological enigmas. The character is partly inspired by Sherlock Holmes.[5][6]

A large portion of the show's plot centers on House's use of Vicodin to manage pain stemming from an infarction in his quadriceps muscle some years earlier, an injury that forces him to walk with a cane. Although his colleagues, doctors James Wilson and Lisa Cuddy, have encouraged him to go to drug rehabilitation several times, so far, no attempts have successfully gotten House off the drug. This addiction is one of the many parallels to Sherlock Holmes, who is addicted to cocaine.[7]

Throughout the series run, the character has received positive reviews.[8][9] Tom Shales of The Washington Post called House "the most electrifying character to hit television in years."[10] In 2008, Gregory House was voted second sexiest TV doctor ever, behind Dr. Doug Ross (George Clooney) from ER.[11] For his portrayal of Gregory House, Hugh Laurie has won various awards, including two Golden Globe Awards for Best Actor in a Television Drama Series and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor from Drama Series.[12] Laurie also earned Primetime Emmy Award nominations in 2005, 2007 and 2008.[13][14][15]

Contents

[edit] Character history

Gregory House was born on June 11, 1959,[1][2] to John and Blythe House (R. Lee Ermey and Diane Baker).[16] House is a "military brat", his father served as a Marine Corps pilot and transferred often to other bases during House's childhood.[17] One place in which his father was stationed was Egypt, where House developed a passing fascination with archaeology and treasure-hunting, an interest which led him to keep his treasure-hunting tools well into his adulthood.[18] Another station was Japan, where, at age 14, House discovered his vocation after witnessing the respect given to a buraku doctor who solved a case no other doctor could.[19] House loves his mother but hates his father, who he claims has an "insane moral compass", and deliberately attempts to avoid both parents.[17] At one point, House tells a story of his parents leaving him with his grandmother, or "oma", whose punishments constituted abuse.[20] He, however, later confesses that it was his father who abused him.[20] Due to his father abusing him, House never believed that John was his biological father, at the age of 12, he deduced that a friend of his family with the same birthmark was his real father.[16] In the season 5 episode "Birthmarks" House discovers that this was true, after he ordered a DNA test that compared his DNA with John's.[16]

House studied medicine at Johns Hopkins University.

House earned his undergraduate degree at Johns Hopkins University and studied medicine at the Johns Hopkins Medical School.[21] During his medical education, House was caught cheating by a man named Weber, who ultimately got him expelled.[21] House then attended the University of Michigan for the remainder of his study and met Lisa Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein), his future boss,[22] with whom he shared a one night stand.[23]

Approximately ten years before the series began, House entered into a relationship with Stacy Warner (Sela Ward), a constitutional lawyer, after she shot him during a "Lawyers vs. Doctors" paintball match.[19] Five years later, during a game of golf, he suffered an infarction in his right leg, which went misdiagnosed for three days due to doctors' concerns that he was exhibiting drug-seeking behavior (House eventually diagnosed the infarction himself).[24] An aneurysm in his thigh had clotted, leading to an infarction and causing his quadriceps muscle to become necrotic.[24] House had the dead muscle bypassed in order to restore circulation to the remainder of his leg, risking organ failure and cardiac arrest.[24] He was willing to endure excruciating post-operative pain to retain the use of his leg.[24] However, after he was put into a chemically induced coma to sleep through the worst of the pain, Stacy, House's medical proxy, acted against his wishes and authorized a safer surgical middle-ground procedure between amputation and a bypass by removing just the dead muscle.[24] This resulted in the partial loss of use in his leg, and left House with a lesser, but still serious, level of pain for the rest of his life.[24] House could not forgive Stacy for making the decision, and because of this, Stacy left him.[24] House now suffers chronic pain in his leg, and uses a cane to aid his walking. He frequently takes Vicodin (hydrocodone) to relieve his pain.[25] When Stacy makes her first appearance in the series, she is married to a high school guidance counselor named Mark Warner.[26] Although she and House grow closer together and reunite briefly during the second season, House tells Stacy to go back to her husband, which devastates her.[27]

At the beginning of season three, House temporarily regains his ability to walk and run after receiving ketamine treatment.[28] However, the chronic pain in his leg comes back and House takes painkillers and uses his cane once again.[29] The other doctors speculate that his cane and opiate re-usage are due to his psychological tendencies.[29]

