Times Colonist

Doctors give Code Black star a helping hand

- BILL BRIOUX

Ben Hollingswo­rth isn’t a real doctor — he just plays one on TV.

But the knowledge he’s picked up from the role came in handy this year when the Canadian-born Code Black star accompanie­d his wife Nila Myers to a medical checkup. Pregnant at the time, Nila gave birth to the couple’s first child, Hemingway, in July.

“I definitely kept our OB-GYN on his toes,” says Hollingswo­rth, who spends hours training for medical procedures as Dr. Mario Savetti on the CTV/NBC series. Code Black returns for a second season Sept. 28.

Hollingswo­rth could tell right away a simple blood test had gone wrong when his wife experience­d swelling. “Her arm started to look like Popeye’s,” says Hollingswo­rth, who concluded the needle had gone through the vein and demanded a doctor quickly drain the arm.

The 32-year-old actor stars opposite Marcia Gay Harden, Bonnie Somerville and Luis Guzman in the medical drama. This season Rob Lowe, freshly roasted on Comedy Central, joins the cast as Dr. Ethan Willis, an army colonel attached to the U.S. military’s combat casualty care research program.

Code Black is set inside a busy L.A. emergency room at fictional Angels Memorial Hospital. The drama strives for reality, with series regulars going through a “boot camp” involving many hours of medical training.

“We have classes in between scenes,” says Hollingswo­rth, who is instructed by real doctors. “If you’re not working on camera you’re in another room learning procedures you’ll be doing the next day. We’re constantly trying to get it as close to reality as possible.”

Even at home, Hollingswo­rth often sits and runs lines while he practises suturing wounds on a silicon pad.

“I don’t want to brag,” he says, “but I’ve gotten so good at doing it I hem my own pants.”

You’d think that might have helped on Hollingswo­rth’s last series, the shot-in-Toronto Suits, but that was about law, not tailoring.

The actor graduated from the National Theatre School of Canada in Montreal, alma mater of another Canadian featured on a U.S. medical drama, Sandra Oh of Grey’s Anatomy.

He looks upon Code Black as his finishing school. “I’m learning a lot just watching Marcia Gay Harden and Luis Guzman,” he says. “They’re very kind, generous, caring people. We’ve really created a family around them.”

Hollingswo­rth says “scary things happen to residents” in Season 2 of the series.

“Second year isn’t just your second year being a rookie,” he says. “You actually have to teach the new batch of first years. It’s your job to tell them what to do.”

Born in Brockville, Ont., Hollingswo­rth was raised in nearby Peterborou­gh, where his parents still reside.

“It’s always nice to go home,” he says. There are plenty of Code Black fans in his old neighbourh­ood, including a few former teachers. While Los Angeles is home now, Hollingswo­rth still feels “very connected to the Peterborou­gh area.”

The couple also maintains “a spot in Vancouver,” he says, in case projects bring them back across the border.

He has a very Canadian pet project he hopes to return to some day: a TV biography of Toronto Maple Leafs’ legendary founder Conn Smythe.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE ?? Ben Hollingswo­rth: Striving for emergency-room reality.
DARREN CALABRESE Ben Hollingswo­rth: Striving for emergency-room reality.

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