Is There a Doctor in the House?
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| Is There a Doctor in the House? | ||||
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Xena tries to heal a critically ill Gabrielle | ||||
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| Series | Xena: Warrior Princess | |||
| Season | 1 | |||
| Antagonist | The Thessalian and Mitoan Civil War | |||
| Setting | Greece Thessaly | |||
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| Original Air-Date | July 29, 1996 | |||
| Written By | Patricia Manney | |||
| Directed By | T.J. Scott | |||
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| Order in Series | 024 | |||
| Order in Season | 24 | |||
| Previous Episode | "Death Mask" | |||
| Next Episode | "Orphan of War" | |||
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Contents |
Summary
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Added by Buffyfan123Suddenly, they hear a woman moaning and discover the Amazon Ephiny, hiding nearby. Newly widowed and about to give birth, Ephiny explains that she and her Centaur husband Phantes wanted to have their baby in Athens but on the way there, Phantes was captured and killed by the Mitoans. Xena, determined to put an end to the war, leaves Ephiny in Gabrielle's care and sneaks up on Mitoan General Marmax as he talks to his aides. When he rides away on his horse seeking a better vantage point, Xena succeeds in wounding and capturing him.
Stripping him of his signs of rank, she forces him to enter the Thessalian Temple of Asclepius, then tends to Ephiny. The healing temple teems with the wounded and dying of both sides and when Xena sees how little attention the injured Mitoans are given by the attending Thessalian priests, she applies her own knowledge of medicine and surgical procedures to save as many lives as possible. Two young priests, Hippocrates and Democrites, become increasingly impressed by her abilities and prove to be willing assistants despite the angry disapproval of the head priest Galen.

Added by Buffyfan123Xena outwits and overpowers Galen's guards and continues with her work. She is ably assisted by Gabrielle, who has by now deeply impressed Marmax with her brains, beauty and compassion.
When a soldier is brought in with a gangrenous leg, Xena orders Marmax to help her with the amputation and the General gets a grisly, closeup look at the horrors of war. Soon after, when Gabrielle leaves the temple to search for a wounded soldier's fallen comrade, Marmax learns from Ephiny how his soldiers slaughtered her husband, who he correctly suspects was a Centaur from her account of the story. A few minutes later, a seriously wounded Gabrielle is carried in on a stretcher.


Added by Buffyfan123As Xena stitches up Gabrielle's multiple knife wounds, Marmax is clearly astonished to learn that she refused to kill the man who stabbed her. With the battle approaching the temple grounds, Democrites begins organizing a group of women and children to protect them from attack when he is hit in the chest by an arrow. Galen rushes him into the temple and, for the first time, turns to Xena for help.
Xena removes the arrow and works to stop the bleeding as Democrites passes out on the table right next to the unconscious Gabrielle. Just as the Thessalians begin bombarding the temple with catapults to stop the quickly advancing Mitoans, Ephiny is ready to give birth. Xena quickly determines that the baby is breech and assisted by Marmax, she operates and delivers a healthy baby Centaur.



Added by Buffyfan123At that moment, Gabrielle is seized by a convulsion and seems to slip away. Desperate, Xena gives her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and pounds on her chest in an attempt to get her breathing again. Though everyone tells her that her friend has died, Xena continues and eventually, Gabrielle responds. In the end, both Gabrielle and Democrites recover and Marmax realizes that it was Xena who wounded him in the first place in order to teach him the most valuable lesson of his life.
Later, while leaving the Temple of Asclepius, Gabrielle tells Xena that she did briefly cross over to the other side and meet her grandmother and Talus. Xena and Gabrielle continue on their journey while Gabrielle recovers from her injuries.
Disclaimer
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Being that war is hell, lots of people were harmed during the production of this motion picture (but since television is a dramatic medium of make believe, all casualties removed their prosthetic make-up and went home unscathed).
Background Information
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Behind the Scenes
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- Shooting Dates: March 13 through March 19, 1996 (5 day shoot).
- This episode was one of seventeen that fans selected to be featured on the Xena: Warrior Princess: 10th Anniversary Collection, and is subsequently considered one of the greatest episodes in Xena: Warrior Princess history.
- This episode was not originally intended to air as the series one finale.
- According to the Chakram Newsletter, when being briefed by Rob Tapert on what he needed for this episode, he told Patricia Manney, "4 1/2 days shooting, one location, ER, and kill Gabrielle." She says he left it up in the air how (or whether) they would bring Gabrielle back at the end.
- The operation performed on Ephiny is known as a Caesarian section, because Julius Caesar was the first to make it a law that a child could be surgically removed from the mother in order to save the life of the child.
- Danielle Cormack was really pregnant during the filming of this episode, but she was only a few months along.
- The original cut for this episode didn't pass censors, deeming it too bloody for airing (like the leg amputation scene). Rob Tapert, Lucy Lawless and Eric Gruendemann fought for the episode, proving that most of the gore is off-screen. In the end, only about 60 seconds was cut from the episode, which is why it aired in July, as so much editing was needed.
- Democritus was a famous philosopher who developed the atomic theory (something which Gabrielle would later postulate in "The Deliverer").
- Galen was a famous ancient physician. He was one of the first to use cadavers to explore the human internal systems and wrote a manual that was used throughout the ages by physicians. His writings were based on the teachings of Plato, Aristotle, and above all Hippocrates (who actually lived about 500 years before him).
- Hippocrates was a Greek physician, whose name became associated with a number of medical writings (the Hippocratic Collection). The Hippocratic Oath, a code of ethics defining a physician's relationship with his patient, survives to this day.
- Asclepius was the demi-god son of Apollo, and after the death of his mortal half, he became the Greek God of Medicine.
Other
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Did Xena discover Artificial Respiration and CPR?
- Chakram Count: 1
- 1) To take out Marmax.
Links and References
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Guest Stars
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- Danielle Cormack (Ephiny)
- Ray Woolf (Marmax)
- Tony Billy (Mitoan Warrior)
- Andrew Binns (Hippocrates)
- Harriet Crampton (Hysterical Woman)
- Edith (Runner)
- Simon Farthing (Democritus)
- Geoff Houtman (Gangrene Man)
- Paul McLaren (POW Leader)
- Adam Middleton (Blind Soldier)
- Charles Pierard (Thessalian Guard)
- Ron Smith (Galen)
- Deane Vipond (Head Wound Man)
References
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People
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Gods
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Places
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| Season 1 | Season 2 >> | |||||||
| #01 | Sins of the Past | #09 | Death in Chains | #17 | The Royal Couple of Thieves | |||
| #02 | Chariots of War | #10 | Hooves and Harlots | #18 | The Prodigal | |||
| #03 | Dreamworker | #11 | The Black Wolf | #19 | Altared States | |||
| #04 | Cradle of Hope | #12 | Beware Greeks Bearing Gifts | #20 | Ties That Bind | |||
| #05 | The Path Not Taken | #13 | Athens City Academy of the Performing Bards | #21 | The Greater Good | |||
| #06 | The Reckoning | #14 | A Fistful of Dinars | #22 | Callisto | |||
| #07 | The Titans | #15 | Warrior... Princess | #23 | Death Mask | |||
| #08 | Prometheus | #16 | Mortal Beloved | #24 | Is There a Doctor in the House? | |||