Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
House season 2
Season of television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The second season of House premiered on September 13, 2005[1] and ended on May 23, 2006.[1] During the season, House tries to cope with his feelings for his ex-girlfriend Stacy Warner, who, after he diagnosed her husband with acute intermittent porphyria, has taken a job in the legal department of Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital.[2]
Sela Ward's chemistry with Hugh Laurie in the final two episodes of the first season was strong enough to have her character return in seven episodes of the second season.[3]
Remove ads
Cast and characters
Summarize
Perspective
Main cast
Recurring cast
- Sela Ward as Stacy Warner
- Stephanie Venditto as Nurse Brenda Previn
- Currie Graham as Mark Warner
- Diane Baker as Blythe House
- R. Lee Ermey as John House
- Charles S. Dutton as Rodney Foreman
- Ron Perkins as Dr. Ron Simpson
Guest cast
Laura Allen, Yareli Arizmendi, Matthew John Armstrong, Mackenzie Astin, Christine Avila, Marshall Bell, Peter Birkenhead, Tamara Braun, Yvette Nicole Brown, Dan Butler, Scott Michael Campbell, Christopher Carley, Jewel Christian, Michelle Clunie, Aasha Davis, Thomas Dekker, Stephanie Erb, Elle Fanning, Bruce French, Erica Gimpel, Greg Grunberg, Wings Hauser, Taraji P. Henson, Howard Hesseman, Wil Horneff, Ryan Hurst, James Immekus, LL Cool J, William Katt, Mimi Kennedy, Edward Kerr, Elias Koteas, Nathan Kress, Tom Lenk, Ron Livingston, Samantha Mathis, Jayma Mays, Eddie Mills, Cynthia Nixon, Michael O'Keefe, America Olivo, Kip Pardue, Randall Park, Sasha Pieterse, Kristoffer Polaha, Clifton Powell, Keri Lynn Pratt, Cameron Richardson, Charlie Robinson, Ignacio Serricchio, Vicellous Reon Shannon, Allison Smith, Christie Lynn Smith, D. B. Sweeney, Chris Tallman, Michelle Trachtenberg, Hillary Tuck, Alanna Ubach, Stephanie Venditto, Tom Verica, J.R. Villarreal and Julie Warner.
Remove ads
Reception
The season gained high Nielsen ratings; "No Reason" was watched by 25.47 million viewers, the show's biggest audience ever at that point.[4] Season two averaged 17.3 million viewers an episode, outperforming season one by 30%.[5] The number of viewers made it the tenth most-watched show of the 2005–2006 television season.[5]
Writer Lawrence Kaplow won a Writers Guild of America Award in 2006 for the episode "Autopsy".[6]
Remove ads
Episodes
Summarize
Perspective
Remove ads
DVD releases
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads