A new little article read today on "Three Rivers"
| quote: | No need for a Three Rivers heart transplant
Fri, October 2, 2009

Katherine Moennig, who plays Dr. Miranda Foster, and Daniel Henney, who plays Dr. David Lee, star in the new medical drama Three Rivers.
There was a wide array of responses when the cast of Three Rivers was asked if they have personally signed up to be organ donors.
Three Rivers, after all, is a new medical drama that deals with the high-stakes, high-intensity, highly emotional race against time that is organ donation. It debuts Sunday, Oct. 4, on CBS.
“I know I always was (an organ donor),” said Katherine Moennig, who plays Dr. Miranda Foster. “I was raised to believe that, by my mom. And when Daniel and I went into surgery, that reinforced it. So I’m proud that I am.”
Daniel, in this case, is Three Rivers castmate Daniel Henney, who plays Dr. David Lee.
“When we were in Pittsburgh shooting, Kate (Moennig) and I had a chance to sit through a heart transplant, literally right in front of the patient, two feet away, the whole thing,” said Henney, who was not an organ donor previously. “It was a surreal moment for me. It has changed everything.”
Three Rivers isn’t likely to change everything, or anything, as far as the TV landscape is concerned. After all, it merely is another show about doctors and nurses and hospitals, and there is no shortage of those.
That said, at least Three Rivers has a different hook.
Three Rivers examines the multi-layered turmoil of organ donors, organ recipients and the surgeons who perform the procedures at a stellar transplant hospital, located in Pittsburgh. Also playing a key role in the drama, obviously, are the donor families, who understandably are dealing with very mixed emotions when forced to think about organ donation at their darkest hour.
Leading the elite team of medical personnel is affable workaholic Dr. Andy Yablonski, played by Alex O’Loughlin (Moonlight). His co-workers include Dr. Foster (Moennig), who has a rebellious streak and a fiery temper, and Dr. Lee (Henney), a womanizing surgical resident.
In the first episode, at least, much of the drama is filtered through Moennig’s character. In addition to trying to save lives, Dr. Foster is trying to live up to her father’s reputation.
“I hope it (continues), actually,” Moennig said. “(Conceiving Dr. Foster) in the first place, she was this very strong, strong-willed, independent force, yet she was also so vulnerable and affected by everything she was dealing with every day. I think that’s her dichotomy right there.
“You are going to see constant situations that we’re put in that are, I’m sure, very volatile, with all different personalities coming from all different angles.”
The 31-year-old Moennig, who is a cousin of fellow actress Gwyneth Paltrow, previously was best known for playing Shane McCutcheon on The L Word. Moennig may always have been an organ donor, which made her a natural for Three Rivers, but she admitted working on the series already has changed one of her hygiene habits.
“We found out that heart disease is mainly caused by bad teeth,” Moennig said. “That can cause terrible heart disease.
“So the second we wrapped, I ran to the dentist.” |
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