Fresh Air - Noah Wyle Is At Home In 'The Pitt'
Episode Date: April 21, 2025After 11 seasons on ER, Noah Wyle thought he was finished with medical dramas: "I spent 15 years avoiding — actively avoiding — walking down what I thought was either hallowed ground or traveled r...oad." But then COVID happened, and he felt compelled to tell more of these stories. He spoke with Dave Davies about the making of The Pitt, the medical jargon, and his mom's feedback on the show. Also, book critic Maureen Corrigan reviews Poems by Dorothy Parker and The Usual Desire to Kill by Camilla Barnes. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air.
I'm Dave Davies.
Our guest today, Noah Wiley, is an executive producer, writer, and star of the new Mac
series The Pit, which gives viewers an inside look at the chaos and drama of a big city
hospital emergency room.
Wendell Stone, 52, Chief Rigger from Pitfest.
Isolated in Shaw into the left chest when a speaker tower came down on him.
Looks like multiple rib fractures.
Pulse 110, BP 130 over 85, decent SATs at 96, 50 a-fent in the field.
Got it?
How we doing, Mr. Stone?
Mr. Stone is my dad.
This is just stone.
The Pit has drawn critical praise for its engaging storylines, intelligent dialogue, and well-drawn characters.
And it's gained a following of real-life emergency room doctors,
who praised the accuracy of the show's depiction of medical conditions and treatments.
Noah Wiley is a veteran of stage, screen, and television, who's no stranger to lab coats and hospital scrubs.
He played a medical student and then a physician on the hit NBC TV series
ER for most of its 15 seasons, where he earned nominations for three Golden Globe and five
Primetime Emmy Awards. He started in the TNT series Falling Skies and The Librarians and
has appeared in many movies. He's also been active in the organization's Human Rights
Watch and Doctors of the World.
The Pit is now wrapping up its 15-episode run
and has been renewed for a second season.
Noah Wiley, welcome to Fresh Air.
Thank you so much for having me.
I mentioned in the introduction that your character,
maybe I didn't, he's the senior attending physician
in this emergency room.
And in addition to treating patients,
you're really running this big organization, and it's a teaching hospital. So while you're an experienced pro,
there are all these others who are less experienced, residents in training and medical students,
on their first day, I believe, in their rotations as this thing begins. So there's a lot going
on here. Tell us just a little bit more about your character, Dr. Robby. I played Dr. Michael Rabinovich, who is several decades into his medical career and probably
should have retired a couple years ago. But like many practitioners, post-COVID felt pressed
into service and out of the increasing need. And because he's really good at what he does and he really cares about the people he works with, he's kept working.
And it's taken a toll on him.
He's seen a lot and done a lot and he's been able to compartmentalize a lot of that.
And today we are embedded with him for his entire shift on the day that he's no longer
able to do that.
Right.
And things, he runs into some rough seas.
He's surrounded by these young medical students.
And I don't think I recognize any of the actors in this,
but they are just so terrific.
The casting process was laborious.
We were looking for people with theater backgrounds, people
who were really adept at memorizing
lots and lots of dialogue, very good with props,
who could do all sorts of things while doing a procedure and walking backwards.
And we had to cast the show internationally.
We found actors in Australia, we found them in England, we found them on the East Coast,
West Coast, but we found tremendous performers.
So while you haven't seen them before, I knew early on that I was going to be a Trojan horse that was going
to introduce all this young talent to your living room.
And they're great.
Well, let's listen to a scene and get a little bit
of a flavor of the show.
This scene is typical of many, where a new patient
is being wheeled in by paramedics from an ambulance.
And we hear them barking out critical facts
as they're rolling them in.
And then you hear this one, two, three,
as the team coordinates lifting the patient from the ambulance stretcher to
a hospital gurney and then the team gets to work. Let's listen.
Twenty-three-year-old Ben Kemper, no helmet, got doored riding an e-scooter, neck versus
handlebar then face planted to the pavement, obvious facial fractures but alert and oriented
with good vitals.
Here we go.
One, two, three.
How we doing, Ben?
Come on.
Back in my throat. That's probably from the nosebleed.
Short rapid rhino, please.
Tacky at 120, pull socks borderline at 90.
We'll buy it 15 liters for now. Neck contusion, larynx shifted to the right, no prepidence. And Better. What's up? Good vitals, ANO, let's have a look.
And that's a scene from The Pit where our guest Noah Wiley is a star.
Tough to get the impact of that clip on radio, but that was a Lafort 3 floating face fracture,
which when you put your fingers on somebody's teeth and you pull their teeth forward, their entire
face comes with it.
