
Eric Foreman Weitere Charaktere aus "Dr. House"
Eric Foreman, M. D., ist eine fiktive Figur des Fox Medical Drama House. Er wird von Omar Epps porträtiert. Dr. Eric Foreman hat die beste Ausbildung im Team. Er wird von Omar Epps verkörpert. Aufgrund. Dr. Eric Foreman ist ein ambitionierter Arzt, der zu House' Diagnostik-Team gehört. Er ist sehr geradlinig und kann mit der forschen Art seines Chefs nichts. Dr. Eric Foreman wird mit der temporären Leitung des Diagnostik-Teams als House sich in die Psychiatrie einweisen lässt. Schließlich wird er sogar Leitung des. Christopher John „Topher“ Grace [ˌtɔˑ.fɐ.ˈɡɹæɪːs] (* Juli in New York City) ist ein US-amerikanischer Schauspieler, der durch die Rolle des Eric Forman in der Sitcom Die wilden Siebziger bekannt wurde. mit Chase, zusammen, bis er am Ende der Staffel seinen Tod vortäuscht. Chase übernimmt daraufhin im Serienfinale die Leitung der Abteilung. Dr. Eric Foreman[. Eric Foreman - Eric Foreman. Aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie. Dieser Artikel handelt von der Figur in der amerikanischen TV-Serie.

Showing all 8 items. After shooting the music video the Cessna B plane crashed seconds after take off. Eric Foreman was one of two who weren't killed instantly but survived for a few hours with terrible injuries.
He later succumbed to his injuries. View agent, publicist, legal and company contact details on IMDbPro.
Foreman takes a job at Mercy Hospital in New York, and he immediately goes out of his way to conduct differential diagnoses with a calm head and professional attitude, almost the exact opposite of House.
However, when a patient presents with a condition with similar symptoms to the patient he killed, Foreman goes against regulations like House to save the patient's life, which he does.
Despite making a life-saving call, Foreman's administrator fires him due to violating regulations. Foreman is then re-hired by Dr. Lisa Cuddy to serve as a partner of sorts with Dr.
House and to act as the "eyes and ears" of Dr. Cuddy on House's team. His position is permanent, as he cannot be hired anywhere else.
His personality appears to have changed drastically since being re-hired and has become distinctly sarcastic and biting, and although he shows some level of restraint, his sense of humor has become very similar to that of Dr.
Significantly, as he did during his temporary stint as House's supervisor in season 2, Foreman has picked up House's habit of practicing medicine in plain clothes, eschewing the white coat he wore during his first hitch as a member of House's team.
However, his outfit is still more professional than House's, tending toward well-tailored suits with ties, and he is frequently seen wearing waistcoats when not in surgery.
In his romantic life, Foreman is shown to have intimacy issues. His relationship with a PPTH nurse named Wendy - between season 3's "Fools For Love" and "Insensitive" - ends with her breaking up with him as he will not truly allow her to get close.
Having begun a relationship with teammate Thirteen in season 5, his issues are highlighted in " Simple Explanation ", where he admits and demonstrates to her that he works through major emotional stress alone, although he later makes a point not to entirely shut her out.
In the following episode, " Saviors ", teammate Dr. Chris Taub deduces from a conversation with Thirteen that Foreman does not open up much to her in private.
After comments from House about his general lack of spontaneity in "Lucky Thirteen", Foreman voices concerns to Chase that he is "boring," to which Chase offers that Foreman is too controlled regarding the events in his life, which prevents him from pushing his limits.
In a moment between Taub and Thirteen during " The Softer Side ", Taub mocks Foreman for having a robotic manner, comparing him to the fictional android character, the T from " Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
Foreman is a fan of jazz music, first shown in the episode "Who's Your Daddy? In the first two seasons, House's relationship with Foreman was probably the least complicated of the relationships he has with his fellows.
