It’s almost time to walk the halls of Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital once again when Grey’s Anatomy returns from its midseason hiatus to pick up where the show left off on that cliffhanger.
Black actors have contributed to some of television's best productions, so we wanted to be sure to shout them out. Whether you're looking for a little comedy or a lot of drama, we've got the show for you.
[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Grey’s Anatomy Season 20 Episode 9 “I Carry Your Heart.”] Dr. Lucas Adams (Niko Terho) has a big decision to make.
It took a surgeon’s scalpel to excise the must-see episodes out of the 420 that Grey’s Anatomy has aired. But you don’t have to stop with these: Hulu now carries the run of the medical drama, plus new episodes starting March 15, the day after they air on ABC.
The 17th season finale of Grey's Anatomy featured Dr. Maggie Pierce and Dr. Winston Ndugu's wedding. And now Kelly McCreary, who has played Maggie since 2014 on the longest-running primetime medical drama of all time, has a personal milestone of her own to celebrate.
Rule No. 1: Never underestimate Grey's Anatomy. Grey's has kept viewers guessing for a record-breaking 17 seasons, and the forthcoming 18th season is already trending in the same direction.
"Dying is exhausting," said Derek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey), or the posthumous spirit of him now occupying a beach between life and death, and exhausted is exactly how I feel after watching Thursday night's Grey's Anatomy ("Good as Hell").
The COVID-19 pandemic has infiltrated Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital and dominated most of Season 17's storylines, but Thursday night's "Sign O' the Times" episode ventured outside to address the protests surrounding racial injustice and systemic oppression that defined last summer.
The 11th episode ("Sorry Doesn't Always Make It Right") of the longest-running primetime medical drama's 17th season aired Thursday night, and while the predominant storyline centered on Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone) and Atticus "Link" Lincoln's (Chris Carmack) relationship, Meredith awakening from her COVID coma was the moment everybody has been waiting for.
The doctors at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital grieved the unexpected loss of Dr. Andrew DeLuca (Giacomo Gianniotti) throughout Thursday's "It's All Too Much" episode, but Dr.
Grey's Anatomy has been the first, in so many respects: the first primetime drama to feature minorities in such powerful roles, the first medical drama to eclipse 322 episodes, the first of Shonda Rhimes' many successful television creations.