arts & entertainment They Play Doctors On TV Cast members from U.S. television series tour Israel and "practice" real-life medicine. From medical dramas: Kevin McKidd and Sarah Drew of Grey's Anatomy; Lisa Edelstein, Omar Epps, Jesse Spencer, Amber Tamblyn and David Shore of House. From non-medical shows: Gregory Smith and Travis Milne of Rookie Blue; Lucas Neff and Shannon Woodward of Raising Hope. Joshua Hamerman The Jerusalem Post F or the second time in a month, actors who portray doctors on an American television series were able to simulate medical procedures at Israeli hospitals. During June, Kevin McKidd and Sarah Drew, who portray Dr. Owen Hunt and Dr. April Kepner, respectively, on the ABC show Grey's Anatomy, visited the robotic surgery laboratory at Hadassah University Medical Center at Ein Kerem. The famous guests were allowed to use the robotic tools to complete procedures, just like their characters. McKidd and Drew participated along with Gregory Smith and Travis Milne, who co-star in the ABC police drama series Rookie Blue, and Lucas Neff and Shannon Woodward, from the Fox sitcom Raising Hope. The Grey's Anatomy, Rookie Blue and Raising Hope delegation members also toured the Hadassah University Medical Center-Hebrew University Biotechnology Park and Charlotte R. Bloomberg Mother and Child Center. In late May, members of the cast of Lisa Edelstein the Fox series House (Dr. Lisa Cuddy), Omar Epps (Dr. Eric Foreman), Jesse Spencer (Dr. Robert Chase), Amber Tamblyn (medical stu- dent Martha Masters) and David Shore, the show's creator, executive producer and lead writer — used robotic surgical tools during a visit to the Sheba Medical Center's medical simulation ward at Tel Hashomer, the only simulation center of its scope internationally, where medical staff, students and army medics and phy- sicians from around the world undergo extensive training. "It's humbling to see the work that real surgeons do:' McKidd told the Jerusalem Post. McKidd's mother, Kathleen, accompa- nied him to Israel. — "My mom's always wanted to come to Israel and visit Jerusalem:' he said. "This is a lifelong dream of hers:' McKidd briefly traveled to Israel 15 years ago when, during a family vacation in Cyprus, the Scottish actor took a ship to Israel for a one-day excursion. He acquired many Israeli friends during the filming of the movie Bunraku, written and directed by Guy Moshe and produced by Ram Bergman, in Romania in 2008. "I have a group of Israeli friends in Los Angeles — they're great people and the people here [in Israel] are the same," McKidd said. "I encourage travel across the board, not just to Israel, but this is a very interesting country to visit and I would encourage people to come and see the country and the surrounding places." The Grey's Anatomy, Rookie Blue and Raising Hope actors began their tour in Tel Aviv, and their itinerary included stops in Jaffa, Sderot (where the actors spoke to film and TV arts students at Sapir Academic College), Nazareth and Safed, as well as climbing Masada, floating in the Dead Sea and swimming in Lake Kinneret. Smith and Milne extended their stay so they could travel to Eilat and to Petra in Jordan. During a press conference at Jerusalem's Inbal Hotel, Drew said the most mov- ing places she visited during the trip were the Western Wall and the Garden of Gethsemane. "There's so much history here so I would encourage people to make the trip out:' said Drew, the daughter of a Presbyterian minister and the wife of a professor specializing in Second Temple- era Judaism. "I felt completely safe the entire time I've been here — I think it's a good thing to let people know not to be afraid to come she said. Lisa Edelstein of House, who is Jewish, and has announced she will not appear in the series' eighth season, stumbled try- ing her hand at simulated arthroscopic surgery. "I'm so glad this is not a living person:' she said at the Sheba Medical Center while shifting the controls over a robotic dummy, eyes fixed on a computer screen that revealed her would-be patient's inter- nal organs. "I think I just mangled its liver." The cast looked on as medical students re-enacted a particularly dramatic scene from the last season of the show in which a patient who was crushed under a fall- ing building has his leg amputated and is rushed to the operating room. Among the team of medical students was Yuval Lotan, an avowed fan of the Emmy Award-winning House, which stars Hugh Laurie (who was not available to come to Israel as he was touring else- where) as a curmudgeonly genius doctor who leads a team of young physicians in investigating mysterious infectious dis- eases and other ailments at a New Jersey hospital. "The show is good entertainment, but at medical school we learn what not to do from it:' Lotan said. "After all, this is Hollywood we are talking about." The visiting cast from House also toured the Wolfson Medical Center in Holon, where they visited the pediatric cardiol- ogy intensive care unit and met with children from the West Bank, Iraq, Africa and Romania, among other places. All of the children were brought to the hospital by an Israel-based humanitarian project called Save a Child's Heart to receive life- saving treatment. Save a Child's Heart, also known as SACH, brings children with heart disease from the developing world for cardiac care in Israel while also working to improve cardiac care centers in their native coun- tries, on average saving some 200 chil- dren's lives a year. "The work that Save a Child's Heart is doing is an important reality check:' said Shore, who is Jewish and has two broth- ers living in Israel. "It's good for the Jews, it's good for Israel, but really it's good for humanity." At the hospital, Edelstein played with two young girls from Zanzibar who had under- gone surgery recently and spent time trying to connect with a girl from Iraq. Nearby, Tamblyn gave her sunglasses to a young Palestinian boy from the West Bank. The delegations' weeklong trips, orga- nized by America's Voices in Israel, is all part of a public relations effort to bring high-profile Americans on visits to the Jewish state. Irwin Katsof, director of America's Voices, said the project's purpose in bring- ing celebrities on such trips was to make them goodwill ambassadors when they go home. "We want them to talk to their friends, perhaps do an interview to let people know Israel is more than just wars;' Katsof said. "These people have an impact. The amount of free publicity we get from them going back and speaking on a news show is phenomenal." The House cast's visit coincided with Israel's somber marking of Memorial Day, and the cast members described watching as Israelis came to a halt at the sound of a siren to stand in silence for those killed in the country's wars. "It was very emotional:' said Edelstein, who also has relatives in Israel, including descendants of a great-aunt who was a founder of Kibbutz Dafna on the border with Lebanon. Memorial Day was followed by the abrupt shift into celebrations for Independence Day. "You guys know how to party:' said Tamblyn, laughing in an exchange with reporters. The group had stayed out late the night before exploring Tel Aviv's vast club scene. Also on the touring list were the Galilee (stopping off in a spa), Jerusalem and the ancient desert fortress of Masada. I1 JTA contributed to this story. June 30 • 2011 35