They might be the best couple on TV, but someone will get between House and Wilson on a future episode of House.
Sasha Alexander - best known for playing Agent Todd on 48 episodes of NCIS from 2003-2005 - will appear on one installment of the Fox hit later this season.
According to Entertainment Weekly, the actress will guest star as the neighbor of this adorable twosome when they move into new digs. Both characters will crush on the beauty, but don’t worry, fans.
Nothing can do long-term damage to our favorite television bromance.
Are true the rumors that Salma Hayek will be in two House episodes? Not true!
When will you start planning out the second half of the season? Soon.
Yes or No? Will we see anything else dealing with House’s father issues concerning either/both John House and his bio dad? A bit.
Any chance of the return of (Evil) Nurse Brenda Previn? Or the Clinic!? Not that i am aware.
Greg each week the episodes are better!!!!! Is True that Lydia coming back?? Someday. Not soon.
Do you think House loves Wilson? Maybe. Be sure to watch ep11.
Aw, that’s too bad! To make me feel better, could you tell me what eps so far you think will make H/W fans happiest? Today’s read through of ep11 was insanely fantastic for any Hilson fans.
That good!Cuddy is part of the drama! I think she should have more scenes! She is so funny even when this troublesome is funny OMG! This is becoming increasingly interesting! We have much Huddy? Yep!
Is there any chance of an epidemic type episode this year or is that classified? You never know.
One tough patient is coming to the Princeton Plainsboro hospital next week. In “House M.D.” episode “The Tyrant“, the team treats a controversial African politician who has fallen ill. He dares Cameron who is in charge of him to pull the trigger if she wants him dead.
The character played by James Earl Jones is a merciless dictator named President Dibala who is being subpoenaed for crimes against humanity in his country. The team faces a moral dilemma whether to save him or let him go.
Meanwhile, Wilson tries to make peace with a feuding neighbor, but House’s prying exacerbates the problem. House himself is in the middle of his mission to get his job back.
“The Tyrant” is scheduled to air on Monday, October 5 on FOX. This would be the starting point episode that triggers Cameron’s exit from the hospital. The character played by Jennifer Morrison reportedly is about to follow her husband Chase out of Princeton after he “treads a thin moral line on a case involving an African dictator”. But after House intervenes, Chase decides to stay and she goes on with the plan.
According to our favorite frenemy, Jennifer Morrison’s run as Dr. Allison Cameron on House will end midseason, and her exit was a creative decision on the part of the producers. (Meaning Morrison didn’t quit; she was written out.)
OK, so that’s the alleged behind-the-scenes situation—according to a rep, “The show does not have any comment” on reports of Morrison’s exit—but forget the Hollywood drama. What drives Cameron to ditch her job at Princeton-Plainsboro after more than five years in House’s orbit?
Read on for the exclusive scoop we got from insiders on why Cameron leaves her husband and the hospital…
Here’s what sources spill about Cameron’s departure: After Chase treads a thin moral line on a case involving an African dictator, he and Cameron both decide they should get out of Princeton while the getting’s good. They plan to quit the hospital together and go somewhere else where they can focus on their relationship and on each other.
And then House gets involved. Because House (Hugh Laurie) is the devil. (Argh!)
House, who loves nothing more than to pour poison in the ears of his friends, starts talking to Chase about Cameron. House suggests that Cameron forgiving Chase for his misdeeds with the dictator is out of character for her.
Shortly thereafter, Chase has an inexplicable change of heart and decides he wants to stay with House after all. Cameron is understandably upset.
Harumph.
According to insiders, this all goes down around episode eight.
If nothing else, this certainly casts a new light on what Jesse Spencer told us at the House premiere party in Hollywood last week: “I’ve got a lot of storylines coming my way. There’s a bit of dodgy doctoring going on. But dodgy doctoring is all we do on the show. Bend the rules a little bit—that’s what House does. If House was practicing medicine [in the real world] he’d have lot his license on day one.”
