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| Per mettere i vari articoli che escono sul telefilm questo è un pezzo dell'intervista a hugh che uscirà sul tv guide della prossima settimana (che avrà in copertina hugh ) Full House How does TV's crankiest doc operate? With a lotta help from his friends by David Hochman
At last, a problem Dr. House can't cure with an insult and an Rx for Vicodin: "It's becoming increasingly difficult to be a regular anonymous person," Hugh Laurie says with a sigh in his House trailer on the Fox lot in L.A. As its second season draws to a close, the popular Fox series is emerging as this generation's St. Elsewhere, a smart hospital drama with enough cool medicine, dark comedy and sexy spark to keep its fame-weary star on call 24/7. He's sporting the five o'clock shadow and casual attire that have become House's trademarks, though Laurie says he sometimes wishes he could be as intimidating as his character. "If I'm seen on the street or in a restaurant, it's apparently an occasion worthy of being recorded on digital video camera. Surely my table manners can't be that interesting."
Maybe not, but House's bedside manner certainly is. That's why we consulted with the Cambridge-educated British actor (who dropped his dead-on American accent for the interview) and a few of his colleagues to evaluate the metastasizing appeal of TV's favorite pill-popping, Cain-raising medical misfit.
PATIENT: Gregory House, M.D. BIZARRE MEDICAL CONDITION: Antisocial Personality Disorder SYMPTOMS: Just listen to him! In the premiere episode, House announced, "Treating patients is what makes most doctors miserable," and it's pretty much been downhill ever since, like when House told his only real ally, Dr. James Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard), "You wouldn't know Prada if one stepped on your scrotum."
Does playing a crank come naturally to Laurie, who was best known before House as the dad in the Stuart Little movies and for wisecracking British comedies like Blackadder? "I'm not this character but I do get grumpy at times," he says. "I can't deny there are times after a few 15-hour days on the set that I'm dragging my feet about coming to work." Adds executive producer Katie Jacobs, "I don't know that 'happy' is who Hugh is. This show puts a lot of pressure on him. He has to rattle off medical terminology in perfect American English. We give him a cane and make him run, and he usually has people sneezing all over him."
To clear his head, Laurie hops on the Triumph motorcycle he keeps parked outside his trailer. "It's the kind of machine that goes from zero to 60 so fast, the skin on your face starts doing ripples," he says.
PROGNOSIS: The glass will remain half empty, creator and exec producer David Shore says. "If a psychoanalyst were to 'cure' House, it would be good for the character but bad for the world, or at least bad for the show," he says. "People think they want House to change, but they don't. They watch him because he's a bastard."
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