It's rather dramatic.
You don't see it very often in an emergency room.
Right.
And you don't see it on the radio, but it is dramatic there.
But just the audio, I mean, you can hear the intensity of it.
And there's all this medical jargon flying by.
I mean, did you know all this stuff before you got into this series?
I knew quite a bit of it.
After 15 years on a medical show, you pick up certain things through osmosis.
The specifics of what each patient needs when they come in is a total mystery to me.
And thankfully, we've got a great team of technical advisors on the writing staff and
on the set.
Our secret weapon is a man named Dr. Joe Sachs, who is a board certified emergency room physician.
He was a technical advisor and writer on ER and he is with us again. And he is meticulous in his
attention to detail. And he basically does those trauma scenes. He will sort of present what the
appropriate medicine and procedures are, what each person in the room's role is given their hierarchy
in the hospital and
Even weighing in a little bit on emotionally how they may be feeling give the circumstances and stakes of the case
Yeah, you know I watched this series with my wife who was 25 years as a primary care physician
She gets almost all of it. I get maybe a third of it, but I don't feel like I'm missing much
But I did wonder is you were a writer on the show
I know. I mean, do you think about maybe letting up on some of that,
or is getting all that in critical
to the authenticity of it?
One of the decisions we made early on
was to not employ any soundtrack in the show.
And by lifting the music out, we've sort of removed
the artifice that says you're watching a TV show
and we need you to feel sad here because we're playing strings or exciting here because we're using percussion.
We're letting the sort of symphony of the sound of the procedures in the room be our
cadence and a lot of that is the technical jargon that the doctors are employing.
It becomes the soundtrack in the scene and the intensity with which they're delivering
those lines becomes the emotional equivalent of a score.
And it's really less important that the audience understands and more important that the audience
sees that the doctors know what they're talking about.
It's competency porn.
Well, the other thing that's interesting about those scenes is everybody's moving and all
of these different actors are barking these observations and commands and they've got to be careful not
to talk over each other so much that you can't hear it.
So there's, it's got to be crisply delivered and well miced.
I imagine this took some pretty meticulous rehearsal.
The rehearsals are extensive, especially for the medical scenes.
We often rehearse those 24 hours in advance of shooting them,
so we can come in with it pretty well in our muscles already,
and then figure out how we want to photograph it
on the day we shoot.
In terms of how the dialogue is overlapped,
that's intentional because that's real.
You know, you've got four or five people in the room,
all are working simultaneously trying to do their own thing
and record their own thing in the medical
record.
So a lot of times the sound is really cacophonous.
The effect is impressive.
You know, the origins of this show are interesting.
As I understand it, during the pandemic, you began hearing from medical providers and first
responders who were dealing with all this high stakes stressful demand on them. Is that right?
Yeah. Yeah. I was, you know, watching the news, but I was also getting a lot of mail
that was coming from first responders and some of it was, you know, hey Carter, we could
use you out here.
Carter was the character you played on ER, right?
It was, yeah. And a lot of them were sort of thanking me for inspiring to go into a
career in medicine, but also telling me how hard it was at that moment.
And I was sort of overwhelmed being a lightning rod for that at that time.
And so I pivoted a lot of that mail to John Wells, who executive produced ER, and said,
outside of the birth of my kids, this is probably the best thing I ever do with my life because
we inspired a generation of practitioners to go into the work that
is saving lives right now.
And then I went on to say that I think something's happening here.
And if you ever want to make a show about what's happening here, even though we said
we'd never do it again, I might be ready to volunteer.
And a couple years later, you know, after we saw how this broke down
over socioeconomic lines and racial lines and geographic lines, there was a show to
be told here.
What was it like for you to put on scrubs and a lab coat and get back in a hospital
setting again after all those years?
It was wonderful. I think I spent 15 years avoiding, actively avoiding walking down what
I thought was either hallowed ground or traveled road. And then finally I had an opportunity
to come back and was excited about it and slipped a stethoscope around my neck and just
felt right at home.
But now you have a beard. I mean, you were a callow young kid when you started that show
and then you were eventually an attending physician. Now you're a guy with a lot of miles on you.
Yes, yes.
I'm, ironically, I'm 20 years older than Anthony Edwards was playing the attending 30 years
ago.
So that makes me sound ancient.
Right, right.
You know, I should just mention it's been widely reported that there is some litigation
around this.
The estate of Michael Crichton, who the creator of ER has sued alleging that the
pit is an unauthorized reboot of the program. I mean what one of the
differences between the two shows is that the pit is the entire 15 episodes
are one day in the life of this ER. There's an hour and essentially in real
time an hour per episode is one hour of the day.
