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Hugh Laurie   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #132 of 1655 |
Hugh Laurie

The sour can be sweet
* Hugh Laurie's doctor character on 'House' is no saint. That's atypical
on TV -- and one reason the actor kinda likes the guy.
By Robert Abele, Special to The Times
On a recent Tuesday night, viewers of Fox's hit medical mystery drama
"House" saw the cranky, Vicodin-popping doctor - whose diagnostic
ingenuity is matched only by his breathtaking rudeness - as visibly
unnerved as he's been all season long. It wasn't a convulsing patient or
his bad leg rattling him. He was being thanked by a staff member for
agreeing to shill for an overpriced new drug in exchange for not having
to fire her or any of his staff. Horror of horrors, House had to endure
someone's gratitude.
For Hugh Laurie, the British actor whose richly sour performance as
infectious-disease specialist Dr. Gregory House has turned him into
television's favorite mood-killing lifesaver, it's his character's
wariness of sentiment that he most admires. "Quite a lot of people would
like to be free of the anxiety of what the rest of the world thinks,"
the 6-foot-2 actor said recently over coffee in West Hollywood, on one
of his rare off-times from the world of 16-hour shooting days. "I wish I
could. He would be happy for a good deed to go unnoticed, and that kind
of self-sufficiency is a rare thing in this age, a heroic quality."
Television heroes have rarely come more misanthropic, though, than
House, and certainly in the lives-on-the-line hospital genre, where the
most important surgical procedure is usually the warming of a viewer's
cockles. House, meanwhile, is on the trail of killer diseases that,
combined with life's messiness, become biological puzzles, so he can't
help but eye any patient - when forced to actually be in the same room
with one - the way a cop sees a perp: "Everybody lies" is House's
deductive mantra regarding the personal information patients give. In
his opinion it leaves little room for a nice bedside manner. For a show
that has already done enough to jolt medical dramas out of their
touchy-feely trappings, the April 12 episode saw House physically
withhold a politician's breathing apparatus until he got the crucial
truth about a childhood illness he needed to save the guy's life.
"Sometimes House is utterly appalling and should be put in jail," says
Laurie, an admitted fan of pop culture rule-breakers like Dirty Harry.
"But other times he's sort of endearing. As long as we travel both sides
of the line, that's as good as treading the line." "House" also proves
that there's room on television for unsympathetic grouches who don't beg
for adoration. It debuted in November to tepid ratings, but when
"American Idol" started up
- with TV's other unrepentant truth-teller Simon Cowell - "House" jumped
into the top 10 and is now Tuesday's No. 1 drama, with the kind of
viewer retention that indicates it is a genuine hit beyond its hugely
popular lead-in. Tuesday's show had 17.4 million viewers overall, and
Fox will now push heavily for Laurie to win an Emmy.
But bring up to Laurie topics like great ratings, and a deep-set, almost
House-ian suspicion rises to the surface. "They're just numbers on a
page to me," says Laurie. "I never get outside of [the set] to actually
find out if anybody is watching the show." OK, but what about the
teenage girl who shouted excitedly, "Dr. House kicks [butt]!" during the
interview with a reporter, visual and verbal proof of fan love? "She
could be a plant," he says, a conspiratorial glance coming from his
hypnotically large blue eyes. "Like 'The Truman Show.' "
One bit of worry the 45-year-old Laurie was right about is that when he
sent an audition tape of himself to the producers, his 20 years as an
icon of English comedy did him no favors. Between his goofy,
thick-headed Prince George in the historical sitcom satire "Black-
adder" and his pitch-perfect rendition of author P.G. Wodehouse's
amiably twitty Bertie Wooster in the "Jeeves and Wooster" series, Laurie
was synonymous with comic buffoonery for anyone familiar with his past.
The pilot episode's director, Bryan Singer, wasn't, but creator David
Shore, born in Canada - where British TV is prevalent - was. "It's as if
someone had said, 'What about Barry Bonds for this part?' " recalls
Shore. "I'd go, 'Yeah, fantastic baseball player. Why would you think he
could do this?' Then Hugh redefined for me what was good in the role."
