Sara Sidle

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CSI: Crime Scene Investigation character

Jorja Fox as Sara Sidle
Sara Sidle
Birthdate September 16, 1971(1971-09-16) (36)
City Las Vegas, Nevada
Status Alive
Job Retired
Rank None
Position Retired
Seasons 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Portrayed by Jorja Fox
First appearance Cool Change

Sara Sidle is a fictional character featured in the television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. She is portrayed by actress Jorja Fox .

Sidle was a forensic scientist and was one of the core characters of the show, which revolves around a crime scene investigation team from Clark County, Nevada that investigates cases in and around the city of Las Vegas. In the first seven years of the show, Sidle had appeared in every episode except in CSI's Pilot, "Random Acts of Violence", from season three, "Jackpot", from season four and "Hollywood Brass", from season five.

Sara Sidle has gained an extensive fan base throughout the years. A romantic relationship between Sidle and her supervisor, Gil Grissom, was hinted at during the first years of the show, but it was only in CSI's season six that the relationship was confirmed and then made definitive with Grissom's marriage proposal in season eight. The relationship between the two characters triggered diverse opinions among fans of the show as well as in the press.

In September 2007, there were rumors of Jorja Fox leaving the show. Fans from all over the world sent money and gifts to CSI's writers and producers to "Keep Jorja Fox in CSI". Although the campaign received some minor publicity and comments to the media from Fox and Carol Mendelsohn, it proved fruitless when in October 2007 Fox confirmed her departure from the show.[1]

It is rumored that Sara will return for Season 9 when she hears the news about Warrick Brown's death.

Contents

[edit] Fictional character biography

Sidle was born in Tamales Bay, an hour and a half outside San Francisco. At some point her father became abusive, battering both his wife and children, until Sidle's mother, Laura, killed him in 1984. Afterwards, she spent time in the foster care system, which didn't keep her from graduating high school as valedictorian at age sixteen.[2] She attained a scholarship and attended Harvard, moving on to graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley. While at Berkeley, she started a work-study position at the San Francisco Coroner’s office, she would also audit lectures to keep up with new developments, it was at one of these that she met Gil Grissom.[3] Some time later, while she was working in San Francisco, Grissom called her because he was in need of someone outside the Las Vegas team. Sidle then went to Las Vegas and helped resolve some internal affairs problems within the CSIs.[4] Some episodes later she became a permanent member of the Las Vegas crime scene investigators night shift and is currently a CSI Level III at the LVPD Criminalistics Bureau, specialising in materials and element analysis. In season eight, Sidle changed from the night shift to the swing shift.

[edit] Character development

[edit] Evolution through the years

In the early years of the show, Sidle was depicted as a loner. Her hobbies were all work related (listening to her police scanner and reading forensic journals); and she claimed to prefer working with corpses over live people. In a mid second season episode, she realized how much she was missing out in life and decided to "get a life" out of work.[5] During season three she dated a paramedic named Hank Pettigrew, but this relationship ended later in the season when she discovered that he had a longterm girlfriend. Later in the third season, she was injured in an explosion in the lab and, realizing she could have been killed, she decided to ask Grissom out, though he turned her down.[6]

Sara Sidle breaks down on the fifth season episode "Nesting Dolls".
Sara Sidle breaks down on the fifth season episode "Nesting Dolls".

After this, during the fourth and fifth seasons, Sidle seemed to be on a downward spiral as her memories of childhood surfaced, with cases becoming more difficult for her emotionally. Also, the fact that supervisor Grissom decided to promote Nick Stokes instead of Sidle, did not help. Season Four concluded with Sidle being stopped by a traffic cop. Although she was driving under the influence, she was not charged but was humiliated in front of Grissom.[7] Later, in season five, she lost her temper with a domestic abuse suspect and then argued with supervisors Catherine Willows and Conrad Ecklie, which resulted in her suspension. Following this incident, she admitted to Grissom that she has a problem with authority, has chosen emotionally unavailable men (like Grissom) and has a self destructive streak. Sidle then opened up to him and revealed her family story;[8] it is during this season that she apparently started bonding with Grissom. During the subsequent seasons (sixth and seventh), after it was revealed that they were in a relationship,[9] she appeared to be happier and on a more even keel.[10]