And so you get to see these things develop just over a day.
So that's a real distinction.
Very much so.
Different city, different character.
We had started down a reboot road
and then it became an impossibility.
And so we pivoted as far away from it as we could
to come up with a new medical show.
I stand by we have.
You're the lead attending in this emergency room.
And in real life, you're also an executive producer
and a writer and an experienced actor
among a cast which includes a lot of much younger actors.
Were you kind of a coach on the set in the same way
or a medical coach for these people learning the craft?
In a way, you know, it's interesting
we started with two weeks of medical boot camp for everybody myself included to kick some rust off and to
refamiliarize myself with how much has changed in health care, but also to
Bring everybody up to speed with where they needed to be by the time we rolled the cameras and John Wells who directed the pilot
Episode and executive produced, said to me,
don't be too nice to him.
And then he sort of segregated us
where I was off by myself and I ate lunch by myself.
And then the R4s ate together,
the R2s and 3s ate together.
And the med students ate together.
That's fourth year residents, second year residents, yeah.
Second year residents, fourth year residents.
And the med students all ate together by themselves.
And they all sat behind me. And then when we did our training rotations, Yeah. Second year residents, fourth year residents, and the med students all ate together by themselves.
And they all sat behind me.
And then when we did our training rotations, the med students learned what med students
know and the R2s learned R2 stuff and so forth.
And I kind of walked around and did a little bit of everything.
But it set a kind of hierarchical tone and differentiated us enough as performers that when we started working, it carried over.
So whether it was a byproduct of the rehearsal or the fact that I am
considerably older than the rest of the cast or that I've played a doctor before,
yes, there was a lot of meta energy where everybody was sort of playing the
dynamics that were present and just sort of heightening them a little bit.
Was there a wrap party after you finished taping in which those barriers broke down?
Yeah, to a degree.
I mean, I don't stand on ceremony when I work and I try to create as much of an egalitarian
and democratic environment as possible.
And so I try to erase numbers on call sheets and I try to erase barriers between foreground
and background or cast
and crew and try to call the whole thing company and get everybody to buy into the same thing.
And it's very hard to do that.
It's very rare that you're successful.
This one was the stars aligned beautifully.
Everybody just jumped in, which made it a real pleasure.
We listened to a clip earlier that was an intense moment in which a patient
is being wheeled in and the staff is immediately
getting to work on him.
There are a lot of quieter moments in this series
where you are dealing with a patient or a relative
and have some tough issues to communicate.
This is one I want to play now where a man and a woman
who are a brother and sister, played here by Rebecca Tilney
and Mackenzie Aston, are at the hospital with their elderly father who has pneumonia. The
father has left instructions he does not want to be intubated and they're talking to you
as Dr. Robbie about it. Dr. Robbie speaks first. Let's listen.
Either his pneumonia is getting worse or his heart couldn't handle the fluids that we
give him to treat the sepsis.
His lungs are filling up with fluid.
Can't you take the fluid away?
Not without his blood pressure crashing with very bad consequences.
So let's just hope the BiPAP works.
And if it doesn't?
Then I would need to know your decision about using a breathing machine.
We're still talking about it.
Well, we know he expressed his wishes in writing.
Do not intubate. We're thinking try it for a week.
That would be a very painful week.
He wouldn't get a lot of rest with all the monitors
and all the blood tests.
He might need to be sedated.
He might need to be restrained because he'd
be in an unfamiliar place with a very uncomfortable tube
down his throat.
And he wouldn't really know what was happening.
Elderly patients can often develop psych throat. And he wouldn't really know what was happening.
Elderly patients can often develop psychosis.
But he might get better.
Or he might get worse.
What would you do?
I really can't answer that for you.
This is your father.
That's your decision to make.
I can guarantee you that we will keep him as comfortable
as possible if a natural death is what you choose.
But he's not your father.
And he can recover from this.
What my sister means is that we're still deciding the best thing to do.
Well, the sooner you decide, the better.
I'm really sorry.
I wish there was more that I could do.
I'm not sure that he has that much time left.
And that is our guest, Noah Wiley, in a scene scene from The Pit which is now streaming on Max.
There are a lot of these scenes where you're dealing with loved ones who just can't accept
what's happening. There's another one, two parents who just can't accept the fact that their son who
came in with a ventanil overdose is brain dead. You want to just say a little bit about preparing
for these scenes? Well first of of all, it's really gratifying
to be able to play a storyline over several episodes
so that you can watch the gradation of acceptance
and watch the different methods and strategies
that practitioners use to help families prepare.
