James Wilson (House)
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Dr. James Wilson | |
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First appearance | "Pilot" |
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Occupation | Head of the Department of Oncology |
Relationships | Julie (ex-wife) |
Portrayed by | Robert Sean Leonard |
Dr. James Evan Wilson is a fictional character on the Fox medical drama House. He is played by Robert Sean Leonard.
Wilson is the head of the Department of Oncology at Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. Conventionally, he is the only true friend of Dr. Gregory House, and frequently provides House with consultations and aid.
In the series' pilot episode, it is revealed that Wilson is Jewish; the revelation occurs when Dr. Eric Foreman says he found ham in the refrigerator of the team's current patient, whom Wilson insisted was his cousin in order to get House to take the case. He also invites House over for Christmas dinner in the episode "Damned If You Do." When House points that Wilson is Jewish, he alters his invitation to invite him for Hanukkah dinner instead.
Wilson's educational background is unknown, although in two episodes, he was dressed in a McGill University sweatshirt. In the episode "Histories," it is revealed he has two brothers, one of which he has not seen for nine years.
An example of Wilson's friendship with House occurs in the episode "Babies & Bathwater" in which Edward Vogler proposes a motion to the hospital's Board of Directors for House's dismissal. Wilson, a member of the board along with Dr. Lisa Cuddy, is the only one who votes against the motion. In response, Vogler proposes and succeeds in obtaining Wilson's dismissal from the hospital, but Wilson is soon reinstated after Vogler withdraws his involvement with the hospital.
Wilson is shown to have been married several times. His current marriage, which from all clues in the series is probably his third, went on the rocks when he discovered that his wife was having an affair. In all truth, however, Wilson himself is not innocent of cheating. In the episode "Spin," Wilson, trying to make a point, asks Dr. Allison Cameron if she's ever cheated and admits that he has. Later in that same episode, he confesses that an unnamed "someone" (whom he presumably met during his first marriage) made him feel "funny, good" and that he "didn't want to let that feeling go," therefore sparking his own series of mental affairs and damaging his relationships. This person's identity has not yet been revealed.
Wilson frequently protests his reputation as a serial philanderer, to no avail as far as House is concerned. In addition to ribbing Wilson about the oncologist's flirtatious nature with young nurses and other hospital staff members, House put the pieces together regarding the state of Wilson's third marriage: Wilson wearing the same clothes he'd worn the day before indicating he had not been home for the night; a mismatched pair of socks indicating Wilson was dressing in the dark to avoid waking his wife; a purchase of an expensive box of candy indicating some form of guilt and/or need to reconcile with his wife: all odd, small details most people outside a situation would be unlikely to notice.
As a result of his wife's affair, Wilson separated from his wife, and reluctantly took up refuge in House's apartment (cf. "Sex Kills"). In the episode "Safe," House told Wilson why he didn't look for a new apartment: "As long as you're here, it's just a fight. As soon as you get a place, it's a divorce." A few episodes later, Wilson moved out, informing House that he had found another apartment, in spite of House's various attempts to prevent Wilson from leaving.
It was revealed over the course of that episode ("House vs. God") that Wilson had lied and was actually living with Grace, one of his terminally ill patients, against all rules of physicians' ethics. House postulated that this was because Wilson feels a need to "fix" the vulnerable women he meets, and when they become well-adjusted (with Wilson's help), he becomes discontent and moves on. Wilson later moved out after Grace decided to spend her last days touring the world as she'd always dreamed of doing, and was now living on his own. On a "date" with Cuddy in the episode "Forever," he admitted that he and his ex-wife were dividing possessions and friends (commenting that his ex-wife had not fought him for the friendship of House), and neatly evaded questions about if he'd wanted children.
In the Emmy Award-winning episode "Three Stories," House referred to "a buddy of mine people say 'Thank you' to when he tells them they are dying." This was later revealed to be Wilson; House convinces him to use this skill to talk a patient into authorizing treatment in the episode "House vs. God."
Throughout the entire run of the series (mainly in the episode "Detox"), it is apparent that House's addiction worries Wilson. In Season Three, when Michael Tritter is trying to put House in jail for his Vicodin addiction, he threatens Wilson's career if he does not testify against House. Wilson refuses, so Tritter freezes his bank account and impounds his car. House publicly refuses to take responsibility or show remorse for Wilson's plight, but his seeming indifference is contradicted by abnormal physical pain that suggests deeply-repressed guilt. The situation is exacerbated by Wilson's barring from prescribing cancer medication, effectively killing his practice. When Wilson confronts him on this, House sneeringly dismisses him.
At the end of the episode "Finding Judas," Wilson agrees to testify, unknown to House. He finally breaks when House verbally attacks Cuddy, telling her it's good she can't get pregnant because she would make a lousy mother, and punching Dr. Chase in the face without provocation. Wilson fears his friend getting out of control; since House was cut off from his regular dosage of Vicodin, he was not thinking clearly when incorrectly diagnosing a child with a condition that required the amputation of one of her arms and legs. Fortunately for House, Chase correctly diagnosed the girl in time before her arm and leg were removed. Furthermore, withdrawal from his pain meds makes House intolerable to work with.
Within the scope of a popular comparison that draws parallels between House and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, Wilson is equivalent to Dr. Watson. This becomes evident as, throughout the course of the show, House consults upon his medical quandaries with Wilson, much as Holmes did with Watson upon his cases. His multiple marriages may also echo his association with Watson, as some Holmes critics postulate that Watson was married more than once. Wilson is also one of the few characters in the show with whom House will discuss what remains of his personal life, or who can make him laugh.
[edit] Wilson & Watson
Just as Dr. Gregory House has some deliberate parallels with Sherlock Holmes, Dr. James Wilson has been written with several references and homages to Doctor Watson
- Both share the initials JW and a medical degree
- Both were married multiple times
- As Watson is Holmes' only true friend, Wilson is House's only true friend.
- Just as Watson cohabits with Holmes for a time, so does Wilson with House
[edit] Trivia
- Out of all the main characters, Wilson is the only character who has not yet been seen crying.
- Wilson, as well as Robert Sean Leonard (who plays the character), is left-handed.
- According to his medical degree as seen in the background in the episode "Deception," Wilson's full name is James Evan Wilson.
- He has several posters of the Alfred Hitchcock film Vertigo on the walls of his office, and is even seen watching the film at the end of the episode "Safe."
- In the episode "House vs. God," we see Wilson wearing a sweater from McGill University, insinuating that he's an alumnus there.
- House often uses Wilson as a sounding-board in the way that Chuck Noland used "Wilson" in Cast Away, Tim Taylor consulted his neighbor Wilson in Home Improvement, and Sherlock Holmes used his best friend and biographer Doctor Watson.
- It is entirely possible that Wilson is an avid Mel Brooks fan. In the episode "Kids" after the young woman interviewing for Cameron's job leaves the office Wilson excitedly shouts "That's our Hitler!" - a reference to Brooks's The Producers. In the episode "Half-Wit" Wilson offers to help House switch brains with his patient - Gene Wilder's solution in Brooks's Young Frankenstein.
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Episode list | Awards | Soundtrack | |
Cast and crew | |
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David Shore | Hugh Laurie | Lisa Edelstein | Robert Sean Leonard | Omar Epps | Jennifer Morrison | Jesse Spencer | |
Characters | |
Gregory House | Lisa Cuddy | James Wilson | Eric Foreman | Allison Cameron | Robert Chase |