While Foreman is considered to dislike his boss "DNR" , constantly challenges House's behaviour and diagnoses, and terms him "an anarchist" "Deception" and "a manipulative bastard" "Euphoria, Part 2" , he genuinely respects House's medical expertise and House seems to appreciate Foreman's professionalism.
Although House frequently targets Foreman with racist jokes, Foreman does not appear to take them personally—it seems that House uses Foreman's race as a source of humor simply because Foreman's race is an easy target, just as House often targets Chase with his nationality and Cameron with her gender, and other episodes cf.
In the episode " Family ", Foreman fears that he has begun to disregard his patients' lives much the way House does, and he decides that he'd rather leave his job than continue on that path.
In the third season finale, House makes a last attempt to keep Foreman from leaving, but it fails. Although House stated in the pilot that he hired Foreman because he was an ex-car thief, House often states or implies that he thinks Foreman is a great doctor.
The best example of this is in the Season 2 Episode "Autopsy". House and the surgical team are trying to determine the exact location of a blood clot in order to be able to remove it.
Foreman swears he spotted a clot on the screen that neither House nor anybody else saw. House nods and states "That's good enough for me. Since Foreman's return to Princeton-Plainsboro Hospital, it has been shown that House still holds a great deal of respect for Foreman.
In stark contrast to previous seasons, he tends to treat Foreman as an equal in his understanding of diagnostics and Foreman in return shows a marked regret at having quit the job in the first place.
In "Whatever It Takes", House reprimands his new fellowship candidates when they fail to listen to Foreman's instructions while House is away.
House tells the candidates that the reason he left Foreman in charge was because Foreman knows what he's doing and that they should listen to him next time.
Later, in " No More Mr. Nice Guy " Foreman believes he is not getting the respect he deserves from Kutner, Taub and Thirteen when he tries, and fails, to do their performance reviews, which he believes is due to House frequently humiliating him.
House replies that if he did not humiliate and taunt Foreman, he would not be strong and able enough to handle the rest of the team. In future episodes, Foreman was considered to be in charge whenever House is unavailable.
He is also the primary attending physician whenever House is legally unable to do so, such as when House's license was suspended at the beginning of season 6, or when House was recovering from a bus crash and drug overdose while diagnosing Amber.
In the final episode of the series season 8 , "Everybody Dies", Foreman and Wilson are the only two people who are aware that House did not die: House faked his death in order to spend time with Wilson who was diagnosed with terminal cancer , and as they ride off together, Foreman finds House's hospital ID badge being used to support a shaky table in his office they had argued over earlier and slowly realizes that House is alive.
He nods, sits back, and smiles. The series ends with the audience realizing that Foreman has become the only person besides Wilson to earn House's trust, and thus the closest thing he has to another friend.
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Even when House is in a good mood, he insists he only keeps Foreman on because Foreman is the only member of the team who is constantly challenging House's conclusions.
In the first season, Foreman is shown to be distrustful of House and his methods. However over time, he comes to respect House as a doctor, even though he always disagrees with his methods.
Conversely, although Foreman has often described House as the best doctor he has ever worked with, he is probably the least tolerant of all the staff of House's faults, such as his Vicodin addiction.
It is heavily implied that Foreman was exposed to addictive drugs during the time he was growing up. Of everyone on his staff, House appears to think Foreman is the most likely to become as good a doctor as he is.
This is backed up by the opinion of most of the senior doctors in the hospital, including Cuddy who offered Foreman a position similar to House's.
This is despite the fact that, according to multiple tallies done online, Chase turns out to be the best diagnostician of the three.
However, House still believes Foreman is swayed by attempting to play it safe and still doesn't trust his own opinions enough. For his own part, Foreman admires House's talents, but not his personality, and does not want to become as good a doctor as House if it means having House's personality.
However, House has always tried to convince Foreman that he does and always has had a similar personality. However, in the episode Resignation , Foreman resigned from the team, giving his two weeks notice.