And sometimes when you only have an hour to tell a story
that has to have a beginning, a middle, and an end,
that feels like extremely hurried work
and often times feels disingenuous or inauthentic to the process.
So when you can have these things kind of arc over several hours, it feels like you
can kind of walk through those five stages of grief with these characters.
When we prepare for them, there's a lot of conversation about tone and about specificity of point
of view. In this particular instance, we have a brother and a sister who have very different
reasons for wanting to keep their father alive that have an emotional core to them that gets
revealed in subsequent episodes. So you want everybody in these scenes to have a real point of view
that's legitimate to who they are.
And then when those three truths come out
and they are in conflict with each other,
as they often are, that makes for good drama.
The other thing that's happening in this story
with your character is, you know,
I mentioned before that this series,
kind of the germ of it began during COVID
when you were hearing from first responders and the crises they were facing. And in
the show, your character, Dr. Robbie, during COVID lost a mentor, another
doctor, and I believe this day that is the focus of the series is the
anniversary of his death, right? We learned that early on. And then you want to just talk a bit about how his flashbacks,
his PTSD, if you will, is portrayed in the show?
This is the five-year anniversary of him taking
his mentor off life support, which
during the height of COVID, he had to be put on.
And then ultimately, in our back story,
he had to be taken off the life support to give
it to another patient who had a better chance of survival and then everybody died.
And it was a traumatic memory that my character has just not really ever dealt with.
He's moved on and today is a day he probably should have stayed home, but today he went
to work and as a result, he's just getting triggered by different things and those memories
begin to come up with greater and greater frequency and greater and greater poignancy
to the point where he becomes totally debilitated by them.
And the aggregate of all of that grief and all of that suppressed emotion just overwhelms
him.
And it was interesting.
My mother was an orthopedic nurse and an operating room nurse.
She worked for 20 years at a hospital in Hollywood.
And she came over for breakfast last Sunday, and she came into the kitchen,
and within five seconds of being there, she said,
you know, Noah, I can't stop thinking about last week's episode
and that scene where you were listing all the people who died.
And I think I had my own PTSD reaction.
I suddenly remembered everybody.
I remembered the four-year-old.
I remembered the pregnant woman with the baby.
I remembered the gang member that I tried to keep alive by squeezing two units of blood.
And she's just listing these names.
And she's, you know, getting teary-eyed.
And she finishes and I said, my goodness, Mom, I was on a medical show for
15 years, you never told me that.
And she said, well, that wasn't real.
I said, well, this one wasn't either.
And she said, but it felt real and it brought all that up for me.
Isn't that funny?
And so here I am in my own kitchen having this lovely sort of cathartic and catalytic
moment with my mother.
And I asked
her, I said, the four-year-old, when was that? She said, oh, I think your brother was probably
about four at the time. I think that's why it hit me. And then I thought to myself, oh,
so you came home and you made us dinner that night and you helped us with our homework.
Wow.
And she's carried that painful memory for all these years.
That's 35 years that's been in there. Came out last Sunday.
We're going to take another break here. We are speaking with Noah Wiley. He's an executive producer, writer,
and star of the new Mac series, The Pit, which is streaming now. He'll be back to talk more
after this short break. I'm Dave Davies and this is Fresh Air. On the latest bonus episode of
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The next clip I wanted to play is a painful moment in
the emergency room where a young child has died and in this case she drowned I
think after jumping into a swimming pool to try and save her sister who survived
right? Yes. Right. So after the child dies you gather the medical students and
residents into a room for a moment and let's listen to what you say.
That's as hard as it gets. We do these debriefs to try to give a sense of closure,
meaning to difficult cases so that they won't linger. But trust me you do? I did my residency at a big charity in New Orleans. And day one, I got a kid, five-year-old boy,
accidentally shot by his brother,
playing with dad's gun,
worried he was gonna get in trouble
right up until he coated and died.
Whew.
Then I asked myself, like, what do I do with this kid?
Where do I put this feeling?
And I found myself walking all night.
I was walking and walking and walking,
and I found myself back at the gates of Big Charity Cemetery
and I'm looking at all those mausoleums and those crypts
and I'm thinking to myself, okay, that's what I need.
I just need a safe place where I can put these feelings in.
I got patients throwing punches in chairs.
Uh, okay, everybody, let's get back to it.
Just remember the Employee Assistance Program is available as are Kiara and myself,
if anybody needs to talk.
What an interruption.
You wrote this scene, didn't you? This was your episode, right?
