Private Practice season 1

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Private Practice
Season 1
Images of multiple characters–four men and four women–are superimposed on top of one another. The words "from the creator of Grey's Anatomy" and "private practice" and "A new start on life." in white and black font. At the bottom, a black circle with the letters "abc" inside, follows the phrase "wednesdays 9/8c" and "series premiere september 26th" and there is an internet URL "abc.com".
ABC promotional poster for the first season of Private Practice.
Starring
No. of episodes9
Release
Original networkABC
Original releaseSeptember 26 (2007-09-26) –
December 5, 2007 (2007-12-05)
Season chronology
Next →
Season 2
List of episodes

The first season of Private Practice, an American television series created by Shonda Rhimes, consisted of nine episodes that ran from September 26 to December 5, 2007. A spin-off of Grey's Anatomy, the series tells the story of Addison Montgomery, a world-class neonatal surgeon, as she adjusts to her move from Seattle to Los Angeles and a new job at Oceanside Wellness Group, a private medical practice. The episodes also focus on the interpersonal relationships among Addison's co-workers, Naomi Bennett, Sam Bennett, Cooper Freedman, Dell Parker, Violet Turner and Pete Wilder, as well as St. Ambrose Hospital chief of staff Charlotte King.

Private Practice's first season aired in the United States on Wednesdays at 9:00 pm

BMI Film & TV Award
.

The season was released on DVD as a three-disc box set under the title of Private Practice: The Complete First Season – Extended Edition, on September 16, 2008, by

streaming video on demand services.[5][6][7]

