Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kerry Weaver is a fictional character, a physician, in the NBC television series ER. Dr. Dr. Weaver first appears as a recurring character in the second-season episode "Welcome Back, Carter!", which aired on September 21, 1995.
In the fall of 1995, Innes began a recurring role in the second season of the hit NBC medical drama ER, where she was cast as Dr. Kerry Weaver, the skilled chief of the ER with an abrasive exterior and a physical disability. She was added to the main cast in the third season.
The first additions to the main cast came in Season 2 with Gloria Reuben signing on as Physician Assistant Jeanie Boulet (recurring character in Season 1), and in Season 3 with Laura Innes as Dr. Kerry Weaver (recurring character in Season 2).
With the addition of Laura Innes (Dr. Kerry Weaver), Maura Tierney (Dr. Abby Lockhart), Alex Kingston (Dr. Elizabeth Corday) and Goran Visnjic (Dr. Luka Kovac), viewers had even more intrigue and ...
Meanwhile, the show's longest-serving character Kerry Weaver departs when Kovač is forced to make budget cuts which threaten her job. Paramedic Tony Gates returns as the ER's new intern, Kovač is sued for malpractice and is later forced to return to Croatia to care for his father, Abby struggles to adapt to motherhood and Ray is involved in a ...
William H. Macy as Dr. David Morgenstern – Chief of Surgery and Emergency Medicine [1] Amy Aquino as Dr. Janet Coburn – Chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology [2] CCH Pounder as Dr. Angela Hicks – Surgical Attending Physician [3] Laura Innes as Dr. Kerry Weaver – Chief Resident; Ron Rifkin as Dr. Carl Vucelich – Cardiothoracic Surgeon [4]
Anthony Edwards as Dr. Mark Greene – Attending Emergency Physician; Noah Wyle as Dr. John Carter – Chief Resident; Laura Innes as Dr. Kerry Weaver – Chief of Emergency Medicine; Alex Kingston as Dr. Elizabeth Corday – Associate Chief of Surgery; Paul McCrane as Dr. Robert Romano – Chief of Staff and Chair of Surgery
The last image we have of Patrick Cagey is of his first moments as a free man. He has just walked out of a 30-day drug treatment center in Georgetown, Kentucky, dressed in gym clothes and carrying a Nike duffel bag.