[edit] Personality

"Dr. House is a fascinating and daringly cantankerous enigma, the proverbial bitter pill who also happens to be a highly intuitive medical genius. He despises interacting with patients and prefers dealing with diseases -- with medical mysteries that leave other doctors scratching their heads in befuddlement."
Tom Shales describing the character.[10]

House's character frequently shows his cunning and biting wit, enjoys picking people apart, and often mocks their weaknesses.[30] House accurately deciphers people's motives and histories from aspects of their personality and appearance.[31] His friend and colleague Dr. James Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard) says that while some doctors have the "Messiah complex"—they need to "save the world", House has the "Rubik's complex"—he needs to "solve the puzzle."[32] House typically waits as long as possible before meeting his patients.[30] When he encounters his patients, House shows an unorthodox bedside manner and uses unconventional treatments.[33] However, he impresses them with rapid and accurate diagnoses after seemingly not paying attention.[29] This skill is demonstrated in a scene where House diagnoses an entire waiting room full of patients in little over one minute on his way out of the hospital clinic.[34] Critics have described the character as "moody", "bitter", antagonistic",[35] "misanthropic",[32] "cynical"[36] "grumpy", "maverick"[37] and "curmudgeon".[38] The Global Language Monitor chose the word "curmudgeon" as the best way to describe the character.[39]

Laurie describes House as a character who refuses to "obey the usual pieties of modern life" and expects to find a rare diagnosis when he is treating his patient.[40][41] As a protagonist, many aspects of his personality are the antithesis of what might be expected from a doctor.[30] Executive producer Katie Jacobs views House as a static character who is accustomed to living in misery.[42] Jacobs has said that Dr. Wilson, his only friend in the show, and House both avoid mature relationships, which brings the two closer together.[43] Leonard has said that Dr. Wilson is one of the few who voluntarily maintains a relationship with House, because his character is free to criticize him.[43]

Although House's crankiness is commonly misattributed to the chronic pain in his leg, both Stacy and Cuddy have said that he was the same before the infarction.[26][27] To handle the chronic pain in his leg, House takes Vicodin every day, and as a result has developed an addiction to the drug.[44] He refuses to admit that he has an addiction ("I do not have a pain management problem, I have a pain problem").[3] However, after winning a bet from Cuddy by not taking the drug for a week, he concedes that he has an addiction, but says that it is not a problem because it does not interfere with his work or life.[45] While both Cuddy and Wilson have encouraged House to go to rehab several times, no attempts have successfully gotten House off the drug.[46] House creator David Shore told the Seattle Times in 2006 that vicodin is "becoming less and less useful a tool for dealing with his pain, and it's something [the writers] are going to continue to deal with, continue to explore".[47] House openly talks about, and makes references to, pornography.[48] In "Lines in the Sand", he returns the flirtations of a female underage patient.[49] He regularly engages the services of prostitutes,[21][50] which his female diagnostic team member Dr. Allison Cameron (Jennifer Morrison), who has a crush on him, is aware of.[51]

A polyglot, House speaks English, Spanish, Portuguese, Hindi, Yiddish, French, Japanese, and Mandarin. He is an atheist, openly mocking colleagues and patients who express any belief in religion.[32][52] He does not believe in an afterlife because he finds it is better to believe that life "isn't just a test".[24] However, in the season four episode "97 Seconds" he expresses enough interest in the possibility of an afterlife to nearly electricute himself dead in an effort to find out, however, he is unsatisfied with the results.[53]

"[House] enjoys pursuing the truth, and he knows we all see the world through our own lenses. He's constantly trying to strip himself of those biases, to get a clean, objective view of things."
David Shore to Variety.[54]

House frequently says "Everybody lies", but jokingly remarked that he was lying when he said that in the first season finale.[40] House criticizes social etiquette for lack of rational purpose and usefulness.[49] Dr. Eric Foreman (Omar Epps) states in the first episode of the first season "House doesn't believe in pretense ... so he just says what he thinks".[55] In the season three episode "Lines in the Sand", he explains how he envies an autistic patient because society allows the patient to forgo the niceties that he must suffer through.[49] In the same episode, Dr. Wilson suggests that House might have Asperger syndrome, which is characterized by a number of traits found in House, such as difficulty accepting the purpose of social rules, lack of concern for his physical appearance, and resistance to change; though he later reveals to House that he does not truly believe this, and that claiming this was a part of a ploy to soften Cuddy's opinion of House.[49] House is a strong nonconformist and gives little regard to how others perceive him.[41] Throughout the series, he displays sardonic contempt for authority figures.[56] House shows an almost constant disregard for his own appearance, possessing a permanent stubble and dressing informally in jeans and a t-shirt.[57] He avoids wearing the standard white lab coat to avoid patients recognizing him as a doctor.[25][56]

