Even after becoming one of television’s highest-paid stars, earning an astounding $700,000 per episode in House’s final season, Hugh Laurie admits he’s haunted by a sense of guilt. The British actor, who captivated audiences worldwide as the brilliant yet tormented Dr. Gregory House, recently confessed that he feels like a “fraud” for portraying a doctor instead of becoming one in real life — a path his late father had once dreamed for him.
Born in June 1959, Laurie grew up under the influence of an extraordinary father, Dr. William “Ran” Laurie — a Cambridge-educated physician, Olympic gold medalist, and war hero. Following in his father’s footsteps, Hugh attended the same college at Cambridge, where he joined the rowing team and planned to pursue medicine after competing in the Olympics. But destiny intervened when he stumbled upon the Cambridge Footlights, a comedy troupe where he met Emma Thompson and Stephen Fry — future collaborators who would forever alter his course.
From that moment, medicine took a back seat. Through the 1980s and ’90s, Laurie became a household name in British comedy, starring in classics like Blackadder alongside Fry and appearing in Sense and Sensibility (1995) with Thompson, his former partner. Hollywood followed, with roles in 101 Dalmatians and even a cameo on Friends. But it was House (2004–2012) that made him a global star — and, ironically, the world’s most famous fictional doctor.