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Grey's Anatomy

Found this article @ Kate Walsh Uncut

Grey's ladies



Seattle Grace Hospital may be loaded with medicine's most mesmerizing males, but it's the female doctors who make Grey's Anatomy a McDreamy attraction for viewers.
Of the average 20 million who tuned in each Sunday last season, two out of three were women, even though overall TV viewership is more evenly split. That distaff devotion has helped make Grey's, which moves to a new night tonight for its season premiere (ABC, 9 ET/PT), television's No. 3 scripted series overall, and No. 2 (behind Desperate Housewives) among women 18-49.

For actress Ellen Pompeo, there's certainly no gray area when it comes to understanding why female viewers check in for their weekly dose of these multiethnic, complex femmes.

"Most of the time on television, we're used to seeing women being bimbos or tramps — anything but flawed but also smart and professional," says Pompeo, 36, who portrays the often-whiny yetprodigiously talented (and bed-hopping) Meredith. "In the past, you'd have to go to cable to see a character so raw."

The creative talents behind the show resist categorizing Grey's. "We don't actually tend to think of it as a 'chick show,' " says executive producer Betsy Beers. "We like to believe that the themes and issues we deal with on Grey's are universal. For example, how does one juggle long hours at a demanding job and still try to have a successful personal life? Half the men and women I know wrestle with that on a regular basis, as do I."

But, Beers adds, "having said that, I can't deny there is a strong female voice in the writing as it was created by, and is run by, a woman" — executive producer Shonda Rhimes.

Fan Renee Dechert, an associate English professor at Northwest College in Powell, Wyo., was pulled in right from the start of the pilot by the voice of Meredith, which opens and closes each episode, much like Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw or Desperate Housewives' Mary Alice Young.

"Obviously, a female perspective is shaping how we'll see what we're about to see," Dechert says. "And just to make sure that we've got it, she'll do a closer at the end. Such a narrative technique is entirely in the tradition of Sex and the City, a show equally based on feminine fantasy."

To be sure, the Grey ladies are no wallflowers or saccharine sisters bonding and giggling over cafeteria Jell-O. They struggle. They make mistakes. They compete. They support. They commit. They cheat.

And each character's choices affect the audiences' affection. Viewers have come to both love and loathe not only Meredith Grey but also tough-talker Miranda Bailey (Chandra Wilson); snarky, abrasive commitment-phobe Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh, who declined to be interviewed); emotional train wreck Izzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl); deeply ambitious and bossy Addison Shepherd (Kate Walsh); and the mysterious hospital-basement dweller Callie Torres (Sara Ramirez).

'Strong, unique voices'

To Walsh, the show's appeal to women is as glaringly obvious as her character's scarlet lipstick.

"Every character has such a strong voice, a unique voice," says Walsh, 38. "It's really rare, as a woman, to see women interestingly and accurately portrayed on television. You get relegated to the mom or the long-suffering wife or the wh*re or the cop. To actually see women with all the complexities and facets of the male characters we've seen through the years ... people didn't even know they missed it until they saw it."


Wilson, 37, received an Emmy nomination for playing "The Nazi," the interns' not-so-affectionate nickname for their supervisor. A serious soap opera fan, she consumes four hours of daytime viewing every day. "I'm sitting here going through my tapes right now," she says, speaking from her home. She believes Grey's qualifies as a soap "like Knots Landing or Dallas was — where you want to come back next week and see how each situation resolved itself."

But unlike the often one-dimensional divas on traditional soaps, Grey's women don't get involved in petty catfights. The cast credits Rhimes for consistently keeping their characters respectable and believable.

Wilson reminds that when there was a locker room brawl (over a syphilis breakout), it was between characters Alex and George, not the ladies.

"It's encouraging a different experience for women and showing that it is entirely possible we can be friends and still be competitive," says Heigl, 27, whose emotional intern Izzie quit the medical program in last season's finale after getting involved with a heart patient and committing medical misconduct in her struggle to keep him alive.

Bring back Izzie!

In the new season, the women unite in a campaign to get Izzie reinstated. "And that's fascinating, because that just does not happen very often," Heigl says. "We're all competing for the medical cases or to get the best surgeries, but they also all helped Izzie at a time when she was making a crazy decision and basically throwing her career away. They stood by her and didn't abandon her."

Rhimes, 36, also has assembled prime time's most colorful cast. And that, too, accounts for the show's appeal, says Ramirez, a Latina whose orthopedic surgeon (and the object of George's affections) becomes a regular this year.

When Ramirez, 31, met Rhimes in New York last year to discuss her role, she said she was elated to discover "that Shonda was an African-American woman. She reflects on TV what I see as my experience in the world. She's got people of different races and backgrounds, but doesn't make a big comment about it. They are characters who have flaws, and — oh, by the way, they're African-American. Or Asian. Or whatever."

By all accounts, this diverse cast has bonded off-screen as well. Walsh says she's closest to Heigl and in fact had drinks with her and co-star T.R. Knight (George) the night before this interview. "It's safe to say that we totally love each other," Walsh says, laughing.

