Scrubs Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- This article is about the television series Scrubs. Scrubs are also the shirts and pants worn by doctors, nurses, and others after "scrubbing in" for surgery. The wearing of scrubs has been extended outside of surgery in some hospitals.
Scrubs is an American sitcom on NBC created by Bill Lawrence, who also co-created Spin City.
The show, which premiered in 2001, focuses on the professional and personal lives of several characters working at Sacred Heart, a hospital in an unspecified city, and is currently in its fourth season.
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2 Cast 3 Trivia 4 External links |
The show premiered on October 2, 2001. What distinguishes it from other sitcoms are its use of narration, unusually verbose characters, abrupt segues between subplots, scenes of surreal escapism (usually presented as the thoughts of the main character), and poignant scenes where the characters address how doctors deal with death, the delivery of dire diagnoses, and other hospital-related issues. It also lacks a laugh track, a typical device in most sitcoms.
These cast members have appeared in numerous episodes since the show's incipience but remain credited as guest stars.
Important roles have been played by Tom Cavanagh, Scott Foley, Michael J. Fox, Brendan Fraser, Heather Locklear, Tara Reid, Freddy Rodríguez, Amy Smart and Heather Graham.
Sean Hayes, D.L. Hughley, Julianna Margulies Christopher Meloni, Jay Mohr, Matthew Perry, Ryan Reynolds, John Ritter, Alan Ruck (who previously worked with Bill Lawrence on "Spin City"), Rick Schroder, Nicole Sullivan, Dick Van Dyke, Jimmie Walker, Kelli Williams and Hattie Winston have also guest-starred.
The show is filmed in an actual abandoned hospital, with most of the props and items on the show having been supplied by the cast and crew. This allows for the crew to film exteriors at the same site as interiors.
Although initially only a recurring guest character, Neil Flynn was promoted to a main character in season 2. If the show was cancelled in its first season, it would have been revealed that the Janitor was simply a figment of JD's imagination.
Although we hear much about Dr. Kelso's wife Enid (nicknamed Bunny), she remains an unseen character.
The title sequence is quick and does not even feature credits (they roll after the sequence), but merely fast-moving pictures of the cast at work in the hospital. At the start of season 2, a longer opening credits sequence was added which featured recurring characters and credits, but was deemed to be too long by NBC who wanted to use more time for the episodes, so the sequence was quickly deleted. In occasional episodes, where they are running particularly short on time, only a brief title card saying 'Scrubs' and 'created by Bill Lawrence' appears.
Sam Lloyd formed a band in college with George Miserlis, Paul Perry and Philip McNiven. In an episode of season one, they guest starred appearing as Ted the lawyer's group of singers (named the Worthless Peons) who all work at the hospital, and appeared twice in season two. Their repertoire on the show included singing television themes (both old tv shows and primetime ones), and singing telegrams that resemble advertising jingles. In an episode near the end of season three, one of the band members quit.
Most of the episodes are narrated by J.D., and the episode titles usually start with "My...".
As of October 2004 three episodes have been narrated by other characters : "His Story" (narrated by Dr. Cox); "His Story II" (Turk) and "Her Story" (Elliott).
Tom Cavanagh was especially hired to play J.D.'s brother because of his uncanny physical resemblance to Zach Braff.
A 2002 episode "My Old Lady" won a Humanitas Prize in the 30 Minute Category. Also in 2002, it won an Artios award for Best Casting for TV, Comedy Pilot from the Casting Society of America. In 2003, it won the BMI TV Music Award. It has been nominated for three Emmys, and numerous other awards.Overview
Cast
Main cast
Recurring cast
Major guest cast
Trivia