Yeah, that was one of the two episodes I wrote.
Your speech about how to overcome a loss like this is interrupted.
It's because they say patients are throwing chairs and fists.
And it turns out to be two women who are fighting because one has, in the waiting room, one woman has asked another woman to mask her coughing child.
And the other mom calls her a Fauci zombie and slugs her.
This is one of the many topical issues that you get into in this series, which
weren't even around in ER. I mean, people listen to their doctors. They didn't resist vaccines and
masks then. You know, we had a bit of a mandate. Let's not be too biased. You know, the fastest
way to get people to turn the channel is if they feel like we're preaching to them or we're being
dogmatic. So what we wanted was accuracy and realism.
We wanted to just be presentational with what emergency rooms look like.
I wrote that episode and I couldn't resist.
Just taking one stance, which I thought was fairly benign, which is to talk about the
efficacy of masks in cutting down the transmission of disease and germs,
which shouldn't be a political statement and shouldn't even be called into question.
And yet it has been the last couple of years.
And it's a great sort of metaphor for all the distrust that's been seeded between us
and our doctors.
And it's really, I think, incredibly unfortunate.
And I don't know if by the time this airs,
how much worse the situation is gonna get,
but there were so, 20% of the NIH was just laid off.
We were gonna be seeing the tale of that decision making
for years and years and years to come.
Yeah, and you do have an episode later
about a measles outbreak.
Well, that was what was so funny,
is we wrote these episodes almost a year ago.
And so when we did a storyline about neurocystic
circosis, we had no idea that RFK Jr. was going to be
diagnosed with neurocystic circosis.
Nor did we think when we did the measles storyline
that it was going to be as topical as it is right now.
Nine months ago, it wasn't.
But it wasn't hard to look into your crystal ball
and see what was gonna happen
if vaccine rates continue to drop.
And we live with an international community
that travels all the time.
Like we are as vulnerable as the next incoming plate.
You know, one of the things that I like about the show
is that it is set in a real place.
It's in Pittsburgh.
And we're in Philadelphia. I've traveled around Pennsylvania a bit. And if you
listen carefully, you can hear a lot of Pittsburgh stuff.
Primanti sandwiches, which is a thing there. And when the charge nurse breaks
up this fight between the two women, there's this moment where
she says, what are you doing? What are you doing? Where do you think you are?
This ain't Philly. It's a hospital. I really appreciated that.
I'm glad.
I've gotten some mail from Philly that didn't appreciate it.
I meant it as sort of a compliment because when I grew up, I grew up from LA and you
know, when the Lakers would play the Sixers or when I would see Rocky or the Broad Street
Bullies like you guys were tough.
They were tough.
Yes. So I just thought that's almost an homage to Philly
to say it's the tougher of the two.
One of the interesting storylines in the pit
involved the Freedom House Ambulance Service,
which had been established by a group of black men
in Pittsburgh.
I believe it's really the first kind of 911
ambulance services in the nation.
And one of the patients, I guess, is
a veteran of that. Do you want to tell us how that got into the story?
Well, it actually circles back to what you mentioned before about trying to put
as many details about Pittsburgh into the show.
And in doing our Pittsburgh research, we came across this incredible story
that is now starting to get told about the Freedom House Ambulance Service,
which was a program started by Dr. Safer, who invented CPR, where he recognized that up until
that point, if you lived in any neighborhood and you needed to go to the hospital, you had to call
the police. The police would come and pick you up, and you went into a paddy wagon, and they took
you to the hospital. But if you lived in the black neighborhood, that didn't happen.
So the mortality rate in the black neighborhoods was just terrible in the late 50s and early
60s.
And so this was an attempt to train high school, college age, young black men in life-saving
techniques for the first time, deploy them in the field with that training and ambulances
that could go to these neighborhoods and pick up people and bring them back.
And it was the very first ambulance service, the very first 911 system in the country.
It was incredibly successful.
The mortality rate dropped considerably and it got the attention of all of the city fathers
who looked at this and thought, my goodness, what a great program.
We should fire all these young men, replace them with white drivers,
and make this a national standard, which is what happened.
And all those original drivers lost their jobs.
Some of them stayed in healthcare and worked in healthcare,
and actually got to meet a couple of the surviving members
when I was in Pittsburgh a couple of weeks ago.
And so we brought in a patient who was depicting a guy who had been one of the original drivers
so we could just shed a little light on it.
You know, one of the other things that you see in this series depicted is, and I think
this was the kid who died of the fentanyl overdose, and the parents, once they come
to terms with the fact that he is brain dead, agree to let him become an organ donor.