Episodes

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateUS viewers
(millions)
11"In Which We Meet Addison, a Nice Girl From Somewhere Else"Mark TinkerShonda RhimesSeptember 26, 2007 (2007-09-26)14.41[8]
Addison Montgomery resigns from Seattle Grace Hospital to accept a position as a gynecologist at the Oceanside Wellness Center. During her first day of work, her six co-workers (and main characters) Naomi Bennett, Sam Bennett, Cooper Freedman, Dell Parker, and Pete Wilder, are introduced. Addison has difficulty adjusting to her new work environment on discovering Naomi did not tell anyone that she had been hired, and learning she will handle a lower number of patients than expected. All of the doctors deal with individual patients, while trying to resolve problems in their personal lives. Addison and Dell help a pregnant teenager with a difficult childbirth, Violet consoles her patient in the middle of a nervous breakdown in a store, and Naomi and Sam discuss whether they should fulfill a woman’s wish to extract her dead boyfriend’s semen and impregnate her with it. At the end of the day, Addison delivers a speech to her co-workers, announcing that she will be staying at the practice.
22"In Which Sam Receives an Unexpected Visitor"Tony GoldwynMike OstrowskiOctober 3, 2007 (2007-10-03)12.30[9]
Cooper hires a stripper for Sam to help him adjust to his new single life. Naomi becomes upset with Sam when the stripper is admitted to the practice as a patient. After performing genetic testing on a clients' baby, Cooper, Addison, and Naomi discover that the child was switched at birth. The doctors collaborate with Charlotte King to determine the identity of the person who switched the babies and the location of the clients' real child. Charlotte and Addison clash over the best way to handle the situation. The mothers meet and bond over their love for the children, with the babies being returned to their biological parents. Cooper consults a patient who becomes extremely sick whenever he drinks alcohol. Violet attempts to deal with her continued feelings for her ex-boyfriend.
33"In Which Addison Finds the Magic"Mark TinkerShonda Rhimes & Marti NoxonOctober 10, 2007 (2007-10-10)12.40[10]
Addison and Pete treat newlyweds who are experiencing sexual problems. Addison diagnoses the wife with vulvar vestibulitis, and Pete treats her through alternative medicine. Cooper attempts to find out why his patient and her three siblings are all displaying signs of ammonium nitrate poisoning. Through a home visit, Cooper realizes that the children were playing in a shed containing bags of fertilizer. Violet tries to convince her patient to leave his wife, but he stays with her after she is diagnosed with granulomatosis with polyangiitis (referred to by the former Nazi eponym for the disease "Wegener's granulomatosis"). Naomi is distraught when Maya chooses to spend the week with Sam. Dell attempts to comfort Naomi by bringing in freshly-baked cakes every day. Pete honors the anniversary of his wife’s death.
44"In Which Addison Has a Very Casual Get Together"Arvin BrownAndrea NewmanOctober 17, 2007 (2007-10-17)11.81[11]
Addison feels offended when none of her co-workers have responded to her invitation to a party. Sam makes his first talk show appearance to promote his latest
Munchausen syndrome, and finds out that she in fact has Crohn's disease
. Pete tries to treat an elderly man who keeps falling asleep unexpectedly, but he faces issues as the man doesn't believe in his kind of treatment. When Addison tells her co-workers about her frustration over the party, they tell her that they had always planned on going to it.
55"In Which Addison Finds a Showerhead"Julie Anne RobinsonShonda Rhimes & Marti NoxonOctober 24, 2007 (2007-10-24)11.77[12]
Addison experiences frequent sexual dreams about Pete that leave her in a constant state of arousal, leading to Naomi and Violet suggesting that she masturbate using a shower head. Naomi’s daughter Maya approaches Addison and tells her that she may have an
Pap smear
on a patient after several failed attempts. Addison decides to use her shower head after imagining Pete as a cowboy and a gladiator.
66"In Which Charlotte Goes Down the Rabbit Hole"David SolomonJenna BansOctober 31, 2007 (2007-10-31)11.21[13]
Charlotte seeks help from Oceanside Wellness, saying that she has not been able to sleep for more than three hours over the last three days. She is sent to Pete after refusing a sleep aid from Sam. Following several failed attempts, Charlotte finally sleeps after talking to Pete about her family's lack of intimacy and affection. Addison and Naomi consult a couple who plan on having a child; the wife, Angie Paget, tells them in private that she does not want children as she believes that she has the gene for Huntington's disease. Angie is tested positive for the gene and tells her husband about her family's history with the disease. They both decide to continue working with Addison and Naomi so they can raise a child before Angie gets the disease. Cooper discovers that his patient is being physically abused by her mother who suffers from multiple sclerosis. Sam becomes concerned and angry when Dell develops a crush on Naomi.
77"In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride"Jeff MelmanEmily HalpernNovember 14, 2007 (2007-11-14)11.45[14]
While answering a house call, Sam gets caught in a hostage situation at a convenience store and is held at gunpoint by a pregnant woman named Kelly. When Kelly goes into labor, Sam helps her to deliver her baby and persuades her to let him call the police. When Sam returns to the practice, he and Naomi reignite their passion and have sex. Violet and Cooper agree to start a friends with benefits relationship, but Cooper advises against it due to his romantic feelings for her. Meanwhile, Pete and Addison decide to pursue a casual relationship, while helping a woman deliver a baby after her boyfriend died. However, Pete ends up standing Addison up. Meanwhile, Addison attracts the attention of Kevin Nelson, the former police partner of her patient's dead boyfriend. Dell delivers his first baby, but he, Naomi and Violet have to help the mother accept her son after she rejects him because she wanted a daughter.
88"In Which Cooper Finds a Port In His Storm"Mark TinkerLauren SchmidtNovember 21, 2007 (2007-11-21)8.44[15]
Cooper discovers that he has been talking to Charlotte on an online dating website, and the two initiate a sexual relationship. Addison goes on a date with one of Violet's patients but is disturbed to learn about his shoe fetish after finding out that he stole one of her shoes and inserted it in his rectum. Naomi and Sam attempt to find the cause for a typhus outbreak in a convent while providing care for the affected nuns and priest. They discover that the priest is the carrier and spread typhus by sneaking into the nunnery. Addison and Pete help with a program involving the safe-haven law. She becomes attached to one of the babies whom she names "Batgirl".
99"In Which Dell Finds His Fight"Wendey StanzlerAyanna FloydDecember 5, 2007 (2007-12-05)10.36[16]
Dell suspects that his grandfather is being abused at his nursing home after noticing bruises on his body. Sam investigates the nursing home and discovers that Dell's grandfather is a part of a fight club run by the residents. Addison begins a romantic relationship with a police officer, Kevin Nelson, while attempting to maintain a friendship with Pete. Addison and Naomi are treating the couple from the third episode after they have difficulty in conceiving a child. Violet and Cooper discuss the changes in their friendship after Cooper avoids her to have a secret sexual relationship with Charlotte. Cooper and Pete participate in a program to prepare first-time fathers to care for their children. Sam and Naomi also have a secret relationship after having sex in previous episodes. Dell kisses Naomi and proclaims his feelings for her and his desire to fight for her.

