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An explosion causes Hawkeye to go blind. Tom Sullivan makes his television debut as a patient who lost his sight in combat. Able is played by Judy Farrell, Mike Farrell's wife at the time this episode aired.
The series, screened on the ABC, is set around a fictional general medical practice, in the vein of the Seven Network serial A Country Practice.Whereas A Country Practice was set in a rural setting, G.P. was set at a clinic in an inner-Sydney suburb, and explored both the personal and professional lives of the general practitioners working together, and the other doctors and staff who worked ...
Alan Alda (left), Wayne Rogers (right), McLean Stevenson (in back) and Loretta Swit (in front) from the first season of M*A*S*H M*A*S*H is an American television series developed by Larry Gelbart and adapted from the 1970 feature film MASH (which was itself based on the 1968 novel MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors by Richard Hooker). It follows a team of doctors and support staff ...
In the late 1960s he wrote several episodes of the Dragnet TV series. [3] He wrote eight episodes of the M*A*S*H TV series during seasons four, five, and six, including The Novocaine Mutiny, [4]: p.190 The General's Practitioner, [4]: p.198 The Grim Reaper [4]: p.203 and Quo Vadis, Captain Chandler? [4]: p.186
Doctor at General Hospital who is involved in a drug-importing scheme with Claudia Zacchara. Friend of Patrick Drake in medical school. Shoots Michael Corinthos in a botched attempt on Sonny Corinthos' life, and is later killed by Jason Morgan. Tried to begin a friendship with Sam McCall after he treated her several times.
The General, a Buster Keaton film; The General, a Russian war film; The General, a John Boorman drama about Dublin criminal Martin Cahill; The General, a British TV fly-on-the-wall documentary series about a hospital "The General" (The Prisoner), an episode of The Prisoner "The General", an episode of Spyforce
Based at Southampton General Hospital, [1] the programme tracked the progress of selected patients, including outpatients, at the hospital. The series was broadcast live [1] every weekday on BBC One, in a daytime slot. 61 episodes of the programme were aired in total; 58 of them in 1998 [2] (from April to June), and the other three in 2002. The ...
He appeared in a children's TV comedy series, Hogg's Back (1975) as Doctor Hogg, an eccentric general practitioner (GP); in 2016, this series appeared on Talking Pictures TV. [3] Royle acted with Wendy Richard and Pat Coombs over two series. [4] Hog's Back is a ridge of hills in Surrey. [5]