He had just finished a procedure where he put a patient in a great deal of pain in order to save the patient's brother, and the fact that he could do it made him feel he was turning into the same unfeeling type of doctor he sees in House.
On his last day, in the episode Human Error , House first asks Foreman to stay, but they start arguing who has the better attitude - House has saved the patient's life by anticipating a never before seen congenital heart defect, but Foreman noted that House only cared about the problem at hand and not the patient.
When the patient's heart stopped but she kept talking, House concentrated on the talking and not the threat to the patient's life. House argued that saving her life mattered more than any of her feelings, while Foreman countered that House didn't even care about that and was simply a junkie for solving puzzles.
House countered that Foreman didn't care any more than he did and only cared about his ego, using patient feelings to validate himself.
Foreman left without another word. After House's supposed death Foreman is having a hard time with the loss of his mentor until he finds House's badge below a table Foreman used to have paper to support it in that exact plaice.
Foreman then realizes that House is still alive and in effect is the only person besides Wilson that knows House isn't dead.
He takes a little time to warm to people House's observations are not without merit. Foreman has no close friends or relationships; comparable to House, although it can be argued that House does have a single close friend: Wilson.
He too loves his parents, but is alienated from them. Like House, he has rejected his father's belief system his father is a devout Christian while Foreman is an avowed atheist.
Foreman also has relationship issues, in that he has difficulty letting himself get close to girlfriends similar to House in his relationships , likely a result of his strict discipline.
He has stated explicitly that he doesn't like Chase , and he has also alienated Cameron. Although he told her she was his friend in Euphoria Part 2 the sincerity of the statement was doubtful, since he was dying at the time and had just asked her to be his medical proxy.
It appears that Chase and Cameron are the closest things Foreman has to friends, despite his House-like manner of pushing people away.
Although he has a better relationship with patients than House does, he does not have the same rapport or attachment that Wilson , Chase and Cameron have with their patients and seems unwilling to adapt his style.
Foreman shares House's distrust of authority figures, particularly the police. When Foreman was dealing with the mirror patient in Mirror Mirror , the patient acted like Foreman by first being sorry about having to perform a necessary but life threatening procedure, but then being excited about getting to do it.
Foreman realized that although there were things about his job he hated having to do, the job itself was something he loved.
Later in the episode, Foreman comes out with his first real Houseism. When an applicant expresses doubts about doing a heart biopsy , Foreman says:.
House identified Foreman as the only doctor when, given an insight about his own personality, actually did anything about it - the other doctors were running from their own personalities.
Foreman is also the one who is most "on top of things," and who does the most to, "keep things in line," compared with the others on the team.
While his diagnostic ability does not compare with House's, as no one's does, he is often the most disciplined one, and is the one who often displays the most strict self-behavior.
He also is the most sharply dressed, often wearing tightly tailored suits and ties. In addition, as he tells Taub in You Must Remember This , he sometimes wakes up in the middle of the night, and is sleepless for hours, because he's worried that he got a patient's diagnosis wrong.
This shows that, although he doesn't always directly express it, Foreman takes getting the right diagnosis and saving a patient's life, very seriously.
Also in this episode, House mocks Foreman by calling him a "humorless hardass," when telling Taub which fellow team member he can pick to tutor him for help passing his exam retake.
However, despite Foreman's overall strict demeanor compared with the others, there are times when he lets loose. For instance, through a few episodes of season 8, he has an affair with a married younger lady.
He also eventually agrees to let Taub cheat, by buying the answers from someone he knows, to his next licensing exam retake, in You Must Remember This.
In addition, in seasons 5 and 6, he eventually acts on being physically attracted to Dr. Remy Hadley Thirteen. Eventually, though, his normal personality becomes evident, and he reverts back to it, which results in endings of his dating experiences.
Foreman tried to leave Princeton-Plainsboro because he didn't want to become more like House. However, this turned out to be a pointless exercise at it appeared Foreman was becoming more and more like his mentor with every passing week.
