HawthoRNe: Series Premiere

Regular airtime: Tuesdays, 9pm ET (TNT)

Cast: Jada Pinkett Smith, Michael Vartan, Suleka Mathew, David Julian Hirsch, Christina Moore, Hannah Hodson

US release date: 16 June 2009

By Leigh H. Edwards

Keep It Moving

With HawthoRNe, Jada Pinkett Smith becomes another of TNT’s strong women. Like Kyra Sedgwick in The Closer and Holly Hunter in Saving Grace, Smith brings movie star wattage to the small screen, playing a complex character who asserts her will in her own professional environment but finds her personal life harder to manage.

At Richmond Trinity Hospital, Christina Hawthorne (Smith) is the Chief Nursing Officer. She battles for her patients, explaining to one social worker, “I jeopardizes my job every day” for the good of her patients. Her foes include incompetent doctors who talk down to nurses, hospital administrators with their eyes on the bottom line, and the kind of bureaucratic red tape the health care system produces on a daily basis.

Still, she has her own issues. The premiere episode starts with her awake from insomnia, talking to her dead husband’s ashes. We learn that he died a year ago from cancer, and she feels she was unable to save him. As she lies pondering the anniversary of his death with equal parts grief and steely resolve, she gets a frantic call from a cancer patient threatening suicide. She’s the kind of nurse her patients can call at 5am, knowing she’ll rush to rescue them.

While granting her heroic status, the show also considers serious social and political questions. On her way to work, Hawthorne pauses to speak to a homeless woman she knows, stationed outside the hospital door. As she appears disheveled, owing to her haste that morning, a new security guard assumes Hawthorne is homeless, and suggests she head to a shelter instead of the hospital. When she rushes past the guard anyway, pushing him out of her way, cops arrive on the scene to drag her away to face assault charges. Yes, she’s a rule-breaker and advocate for the less fortunate. And yet, even after her harrowing morning, Hawthorne is all business, telling her nursing staff:  “Let’s just let it go and keep it moving.”

When her friend, Chief of Surgery Tom Wakefield (Michael Vartan), tries to get Hawthorne to take a day off, she refuses, asserting, “This is home.” That’s not to say she doesn’t have a home, as well as a daughter Camille (Hannah Hobson). Her high school principal calls to say Camille is about to be dragged off for chaining herself to a vending machine that’s about to be removed. Ostensibly, she’s protesting lack of choice for students, but like her mother, she’s driven by other concerns. This much is clear when she introduces her mother to the principal by saying, “My mom let my dad die.” Both adults concur that detention might be good for Camille.

Hawthorne faces another sort of displacement with her mother-in-law, Amanda (Joanna Cassidy), a hospital board member. The women refuse to talk about how Hawthorne’s husband died and Amanda’s belief that she is “unreliable.” All they can agree on is sharing custody of the dead man’s ashes.

HawthoRNe‘s bracing combination of fast-paced professional crises and personal tensions is leavened by the banter she shares with fellow nurses and their somewhat comic dating tribulations. A male nurse, Ray Stein (David Julian Hirsh), faces his own trials in a female-dominated field, a storyline that makes for some fresh takes on hospital politics. While some subplots are trite (a nurse turns down a paramedic’s romantic overtures, saying she’s “damaged goods”), the premiere hums along whenever Hawthorne is driving it.

 

— 16 June 2009
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
  • HawthoRNe: Series Premiere
 
 
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Comments

Come on, not only is this already a terribly inaccurate show, but can it get any more cliche? A hero who cares more about patients than the stinking rules!! This type of character is so tired.

Comment by Kyle from Florida — June 16, 2009 @ 9:00 pm

This show good. It deals with everyday ethical decisions making and realistic events! Kyle from Florida….your WACK!!

Comment by Jersey973 — June 17, 2009 @ 7:56 am

I also found it to be an awesome show, with realistic events and highly ethical decision making.

Comment by Keisha — June 17, 2009 @ 1:10 pm

This show is very inaccurate representation of nursing, doctors and hospitals.  The scene depicting shift report was laughable at best.  I would suggest the writers hire a nurse who is currently working in an acute care setting to check for reality.

Comment by Maria from nc — June 17, 2009 @ 5:57 pm

Give me a break Maria. It’s T.V and entertainment!!! How many shows that are set in hospitals, or portray lawyers and police officers are entirely accurate???

Comment by Mona from New Jersey — June 18, 2009 @ 1:19 pm

I really didn’t expect much from the show-I tho’t it would be a
result of her husband-I was WAY wrong!  Jada is an excellent actor.  Being in the medical field myself, I can relate to her in a way that many medical shows have not been able to achieve. Way to go, Jada!!  I will watch every week.  With all due respect, Bev

Comment by beverly stevenson from anchorage ak — July 3, 2009 @ 6:04 pm

does anybody know the actress who played the social worker on the Hawthorne pilot or where I have seen her recently?

Comment by Kim from SA texas — July 6, 2009 @ 8:45 pm

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