'Monday Mornings,' which stars Alfred Molina and Ving Rhames, shows the pressure doctors are under and the dreaded morning meetings in which they hold each other accountable. 'Monday Mornings' airs on TNT.
The new medical drama from David E. Kelly may be innocuously titled MONDAY MORNINGS, but it is anything but benign. In fact, it aims right for the jugular with storylines intent on piercing even the most hardened of hearts. MONDAY MORNINGS seeks to tell the internal trials which doctors face from their peers after a medical misstep, while providing a human face to back-dropped the problem from which it stemmed.
Co-created and executive produced by world-renown neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta, the stories of MONDAY MORNINGS resonate with authenticity and humanity. The medical world may appear cold and clinical from the outside, but inside the operating rooms, in the waiting rooms, and in the doctor’s offices, life and death decisions are made each day. Many result in a favorable and happy ending. But then there are those decisions that make every doctor and surgeon question whether something more could have been done. That is also where the Monday morning Morbidity & Morality (M&M) sessions come into play. Those meetings ensure doctors hold each other accountable for risky decisions that resulted in adverse consequences.
With an all-star cast of Jamie Bamber, Jennifer Finnigan, Alfred Molina, Ving Rhames, Keong Sim, Sarayu Rao, Bill Irwin and Emily Swallow, MEDICAL MORNINGS shall tug on the heart strings and yet be heart-crushing, simultaneously. But for those who make the life-and-death decisions, making hard decisions is their job. They were trained to make the hard calls; yet living with those decisions can be painful, and accountability can both haunt and destroy. However, for every bad call, there are thousands of decisions that result in a happy-ending and those are to be celebrated as well.