
"Feels like I got an SUV riding around on training wheels down there," he tells the doctors. He plays a millionaire businessman who had his testes removed after getting prostate cancer, and he isn't happy with his prosthesis. So it's especially rich that Hagman now is on Nip/Tuck playing a character seeking surgical enhancement. Ewing's manliness was never in doubt during the 13 years Hagman portrayed the slimy Texas oilman on Dallas. Troy does get to call him a "rich old queen." The show's writers say his character is based on Liberace, and though Chamberlain isn't swathed in sequins, Dr. "You remember the naked statue that caused such a fuss in Tampa?") Toy's face remade to look like his ("I was a sculptor's model," Chamberlain's character says. The second episode of the new season begins with him visiting McNamara/Troy with his latest boy toy to have Mr. Kildare puts himself under the proverbial knife by playing his first gay character since coming out in 2003. With the exception of the pilot, each episode is named after the character(s) that are scheduled to have plastic surgery.That's not the only nipping and tucking the series is doing that doesn't involve stitches, blood and sucking fat out of hips.īeing ever so careful not to spoil anything for our fellow fans, here are five guest stars and topics that make the new shows worth watching:ĭr. The series ran for 100 episodes, concluding with the series finale on March 3, 2010.

Accordingly, the second half of the fifth season was not screened until January 6, 2009, in the U.S. The fifth season premiered on October 30, 2007, though production was affected by the 2007 Writers Strike. While the show was initially set in Miami, at the end of the fourth season, the practice was relocated to Los Angeles and many of the characters followed.



The show began in July 2003 and concluded with the end of the sixth season in March 2010. Each episode typically involves the cosmetic procedures of one or more patients, and also features the personal and professional lives of its main cast. Christian Troy (portrayed by Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon respectively). The series focuses on "McNamara/Troy", a plastic surgery practice, and follows its founders, Dr. Nip/Tuck is an American medical drama created by Ryan Murphy, which aired on FX in the United States between 20.