In CSIs eighth season, when Jorja Fox decided to leave the show,[11] both she and the writers decided not to kill the character, so as to leave the door open for a possible comeback.[12] Consequently, Sara Sidle is submerged into depression after her abduction in the season seven finale, and, even though she accepts Grissom's marriage proposal on the season's fourth episode, she shows signs of burnout during the subsequent episodes, breaking down on the season's seventh episode, leaving Las Vegas with only a goodbye letter for Grissom and a good luck note for Ronnie Lake. In the letter she states that ever since her father's death she has been dealing with "ghosts" and that she now needs to go away and deal with them before self-destructing.[13] In the season 8 episode "You Kill Me" Grissom indicates he has talked with Sidle and she is in San Francisco visiting her mother.[14]

[edit] Personality

Perhaps because of her traumatic childhood, Sidle has demonstrated compassion and empathy for victims of domestic violence, and fury against their abusers.[15] She also has a soft spot for animals and became a vegetarian after she saw Grissom conduct an experiment on a dead pig.[16] She has also shown a tendency to become very aggressive when under pressure or annoyed - such as her arguments with Catherine and Ecklie, and engaging in a heated argument with a man suspected of murdering his wife.

[edit] Relationships

Sara Sidle's romantic relationships have been largely unsuccessful. In the first season she named a college boyfriend, Ken Fuller, with whom she had an unsatisfactory relationship, and in season seven she mentioned a college boyfriend who cheated on her. It is unclear whether Fuller was also the boyfriend who cheated on her. In the third season she had a casual relationship with Hank Pettigrew, who was an emergency medical technician. He was involved in several of her cases, but they later broke up after she found out Hank had a longtime girlfriend.[17]

During the first seasons coroner David Phillips, laboratory technician Greg Sanders and fellow CSI Nick Stokes occasionally flirted with her, but nothing more than friendship has resulted from those flirtations.

[edit] Gil Grissom

Since CSI's first season there were hints that both Sara Sidle and Gil Grissom were interested in each other romantically; in fact the show's producers initially introduced Sara Sidle as a future love interest for Grissom.[18] However, during the show's first three seasons Grissom flirted with other female characters and when she asked him out to dinner he rejected her, saying that he didn't know what to do about what was going on between them.[19]

In season four Grissom's true feelings were revealed in Butterflied, an episode that centers entirely around Grissom exploring his attraction to Sidle. In this episode Grissom admitted that he was unable to risk his career to be with her. In this season Sara Sidle apparently developed a drinking problem, which Grissom acknowledged in the season finale. In the next season, Sidle was suspended for insubordination and told Grissom about her tormented childhood. He refused to fire her and has her working with him in almost every episode from season six and season seven.[20]

Gil Grissom and Sara Sidle on the fourth season episode "Invisible Evidence"
Gil Grissom and Sara Sidle on the fourth season episode "Invisible Evidence"

It was not until the sixth season finale that it is revealed that Grissom and Sidle have worked through whatever issues they had and are, in fact, a couple.[21] In season eight it was revealed they have been intimately involved for two years. This revelation caused mixed emotions from fans, some of whom see this relationship as CSI "jumping the shark", an attempt to include more drama and romance to the show to compete with the medical drama Grey's Anatomy, which airs in the U.S. at the same time.[22] By resolving the sexual tension between the two characters, critics posited that the show might appeal to some of Grey's younger audience.[23] This has been denied by the writers. In one interview, producer Carol Mendelsohn said that she has never been able to see Grissom with any other character other than Sidle and that this episode was seen by the writers as the right time to reveal the relationship. Jorja Fox and William Petersen have also said that the relationship between their characters is not new.[24]

Throughout season seven the audience saw Grissom and Sidle as a couple, but the relationship was kept secret from the others in the lab until Sara Sidle's abduction by The Miniature Killer in the season finale.[25] In season eight, they become engaged to be married, but this storyline is left inconclusive when Sara leaves Grissom with a note three episodes later.[26][27]