"It's a very fun atmosphere on set," echoes Pompeo. "It would be too difficult if we didn't have fun with the hours we have to put in."

For one episode, real-life knitters Wilson and Heigl taught Pompeo how to handle needles and yarn. Walsh and Heigl live near each other and often meet for drinks and prior to awards shows get gussied up together in one of their homes.

"There's an unbelievable amount of support and encouragement among these women," says Heigl. "We're very much there for each other in a way I haven't experienced outside of my very, very close friends that I've had since childhood. And I've had past working relationships with women that haven't been that supportive ... that have been more competitive."

Heigl recalls receiving a phone call at home from Pompeo after last season's finale showed the emotional scene in which Izzie broke down and climbed into bed with her beloved, dead patient, Denny.

"Ellen was so incredibly supportive and complimentary," Heigl says. "That meant so much to me because I'm so critical of myself and value her opinion. It made me want to cry."

Still, the actors have separate lives off-screen. "We don't have (much) time to hang out," admits Pompeo. "We spend all day together, and it's not like we're going to run home and hang out together, too. We all have things to do ... boyfriends, dogs to take care of."

Pompeo lives with longtime boyfriend Chris Ivery and their two poodles. Walsh is single. Heigl became engaged in June to musician Josh Kelley. Ramirez says she has a beau. Oh split from her Sideways director, Alexander Payne, after a brief marriage. And though Wilson declines to discuss the nature of her relationship with the father of her three children, daughters Serena, 13, and Joy, 8, and son, Michael, 10 months, keep her quite busy.

Wilson realizes what fans truly want to know is who their favorite characters will be hooking up with.

"The setting, the medical emergencies, the individual quirks of the characters, the humor — that's all secondary," says fan Petra Otto of Neenah, Wis. "In the end, I'm tuning in every week to watch them find love ... and hope that they all get loved in return.

"Heck, I even want McDreamy to make the right decision so that he, too, can be happy. But the sly writers added a twist here, didn't they? McDreamy can't be happy without breaking one of the gals' hearts."

On the strict orders of tight-lipped Rhimes, the cast has been given a gag order about revealing anything plot-related.

This season "you see everybody stand on their own a little bit more," says Walsh. "You get to see a different side of all of us. A little more history of where they've come from and where they're going. Every character in the show takes on a different direction. It's a lot more in-depth but still in the structure of the hospital and cases."

And Otto will be happy to learn the messy, misguided love triangle of Derek "McDreamy" Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey), his wife Addison and lover Meredith will be resolved. And a new twist will come via the arrival of Derek's sister.

Fans caught up in the action

Viewers feel so passionately about all these hookups, breakups and entanglements that some have even accosted Walsh in public to offer insight and encouragement.

"I was doing this event in Chicago, and this woman who'd had a few drinks came up to me, grabbed my arm like she knew me and said, 'You need to let McDreamy go! Let it go. It's done,' " recalls Walsh.


Not even Pompeo knows how the triangle will play out. "I don't know that I end up with anybody," she says. But Pompeo would be just fine continuing without a clear resolution, allowing Meredith to play the field, as many a man would do. Sex and the City aside, it's something rarely seen on television.

"It's what a lot of women do, anyway," Pompeo says. "But guys get a pat on the back, and women get a reputation."

Heigl believes female viewers are responding to such sexual liberation. "We've all been in those circumstances where there's been a double standard, where a man can act any way he wants, but if a woman behaves in a similar way, she's labeled something," Heigl says. "I think a lot of women appreciated that Meredith stands up for all women in a way."

Heigl says she still hears from female fans "how much they loved Meredith's speech to Derek that 'you don't get to call me a wh*re!' "

Heigl pauses.

"Was it 'wh*re' or 'sl*t'? I can't remember. But anyway, people loved it."

Source: usatoday.com
 
McSteamy was very steamy last night!:lol:
Derek's sister...hmmm...that would be interesting.
 
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I thought last night's episode was terrible. All about jealousy and cheating and sex? C'mon. Is that the only way we can have a good show nowadays? They've turned a potentially great show into a typical sex-based thing. :rolleyes: I was very disappointed. And the bar scene? C'MON.

And this whole thing with Meredith? I know writers do this to draw things out, yes... but it's SO silly and obvious that she's a twit.
 
I liked this episode much better than the previous one. I was annoyed thought that this mer/mcdreamy/finn love triangle is still going on. Pick one, end it already and move on!

BTW, I work in a hospital so I see all types of injuries but I have yet to see the amount of gruesome accidents/deaths Seattle Grace Hospital has seen, ie Season one the two people stuck together on the pole, and this episode with the tree trunk.........just a bit over the top much.

dlg
 
christina126 said:
Addison was sooooo funny last night!!
She was! She should get drunk more often! :lol:
I loved how McSteamy materialized from the shower. Literally...all steamy. It was hot. Go Addie!

If you missed the episode 3 preview, here it is:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jMvzS_y4MIE

(ADDIE AND MARK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
 
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Oh, and an article from The Boston Globe.

Love to hate you

September 28, 2006


I hate Meredith.

I have my reasons.


She whines incessantly and puts y's on the end of words that don't need them (after all, she's ``dark and twisty ") .