Long story short: Chase drank the boss’ Kool-Aid, Cameron didn’t and horrible, horrible House wins again.
What do you think about this major cast change? Does Jennifer’s departure from House and the final destruction of Hameron ruin the show for you, or will you carry on in the company of Cuddy and Thirteen and not mind one bit?
Dr. Gregory House has officially gone crazy, and fans are about to dive down the rabbit hole with him when House returns on Monday (8/7c, Fox).
The two-hour Season 5 premiere finds House confined to the mental institution we saw him walking into in the final moments of last season. If you’re a fan of Hugh Laurie’s cantankerous doc, you’ll certainly be happy with the premiere, as he and Wilson (he’s in one quick scene) are the only main characters to make an appearance. “It was daunting, I was daunted and I still am,” Laurie told TVGuide.com about House’s solo flight. “It was a big thing to take on for everybody, to set it in a completely different world, with a completely different cast of characters. A lot of people have taken a lot of risks with this. If nothing else, it’s exciting.”
In the meantime, TVGuide.com turned to Laurie’s co-star Lisa Edelstein to find up what’s coming up on this season of House. She reveals what the hospital is like without House, who might give Cuddy a new romantic distraction and what she thinks is the ultimate endgame for “Huddy.”
TVGuide.com: Fans were pretty upset with the season finale because the House and Cuddy love scene they’ve been waiting for was actually a hallucination. Lisa Edelstein: The thing that I thought was good news about it is that there’s only so far we can take it on the show before you change the dynamic, so the fact is, we kind of got a freebie in, because ultimately it can’t really be that successful because that’s not what House is about. The more time you eke out of the opportunity to just explore two people who have no relationship skills, the more we can play around. I get to be a virgin another time.
TVGuide.com: Was it awkward shooting those physical scenes with Hugh Laurie after having worked with him for so long? Edelstein: Not for me. I wasn’t awkward. Hugh kept saying how odd it was at the Paley Festival, but I’m not married, so there’s no issue for me. I think Hugh is awesome, we’re great friends and I love kissing, so why wouldn’t I love kissing Hugh Laurie?
TVGuide.com: How will the show evolve this season? Edelstein: The beginning of this season is really about House trying to find a sense of recovery from himself. He’s most likely doomed to fail in that regard, but that’s where we’re at right now in terms of what’s happening in the season.
TVGuide.com: House is like a rock for everyone in the hospital. How will that change now that he’s not around? Edelstein: The team is particularly insecure. Even though they all know they’re smart, nobody feels quite as smart as House. So there’s a lot of second-guessing going on on the team. When you have such an overbearing father, in a sense, it’s really hard to know when you can think for yourself. Learning how to think on your own two feet is a challenge when somebody is making all the decisions for you. They’re all kind of faced with that.
TVGuide.com: Foreman is taking over the diagnostics department in House’s absence. How does he handle the new job? Edelstein: He’s the one that demanded that position, by the way. She didn’t hand it to him. He demanded it. I think she respected that, but then she’s just like, ‘Step up then; this is what you want to do.’ He doesn’t handle it so well. In trying to be the best boss he can be, he actually really screws it up.
TVGuide.com: What does Cuddy get to do this season that we haven’t seen in the past? Edelstein: This year, Cuddy is really trying to step out a little bit and get her own life and a love life and try not to be so down and up with House, which of course will probably make him go for her even more. I think there’s a lot of exploration going on with that. She should get to sleep with somebody else too. All’s fair in love and war. Damn it, why don’t I get any love scenes with anybody else? Every once in a while, somebody shoves their tongue down your throat that you’re not happy about.
TVGuide.com: What would your ideal ending for House and Cuddy be? Edelstein: I’m not into endings because I don’t think that’s what life is. It’s not like Lost, where they’re going to get back to the island or everything is going to become clear at episode 17. I think life goes on for everybody. Whenever the show ends, it seems like there’s a chance that they might try, although the hope is very dismal for it to work. The complicated dance that they do kind of goes on forever. I would imagine [that] to be the most honest. To some extent, if you just surrender to it and let it be what it is, good and bad and ugly, that’s a beautiful thing.
