Noah wyle is back in the er on ‘the pitt’ | members only

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Actor Noah Wyle, 53, is back in a medical drama — this time to play emergency room chief attendant Michael “Robby” Robinavitch on the new series _The Pitt_, launching Jan. 9 on Max. In


the role, he deals with issues that are perhaps more relevant to 2025 than the ones he faced as John Carter on _ER_, the long-running NBC medical drama that aired from 1994 to 2009.


“Fentanyl overdoses, mental health stuff, the gun epidemic, mass shootings, medical-assisted suicides and anything that has to do with what our country is going through post-pandemic,” Wyle


says. “These become viewed under a totally different light than what we did [on _ER_]. It makes for very exciting storylines that feel really relevant, not the least one of which is one


that's relevant to [AARP] — which is, we have a very large aging population.” That storyline is also personal to Wyle, who wrote two of the episodes. “I've [got] four healthy


parents that are still alive and thriving. But that is a gift that not many people are enjoying as late into life as I am. So exploring the realities of what that looks like and how we care


for our elders and what we want ‘end of life’ to look and feel like for them and for us is a significant storyline that runs through the series this season, which I was really proud of.”


Wyle tells AARP about how he’s keeping fit and healthy; his still-cherished connections to _ER_ colleagues like George Clooney and Julianna Margulies; and his way-too-extensive


“collections” of things like books, walking canes and — yes — Noah’s Arks. _This interview has been edited for length and clarity._ Noah Wyle stars as Michael “Robby” Robinavitch on the new


hospital drama "The Pitt," launching Jan. 9 on Max. Warrick Page/MAX WHAT WAS IT LIKE GOING BACK TO A MEDICAL DRAMA? It's been incredibly satisfying. At the beginning, it was


really just steeped in memory. I was walking around that lot [_The Pitt_ is filmed about 200 feet from where _ER _was] just saying hello to ghost after ghost and opening up a time capsule.


I've described it to people as, for the longest time, _ER_ was a very near memory no matter how long it had been. Those memories, those relationships, it was all very easy to access for


me, even when I had gone on to do other things. In the last four or five years, that began to change. And in the last year and a half, two years, those memories have now receded farther


into the distance than I ever thought possible. DO YOU KEEP IN TOUCH WITH YOUR _ER _COLLEAGUES? I hear about what Julianna is up to all the time. George is sort of a “happy birthday, merry


Christmas, saw your movie, heard you're doing a show” kind of relationship. Tony (Anthony Edwards) and I reconnected a couple of years ago when [former_ ER _colleague] Gloria Reuben


organized a Zoom reunion for the Waterkeeper Alliance [a nonprofit that Reuben is the president of that works to protect bodies of water around the world]. I said yes, expecting it to be


three or four people. And the fact that everybody turned up to be part of it was a testament to how much we wanted to see each other again, and the fact that we didn't even want to get


off the call. Especially George. George was having a ball. He couldn't stop talking.  Noah Wyle, right, first gained fame in the 1990s tending to patients on "ER" alongside


superstar castmates such as Julianna Margulies, left. NBC/Courtesy Everett Collection