She can't be alone, she only talks about her love life, and an entire hospital staff orbits around her.


She got her job because of her mom.


During the 15 seconds she was single, she met a perfect veterinarian who cooks.


She used a sick dog to perpetuate adultery.


She slept with a million guys and never freaked out to her roommates about whether she got an STD.


I hate her because McDreamy is a stupid nickname.

I hate Meredith for the same reason someone posted this note on a blog last winter at 2:20 a.m.: ``I think Meredith's character needs to gain about 20 pounds and stop crying." And for the reason someone posted this one on a blog just a few months ago after last season's finale: ``Meredith looks like some skeleton someone found on an archeological dig and did a voodoo spell on to bring her back to life. Someone get her a Twinkie, a pizza and a Luna Bar and fast.

At least Ally McBeal sang sometimes.


I hate Meredith because sometimes she has a lisp and sometimes she doesn't. I hate her even more because the lisp is cute.


When Meredith is doing her job, which involves cutting people open and exposing their organs, I'm pretty sure she's thinking about boys.


She breathes loud just to be dramatic. She probably doesn't even have asthma.


She thinks she's unique -- everybody's parents get sick and divorced.


I hate Meredith because she wants what she can't have.


Because she's probably going to get her way.


Because if she doesn't get her way, I will feel incomplete.


And because tonight, against my better judgment, I will tune in and root for her just like everybody else.


MEREDITH GOLDSTEIN


---------
I definitely don't root for Meredith, sorry.
 
haha me neither! i root for mcvet and if getting meredith makes him happy, then i root for them getting together. although i would really like meredith to just move to another country so the show can revolve around izzy and alex :)
 
DANG!!!!! McSteamy...McDreamy....Addison...Meredith.....Burke's mom....I'm loving the drama!
 
I'm so glad that McSteamy is back to bring more drama! I adore Addison though. She's really grown on me and now I find Meredith a little... whiny.
 
xtine888 said:
Oh, and an article from The Boston Globe.

Love to hate you

Meredith looks like some skeleton someone found on an archeological dig and did a voodoo spell on to bring her back to life. Someone get her a Twinkie, a pizza and a Luna Bar and fast.
:lol: kinda mean but still funny.
 
whoa! loved last weeks eps. Overall i'm lovin' Grey's Anatomy more and more. The casts are amazing. Whoever is in charge of casting, they pick the right people! I love Addison she better stay a regular. I love their new addition, Callie. She always get the girls out of a jam :lol: Diane Carroll played her part well. I hope she makes numerous guest appearances in the future. :lol: McSteamy (i rather call him McF***Me :blush: ) looked sooo hot *sighs* Saw the side of Finn that blew me away. Meredith wasn't the only one that got takened aback. lol

I'm lovin' the story line more and more every week. Hell, I love to see brilliant minds and their fragility of life. :lol:
 
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Callie is so hilarious...! I loved it when she was dancing!

09/16 - McDreamy's sister will be played by Embeth Davidtz. Source: TV Guide Podcast
 
I'm enjoying season 3 so far. Cristina and Addison are still my favorites to be sure. Meredith is kind of like Buffy was for me in Buffy the Vampire Slayer...an annoying means to better characters. I can't stand her, but GA wouldn't be a show without her.
 
Any McDreamy fans? Or Patrick Dempsey fans? (I like PD very much, I flat out hate McDreamy and wish the bomb had taken him (and Meredith) out instead of Dylan, the cute bomb guy.)

Aww, he was so nerdy when he was younger. Time has definitely been kind to him; he looks way better now.
(source: greysanatomy LJ, thanks to wasted_nickel for posting these!)

ETA: I KNEW I recognized him from somewhere! "Sweet Home Alabama"!! He was so cute in that movie (but I'm a bigger Joshy Lucas fan).

 
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Article and video clip of a McSteamy Interview:
http://www.etonline.com/tv/spotlight/37335/index.html

This man is gorgeous. PD should be getting a little worried.

Gibbs is on the case and McSteamy heats things up! With the television season underway, we go inside two of the hottest shows to hit the airwaves -- "NCIS" and "Grey's Anatomy."

Dr. McDreamy, meet Dr. McSteamy! PATRICK DEMPSEY has some newfound competition in the hot doctor category as ERIC DANE permanently joins the cast of "Grey's Anatomy." We were the first on the set with the hunky star, who revealed how he stays in shape for his racy towel scenes.

"I go to the gym four times a week," he says. "When I'm 60, I want to feel like I am 40. I lift weights and I have a really good trainer."

He also confesses that he's not too picky about what he chows on. "I eat whatever I get my hands on," he says. "You could bottle my metabolism and we would all be billionaires. I miss a meal, I lose five pounds!"

Dane, who's been seen on the big screen in 'X-Men: The Last Stand,' was introduced on the ABC series last season in the episode titled "Yesterday," and made a surprise appearance at the end of last Thursday's episode. He returns as a regular, reprising his role as plastic surgeon Dr. Mark Sloan. "Grey's Anatomy" airs Thursday's at 9 p.m.
 

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