And then when he's wheeled out,
when the son is wheeled out to start his journey,
the whole staff line up in honor of this contribution.
It's an honor walk, I guess, is what you call it, right?
Yes, that's a real thing.
That is a real thing.
And I've seen films of it done, and it's just as moving
as we've depicted it, if not more so in real life.
It's really beautiful.
Going to take another break here.
We are speaking with Noah Wiley.
He's an executive producer, writer,
and star of the new Mac series, The Pit, which is streaming now.
We'll continue our conversation after this short break. This is fresh air. Talk a little bit about your own life.
You grew up in Los Angeles, right? Your mom was an orthopedic head nurse and you
said an OR nurse too, right? You had two siblings and then I guess your parents
divorced when you were pretty young and both remarried and had other kids. So it
was a...
This is where the tree gets very fuzzy, I understand.
A lot of people. What was your childhood like? What kind of kid were you?
Eclectic, you know, I'm one of seven children spread over a couple of marriages.
At the most we had six under one roof sharing a bathroom.
That's a lot of kids at the table. That's a lot of vying for attention.
We had all sorts of, you know, we've had academics,
we've had athletes, and I was trying to find my identity
in the midst of all that, and I ended up the storyteller.
Right.
You went to a private school about 100 miles away from LA,
I gather, and got interested in theater there?
I did.
I went to a boarding school, the oldest boarding school
in California, a school called the Thatcher School, founded in 1889.
And when I was there my sophomore year, I auditioned for a play kind of as a joke, intentionally
to go and kind of make fun of the process and ended up getting cast.
And I just took to it.
I enjoyed the process more than that.
I enjoyed somebody telling me that I was good at it
after the show.
And that feeling of being told I was good at something
was enough to make me want to continue doing it.
Yeah, performing is fun.
Getting praised for it is better.
Yeah.
Also growing up in Los Angeles,
an acting career didn't seem like a foreign concept.
I knew that roadmap fairly well.
So it all seemed within grasp. So you spent a foreign concept, you know, I knew that roadmap fairly well, so it all seemed within
grasp.
So you spent a few years, you know, I assume you were taking acting lessons, right, and
going to auditions, and was that, I mean, that stretch where you were going to auditions
and getting small parts, what did it feel like at the time?
Was it frustrating?
It can be tough, right?
Yeah, but how, I mean, in retrospect, how long was that period of time for me? So short, so short that it's almost ridiculous that I could have been
impatient. The truth is I started when I was 19 and when I was 22 or 23 I did
the pilot for ER and never looked back after that. Right, which was a huge
success from the beginning. It was a big project for NBC. Well, so this was like
what, 1994 when it debuted, right, the series's when... We shot the pilot in 93, 94. So that's when you know
there weren't all these videos on the internet and all that stuff and people
watched network television and NBC they had a two-hour special I think on Sunday
night and then the next episode was on Thursday night at 10 where it stayed for
15 seasons.
Quite a remarkable thing.
Were you ready for that kind of success?
What was it like for you?
I'm really incredibly grateful to George, Anthony, and Tony.
They were all 10 years older than I was,
and really took me into their wing like big brothers.
To a certain extent, Sheri and Julianne as well. We're talking about the cast of ER.
I'm talking about the cast of ER, George Clooney,
Anthony Edwards, Eric LaSalle.
So they were mentors and tutors to me in the early years.
And I don't know how I would have handled all the success
and the workload if I hadn't had such incredible role models
around me showing me how to be professional. Did you trust it? I mean, you know, when you have that kind of
huge success as a young person,
it can give you kind of an imposter's sense of like,
what do I really deserve this?
No, I think that's very true.
Well, the work was being recognized as groundbreaking
and it lasted a long time.
I took for granted how well run the show was
and how smooth it was produced and how well cared for I
was in that ecosystem.
And then I spent the next 15 years
trying to recreate something that I thought
was an industry standard without realizing it was a once
in a lifetime opportunity.
And then I've been blessed by having Lightning Strike twice.
You stayed for 11 seasons, right?
By that point, most of the original cast had moved on.
And then you took a couple of years off to have kids, right?
And then came back for the last season?
Yeah, I left and I called it a divorce with visitation rights.
I left a certain amount of episodes in the balance,
knowing that I wanted to stay part of the narrative
and also having had John Wells tell me
that he wanted me to be part of the finale,
that John Carter coming back to the emergency room
as an attending seemed like a really lovely bookend
to the whole experience from where the pilot began.
So I wanted to be part of that.