House does not have much of a social life, and his only friend is Dr. James Wilson.[32][41] Wilson knew House before the infarction and looked after him when House's relationship with Stacy ended.[27] Dr. Wilson's moving into House's apartment after his failed marriage in "Sex Kills" symbolizes his taking emotional refuge in his friend.[58] Although they frequently analyze and criticize each other's motives, Wilson has risked his career to protect House.[48] House has quietly admitted, at several instances, that he is grateful for Wilson's presence, including referring to Wilson as his best friend. When Wilson resigns and moves away from both New Jersey and House's friendship in the season 5 premiere, House is desperate to have his friend back, and hires a private investigator (Michael Weston) to spy on him.[59] The two ultimately reconcile at House's father's funeral.[16]

Despite his sardonic personality, Edelstein has said that House is a character who is reliant on people surrounding him.[40] Edelstein says this characteristic is portrayed on several occasions in the third season, during which House's medical career is in jeopardy due to investigations by Det. Michael Tritter (David Morse), who arrests him for possessing narcotics.[60] House's legal trouble ends when Edelstein's character, Lisa Cuddy, commits perjury during his hearing.[46] In Season 5, a relationship with Cuddy begins to blossom, as they are unable to refute feelings between each other.[61] They share a kiss in episode six "Joy" and are now seen trying to cope with their new found feelings for each other.[61]

[edit] Concept and creation

Adopting an American accent for his role has been difficult for Laurie, who said words such as "coronary artery" are particularly tricky to pronounce.[50] The cane tricks that are seen throughout the series are created by Laurie himself.[43] In the pilot episode, House holds his cane on the same side as that of his injured leg; creator David Shore explained: "Some people feel more comfortable with the cane in the dominant arm, and that is acceptable."[62]

[edit] Parallels to Sherlock Holmes

The House and Wilson's relationship mirrors Holmes and Watson's (pictured) relationship.

Similarities between House and the famous fictional detective Sherlock Holmes appear throughout the series;[63] Shore explained that he was always a Sherlock Holmes fan, and found the character's traits of indifference to his clients unique.[64] The resemblance is evident in various elements of the series' plot, such as House's home address apartment 221B, while Holmes lives at 221B Baker Street.[40] Other similarties between the two character are drug addiction (House to vicodin and Holmes to cocaine), the use of a cane, playing an instrument (Holmes plays the violin and House plays the guitar) and both have a talent for accurately deducing people's motives and histories from aspects of their personality and appearance.[65]

Shore has alos explained that the name "House" is a play on the name Holmes (i.e., homes).[66] Both Holmes and House have one true friend, Dr. Watson is Holmes' and Dr. Wilson is House's.[6] Leonard has said that House and his character were originally intended to play the roles of Holmes and Watson in the series although he believes that House's team has assumed the Watson role.[67] Shore also explained that Dr. House draws inspiration from Dr. Joseph Bell (who was also a source for the creation of Holmes), who could "walk into a waiting room and diagnose people without speaking to them".[6] In the season two finale "No Reason", House is shot by a man named Jack Moriarty, this name coincides with Sherlock Holmes' adversary, Professor James Moriarty;[65][68] likewise, in the fifth season, Wilson uses Irene Adler as the name for an imaginary love interest of House,[69] the same name as the only female adversary Holmes ever encountered.[65]

