The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New medical drama set in Atlanta

Co-creator talks about major themes in show that has factual roots.

- By Rodney Ho rho@ajc.com

Medical dramas can still work. Just ask ABC, which has the biggest new hit of the broadcast season with “The Good Doctor.” “Grey’s Anatomy,” in the meantime, is in its 14th season.

Now Fox is hoping its latest effort “The Resident,” set and shot in Atlanta, will capture similar magic, a genre it mined well for eight years with “House” from 2004 to 2012. It debuts after Sunday’s Eagles/Vikings NFC Championsh­ip game.

Like John Carter on “ER” and Meredith Grey on “Grey’s Anatomy,” Dr. Devon Pravesh (Manish Dayal) opens “The Resident” on

his first day at the hospital and quickly faces life-threatenin­g challenges and difficult characters.

As a first-year resident, Dr. Pravesh is assigned to work under

blunt, cocky but highly effective internist Dr. Conrad Hawkins (Matt Czuchry of “The Good Wife”

fame). Dr. Hawkins, in the meantime, is trying to get back together with nurse Nicolette (Emily VanCamp from “Revenge”) and spars with lead surgeon Dr. Soloman Bell (veteran actor Bruce Greenwood).

Amy Holden Jones, the co-creator and executive producer who wrote “Mystic Pizza” and “Beethoven,” said she wanted to highlight how hospitals juggle ethics and profits and often lack accountabi­lity. When a surgeon kills a patient in the very first scene of the pilot, he deflects his own blame quickly, and the rest of the staff complies with a new excuse.

Jones said episode five will show a surgeon juggling five simultaneo­us surgeries, a time-saving device where residents handle the bulk of the work. It’s a situation that could backfire if something goes horribly wrong.

Scarily, many of the story ideas come from doctors themselves who provide them anecdotes that have actually happened.

Here are five notable takeaways from the first two episodes:

1. So is he “House” or is he McDreamy? Dr. Hawkins can turn on the charm when he needs to, and he is beloved by many of his patients. But he has a sizable ego and tells his firstyear resident Dr. Pravesh to throw all the rules out of the window and do everything he says. Later, he is kinder, telling Dr. Pravesh, “What they don’t teach us in medical school is there are so many ways to do harm.” He’s also the type of hot dude who will get down with the prettiest nurse in the department and reveal a tattoo on his back that says “Death before Dishonor.”

2. Bad guy alert: Dr. “Shaky Hands” Bell is the aging chief surgeon who keeps killing patients and covering it up. Of course, Dr. Hawkins sees right through him and calls him out. “Is your pride really greater than the life of a patient?” he asks Dr. Bell. He isn’t evil personifie­d, just calculatin­g enough to ensure the hospital makes money and his image remains pristine. “His own feelings about the job and his own hubris have become far more important than the outcome of his patients,” Jones said.

3. Being in Atlanta is purely incidental: While shows like FX’s “Atlanta” and Starz’s recently canceled “Survivor’s Remorse” made a concerted effort to splice the city into the storylines, “The Resident” is focused almost purely on the fictional hospital the first two episodes. It does have an Atlanta-ish name: Chastain Park Memorial Hospital. Exteriors and some interiors are shot at the High Museum in Midtown, nowhere near the actual Chastain Park neighborho­od. Jones — who has no direct Atlanta ties herself though she grew up in Florida — said the show was originally set in Boston, which has a reputation for great hospitals, but she decided to just keep it Atlanta since it’s shooting here.

4. Best doctor in the house actually has the worst bedside manner: This seems like a trope, but Nigerian resident Mina Okafor (Shaunette Renée Wilson) is all business both to patients and fellow doctors. “These are superficia­l wounds,” she tells another surgeon when assigned to remove buckshot from a patient’s buttocks. “You don’t need a surgeon. Any fool can do this.” And she walks away. Jones, the creator, considers her the “Spock” of the show. She also believes Wilson might end up being the breakout star, based on early test screenings.

5. Nosy nurse: Twice in the first two episodes, Nurse Nicolette walks in on Dr. Hawkins doing something he technicall­y shouldn’t be doing. Jones considers Nicolette the “conscience” of the hospital, someone who accepts but doesn’t particular­ly like the way Hawkins bends or breaks rules to get what he wants.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY GUY D’ALEMA / FOX ?? Emily VanCamp, Matt Czuchry and Manish Dayal star in Fox’s new Atlanta-based medical drama, “The Resident,” debuting Sunday after the NFC Championsh­ip game.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY GUY D’ALEMA / FOX Emily VanCamp, Matt Czuchry and Manish Dayal star in Fox’s new Atlanta-based medical drama, “The Resident,” debuting Sunday after the NFC Championsh­ip game.

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