Production

Development

On February 21, 2007, Edward Wyatt of

Today's Jeannette Walls reported that Pompeo was angry at not being consulted prior the show's creation.[18] Heigl praised the concept for Private Practice but wished her character (Izzie Stevens) had been chosen for the spin-off instead.[19]

The show was officially announced as part of ABC's 2007 fall television schedule on

Mark Gordon, and Mark Tinker;[22] Rhimes also served as the show's cinematographer.[23] Production began on July 18, 2007, in Los Angeles.[22] The series' theme and score were composed by Chad Fischer and Tim Bright.[24][25]

Casting

Kate Walsh smiling at the camera in a blue dress
The series was created to focus on Kate Walsh's character.

The first season features a cast of eight actors who receive

fertility specialist Dr. Naomi Bennett and health guru Dr. Sam Bennett, Addison's divorcee college friends.[17][26] The role of Naomi was originally played by Merrin Dungey in the backdoor pilot. According to a writer from Variety, network executives replaced her with McDonald due to concerns over the lack of chemistry between Dungey and Diggs. The recasting did not result in reshooting any of the pilot's previous scenes.[26] Amy Brenneman is Dr. Violet Turner, a therapist who constantly doubts herself.[17] Paul Adelstein portrays pediatrician Dr. Cooper Freedman, who is a sex addict.[27][28] Tim Daly plays the seductive alternative medicine specialist, Dr. Pete Wilder, and Chris Lowell is the receptionist Dell Parker, who frequently appears shirtless in the office.[17]

KaDee Strickland portrays Dr. Charlotte King, who also works as a hospital administrator. Strickland's character was introduced in the first season and did not make an appearance in the backdoor pilot. Her addition to the main cast was announced on July 11, 2007, prior to the commencement of the first season.[29] Strickland did not have to audition for the role, but was cast after a meeting with Rhimes.[30]

Numerous supporting characters have been given expansive and recurring appearances in the progressive storylines. David Sutcliffe plays police officer Kevin Nelson, who was introduced as a love interest of Addison. Sutcliffe later appeared in 11 episodes in the second season.[31] Geffri Maya Hightower plays Naomi and Sam's daughter, Maya Bennett. Hightower would return for future seasons, and was included in 30 episodes over the course of the series.[23] James Pickens Jr. portrays Dr. Richard Webber, as a special guest star, appearing in the teaser sequence for the first episode.[23][32]

Reception

Viewing figures

The pilot episode, which aired on September 26, 2007, garnered 14.1 million viewers, ranking number 13 in its time slot of Wednesdays at 9:00 pm

Nielsen ratings.[34]

Critical response

Private Practice received generally negative critical reviews when it was first broadcast. On the review aggregator website Metacritic, the first season scored 45 out of 100, based on 25 reviews, indicating "mixed to average" responses.[35] The series was called "shallow and smirky" by The Washington Post's Tom Shales, who felt the dialogue and storylines relied too much on sexual humor; he thought the first season would not appeal to Grey's Anatomy fans.[36] David Hinckley of the New York Daily News was critical of the pilot's opening sequences, finding they represented the show too much as a sitcom, but felt that it found its footing as the episode progressed and more emphasis was placed on "the more nuanced personal and professional sides of its characters".[37] David Zurawik of The Baltimore Sun praised Brenneman and McDonald's performances, but was disappointed in the series premiere.[33]

Some critics commented negatively on the characters and the show's representation of women. The series was described as an improvement over the backdoor pilot by USA Today's Robert Blanco, but he criticized the doctors' characters as childish and seemingly incapable of doing their jobs. Blanco viewed the show as a misstep in Addison's character development, writing that she is "a woman who was once a tough, smart, flawed, sexy adult [who] has turned into a fluttering, indecisive sorority girl".[38] Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times was critical of the show's interpretation of feminism, describing the characters as "one of the most depressing portrayals of the female condition since The Bell Jar", and reminiscent of the "seven stages of womanly despair" in William Hogarth's engraving A Surgeon's Progress.[39] Dough Elfman of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote that the actors were better than the show's premise and writing,[40] and The Boston Globe's Matthew Gilbert described the characters as a "stock cast of whiney healers" and the storylines as "hokey, gimmicky medical cases of the week".[41]

Awards and nominations