[edit] Casting

Before Hugh Laurie auditioned for the role of Gregory House, he was filming Flight of the Phoenix in Namibia. Laurie planned to audition for the roles of both James Wilson and Gregory House. When Laurie read that Wilson was a character with a "handsome open face", he decided to audition solely for the role of House.[70] After watching casting tapes for the pilot episode, Bryan Singer grew frustrated and refused to consider any more British actors because of their flawed American accents.[41] However, when he saw Hugh Laurie's audition tape, not knowing who he was, Singer was fooled by Laurie's American accent. He mistook him as an American and praised Laurie as an example of a true American actor.[71] Laurie initially believed that James Wilson would be the protagonist of the show after reading the brief description of the character and did not find out that House was the main character until he read the full script of the pilot episode.[72] Prior to the airing of the series, the producers were also concerned that Laurie lacked sex appeal to the viewers.[41] Throughout the first two seasons of House, Laurie earned a salary of $100,000 an episode.[73] He received a raise from $275,000 to $300,000 an episode throughout seasons three and four.[74] In 2008, TV Guide reported that Laurie will be getting paid $400,000 an episode at the start of the show's fifth season.[75]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "No Reason". House, M.D.. 2006-05-23. No. 24, season 2. According to his listed social security number (295-13-7865) on the hospital identification bracelet. House's full name is listed on his chart when he reviews it in his hospital bed.
  2. ^ a b It coincides with the birth date of Hugh Laurie. It has been previously given as December 21 or sometime during the late fall or early winter in "The Socratic Method".
  3. ^ a b "Occam's Razor". House, M.D.. 2004-11-30. No. 3, season 1.
  4. ^ Kristine, Diane (2005-04-23), "Ending Season Three With a Bang? An Interview with House Writer Lawrence Kaplow", Blog Critics, http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/04/23/073606.php, retrieved on 2007-10-13 
  5. ^ O'Hare, Kate (2005-01-05), "Building 'House' Is Hard Work", Zap2It, http://tv.zap2it.com/tveditorial/tve_main/1,1002,271%7C92770%7C1%7C,00.html, retrieved on 2007-06-30 
  6. ^ a b c "House... and Holmes". Radio Times (BBC Magazines Ltd.): p. 57. January 2006. http://www.radiotimes.com/content/show-features/house/house-and-holmes-parallels/. 
  7. ^ Jericho, Arachne (2008-05-31). "A House, MD and Sherlock Holmes Special: Predicting House Season Five Based On the Sherlock Holmes Canon". Holmesian Derivations, A 21st century look at Sherlock Holmes.. http://holmes.spontaneousderivation.com/2008/05/31/a-house-md-and-sherlock-holmes-special-predicting-house-season-five-based-on-the-sherlock-holmes-canon/. Retrieved on 2008-09-27. 
  8. ^ Davies, Hugh (2004-11-20). "Dr Laurie has viewers of US TV in stitches". The Daily Telegraph: p. N9. 
  9. ^ Bianco, Robert (2004-11-14). "There's a doctor worth watching in 'House'". USA Today: p. D1. http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/reviews/2004-11-15-house_x.htm. Retrieved on 2006-12-30. 
  10. ^ a b Shales, Tom (2004-11-16). "'House': Watching Is the Best Medicine". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A53025-2004Nov15.html. Retrieved on 2006-12-30. 
  11. ^ Diaz, Glen L. (2008-08-11). "Move over Clooney, 'House' is Here". BuddyTV. http://www.buddytv.com/articles/house/move-over-clooney-house-is-her-21907.aspx. Retrieved on 2008-10-04. 
  12. ^ Blaustein, David (2006-01-17). "Loose Lips Backstage at Golden Globes". ABC News. http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Entertainment/story?id=1512758. Retrieved on 2008-09-29. 
  13. ^ "Complete 2008 Nominations List". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 2008-07-17. http://cdn.emmys.tv/awards/2008pte/60thpte_noms.php. Retrieved on 2008-07-25. 
  14. ^ "The 59th Primetime Emmy Awards and Creative Arts Emmy Awards Nominees are...". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. http://www.emmys.org/awards/2007pt/59thnominations.php. Retrieved on 2008-03-02. 