House ended last season with a double twist. At first it seemed like Dr. House and Cuddy finally got together and he’d kicked Vicodin. Then they revealed that their tryst was a hallucination caused by House’s Vicodin addiction. The season finale showed House entering a psychiatric institution, which is where the new season will pick him up.
Hugh Laurie gave reporters a preview of House’s journey to come over the summer. For years we have been analyzing House’s behavior, the actor being the character’s de facto defender as his real world spokesperson. The issue of whether his entertainingly vicious banter is justified by his ability to solve rare medical mysteries has been at the heart of the show for its five years and counting.
Now the issue deepens. His painkiller addiction has compromised his sobriety, and if he’s not practicing medicine, can he still get away with insulting others? House returns September 21 on Fox. Read More→
The “House” season premiere coming up next week? So un-House like.
With all the series regulars besides Hugh Laurie — and Robert Sean Leonard, who appears as Wilson in one very short scene — absent from the two-hour episode which spans the several months that House spends in a mental facility, you’re either going to love what the writer-producers have done or you’re going to hate it.
And Cuddy fans who want to see Princeton-Plainsboro’s fearless leader together with the cranky doctor should beware.
As has been rumored, House is indeed hooking up with the character played by guest star Franka Potente… and its pretty serious.
Like so serious that our guy might shed a few tears because of it.
Uh, yeah.
Not to worry, however. According to executive producer David Shore, House — though he’ll certainly attempt to change — will end up being the same man he’s always been in the end.
I spoke with Shore, as well as Robert Sean Leonard, Lisa Edelstein and Peter Jacobsen, recently and they all weighed in on the situation.
Shore is also spilling on Foreteen’s current relationship, plus Cameron and Chase and how the two will figure back into the mainstream action this season…
Following a guest-starring stint that received mixed reviews (and rumors of his own spin-off), Michael Weston will reprise his role on House this season as private eye Lucas Douglas.
Last fall, House hired Douglas - who turned out to be quite similar to the honest cranky doctor we all know and love - to trail around Wilson. He appeared in multiple episodes and then pretty much vanished.
But Michael Ausiello confirms Weston’s return to the series this season, though plot details are unknown at this time.
Meanwhile, Hugh Laurie told E! News that season six will also feature a lot of nudity. Seriously. Or not seriously. It’s hard to tell when he speaks in a British accent…
As the extended season six trailer for House depicts, this character’s stay in a mental institution won’t be a pleasant one. In a revealing interview with TV Guide Magazine, star Hugh Laurie attests to this fact.
He’s filmed three episodes of season six so far and says the troubled doctor is experiencing a “harrowing” journey.
“It’s been a very dark and challenging experience but a good one. He’s a character seeking redemption in some way or another, and I think there’s always a glimmer of hope, but it is a dark place to start. It’s a character going through a very traumatic experience.”
Will House be practicing medicine any time soon?
“I don’t know,” Laurie said. “I’m operating in a consultative capacity at the moment. His license is suspended, as it would be, and has yet to be given back.” While waiting for his license to be reinstated the doctor is simply trying to behave. “House is trying to keep himself in check and curb his acerbic tongue. How long that will last, remains to be seen. I have my doubts.”
The two-hour season premiere of House airs on September 21.
What impact will last season’s fantasized hook-up between House and Cuddy have on these characters’ relationship this fall?
Michael Ausiello asked House creator David Shore that question He replied:
“We’re stepping back from it a little bit. We’re not ignoring it. We have to carry forward… It’s going to go someplace eventually. But the beginning of this season is primarily focused on House trying to find some semblance of sanity, and not completely succeeding.”
Follow this article’s jump for more of the Q&A with Shore, including his thoughts his plans for Cameron and Chase next year.