Sidney Freedman
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M*A*S*H character | |
Dr. Sidney Freedman as played by Allan Arbus |
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Sidney Theodore Freedman | |
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Rank | Major |
Gender | Male |
Hair color | Black |
Eye color | Brown |
Home city | New York City, New York |
Film portrayer | None |
Television portrayer | Allan Arbus |
Spanish voice dubber | Blas Garcia |
First appearance | "Radar's Report" |
Last appearance | "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen" |
In the television series M*A*S*H, Dr. Sidney Theodore Freedman, played by Allan Arbus, is a psychiatrist frequently summoned in cases of mental health problems.
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[edit] First appearance
Freedman first visited the camp to do psychiatric evaluation of Klinger, who was aiming for a discharge (as always). After Freedman had finished the report, he quietly took Klinger in for an interview and told him that while he is obviously not mentally ill, Freedman was willing to declare him transvestite and a homosexual. This label would not leave him, as he put it: "From now on, you go through life on high heels." Klinger vociferously denied it: "I ain't any of those things! I'm just crazy!" Klinger's discharge was uniformly dropped and Freedman left the camp.
In this first appearance in the series, Dr. Freedman's first name was Milton, not Sidney. The name change may have been due to the prominence of the economist Milton Friedman, or possibly to give him the same initials as Sigmund Freud.
[edit] Subsequent appearances
Freedman helped M*A*S*H 4077 in many cases, such as when Hawkeye began sleepwalking and having nightmares, and another episode where Hawkeye started uncontrollably sneezing psychosomatically, and another where Colonel Potter began to doubt his skills following a surgical error. In turn, Freedman found his visits to the camp a welcome break from his regular duties. He came frequently to play cards, and once stayed for several days after the suicide of one young patient, to get insight into how the M*A*S*H'ers coped with their experience. (As a psychiatrist, he'd also been to medical school, and was able to assist the surgeons when emergencies arose.)
Freedman treated a bomber pilot whose horror over the deaths of the civilians his bombs killed led him to believe he was Jesus Christ. He recommended that the pilot be encouraged to remember and resume his identity, but not his military role. This infuriated another visitor, Colonel Flagg, who decided Freedman might be a Communist, or a disloyal American, especially since Sidney didn't sign his loyalty oath. However, Freedman refused to be intimidated and Flagg's subsequent investigations of the doctor evidently turned up nothing useful against him.
Freedman used a post-hypnotic suggestion to stop the suicidal thoughts of another soldier, a Chinese-American named Sgt. Michael Yee. Yee had served in Europe, not the Pacific Theater, in World War II. "This is the first time he's fought an Asian enemy," Freedman told Hawkeye, invoking the Asian sense of honor. "He has to kill Chinese to be a good American, and he has to kill himself to be a good Chinese." This led Hawkeye to call Sgt. Yee "A man without two countries." Another time, Freedman used hypnosis to help a combat medic with amnesia recover his memory, and had Hawkeye and B.J. help by providing sound effects and the voices of soldiers.
[edit] Finale
In an early episode, Freedman told those gathered in the operating room, "Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice: Pull down your pants and slide on the ice." He repeated that advice in the series finale, following his treatment of Hawkeye, who had finally cracked under the strain of the war. Freedman led Hawkeye to stop suppressing the memory of seeing a Korean mother who had smothered her coughing and crying baby in an effort to keep it silent, in order that threatening North Korean troops wouldn't hear them and kill all in their group. (In Hawkeye's suppression, he had 'remembered' that the mother had killed a 'chicken', until Freedman brought the memory into the light.) He convinced a reluctant Hawkeye that the best thing for him now was to return to duty for the last days of the war.
[edit] Trivia
Originally, when Radar was written out of the series, Sidney Freedman was going to join the cast of M*A*S*H. However, Allan Arbus didn't want to commit to be anything other then a guest star, so the character remained an irregular character.
[edit] External links
M*A*S*H | |
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Film: | MASH |
TV series: | M*A*S*H | Trapper John, M.D. | AfterMASH | W*A*L*T*E*R |
Characters: |
Hawkeye Pierce | Trapper John McIntyre | Duke Forrest | B.J. Hunnicutt | Henry Blake | Sherman T. Potter | Frank Burns | Margaret Houlihan | Charles Winchester | Radar O'Reilly | Father Mulcahy | Maxwell Klinger | Igor Straminsky | Luther Rizzo | Sidney Freedman | Col. Flagg | Spearchucker Jones | Ugly John | Walter Koskiusko Waldowski | Ho-Jon | Lieutenant Dish | Donald Penobscot |
Episodes: | Season 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
Books: | M*A*S*H: A Novel About Three Army Doctors | M*A*S*H Goes to Maine |
Related material: | Guest stars | Differences between book, film and TV versions of M*A*S*H | Suicide Is Painless |