  15. ^ "First Set Of Presenters Announced for the 60th Primetime Emmy Awards Airing Sunday, September 21, on ABC". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 2008-08-21. http://cdn.emmys.tv/media/releases/2008/rel-pte60-pres1.php. Retrieved on 2008-09-26. 
  16. ^ a b c d "Birthmarks". House, M.D.. 2008-10-14. No. 4, season 5.
  17. ^ a b "Daddy's Boy". House, M.D.. 2005-11-08. No. 5, season 2.
  18. ^ "Clueless". House, M.D.. 2006-03-28. No. 15, season 2.
  19. ^ a b "Son of Coma Guy". House, M.D.. 2006-11-14. No. 7, season 3.
  20. ^ a b "One Day, One Room". House, M.D.. 2007-01-30. No. 12, season 3.
  21. ^ a b c "Distractions". House, M.D.. 2006-02-14. No. 12, season 2.
  22. ^ "Humpty Dumpty". House, M.D.. 2005-09-27. No. 3, season 2.
  23. ^ "Top Secret". House, M.D.. 2007-03-27. No. 16, season 3.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h "Three Stories". House, M.D.. 2005-05-17. No. 21, season 1.
  25. ^ a b "Pilot". House, M.D.. 2004-11-16. No. 1, season 1.
  26. ^ a b "Honeymoon". House, M.D.. 2005-05-24. No. 22, season 1.
  27. ^ a b c "Need to Know". House, M.D.. 2005-02-07. No. 11, season 2.
  28. ^ "Meaning". House, M.D.. 2006-09-05. No. 1, season 3.
  29. ^ a b c Poniewozik, James (2004), "Scorn is the Best Medicine", Time (magazine) (Time Inc.) (Time (magazine)), 2004-11-22, ISSN 0040-781X, http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,995688,00.html, retrieved on 2007-09-28 
  30. ^ Holland, Roger (2006-05-01). "House: Season Four Premiere". PopMatters. http://www.popmatters.com/pm/tv/reviews/48955/house/. Retrieved on 2007-09-27. 
  31. ^ a b c d Burnett, Barbara (2007-10-30). "Dr. Gregory House: Romantic Hero". Blogcritics. http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/10/30/114407.php. Retrieved on 2008-02-09. 
  32. ^ Kelley, Sue (2008-09-18). "Find better bedside manner". USA Today. http://blogs.usatoday.com/betterlife/2008/09/find-better-bed.html. Retrieved on 2009-04-04. 
  33. ^ "Sports Medicine". House, M.D.. 2005-02-22. No. 12, season 1.
  34. ^ Goodman, Tim (2004-11-15). "Network meddling by Fox execs starts the deathwatch for 'House'". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/article?f=/c/a/2004/11/15/DDGSL9QOII1.DTL. Retrieved on 2008-10-24. 
  35. ^ Strauss, Neil (2007-04-05). "Dr. Feelbad". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/13893076/dr_feelbad_hugh_laurie_became_the_dark_prince_of_prime_time_by_playing_the_best_vicodinaddicted_t/2. Retrieved on 2009-04-04. 
  36. ^ Wright, Mark (2007-11-06). "Top 5 Grumpy TV Doctors(amended)". The Stage. http://blogs.thestage.co.uk/tvtoday/2007/11/top-5-grumpy-tv-doctors/. Retrieved on 2009-04-04. 
  37. ^ Burana, Lily (2007-05-27). "Stalking Dr. House". Salon.com. http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2007/05/29/hugh_laurie/. Retrieved on 2009-04-04. 
  38. ^ Staff (2006-12-18). "Telewords - 'Refugee' Tops 'Desperation' and 'Camp Cupcake' as Top Television Buzzword of the 2005". Global Language Monitor. http://www.languagemonitor.com/?page_id=20. Retrieved on 2009-04-05. 
  39. ^ a b c d Jensen, Jeff (April 2007-04-06). "Full 'House'". Entertainment Weekly 928: 44-47. http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20016394,00.html. Retrieved on 2007-09-12. 
  40. ^ a b c d e Winters, Rebecca (2005-09-04), "Doctor Is in ... a Bad Mood", Time (magazine), ISSN 0040-781X, http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101308,00.html, retrieved on 2007-10-09 
  41. ^ Kristine, Diane (2005-04-23), "Behind "Half-Wit" and Beyond: An Interview with House Executive Producer Katie Jacobs", Blog Critics, http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/03/05/110433.php, retrieved on 2007-03-05 
  42. ^ a b c Ryan, Maureen (2006-05-01). "'House'-a-palooza: On Omar Epps' Emmy bid, Wilson's messed-up life and stupid cane tricks". Chicago Tribune. http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/2006/05/house_isnt_wait.html. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  43. ^ Kristine, Diane (2005-10-24), "Constructing House: An Interview With House, M.D. Writer Lawrence Kaplow", Blog Critics, http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/10/24/213107.php, retrieved on 2007-10-12 
  44. ^ "Detox". House, M.D.. 2005-02-15. No. 11, season 1.
  45. ^ a b "Words and Deeds". House, M.D.. FOX. 2007-01-01. No. 10, season 3.
