Of course,Zach Braff and Donald Faisonwere going to soar in an"Eagle!"flight on ABC's"Scrubs" revival, middle-aged dangers be damned.
Twenty-five years after the original "Scrubs" began on NBC, reunited doctors John "JD" Dorian(Braff)and Christopher Turk(Faison)nostalgically embark on their signature piggyback ride during the two-episode premiere (8 ET/PT Wednesday, Feb. 25, streaming next day on Hulu)."Eagle!" even flies in the trailer.
Naturally, the TV hilarity resulted in a real injury − just not to Braff or Faison, the show's stars and executive producers. The stunt performer standing in for Faison wiped out.
"There was a complication," Faison, 51, says during a joint USA TODAY interview. "He busted his face on the ground."
New 'Scrubs' trailer:See Zach Braff, Donald Faison flying
"That's not really a fake stunt," says Braff, 50, who directed the pilot. "That guy really took a pancake to the ground and hit his head. And he was like, 'I'm ready to go again.' And we're like, 'Dude, you're bleeding. You need stitches. That's it. We got it.' "
But let's give a "Hell, yeah!" for the gung-ho comedy effort. Because if you're going to bring "Scrubs" back, you have to leave real blood on the fake hospital floor.
The aughts-favorite medical comedy created by Bill Lawrence ruled NBC for seven wacky seasons (2001 to 2008), winning a prestigious Peabody Award and earning 17 Emmy Award nominations. The series fizzled on ABC after one season and was canceled in 2010. But viewers stayed loyal and loving, attached to Braff and Faison, the real-life besties at the comedy's center. The stars hosted their pandemic podcast"Fake Doctors, Real Friends"and starred in surprisingly entertainingT-Mobilecommercials.
After years of being asked about when "Scrubs" would be returning, Braff and Faison are finally riding the revival, 16 years after the show's original cancellation. "Scrubs" somehow features the impossibly busy Lawrence as executive producer alongside the comedy maestro of the moment's other hits "Ted Lasso" and "Shrinking."
"Bill is definitely overseeing," says Braff of Lawrence's role. "He is the mentor to everyone involved. Bill is doing so many other shows, but he still weighs in."
Lawrence's first mandate was to keep the heart in the show and the zaniness in check.
"When we finished the show before, we were kind of off the rails," Faison says. "We had a show where Zach was hiding in a backpack."
"The show got pretty crazy," says Braff. "So we all said, let's reground and put it back in reality."
The old 'Scrubs' set was a real medical center
The decommissioned North Hollywood Medical Center served as the original set of "Scrubs," which was sometimes too realistic.
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"People used to wander into the hospital, and we'd have to tell them, 'This isn't an actual hospital.' It was crazy," says Faison. "It was especially hard to explain since so many people were walking around in scrubs."
The medical center has been converted to condos, so the new series had to start from scratch. Production designers had to painstakingly recreate "a full-scale replica" of Sacred Heart Hospital "inch by inch," says Braff.
After a formative decade on the previous set, the look-alike took some getting used to.
"Doors that used to lead to rooms now open onto a soundstage, the elevators don't work," Faison says. "Your brain remembers one thing, but reality says something else."
Who returns for the 'Scrubs' revival?
The series reunites Sacred Heart favorites, including Sarah Chalke as Elliot Reid − whose marriage to JD didn't last to the revival. Judy Reyes returns as Carla Espinosa, whose marriage to Turk has endured.
John C. McGinley reappears as the relentlessly intimidating Perry Cox, and then disappears. "Spoiler alert, because you're USA TODAY, Dr. Cox does indeed return," says Braff. Beloved minor characters, like the unhinged orthopedic surgeon Hooch (Phill Lewis), resurface.
But the fresh, young cast is key, including new medical interns likeDashana Trainor(Amanda Morrow) and influencer doctor-wannabeSam Tosh(Ava Bunn).
"The crazy thing about Ava and Amanda is that they were born in 2000," says Braff. "So that means when 'Scrubs' first came out, they were in utero. They weren't even born yet."
"And they have their own language," says "Clueless" star Faison. "It's like when 'Clueless' came out in 1995 and everyone was like, 'What are they saying?' And now I'm like, 'What aretheysaying?' "
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The older duo, now serving in positions of authority at Sacred Heart, still pulls comedy from their real lives. Braff is famously single, while Faison has been married to CaCee Cobb since 2012 and has two kids. The stars' family dynamics and personal chemistry are still what viewers see on TV.
"Bill Lawrence started seeing our friendship develop and the way that we were with each other, and started writing to that. We continue to do that," says Braff. "Now I'm still a 50-year-old bachelor, and Donald's married with kids. I still FaceTime Donald five times a day and if I'm lucky, he'll answer once."
Perhaps the only thing that is not realistic about "Scrubs" is that Faison could totally handle "Eagle!" − unlike his character Turk, who topples under JD's weight, complaining of back issues.
"Donald is telling any reporter who will listen that even though Turk can't handle 'Eagle!' Donald Faison still can," says Braff.
"My back isn't that bad. It's starting to shift, I am 51," says Faison. "But I can handle it. I can certainly handle Zach as an 'Eagle!' partner."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'Scrubs' revival 'Eagle!' stunt goes wrong