House, for his part, believed that Foreman had always been like him, but was in denial about it. House had always admired Foreman's intelligence and objectivity, but had upbraided him for not trusting his own judgment.
Their fundamental disagreement was whether you had to care about the patient to get results. House was of the opinion that as long as you cure the patient, they aren't going to complain.
Foreman felt that you couldn't empathize with people unless you understood that they were suffering. However, since leaving House, Foreman has not only become a better doctor, he has become more like House.
Three weeks into his new job, he was fired for going against his superiors and treating a patient successfully without definitive proof that they had the disease they were being treated for.
Had Foreman been wrong, he would have killed the patient. After being fired, he found himself in a similar situation to House - being seen as a rogue doctor who cared more for results than procedures, even if he did produce results.
Since coming back to Princeton-Plainsboro, Foreman has continued to morph into House. Like House, he has eschewed wearing a white lab coat regularly, although he tends toward well-tailored suits and ties rather than House's jacket, jeans, and T-shirt combo.
His position as senior fellow has also given him more of House's mannerisms, as he treats the new fellows with contempt whenever they try to play it safe and tends to provide them with cynical if well-meaning advice.
Nice Guy when he makes Foreman do team reviews that the fellows ignore. House admits he expected the team to disregard them, rationalizing "If the team fears you, they don't question you; if they don't question you, they don't find answers; if they don't find answers, they're useless.
He tends to be biased and generally won't revise his first impression of people. He also, unlike House, doesn't seem to be able to think outside the box.
In the Season 5 episode Emancipation , Foreman decides to treat a patient without House's help, just to prove that he can, and when he figures out what's wrong with the patient, he gets up and leaves the room in mid-conversation, just like House does.
After House was taken to Mayfield Psychiatric Hospital , Cuddy allowed the diagnostics department to continue during his absence. When House announced that he was quitting, Foreman begged Cuddy to take over the department.
Sign In. Up 11, this week. The plane crashed shortly after take-off when they were on the way back to Florida from shooting the hit single "Rock the boat" track number three of Aaliyah's latest album self-titled.
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Edit Did You Know? Personal Quote: Where you act out, is where you'll get worked out! In the next episode, " Joy to the World ", Foreman and Thirteen kiss passionately, but in the following episode, she expresses her wish to keep some distance.
However, they subsequently decide to pursue a romantic relationship. House repeatedly referred to them as "Foreteen," a collective nickname.
Things get complicated and Foreman and Thirteen misdiagnose the patient, until Foreman realizes the right diagnosis and finds Thirteen stopped treatment as she came to the same conclusion based on an Internet suggestion from House himself, though unknown to them.
Foreman ends up firing Thirteen so he can continue dating her with no conflict of interest. In " The Tyrant ", Chase forges test results for a patient who is an African dictator, leading to the patient's death.
Foreman burns the papers that would have incriminated Chase. At the beginning of season 8, it is revealed that Foreman has taken over Cuddy's job of Dean of Medicine at Princeton-Plainsboro, performing the role for 12 months while House has been in prison.
Foreman hired House back into his old position upon his release from prison. In the season 6 episode " Epic Fail ", Dr. Foreman took over as Head of the Diagnostic Department in Dr.
House's absence. House was treated for psychosis and depression in Mayfield Psychiatric Hospital by Dr. Nolan, he was supposedly able to leave whenever he wanted because he had voluntarily entered the hospital.
However, House's medical license was on the line and he was not able to leave without Dr. Nolan's approval letter to allow him to practice medicine again.
To prevent Cuddy from shutting the department down, Foreman asked to fill the void that House had created. The stress of the job and newfound authority over his former co-workers caused a strain in the relationship between Foreman and Thirteen causing them to break up, as well as leading to Taub's resignation.
In " Teamwork " House's medical licence is re-instated and he is given back his title as the Head of Diagnostic Medicine at Princeton-Plainsboro and Foreman had to take his job as senior-fellow on the Diagnostic team back.
