ER 's success surprised the networks and critics alike, as David E.
Then we moved it to Thursday and it just took off", commented Littlefield. " ER premiered opposite a Monday Night Football game on ABC and did surprisingly well. Elsewhere." After Spielberg had joined as a producer, NBC ordered six episodes. Warren Littlefield, running NBC Entertainment at the time, was impressed by the series: "We were intrigued, but we were admittedly a bit spooked in attempting to go back into that territory a few years after St. studios in Burbank, California, although the show makes extensive use of location shoots in Chicago, most notably the city's famous "L" train platforms.
A set modeled after Los Angeles County General Hospital's emergency room was built soon afterward at the Warner Bros. Because of a lack of time and money necessary to build a set, the pilot episode of ER was filmed in the former Linda Vista Hospital in Los Angeles, an old facility that had ceased operating in 1990. The only substantive changes made by the producers in 1994 were that the Susan Lewis character became a woman and the Peter Benton character became African-American, and the running time was shortened by about 20 minutes in order for the pilot to air in a two-hour block on network TV. The script used to shoot the pilot was virtually unchanged from what Crichton had written in 1974. Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment provided John Wells as the show's executive producer.
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Crichton and Spielberg then turned to ER, but decided to film the story as a two-hour pilot for a television series rather than as a feature film. In 1990, he published the novel Jurassic Park, and in 1993 began a collaboration with director Steven Spielberg on the film adaptation of the book. The screenplay went nowhere and Crichton turned to other topics. In 1974, author Michael Crichton wrote a screenplay based on his own experiences as a medical student in a busy hospital emergency room. As of 2014, ER has grossed over $3 billion in television revenue.
ER won 116 awards in total, including the Peabody Award, while the cast earned four Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Ensemble Performance in a Drama Series. It won 23 Primetime Emmy Awards, including the 1996 Outstanding Drama Series award, and received 124 Emmy nominations. The show is the second longest-running primetime medical drama in American television history behind Grey's Anatomy, and the sixth longest medical drama across the globe (behind British series Casualty and Holby City, Grey's Anatomy, Germany's In aller Freundschaft, and Poland's Na dobre i na złe). ER follows the inner life of the emergency room (ER) of fictional County General Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, and various critical issues faced by the room's physicians and staff. It was produced by Constant C Productions and Amblin Television, in association with Warner Bros. ER is an American medical drama television series created by novelist and physician Michael Crichton that aired on NBC from September 19, 1994, to April 2, 2009, with a total of 331 episodes spanning 15 seasons.