  46. ^ Holston, Noel (2006). "Doctors find little humor in TV's handling of painkillers". The Seattle Times. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/television/2002820070_tvdrugs22.html. Retrieved on 2008-12-18. 
  47. ^ a b "Babies & Bathwater". House, M.D.. 2005-04-19. No. 18, season 1.
  48. ^ a b c d "Lines in the Sand". House, M.D.. 2006-09-26. No. 4, season 3.
  49. ^ a b Hochman, David (February 2009). "Playboy Interview: Hugh Laurie". Playboy: pp. 31-36 + 105. 
  50. ^ "Que Sera Sera". House, M.D..
  51. ^ Kristine, Diane (2007-11-12). "The Church of House". Blogcritics. http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/11/12/111004.php. Retrieved on 2008-02-09. 
  52. ^ "97 Seconds". House, M.D.. 2007-10-09. No. 3, season 4.
  53. ^ Werts, Diane (2009-01-29). "Fox's medical marvel stays on top". Variety. http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117999278.html?categoryid=3530&cs=1. Retrieved on 2009-04-05. 
  54. ^ Lowry, Brian (2004-11-15). "House Review". Variety. http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117925545.html?categoryid=32&cs=1&p=0. Retrieved on 2008-12-23. 
  55. ^ a b "Control". House, M.D.. 2005-03-15. No. 14, season 1.
  56. ^ Leonard, John (2004-11-15). "Scrub Par". New York Magazine. p. 1. http://nymag.com/nymetro/arts/tv/reviews/10331/. Retrieved on 2006-12-30. 
  57. ^ Ryan, Maureen (2006-05-01). "'House'-a-palooze, Part 3: Katie Jacobs". Chicago Tribune. http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/2006/05/houseapalooze_p.html. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  58. ^ "Not Cancer". House, M.D.. 2008-09-23. No. 2, season 5.
  59. ^ "Fools for Love". House, M.D.. FOX. October 31, 2006. No. 5, season 3.
  60. ^ a b "Joy". House, M.D.. 2008-10-28. No. 6, season 5.
  61. ^ Challen, Paul (October 2008). The House that Hugh Laurie Built. ECW Press. p. 106. ISBN 1-55022-803-X. 
  62. ^ Slate, Libby (2006-04-17). "House Calls, An Evening with House". Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. http://www.emmys.tv/events/2006/house-wrap.php. Retrieved on 2008-12-23. 
  63. ^ Shore, David (2006). "Developing The Concept". Hulu.com. The Paley Center for Media. http://www.hulu.com/watch/21606/house-house---developing-the-concept#s-p2-st-i1. Retrieved on 2008-09-16. 
  64. ^ a b c Ward, Julia (2006-10-31). "You can't have House without a Holmes". TV Squad. http://www.tvsquad.com/2006/10/31/you-cant-have-house-without-a-holmes/. Retrieved on 2009-04-05. 
  65. ^ Wittler, Wendell (2005-04-18). "Living in a ‘House’ built for one". MSNBC. http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7518037. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  66. ^ Ryan, Maureen (2006-05-01). "'House'-a-palooza, part 2: Robert Sean Leonard". Chicago Tribune. http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/2006/05/houseapalooza_p.html. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  67. ^ Kristine, Diane (2006-05-24), "TV Review: House Season Finale - "No Reason"", Blog Critics, http://blogcritics.org/archives/2006/05/24/011244.php, retrieved on 2007-10-09 
  68. ^ "Joy to the World". House. FOX. 2008-11-09. No. 11, season 5.
  69. ^ Byrne, Bridget (2004-11-23), "British actor set for U.S. fame with offbeat M.D. role", The Press Enterprise (Riverside, California: Press-Enterprise Company), http://www.pe.com/entertainment/stories/PE_Fea_Ent_housestar.a1444.html, retrieved on 2007-10-09 
  70. ^ Radio Times magazine, March 23, 2007
  71. ^ Inside the Actor's Studio Hugh Laurie Interview, BRAVO Network, [2006]
  72. ^ Donnelly, Gabrielle (2008-08-09). "Is Hugh Laurie the new George Clooney? The House actor on how he's set pulses racing as TV's moodiest medic". The Daily Mail. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1042886/Is-Hugh-Laurie-new-George-Clooney-The-House-actor-hes-set-pulses-racing-TVs-moodiest-medic.html. Retrieved on 2008-11-20. 
  73. ^ "Raise Prescribed for 'House' Star". Zap2it. 2008-02-23. http://www.zap2it.com/tv/news/zap-hughlauriehouseraise,0,7642764.story. Retrieved on 2008-12-05. 
  74. ^ Fox, Erin (2008-09-12). "House’s Hugh Laurie Gets Huge Raise". TV Guide. http://community.tvguide.com/blog-entry/TVGuide-News-Blog/Todays-News/Hugh-Laurie-Gets/800046574. Retrieved on 2008-10-04. 

[edit] External links

Personal tools