Yeah, John Carter was your character
who began as a med student, right?
And we-
He was your medical student,
first day of his rotation in the emergency room.
And over the course of the series,
we see him mature, become a doctor, get stabbed and nearly
die.
Become a drug addict, fall in love, almost become a father.
Yeah, a lot happens.
You know, during the series run, you had a platform to connect with causes that matter
to you, and you got connected with an organization called Doctors of the World that's distinct from Doctors Without Borders. Tell us about that
relationship, what you did. Well sure, during that period of time and subsequently
I was approached by a lot of different charities and organizations, a lot of
the medical based to use my celebrity to raise awareness or money for them and I
got very selective because you want to pick and choose.
You want to make sure that when you go out and stump for something, it has some resonance
in your own life and you can speak intelligently about it, passionately about it.
And then I got approached by this group called Doctors of the World that was an American-based
version of Doctors Without Borders, which is French, that was doing frontline triage
medicine in different war zones around the world.
And I was really moved by, it's a purely volunteer organization.
Doctors, GPs from America would go and volunteer their time to go halfway around the world
and practice wartime mash medicine in very harrowing circumstances.
And I had an opportunity to go during the war in Kosovo and be in a refugee
camp in Macedonia and watch firsthand the heroic efforts of these doctors trying to
treat this refugee population and came back really galvanized about helping this organization
and ones like it do that kind of humanitarian aid.
And it was catalytic for us doing the storylines in Darfur and the Belgian Congo that we eventually
did on the show.
Right.
You carried it into ER.
What kinds of things did you see in Macedonia?
I mean, you weren't treating people, obviously.
Well, I wasn't, but it was sort of an all hands on deck situation there too. A bus would show up with maybe 50, 60 refugees of varying ages, mostly young children and
old women because any man that was of fighting age was fighting.
So a lot of people had been on the road for a really long time.
They were wearing everything that they could carry. So there was a lot of dehydration and a lot of malnutrition and a lot of fear, you know.
And it began with taking people off buses and doing basic medical assessments.
And then also there were lawyers and psychiatrists who would go and do interviews with the refugees
and ask them about their experiences.
And those became testimonials that were later used in the war crimes tribunal trials with
Milosevic.
But I saw in that moment the sort of hand-in-hand medical psychological tandem treatment that
was having an effect, both treating the body but also treating the psychological damage
of the trauma. that was having an effect both treating the body but also treating the psychological damage of
the trauma. And that led me to another organization called Human Rights Watch, which is a
legally legal-based advocacy group that does exactly that kind of work. They go around and
they take testimony to try and affect social change. So those two organizations kind of defined
the 90s and early teens for me in terms of activism.
Have you stayed active in doctors in the world?
It's been a long time since I've been in contact with them. I've been involved with a lot of other
grassroots medical organizations over the years, ones that do anything from feeding people in
disaster zones domestically to international stuff. Obviously, the cutbacks in USAID and a lot of the NGOs funding that we're seeing are
disastrous to the communities that I've become close with and it's very, very troubling.
So what are your priorities today as an activist? I tend to align myself with anything that involves human rights or civil rights.
I'm right now extremely concerned about our healthcare system and its fragility to the
next pandemic.
I'm extremely concerned about the burnout rate of our practitioners and the overburdening
that the nursing shortage and the boarding crisis is
causing.
You know, I can't express enough how interdependent we are as a population, how much we need each
other and yet it just seems like every day the seeds of division are being sowed to greater
and greater degrees and it's unsustainable.
It really is.
Well, you have been renewed for a second season of The Pit, right? I mean, you've got your work there.
Yes, more bread and circus.
Well, I mean, that's not just that, I don't think.
I don't think it is. I like to think that we're part of a lighthouse kind of light that's going to keep everybody,
reminding everybody about what kind of country we really are at heart and how amazing the people that do this kind of work are.
And that's the irony.
You can cut Medi-Cal and you can take 80% of California's population off those rolls
and you can kick people out of assisted living homes or out of old folks' homes and you can
force emergency rooms to close.
The practitioners will still take care of sick
people. The aged will still be cared for. Children will still be cared for because these people won't
let those patients fall between the cracks because that's who they are, which is why it's so
infuriating to watch them be taken advantage of, or worse, taken for granted.
Pete Well, Noah Wiley, thank you so much for speaking with us. It's been fun.
Noah Wiley Oh, this has been a pleasure. Thank you.
Noah Wiley is an executive producer, writer, and star of the series The Pit, which is streaming on Max.
Coming up, Maureen Corrigan recommends reading from two witty women authors,
one a long deceased legend, the other a debut novelist.
