Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Nip/Tuck season 1
2003 season of American tv series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The first season of Nip/Tuck premiered on July 23, 2003, and concluded on October 21, 2003. It consisted of 13 episodes.
Cast and characters
Main cast
- Dylan Walsh as Dr. Sean McNamara
- Julian McMahon as Dr. Christian Troy
- John Hensley as Matt McNamara
- Valerie Cruz as Dr. Grace Santiago
- Joely Richardson as Julia McNamara
Recurring cast
- Robert LaSardo as Escobar Gallardo
- Kelsey Lynn Batelaan as Annie McNamara
- Kelly Carlson as Kimber Henry
- Roma Maffia as Liz Winters
- Nancy Cassaro as Suzanne Epstein
- Kate Mara as Vanessa Bartholomew
- Sophia Bush as Ridley Lange
- Ruth Williamson as Hedda Grubman
- Jonathan Del Arco as Sofia Lopez
- Phillip Rhys as Jude Sawyer
- Joey Slotnick as Dr. Merril Bobolit
- Brenda Strong as Iris
- Jessalyn Gilsig as Gina Russo
- Julie Warner as Megan O'Hara
- Rick Kelly as Jim O'Hara
- Andrew Leeds as Henry Shapiro
- Daniel Zacapa as Pepe
Remove ads
Episodes
Remove ads
U.S. television ratings
Reception
Summarize
Perspective
The first season received generally positive reviews from critics, holding a 74% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[4] Robert Bianco of USA Today wrote "Gross, engrossing and ultimately and utterly fearless, Nip/Tuck is a show about the price we pay to keep up appearances – and about the effort a show has to go to these days to break through TV's clutter."[5] Brian Lowry of the Los Angeles Times said "Both troubling and welcome ... Nip/Tuck both wallows in these shallow and twisted lives, while portraying them with warts and then some."[6] McMahon and Walsh received praise for their performances, with Terry Kelleher of People Magazine stating "McMahon is perfect as a satyr with a seductive smile ... Walsh fares well in the difficult role of a man who swings back and forth between self-righteousness and complete moral confusion."[7] Some criticism was aimed at the shows use of GUI, with David Bianculli of the New York Daily News saying "It's more artifice than art, and in everything from the performances to the dramatic contrivances, you can see the strain. You watch, and sometimes you smile or squirm – but you don't believe."[8] Linda Stasi of the New York Post said "What's good here is the acting, and some of the story lines. But they are overshadowed by over-the-top gory surgeries and preposterous situations."[9]
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads