Scott Wolf reflects on his experience working with the late actor Treat Williams Everwood.
In a new interview with TV Insider, published Jan. 23, Wolf, 56, shared how the pair became “really good friends” over the years despite playing characters who were “antagonistic” to each other on The WB show, which was broadcast from 2002 to 2006.
“I loved Treat and his wife and their kids,” Wolf told the newspaper, adding of Williams, who died in June 2023 at age 71 after a motorcycle accident, “He was a wonderful actor.”
In the family series, Williams played Dr. Andrew Brown, a gifted New York neurosurgeon who moves his son and daughter to the small town of Everwood, Colorado after the sudden death of his wife in a car accident. There he establishes a free medical practice in the community at an old train station that his wife once passed through as a girl and fell in love with the city.
Wolf joined the series in Season 3 as Jake Hartman, a young, overzealous doctor who immediately angers Williams’ character and fellow doctor Harold Abbott (Tom Amandes).
Chris Pratt, Scott Wolf and fellow ‘Everwood’ costars have paid tribute to Treat Williams following his death
From left: Tom Amandes (Harold Abbott), Treat Williams (Andrew Brown) and Scott Wolf (Jake Hartman) in ‘Everwood’.
Everett
For the Wolf, Everwood was his first major TV role after starring in Party of five from 1994 to 2000. He remembered how he felt at home on the set. “Everwood it was a really wonderful experience. I moved my wife and I to Utah [to film]where we still live,” he told TV Insider. “Some amazing people on that show. Honor, rest his soul, Chris Pratt, Greg Smith, Emily VanCamp — just like a wonderful cast.”
“That kind of family drama, that kind of character-based show was what I obviously latched onto and loved more than anything,” he added.
Looking back at my own Everwood experience, Wolf said he wished his and Williams’ characters could have had a more friendly relationship that would have allowed them to be more relatable in their scenes together.
“He and I were antagonists to each other on the show, which was fun. If I could go back, it would be fun to play a role that was much more connected to him because most of our stuff on camera was contentious,” he explained. . “But [Williams] was a wonderful human being, and I’ve been a fan of his work for years and years and years. It was a gift to get the chance to work with him and meet his family.”
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Honor Williams in 2017.
David Livingston/Getty
After Williams’ death, many of his Everwood costars shared similar fond memories of the actor, who was also known for his roles in Hair, Shores of the Chesapeake and Chicago Fire.
Smith – who played Dr. Brown’s teenage piano prodigy son Ephram – described the news of Williams’ death as “devastating” at the time. “Treat was a wonderful man and a brilliant actor. Above all, he loved his family very much,” he said in a statement to PEOPLE.
“I’m so grateful for the time I was able to spend as part of his extended TV family,” continued Smith, 41. “He left an indelible impression on me during my most formative years. I will always cherish the time I spend with Treat and think fondly of his stories, his laugh and his passion for adventure.”
In his own tribute, Pratt, who played the son of Dr. Abbott Bright, recalled Williams and colleagues Everwood star John Beasley — who died in May 2023 at age 79 — as “exceptional” talents.
“They were both exceptional actors, wonderful husbands, fathers and friends. We will miss them immensely,” he wrote on Instagram. “I learned a lot working with each of them.”
From the first acting dr. Hartman EverwoodWolf played a doctor in three other series — Night shift, Nine and a new Fox drama Assoc. speaks about thiswhich premiered on January 7.
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