← NewsAll
Jamie-Lynn Sigler discusses emotional portrayal of MS on Grey's Anatomy
Summary
Jamie-Lynn Sigler spoke about playing a doctor with Multiple Sclerosis in a recent Grey's Anatomy episode and described her first on-set moment revealing the diagnosis as emotional. She said writers collaborated with her and that the role aimed to show authentic representation of living with MS.
Content
Jamie-Lynn Sigler discussed her guest role as Dr. Laura Kaplan, a doctor living with Multiple Sclerosis, in a recent episode of Grey's Anatomy. Sigler, who was diagnosed with MS at about age 20 and disclosed the condition publicly in 2016, described the scene where her character acknowledges the diagnosis as particularly emotional. She said writers consulted with her and that the episode offered an opportunity to show someone living with MS authentically and in their power.
Key points:
- Sigler appeared as Dr. Laura Kaplan in a season 22 episode of Grey's Anatomy and found her first on-set scene acknowledging MS to be an emotional moment.
- She was diagnosed with MS around age 20, kept it private for many years due to career concerns, and went public with the diagnosis in 2016.
- Sigler said she contributed input to the character and that writers collaborated with her to portray the condition authentically.
- The Mayo Clinic description reported in coverage notes that MS can cause symptoms such as numbness, weakness, trouble walking and vision changes.
Summary:
Sigler described the role as a full-circle moment and said portraying a character who does not hide her MS allowed her to do meaningful work. The episode aired recently and marked her first TV appearance in three years. Undetermined at this time.