Despite his youthful offenses, Foreman initially may have been the best-adjusted of House's team. He is shown to possess a level of leadership skills, and was temporarily appointed House's supervisor by Dr.
Whether this is true is debatable, although in the episode " House Training ", he admits that he has problems with his own ego. Like House, Foreman has also been shown to be extremely honest even at the cost of hurting other people's feelings.
This is evident in the episode "Sleeping Dogs Lie", in which he tells Cameron that the two of them were never friends, merely working colleagues, after she falls out with him over his writing up an article on a previous case, knowing she was already writing her own, and getting House to sign off on it while hers lay unread, leading to his article's publication.
However, during a later bout with a deadly illness see below , Foreman recants this position. His sincerity, given his dying state, was unclear, and she initially refused his apology, but accepted when he was placed in a chemically induced coma.
Similarly, in the episode "Resignation", he tells Chase that he's never liked him and never will. Despite these instances, later episodes such as "Wilson's Heart" and "Emancipation" demonstrate Cameron and Chase offering Foreman advice and support.
During Season Three, a change in Foreman's character, making him more sensitive to other people's feelings, can be noticed when he resists telling two interracial lovers that they are half-siblings in "Fools For Love".
During the same episode, he is accused of being against interracial relationships. Foreman makes a bet with House, saying that Dr.
James Wilson is not dating a nurse in the hospital: the white nurse is actually dating Foreman, which explains his sensitivity to this particular case.
Later, in "Needle in a Haystack", Foreman offers a Romani boy an interview for an intern job and tries to help him. The season three episode " House Training " reveals a great deal about Foreman's character.
Upon giving orders for a patient to be given immunosuppressing radiation treatment and then learning that it was nothing more than a staph infection the radiation therapy killed the patient's immune system, essentially dooming her to a painful death , he is visibly agonized and blames himself for killing her.
Throughout the episode Foreman displays a passionately emotional side and at one point breaks down, stating that in many ways he is no better than from where he came simply because his ego has gotten in the way.
In the following episode, Foreman is seen for the first time praying or meditating in the hospital chapel, despite the fact that he had expressed being fairly nonreligious before.
Foreman was able to get over the grief and trauma of killing a patient, and the self-doubt that his mistake caused, when he was able to save another patient's life by taking extreme measures in " Family ".
With a young boy dying unless he got a bone marrow transplant immediately, Foreman was forced to get the marrow from the patient's little brother, without anesthetizing the boy first as he was too sick to be sedated.
Foreman strapped the boy down to a bed and drew the marrow from him by force in several places on his body to get the samples he needed, ignoring the boy's screams of agony in order to do so.
The patient survived as a result, and while Foreman acknowledged this, he was also horrified with what he had done.
He tendered his resignation the same day. Foreman takes a job at Mercy Hospital in New York, and he immediately goes out of his way to conduct differential diagnoses with a calm head and professional attitude, almost the exact opposite of House.
However, when a patient presents with a condition with similar symptoms to the patient he killed, Foreman goes against regulations like House to save the patient's life, which he does.
Despite making a life-saving call, Foreman's administrator fires him due to violating regulations. Foreman is then re-hired by Dr.
Lisa Cuddy to serve as a partner of sorts with Dr. House and to act as the "eyes and ears" of Dr.
Cuddy on House's team. His position is permanent, as he cannot be hired anywhere else. His personality appears to have changed drastically since being re-hired and has become distinctly sarcastic and biting, and although he shows some level of restraint, his sense of humor has become very similar to that of Dr.
Significantly, as he did during his temporary stint as House's supervisor in season 2, Foreman has picked up House's habit of practicing medicine in plain clothes, eschewing the white coat he wore during his first hitch as a member of House's team.
However, his outfit is still more professional than House's, tending toward well-tailored suits with ties, and he is frequently seen wearing waistcoats when not in surgery.