William Petersen has said that what Grissom loves about Sidle is her tenacity. "She's a bulldog. And he always saw that in her. And he always knew that subconsciously the only person who'd be able to give him a second look is someone who's not willing to take the first look for granted."[28] On her side, Jorja Fox has said that "The story of Sara and Grissom is a little like a fable. And most great fables don't really have 100 percent resolution."[29]

[edit] Public reaction

The GSR (Grissom and Sara Romance: this acronym is also a reference to gunshot residue, often mentioned in CSI episodes) has accumulated an extensive fanbase during the years with some web sites getting thousands of viewers a week. Three other popular pairings are called "Sandle" "Snickers" and "Cara or CSR", depicting her with Greg Sanders, Nick Stokes and Catherine Willows respectively, though none of the three are considered "canon" pairings.[30] Some fans consider the GSR "ship" very similar to the one of Mulder and Scully in the X-Files which, as did CSI, showed a lot of chemistry between the two co-workers since the beginning of the show, letting viewers assume that a relationship between the two would soon begin when in fact it would take years of a platonic relationship and sexual tension for a romantic relationship to be more than hinted at. [31] Mulder and Scully didn't kiss until the seventh season of "The X-Files". [32]Other critics have remarked that the repressed sexual attraction between Grissom and Sidle was a large part of their appeal in the first six seasons of the show.[33]

Grissom and Sidle's relationship has been the subject of intense debate in the press and on-line forums between fans of the romantic relationship and those who believe the romance detracts from what was once a show devoted mainly to mysteries and a forensics laboratory.[34]

In early August 2007, upon rumors of Jorja Fox leaving the show, a grassroots campaign started.[35] Thousands of fans donated to the cause, and they had a plane flying over the Universal Studios of Los Angeles weekly on Tuesdays and Thursdays with a "Keep Jorja Fox on CBS" banner for a month.[36] The online forum Your Tax Dollars At Work, which has about 15,000 members and has organized the campaign, created another campaign that includes mailing the show's producers a dollar, so as to keep Fox on the show. By October 5, 2007, more than 3,500 dollars had reportedly been mailed to the Universal Studios from forty-nine countries. The campaign had started less than a week before, on September 29, 2007.[37]

Though the effort garnered media coverage, it was announced in late October, 2007 that Jorja Fox's final appearance as a full cast member would be in the episode Goodbye and Good Luck, which aired on November 15, 2007. Both writers and Fox have said that they believe that Sara Sidle "will be back" sometime in the future. Fox and CSI writer Carol Mendelsohn chose to donate the money sent to the studios to CASA, a national association that supports and promotes court-appointed advocates for abused or neglected children.[38][39][40]

[edit] Video games

Jorja Fox voiced Sara Sidle in the first two CSI video games, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and CSI: Dark Motives. The other two video games, CSI: Hard Evidence and CSI: 3 Dimensions of Murder, are dubbed by Kate Savage.[41][42]

[edit] Trivia

  • When Sara was first seconded to Las Vegas she wore a badge that read:

P O L I C E San Francisco

After she was given the permanant position of CSI 3 in Las Vegas she still wore the badge until season 2 when she was given a new badge that read: Sara Sidle, CSI Level 3 LVPD Las Vegas, NEV Supervised by Gilbert Grissom, PhD