'Reason is his religion'
What Laurie grasped was the cool-headed romanticism in being a quippy
maverick who may not be happy but thrives on knowledge. "We live in an
age where we place emotion above reason, perhaps too often," says
Laurie, who likes that the show is pro-science in a contentious time for
medicine. "Reason is his religion. The show embraces logic."
But he also understood that House's insult-laden people skills - nearly
unparalleled in an American TV series protagonist - would have the right
savagely witty bite as long as it had focus and wasn't simply attitude.
A few weeks ago at Fox's Century City studios, Laurie could be found
defending his character against random cantankerousness. The scene
called for House to witheringly contradict his oncologist colleague and
diplomatic sounding board Dr. James Wilson (played by Robert Sean
Leonard) over a snap diagnosis. Between takes, Laurie questioned the
viability of a retort, his long, stubbly face looking as if a migraine
had set in when he couldn't articulate his concern. After the scene
wrapped and during a break in filming, the words came: He thought the
line was the equivalent of a smart-alecky "Duh!" tone that he and the
writers have worked hard to avoid.
"Every other show does that," Laurie said. "We should set ourselves
apart. House can be mean, but his causticity is not a default setting."
Laurie's father was a doctor in Oxford, where Laurie was born, and
though he says Dad was the "kindest, gentlest" of general practitioners
and would have found House's acerbic nature "utterly alien," he believes
he would have enjoyed the show. "Even he could come back at the end of a
long day wound up by some patient."
It's hard not to look at Laurie's performance, then, as part homage to a
man who entered medical school at age 40, after World War II ended and
he had served 16 years in the Sudan as a colonial district commissioner
for the British government. "It's unthinkable now, but there were so
many instances after the war of people who beat Rommel in North Africa
and then went back to sell insurance or completely retrain and have
whole new lives."
Laurie's father was also an Olympic gold medalist in rowing, and his
adoring youngest son fully intended to become an oarsman himself at
Cambridge, but illness sidelined him. Instead, the young man who had
always made people laugh joined the college's famed comedy club the
Footlights, whose alumni include Peter Cook and John Cleese. Laurie
became president and with classmates Emma Thompson and Stephen Fry
created a popular touring revue show.
Fry, who has been Laurie's best friend ever since, says Laurie was a
natural performer. "He had a wonderfully grave presence," Fry said by
phone recently. "In terms of comedy, he had this miraculous ability to
wander onstage . as if it were all a terrible mistake and he belonged
somewhere else."
Laurie recalls that after one show on the south coast of England, the
booker came to the dressing room afterward as everyone was removing
their costumes. "He said, 'That was great! Shall we say 15 minutes?' We
went, 'For what?' He said, 'The second half.' "
Laurie, who rarely exhibits self-satisfaction, is now quite proud of the
frantic cobbling together of half-remembered sketches and half-forgotten
songs in hardly any time.
Nevertheless, Laurie doesn't attribute his storied career in
entertainment to ambition. He won't even admit to choosing show business
as a profession. When his Cambridge group won the very first Perrier
Comedy Award at the prestigious Edinburgh Festival - "now it's
absolutely huge, a very desired thing," he says - Laurie garnered the
attention of an agent who "turned up in a Rolls-Royce and with a big
cigar and said, 'Do you want to do this for a living?' I said, 'Yeah,
for the next month.' Here I am 25 years later. It's bizarre."
According to Fry, Laurie's English modesty is extreme. "He's absolutely
brilliant but also painfully self-critical," says Fry, who then ticks
off his friend's gifts: athletic prowess, command of several musical
instruments and "laser-like" attention to logic and detail when the pair
wrote their popular U.K. sketch series "A Bit of Fry and Laurie." "I
don't think I've ever heard him say that he's pleased with anything he's
done, except things to him that really matter, like friendships,
parenthood, love. He's just a remarkable man to have as a friend, the
wisest I have ever known."
Now that an American show eats up a good portion of Laurie's time,
though, being away from his family - wife Jo and children Charlie, 16;
Bill, 14; and Rebecca, 11 - is an obvious strain. ("My eldest son was
one size when I left, and he's probably a cabinet minister now," he
jokes.) They've visited L.A. a few times, and when he gets the
occasional break he flies back to England, but contact is mostly morning
phone calls from his West Hollywood apartment, a quick burst of
native-accented chat before he has to reacclimatize to American-speak.