This is Fresh Air.
If you could use some humor right now, our book critic Maureen Corrigan has a couple
of books she strongly recommends.
As the saying goes, it's a marathon, not a sprint. And what better way to maintain
stamina and mental equilibrium during tense times than a dose of wit. Two women writers, one a
long deceased legend, the other a debut novelist, give readers reason to keep
calm and smile on. In my house, every time the male brings a dread notice from, say,
the Department of Motor Vehicles, one of us humans is bound to mutter,
what fresh hell is this?
If for nothing else but that line,
Dorothy Parker is a demigod.
But of course, there's plenty else.
In her poems, short stories,
and surgical knife sharp reviews
for magazines like Vanity Fair and The New Yorker,
Parker brought into being one
of the signature voices of the 1920s. Rye, risqué, and hard-boiled, swaddled in a
cocoon coat of humor. It's been said, rightly I think, that Parker's wit can't
be fully appreciated by reading her. You had to have been at one of those boozy, Algonquin round table lunches to marvel at
how quickly she whipped out one-liners.
But perhaps the closest we can come is reading her poetry, which like so many works of the
1920s, is short.
The Everyman's Library has just brought out a pocket edition of her work,
culled from Parker's best-selling collections, Enough Rope and Sunset Gun. A lot of her poems
are rueful odes to how tough it was for a smart, celebrated literary woman to find love. So how fun to discover other lesser-known poems that are sassier.
Here's one called Fighting Words that veers away from female martyrdom.
Say my love is easy had, say I'm bitten raw with pride, say I am too often sad, still behold me at your side.
Say I'm neither brave nor young, say I woo and coddle care.
Say the devil touched my tongue, still you have my heart to wear.
But say my verses do not scan, and I get me another man.
If Parker's voice embodies the wisecracking ethos of the 1920s,
the humor of British-born novelist Camilla Barnes is more in the droll, psychologically
astute tradition of a Barbara Pym novel. Barnes' debut is called The Usual Desire to Kill.
It's what two sisters here, Charlotte and Miranda, acknowledge that
that's what they feel whenever they visit their eccentric, exhausting, retired parents at their
tumbledown farmhouse in rural France. Mum, a homemaker, is described by Miranda as looking like a piece of low-slung Victorian
furniture. Dad, a former philosophy professor, lives in his head. Here's
Miranda talking about her father's way of relating to the ducks, cats, chickens,
and llamas who live on the farm. They were not pets. He didn't interfere in
their lives in the same way he didn't interfere in his
daughter's lives. He was just not very good at being interested in other living creatures,
particularly if they only had two legs. The more legs the better, he would say. He would be happier
living with a spider than with mom if the spider could cook. A millipede would be paradise.
The pair met in Oxford in the early 60s and married after their first real date resulted
in an unplanned pregnancy. For more than 50 years, they've been nattering at each other,
sunk deep into a marriage that Miranda describes as a game of stubbornness
versus pedantry. The constant pleasure of reading the usual desire to kill is Barnes' unexpected
language. A bed with a hard mattress is likened to sleeping on old toast. Dried eggs, which the father recalls eating during World War II,
are said to have tasted a bit like dandruff. But as the story of their parents' lives comes to the
fore through old letters and other narrative devices, it's evident that, much as Charlotte
and Miranda have always felt unseen by their odd parents,
they in turn don't really know those parents, not in full. None of us do, given
that we mostly only hear selective stories of our parents' early lives. The
sharpest humor is always grounded in some pain. Parker and Barnes both affirm that familiar truth.
Reading these very different, very funny books boosted my spirits and lowered my tight shoulders.
Pete Moron Maureen Corrigan is a professor of literature at Georgetown University.
She reviewed poems by Dorothy Parker and The Unusual Desire to Kill by Camilla Barnes.
poems by Dorothy Parker and the unusual desire to kill by Camilla Barnes. On tomorrow's show, we speak with Harvard government professor Stephen Lewicki.
He spent years studying how democracies die.
He argues that the Trump administration is pushing the U.S. towards a 21st century form
of autocracy, where elections, opposition parties, and independent media still exist
but are weakened by the
incumbent rulers' abuses of power.
I hope you can join us.
To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on
Instagram at NPR Fresh Air.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne-Marie Baldonado,
Lauren Krenzel, Theresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thaya Challener, Susan Yakundi, and Anna Bauman.
Our digital media producer is Molly Sivi Nesper.
Ripper Shorrock directs the show.
For Terry Gross, Antonia Mosley, I'm Dave Davis.