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HomeTVThe Pitt's Supriya Ganesh On Season 2 Moment That Makes Samira Reconsider...

The Pitt’s Supriya Ganesh On Season 2 Moment That Makes Samira Reconsider Her Future


In “The Pitt” Season 2 premiere, senior resident Samira Mohan laid out her post-residency plan to Dr. Cassie McKay: she had committed to a partnership-track position at a hospital back in New Jersey to stay close to and support her mother. In the same conversation, Samira also explained that the future she had organized for herself was already shifting — her mother was getting married, selling their house, and preparing to spend a year traveling the world on a cruise with a man she’d known for less than a year.

“It’s like she’s planned her career and her life around this move back to Jersey,” Supriya Ganesh tells TVLine. “I think in a later episode, she says, like, ‘Well, I thought I’d go back to Jersey then work on finding a relationship. And then I’d figure out when to have kids.’

“That’s why [Samira] hasn’t really put down roots [in Pittsburgh],” she says. “And so when that falls apart for her, I think it’s incredibly destabilizing. And she feels like she just has no sense of direction or purpose, even, in a lot of ways.”

In Season 2, Samira has been treating Orlando Diaz, an uninsured diabetic patient whose teenage daughter, Ana, offers to take on extra shifts at work to help cover her father’s medical bills. The camera lingers on Samira after the gesture is made, suggesting this is all too familiar to her — and when I sat down with Ganesh to unpack Episode 5, I asked whether Samira in that moment might be reconsidering the expectations she’s placed on herself to support her own parent.

“That’s a really great question,” Ganesh responds. “I think Samira’s always supported herself and her mom. I mean, she lost her dad at a pretty young age. And I remember, as part of the character work I did, I think she took shifts on herself to help her family out.”

In Ana, Samira sees a version of herself she knows all too well: a daughter growing up too fast because the system leaves no other choice. “Healthcare cannot be a reason why your daughter has to pick up more shifts,” Ganesh says. “This is absurd.”

Moving forward, Samira is left to reckon with how thoroughly she has defined herself by responsibility — to her job, and to her mother — and how little room she’s left for anything else.

“She’s so hyper-focused on her job that she doesn’t even really know, outside of that, what relationships she has or what friendships she has,” Ganesh says. “And so I really think that, hopefully, by the end of this day, she is grappling with that in some way.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLg_HXC2WmU



This story originally appeared on TVLine

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