In fact, talk to Laurie on a weekend and he's British, but on set he's
an all-day Yank just to stay in the zone. His accent, or lack of one,
has been widely praised - he initially nailed it as the dad in the
"Stuart Little" movies - but it's the hardest part of his job. "The
problem is one part of the brain is doing it, and the other part is
listening all the time," he says. "Something like 'coronary artery'
gives me a nosebleed. I have to lie down in a dark room for about 20
minutes."
The "dark room" has a metaphorical reality for Laurie, who has had a
long bout with depression. "I feel it's over my shoulder, ever present,
but I have more good days than bad," says Laurie, who indicates that his
fouler dispositions stem from a perceived inability to play House
exactly the way he hears and envisions him. "It's very tiresome for
everyone else," he adds, and while he says it doesn't inform his
portrayal of an obviously damaged Sherlock Holmes-ian loner, Laurie's
on-screen Watson believes it does, and rightly so.
"You don't play a character like that with any kind of success unless
you have some deep waters," says Leonard. "A happy person acting unhappy
is unbearable to watch. He's not misery on the set, he's actually very
quiet and easygoing. But it's that Peter Cook thing, misery turned into
brilliance."
But Laurie has a big cure-all in his black Triumph Bonneville
motorcycle, a replica of the '60s British model, which makes the only
hours outside of working and sleeping - a trafficless, wind-swept
commute - feel something like freedom. "I couldn't live without it. It's
an exhilarating, sensual thing," he says.
It won't be going to Australia, though. Laurie was set to play Perry
White in Bryan Singer's "Superman Returns" movie shooting Down Under,
but his "House" schedule - with a second season filming earlier than
usual so Fox can kick it off in August - put the kibosh on that. "That
was a disappointment," he says. "That movie will just be huge . but it's
great that we have a second season too."
We will soon meet House's long-hinted-at ex when Sela Ward joins "House"
for the last two shows of this season and probably more next year. Will
she help explain House? Laurie hopes not, certainly no more so than the
character's chronic leg pain or love of soap operas and monster truck
rallies do.
Even if he loves the irritable misfit who's taken over his life, Laurie
can't help but feel tricked. "It begins with two [audition] pages, and
'Oh, that's nice, I think I'll have a little more.' Then you do a pilot
and you think, 'These two weeks will be great, working with Bryan
Singer.' Then it's, 'We think we're going to do six now.' 'Wow, six?'
Then six became 13 episodes pretty quickly, then another five, then
another four after, then whack! Twenty-two. Now it's 'Oh, my God, I'm a
heroin addict and didn't even realize it!' "




Fri Apr 29, 2005 5:06 pm

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The Radio Times Interview June 14-20, 2003 Hugh and cry ANDREW DUNCAN MEETS HUGH LAURIE We meet in the "honesty bar" of a boutique London hotel. It is, I ...
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Apr 10, 2005
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The sour can be sweet * Hugh Laurie's doctor character on 'House' is no saint. That's atypical on TV -- and one reason the actor kinda likes the guy. By Robert...
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Apr 29, 2005
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A Bit of Hugh and Worry, by James Mottram From Scotland on Sunday May 7, 2000, Sunday Finding the key to Hugh Laurie is a difficult task. Comedian, actor, ...
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May 1, 2005
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Related Stories" link that takes you to another interview with HL (it tells the story of filming the naked scene in 40 Something). ...
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Jun 3, 2005
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manchester film & tv   tv news   Friday, 27th June 2003   Telly talk: On the Slippery slope   Ian Wylie     HUGH Laurie has a theory about the fame...
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Jun 3, 2005
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Oh you scared me! I thought this was now and that Hugh had gone home and his wife said "forget it, we aren't moving to America, are you crazy?" And he had to...
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Jun 3, 2005
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From This morning's Daily Variety House' calls on boorish behavior Worthy of attention: Hugh Laurie By DAVID...
