![]() After Blalock's death, Thomas continued his work at Johns Hopkins training surgeons. In 1964, one day before Blalock dies, he sees Thomas, now a professional surgeon and trainer in the open heart surgery wing. He therefore decides to overlook Blalock's lack of acknowledgement and return to the lab. However, his heart is with the work he left behind so much that he is unhappy in other endeavors. The next day, Thomas reveals that he saw the ceremony, and quits from his lab. From there, he listens to Blalock give credit to the other doctors who assisted in the work but make no mention of Thomas or his contributions. Instead, he watches from behind a potted palm at the rear of the ballroom. Thomas attends Blalock's parties as a bartender, moonlighting for extra income, and when Blalock is honored for the Blue Baby work at the segregated Belvedere Hotel, Thomas is not among the invited guests. Also doctors from around the world start attending Thomas's surgery in order to learn how to do the surgery themselves so they can treat their own patients. As word quickly spreads of their success, parents all over the country flock to the hospital with their sick children, hoping the surgery will cure them. Blalock makes a mistake once by accidentally cutting an artery at the wrong place, but eventually, along with Thomas, succeeds. Yet outside the lab, they are separated by the prevailing racism of the time. Blalock praises Thomas' surgical skill as being "like something the Lord made", and insists that Thomas coach him through the first Blue Baby surgery over the protests of Hopkins administrators. The film dramatizes Blalock's and Thomas' fight to save the dying Blue Babies. Blalock interprets it as the fact that their sewing technique didn't work because the sutures didn't grow with the heart, and worked on a new version that would work. Thomas asks why she's dying in the dream and she says it's because she has a baby heart. The outcome looks good and they are excited to operate on a baby with the defect, but in a dream, Thomas sees the baby grown up and crying because she's dying. The duo is seen experimenting on stray dogs they got from the local dog pound, deliberately giving the dogs the heart defect and trying to solve it. She needs a new ductus for them to oxygenate their blood. ![]() Helen Taussig ( Mary Stuart Masterson), the pediatrician/cardiologist at Johns Hopkins, challenges Blalock to come up with a surgical solution for her Blue Babies. ![]() Together, they attack the congenital heart defect of Tetralogy of Fallot, also known as Blue Baby Syndrome, and in so doing they open the field of heart surgery. The film traces the two men's work when they move in 1943 from Vanderbilt to Johns Hopkins, an institution where the only black employees are janitors and where Thomas must enter by the back door. But Thomas' remarkable manual dexterity and intellectual acumen confound Blalock's expectations, and Thomas rapidly becomes indispensable as a research partner to Blalock in his forays into heart surgery. Something the Lord Made tells the story of the 34-year partnership that begins in Depression Era Nashville in 1930 when Blalock ( Alan Rickman) hires Thomas ( Mos Def) as an assistant at his Vanderbilt University lab, expecting him to perform janitorial work. ![]() Based on the National Magazine Award-winning Washingtonian magazine article "Like Something the Lord Made" by Katie McCabe, the film was directed by Joseph Sargent and written by Peter Silverman and Robert Caswell. Something the Lord Made is a 2004 American made-for-television biographical drama film about the black cardiac pioneer Vivien Thomas (1910–1985) and his complex and volatile partnership with white surgeon Alfred Blalock (1899–1964), the "Blue Baby doctor" who pioneered modern heart surgery. 2004 television film directed by Joseph Sargent Something the Lord Made ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |