How does wilson die in house
While he was at the convention, his wife had him served with divorce papers the first time he knew Sam was dissatisfied with their marriage. He got into an altercation and hurled a glass into an antique mirror. He was soon arrested and taken to jail. However, he was soon rescued by a doctor who had also been at the convention who had been following him around, Gregory House. House became intrigued with Wilson when he saw him carrying around a parcel from a divorce attorney all weekend without opening it.
He followed him to the bar and bailed him out of jail. They spent the rest of the weekend drinking together and soon became fast friends. Unfortunately, due to a misunderstanding, Wilson never attended to plead to the charges and a Louisiana warrant was issued for his arrest. Wilson completed his internship and residency in oncology , becoming board certified.
He soon found romance with a new partner, Bonnie Wilson. Wilson enjoyed substantial career success as an oncologist. One day, House called him to let him know that Princeton-Plainsboro was looking for a new oncologist and thought it would be fun to work together.
Wilson jumped at the chance, but not for the reason House thought — since Danny had disappeared in Princeton, Wilson took the opportunity to look in homeless shelters for him.
He kept this secret from House for years. He only spotted Danny once during this time — while James was having dinner, he spotted him outside. However, by the time he got out of the restaurant, Danny was gone.
This eventually prompted Wilson to join the Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital where he eventually became the head of the Oncology Department. When House became disabled and his girlfriend Stacy Warner left him, Wilson started spending more time with House and less with Bonnie. However, Wilson bounced back again — he married a third time to Julie who has never been seen in the series.
The hospital is soon in turmoil when it obtains a new benefactor and chairman, Edward Vogler , who insists that all the departments be profitable. For his trouble, Wilson is voted off the board, and is forced to consider resigning his position at the hospital to avoid further damage to his career.
Wilson is soon restored to his job. Wilson is brought into action when Stacy returns and it appears House wants to rekindle their relationship despite her marriage. He confronts her and reminds her of the damage she did to House the last time she left. Although House and Stacy have a brief affair, House decides to end it.
Wilson also finds out that House borrowed money from him to buy a motorcycle even though House had enough money already. House admits that he borrowed the money to see how much he could borrow before Wilson refused. Fearing that his wife is angry with him for his latest infidelity, he instead finds out that she has been cheating on him.
Wilson does manage a personal accomplishment. With House out with a patient and helping Wilson to keep Cuddy playing poker instead of checking out his activities, Wilson manages to win the oncology benefit poker tournament by slow playing a pair of pocket aces and beating a pair of kings. After House returns from his convalescence after being shot and having treatment that removes his leg pain, he takes on the case of a former cancer patient who is confined to a wheelchair.
However, Cuddy refuses permission, only to give the patient the shot herself. As if by a miracle, the patient immediately improves, showing House was right. Wilson refuses, figuring that House is merely suffering aches and pains from overdoing his rehabilitation. The deception soon turns into a disaster. A police detective takes an interest in House after he sees House taking Vicodin in the clinic.
He soon finds the faked prescriptions and asks Wilson about them. Wilson tries to get Allison Cameron to sign off on his prescriptions, but when House calls her away to work on his case, Wilson instead gives up his oncology practice. Wilson accompanies House on a trip to Atlantic City with a former coma patient who House has temporarily revived. Instead, House turns the deal down flat. In order to keep the pressure on House, Cuddy and Wilson conspire to cut House off of Vicodin completely until he agrees to the deal.
Instead House steals drugs from a patient and, even though Wilson reverses himself and stops cooperating, House nearly goes to jail until Cuddy perjures herself to convince the court the stolen drugs were only a placebo. Wilson has to intervene once again when he realizes House is plotting to get nerve tissue from a patient who is insensitive to pain in an attempt to graft the nerve cells to his own.
While House is away, Wilson takes over the team when a middle aged woman collapses in her own home. Fortunately, Chase comes through with the right diagnosis. House finally relents when he takes a lengthy period of time to solve a case. After the fellowship derby, House is sure that Wilson is not only dating someone, but someone House knew personally. Wilson's relationship with Amber Volakis came as a surprise to everyone, including Wilson and Amber themselves. Wilson realized that because Amber shared many characteristic with his best friend that they might be able to have the same type of lasting relationship.
He later admitted to House that one of the reasons he liked Amber so much was because, like House, she was so much fun to be with. He also enjoyed the fact that she was much more assertive than he was. On Amber's part, she had deep seated feelings of inadequacy that drove her to demand respect and to excel to get that respect. We had to decide which show we were doing: Season 8 or the final season. Ultimately, I made the decision that I couldn't allow it to drag out any longer and we proceeded with it.
So this was always the end of the cancer arc you planned for Wilson? Shore: This finale was part and parcel with what we mapped out. Wilson has cancer. House deals with it well, House deals with it badly, and both of them reach a level of acceptance at different times. Pretty early on we knew it was going to be House debating "How am I going to deal with this? At that point, did you know he would be debating it with hallucinations of former cast members?
Shore: I liked the idea in general, but a big part of it was that it gave us an opportunity to do what so many shows do at the end, which is have all the other people come back from the past. But this was having them come back in a very different way. As we started to write it, we started discussing which people from past shows it should be. There were certain availability issues, although really not a lot. House comes to an end: The cast and producers retrace the show's highs and lows.
How does House 's finale compare to the greatest series-enders of all time? Do you think it's possible for someone with a bad limp to escape that quickly out the back door of a burning building? Dramatic license? Shore: With the fire and that explosion and the timing and what you actually saw and what you didn't see, it was certainly intended to make the audience believe it's going to be very, very difficult for him to get out. The collapse was supposed to be possibly on him [or] possibly in front of him.
It certainly would have been tricky for him to get out, but we don't have a full understanding of the geography of the interior. At the same time, Wilson and Foreman approached the burning building and arrived at the entrance just a beam fell down, seemingly killing House. In the moment, I wholeheartedly believed he was. But as things progressed, I became more and more skeptical.
They found the body, the coroner confirmed, etc. By the time they got to the funeral, something definitely felt…off. I cheered. Wilson pulled up to the stoop, and sure enough, there was House. How do you want to spend your last five months? House was right again. David Shore pulled the ole bait and switch by leading us to believe that House Hugh Laurie had died in a building fire. There was a coroner confirming it was House and a funeral!
After a long period of mourning, Wilson returns to the hospital to announce that he's leaving. House once again tries to confront Wilson about this, but Wilson blows him off again. However, when House's father died, Cuddy enlisted Wilson to ensure that House attended the funeral. In the season four episode "You Don't Want to Know", Thirteen tells House that her mother died from Huntington's disease; a test she performs several episodes later confirms she carries the gene. Remy "Thirteen" Hadley, M.
Last appearance "Everybody Dies" 8. In the final scenes of the series, Foreman and Wilson are the only two people who know that House is still alive after everyone thinks he died in a fire: Foreman discovers an ID badge that House planted in his office as House and Wilson ride motorcycles to points unknown.
During their argument, Cuddy tells him that she doesn't love him and to move on. House then decides to amputate Hannah's leg. Afterwards she is sent to the hospital but on the way she dies due to a fat embolism, caused by the amputation. So most likely, Cuddy chose to leave the hospital out of frustration and sorrow for what happened. The second reason is due to budget cuts for the eighth season, which at the time wasn't entirely a sure thing for renewal.
So Edelstein left the show likely due to a dissapointing offer. Gregory House , M. A portion of the show's plot centers on House's habitual use of Vicodin to manage pain stemming from a leg infarction involving his quadriceps muscle some years earlier, an injury that forces him to walk with a cane.
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