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Jun 11, 2005
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TV CLOSE-UP --HUGH LAURIE i'd never seen this article before. it plays a little fast and loose with some facts, but it does clear up the mystery of who helped...
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Jun 17, 2005
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Hugh Laurie on Jay Leno Just to let u guys know Hugh Laurie is goin to be on Jay Leno September 7th. ________________________________________...
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Aug 31, 2005
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Laurie 'Anti-Social' on Set of 'House' 2 hours, 36 minutes ago BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - In many ways, Hugh Laurie's character on the Fox hospital drama "House"...
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Sep 13, 2005
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UK's glitsiest designers dazzle the stars Eight of the UK's glitsiest designers are recovering from celebrations after winning the Design Innovation Award,...
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Oct 28, 2005
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Drama generated by a House market boom LOUISA PEARSON Bleak House, BBC1 House, Five Imagine that the date is November 1852. Rather than flicking through the TV...
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Nov 5, 2005
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Catching up with Hugh Laurie By TERRY MORROW November 1, 2005 Meeting Hugh Laurie instantly dismisses notions that he's like the gruff doctor he so...
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Nov 5, 2005
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Revving on 'Tonight' "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" (11:35 p.m., WDIV-TV, Channel 4, NBC). Dr. Cranky Puss comes calling when "House" star Hugh Laurie visits...
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Nov 16, 2005
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Actor Hugh Laurie Took Drugs For Role November 18, 2005 3:01 p.m. EST William J Brown - All Headline News Staff (AHN) - Actor Hugh Laurie admits he...
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Nov 19, 2005
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British actor HUGH LAURIE has realised a sky high dream - to fly a military jet without throwing up. The former BLACKADDER star recently took the controls of a...
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Nov 19, 2005
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Hugh Laurie SAG Nominee http://www.sagawards.org/PR_060105.htm Screen Actors Guild will honor its own at the 12th Annual SAG Awards™ ceremony on Sunday, Jan....
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Jan 8, 2006
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Laurie Modest About Success Just read this and thought I'd pass it on to other "House-mates". Tery ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...
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Jan 18, 2006
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Hugh and TVGuide.com     There's a wonderful interview with Hugh after getting his award in TV Guides coverage of the Golden Globes on the opening page at ...
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Jan 18, 2006
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HUGH LAURIE It's a caterpillar to butterfly-type media metamorphosis. The man best known in his homeland for portraying bumbling, English upper-class twits has...
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Jan 21, 2006
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Laurie likes House, but he's nothing like him By MELANIE McFARLAND SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER TELEVISION CRITIC Gregory House, M.D., is unpleasant, tactless...
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Jan 21, 2006
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Hughs Golden Globe clip http://s48.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=35VB9BRE8KD23040B861F7VDS6 If this has been posted here I apologize but if it hasnt then YAY! here ...
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Jan 25, 2006
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Hugh will be on Letterman on Friday, Feb. 24th. Nancy :)...
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Feb 19, 2006
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Hugh Laurie sex symbol shock Friday, 24th February 2006, 14:25 LIFE STYLE EXTRA (UK) - Hugh Laurie is flabbergasted he's a sex symbol - because even his wife...
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Feb 25, 2006
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If his wife didn´t say hin that he´s sexy and desirable, she´s a goon.This man seems to have no self esteem an it´s her bloody duty to push it, she´s his...
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Feb 26, 2006
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Article: Hugh Laurie taps into his curmudgeon http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200660407033\ 9 ...
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Apr 15, 2006
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House will be shown at long last in Germany at Mai, 9th! I hope it'll be a success. mlr6629@... schrieb: Article: Hugh Laurie taps into his curmudgeon ...
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Apr 16, 2006
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18 APRIL 2006 For many years he has enjoyed huge popularity in Britain where he is well-known for playing affable English gents, but on Monday night the ...
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Apr 21, 2006
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Hugh Laurie hits pay jackpot with House"   Posted by: "Cyane" cyane12@... northernlightspaintedsky   Date: Fri Jul 21, 2006 2:36 pm (PDT) ...
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Jul 23, 2006
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Hugh Laurie is scheduled to appear on "Inside the Actors' Studio" on Monday, July 31 at 8:00PM....
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