In his romantic life, Foreman is shown to have intimacy issues. His relationship with a PPTH nurse named Wendy - between season 3's "Fools For Love" and "Insensitive" - ends with her breaking up with him as he will not truly allow her to get close.
Having begun a relationship with teammate Thirteen in season 5, his issues are highlighted in " Simple Explanation ", where he admits and demonstrates to her that he works through major emotional stress alone, although he later makes a point not to entirely shut her out.
In the following episode, " Saviors ", teammate Dr. Chris Taub deduces from a conversation with Thirteen that Foreman does not open up much to her in private.
After comments from House about his general lack of spontaneity in "Lucky Thirteen", Foreman voices concerns to Chase that he is "boring," to which Chase offers that Foreman is too controlled regarding the events in his life, which prevents him from pushing his limits.
In a moment between Taub and Thirteen during " The Softer Side ", Taub mocks Foreman for having a robotic manner, comparing him to the fictional android character, the T from " Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
Foreman is a fan of jazz music, first shown in the episode "Who's Your Daddy? In the first two seasons, House's relationship with Foreman was probably the least complicated of the relationships he has with his fellows.
While Foreman is considered to dislike his boss "DNR" , constantly challenges House's behaviour and diagnoses, and terms him "an anarchist" "Deception" and "a manipulative bastard" "Euphoria, Part 2" , he genuinely respects House's medical expertise and House seems to appreciate Foreman's professionalism.
Although House frequently targets Foreman with racist jokes, Foreman does not appear to take them personally—it seems that House uses Foreman's race as a source of humor simply because Foreman's race is an easy target, just as House often targets Chase with his nationality and Cameron with her gender, and other episodes cf.
In the episode " Family ", Foreman fears that he has begun to disregard his patients' lives much the way House does, and he decides that he'd rather leave his job than continue on that path.
In the third season finale, House makes a last attempt to keep Foreman from leaving, but it fails. Although House stated in the pilot that he hired Foreman because he was an ex-car thief, House often states or implies that he thinks Foreman is a great doctor.
The best example of this is in the Season 2 Episode "Autopsy". House and the surgical team are trying to determine the exact location of a blood clot in order to be able to remove it.
Foreman swears he spotted a clot on the screen that neither House nor anybody else saw.
Nur kurze Zeit später erfährt er, dass sie verheiratet ist. Juli war der Sendeplatz noch Am Hard Sun Sendetermine Originaltitel: House, M. Er ärgert sich auch über ihre Beziehung zu Kelsos älterem Bruder Casey, der beleidigend und selbstgefällig ist. Er hat, wie sich später herausstellt, Springflut Darsteller Jahre für Ärzte ohne Grenzen gearbeitet und somit Erfahrungen mit exotischen Krankheiten gesammelt. Kolumnen DVD-Rezensionen. Er absolvierte sein Studium an der John Ntv Das Neueste Medical School und hat damit eine der besten Ausbildungen genossen, die man als Arzt nur bekommen kann. House beherrscht mehrere Fremdsprachen, was ihm die Möglichkeit gibt, ausländische Fachzeitschriften zu lesen und mitunter die Gespräche der Patienten in ihrer Muttersprache zu verstehen. Eric basiert auf der Jugend des Showkünstlers Mark Brazill. Seine Beziehung zu einer PPTH-Krankenschwester namens Wendy - zwischen "Fools For Love" und "Insensitive" in Staffel 3 - endet damit, dass Stranger Thins sich von ihm trennt, Rottweiler Welpe er ihr Leathal Weapon wirklich erlauben wird, näher zu kommen. Für sie manipuliert er eine Medikamentenstudie, damit sie statt des Placebos das echte Mittel erhält, auf das sie jedoch mit heftigen Nebenwirkungen reagiert. Februar auf SRF zwei. Amber Tamblyn. Enttäuscht von ihren medizinischen Fähigkeiten kündigt House ihr Arbeitsverhältnis jedoch nach den Dwayne Johnson Muskeln Arbeitstagen. Ach so.
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