Shaunette Renée Wilson Exits The Resident thewrap.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thewrap.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
As a staff writer since 2018 on âThe Resident,â Indian American writer/director Tianna Majumdar-Langham is among those responsible for creating the many intense and heart-warming moments on the Fox medical drama.
Majumdar-Langham, born to a Bengali mother and British father, has also served as the story editor, executive story editor, writer and co-producer on separate episodes on the show.
Season 4 of the show premiered Jan. 12.
She spent her childhood in a small English village called Pirbright but traveled to India every year, according to lassiwithlavina.com. Later, the family moved to the United States where she attended high school and then studied political science and psychology at the University of Redlands in Southern California.
About the Show
Season four continues to shine a light on the daily heroism of today’s health care workers. The provocative medical drama follows the doctors and nurses at Chastain Memorial Hospital, as they face personal and professional challenges and fight for their patients’ health. The new season picks up as Dr. Conrad Hawkins and Nurse Practioner Nicolette Nevin tie the knot in an intimate and beautiful wedding, strengthening their already powerful bond. Meanwhile, Chastain is transitioning from private to public hospital, causing the hero doctors to fight to fix the broken machine from the inside. Dr. Randolph Bell finds himself mining his own past to find his estranged former stepson, elite plastic.
Jane Leeves won t leave The Resident if there s a Frasier revival ew.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ew.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Watching TV in the time of Covid-19. (Graphic: Getty Images)
It s been a year since the deadly virus swept across the globe, infecting millions and killing an estimated 2.33 million people so far.
The race against time continues as humanity battles a merciless, invisible enemy.
Pandemics have long been a vehicle used by storytellers to frighten or scare viewers with post-apocalyptic storylines of devastation.
But this time the topic is no longer fiction. It s real. Very real. A world where everyone wears a mask and stays indoors is no longer something a sci-fi writer dreams up. Instead, it s our daily reality.