[edit] References

  1. ^ 'CSI' fan says losing Sara would be a crime Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  2. ^ Marrinan and Parker (2006), p. 59
  3. ^ CBS.com "CSI"s characters official biographies Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  4. ^ "Cool Change". Anthony E. Zuiker (writer) & Michael Watkins (director). CSI. CBS. 2000-10-13. Season 1 Ep. 2.
  5. ^ "You've Got Male". Marc Dube,Corey Miller (writers) & Charlie Correll (director). CSI. CBS. 2001-12-20. Season 2 Ep. 12.
  6. ^ "Play with Fire". Andrew Lipsitz, Naren Shankar (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2003-5-8. Season 3 Ep. 22.
  7. ^ "Bloodline". Sarah Goldfinger,Carol Mendelsohn, Naren Shankar, Eli Talbert (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2004-05-20. Season 4 Ep. 23.
  8. ^ "Nesting Dolls". Sarah Goldfinger (writers) & Bill Eagles (director). CSI. CBS. 2005-2-3. Season 5 Ep. 13.
  9. ^ "Way To Go". Jerry Stahl (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2006-5-18. Season 6 Ep. 24.
  10. ^ "Ending Happy". Evan Dunsky (writer) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2007-4-26. Season 7 Ep. 21.
  11. ^ Jorja Fox: Why I Quit 'CSI' Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
  12. ^ Exclusive: CSI Boss Vows Jorja Fox is "Coming Back"
  13. ^ "Goodbye and Good Luck". Sarah Goldfinger,Allen MacDonald, Naren Shankar (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2007-11-15. Season 8 Ep. 7.
  14. ^ "You Kill Me" Naren Shankar, Sarah Goldfinger (writers) & Paris Barclay (director). CSI. CBS. 2007-11-22. Season 8 Ep. 8
  15. ^ Marrinan and Parker (2006), p. 60
  16. ^ "Burden of Proof". Ann Donahue (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2002-2-7. Season 2 Ep. 15.
  17. ^ "Crash and Burn". Josh Berman (writers) & Richard J. Lewis (director). CSI. CBS. 2003-03-13. Season 3 Ep. 17.
  18. ^ Deseret Morning News -Apparently, autopsies and romance do mix Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  19. ^ "Play with Fire". Andrew Lipsitz, Naren Shankar (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2003-5-8. Season 3 Ep. 22.
  20. ^ "Nesting Dolls". Sarah Goldfinger (writers) & Bill Eagles (director). CSI. CBS. 2005-2-3. Season 5 Ep. 13.
  21. ^ "Way To Go". Jerry Stahl (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2006-5-18. Season 6 Ep. 24.
  22. ^ CSI in JumpTheShark.com Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  23. ^ TVguide-"Note to CSI—Don't Do It" Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  24. ^ Chicago Tribune - "A 'terrifying' romance on 'CSI'" Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  25. ^ "Living Doll". Sarah Goldfinger, Naren Shankar (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2007-5-17. Season 7 Ep. 24.
  26. ^ "The Case of the Cross-Dressing Carp". David Rambo, Jacqueline Hoyt (writers) & ... (director). CSI. CBS. 2007-10-18. Season 8 Ep. 4.
  27. ^ "Goodbye and Good Luck". Sarah Goldfinger,Allen MacDonald, Naren Shankar (writers) & Kenneth Fink (director). CSI. CBS. 2007-11-15. Season 8 Ep. 7.
  28. ^ Chicago Tribune - "Bound for home: Chicago's William Petersen looks beyond CSI to a return to the stage" Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  29. ^ Entertainment Weekly - "Jorja Fox: Why I Quit 'CSI'" Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  30. ^ GSR: The Grissom and Sara Romance Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  31. ^ Blogcritics Magazine - "TV Review: CSI Finale - "Way to Go" Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  32. ^ Relationship Episode Guide Retrieved on 2008-02-28.
  33. ^ Walrus Magazine - "Repress Yourself" Retrieved on 2008-02-24.
  34. ^ Chicago Tribune - "A 'Terrifying' Romance on CSI" Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  35. ^ TVGuide.com - Is CSI On the Hunt for a New Jorja Fox? Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  36. ^ DollarsFroSense.com/Flyover Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  37. ^ EW.com - 'CSI' Fans Launch Save Jorja Fox Campaign Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  38. ^ CSI Files - Fans donate to charity Retrieved on 2008-January 15.
  39. ^ Jorja Fox on “The View” Retrieved on 2007-11-17.
  40. ^ Exclusive: CSI Boss Vows Jorja Fox is "Coming Back"
  41. ^ CSI: 3 Dimensions of Murder (VG) in Imdb.com Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  42. ^ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation - Hard Evidence in Imdb.com Retrieved on 2007-10-21.

[edit] Further reading

  • Marrinan, Corinne and Parker, Steve, Ultimate CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2006), DK Publishing, Inc.