The cast sat down with PEOPLE ahead of the May 21 series finale to discuss filming the ABC medical drama’s final episodes and why they feel it has resonated with viewers for seven seasons
Freddie Highmore is running late, but he has a really good excuse.
The actor, 32, has stepped in for the day to direct one of The Good Doctor’s final episodes because the director is sick. When Highmore, clad in a blue checkered dress shirt and trousers, finally sits down with PEOPLE on the Vancouver set of San Jose St. Bonaventure Hospital, the halls, normally bustling with hurried activity when the cameras are rolling, are unusually quiet.
He and his castmates will soon do a table read for the finale, but for Highmore, wrapping up the ABC medical drama in a few weeks hasn’t registered yet.
“It probably won’t sink in really until it is finally all over and they start taking a sledgehammer to the set,” he admits.
Highmore, who plays the brilliant surgeon Shaun Murphy, will hang up his scrubs for good after seven seasons when the series finale airs on Tuesday, May 21. The episode will be a “satisfying” send-off, he teases.
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“It’s going to be a surprising ending but also an ending that I think all good finales do: remind us of the beginning and tie together this journey that Shaun and all of our characters have been on,” Highmore continues. “It will feel like in some ways we’ve come full circle, but at the same time see our characters off into the future.”
Since The Good Doctor debuted in September 2017, viewers have come to know (and love) San Jose St. Bonaventure Hospital’s gifted surgeons, cheering on their wins and empathizing with their struggles. Onscreen, lives have been lost, love has blossomed, and life lessons have been learned along the way, creating compelling drama for viewers and meaningful material for the show’s actors.
It’s no surprise then that the cast is navigating The Good Doctor’s homestretch with mixed emotions. For Fiona Gubelmann, who portrays Dr. Morgan Reznick, filming these last episodes has been “very surreal.”
“Now as things start coming up, and you’re like, ‘Oh, this is the last time I’m doing this, or this is the last time I’m doing that,’ you start to get emotional,” Gubelmann, 44, says.
During a table read the week before, her costar Will Yun Lee, who plays her onscreen partner Dr. Alex Park, welled up with emotion.
“Will started crying, teared up, and then I got choked up,” she says, adding, “I couldn’t continue the table read. I had to leave, because we do them on Zoom, so I had to log out, because I was like, ‘I can’t stop crying.’”
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Lee, for his part, admits that working on The Good Doctor’s final season has been “bittersweet.” “We’ve seen a lot of our kids grow up on this set and go from here to here,” he says. “It’s [been] a good portion of our lives.”
While Lee’s character has come a long way since the actor, 53, became a series regular in season 2 — his character now shares adopted daughter Eden with Morgan, for one — The Good Doctor has also touched upon very personal issues, too. Lee’s son Cash, whom he shares with wife Jennifer Birmingham Lee, suffered a stroke when he was just 3 years old that led to frequent trips to the hospital and consultations with doctors as they searched for a cause.
The toddler, who had a second stroke seven months later, was diagnosed with a rare blood disorder called moyamoya disease and needed double bypass brain surgery. The procedure worked, thankfully, and Cash’s health journey became the inspiration for the season 6 episode “Hard Heart.”
“I thought it was an important message, because [moyamoya disease] is one of the most misdiagnosed diseases out there,” he explains. “Before I leave this show, I felt like I owed it to all the doctors who took care of my son to get that message out there.”
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After a recurring role in season 4, Bria Henderson became a series regular the following season. The actress, 31, recalls the moment she received the initial breakdown of her character Dr. Jordan Allen.
“The one thing that stood out was that she was full-figured and also proud and confident and loved herself,” she remembers. “I don’t get a lot of [character] breakdowns like that, especially being a dark-skinned, plus-sized actress… Me representing a marginalized community and then getting a breakdown like that, starting to see a shift in what TV wants to push out there, it fit me.”