October 11, 2021 | Prodigal SonĀ (S1E15)
Another Egypt or Egyptian mention in the Prodigal Son is in episode 15 in season 1, āDeathās Door.ā In this scene,Ā Dr. Edrisa Tanaka (played by Keiko Agena), a medical examiner for the NYPD, is explaining to Malcolm and Gil Arroyo (played by Lou Diamond Phillips), an NYPD lieutenant, the victim Kevinās conditionāan embalmment, professionally done.
Dr. Edrisa Tanaka: John Hunter would be proud. He was an early pioneer of embalming. Malcolm Bright: Uh, forget Hunter, what about Hofmann? He discovered formaldehyde. Dr. Edrisa Tanaka: Okay, I admit I was a von Hofmann girl for a whileāI mean, who isnāt in collegeābut credit really goes to the ancient Egyptians, if weāre going to get technical about the origins of mortuary sciences. Gil Arroyo: Weāre not.
According to Britannicaās article on theĀ ādevelopment of modern embalmingā (āmodernā being the key word), āJohn Hunter, in 1775 embalmed the body of a Mrs. Martin Van Butchell, whose will specified that her husband had control of her fortune only as long as her body remained above ground. To meet that condition, Van Butchell had her embalmed, placed her fashionably dressed body in a glass-lidded case in a sitting room, and held regular visiting hours.ā John Hunter, according to Britannica, was aĀ āsurgeon, founder of pathological anatomy in England, and early advocate of investigation and experimentation.āĀ
August Wilhelm von Hofmann, according to Britannica, was aĀ āGerman chemist whose research on aniline, with that of Sir William Henry Perkin, helped lay the basis of the aniline-dye industry.ā He alsoĀ discovered formaldehyde, as mentioned in the scene.
However, as written in Britannicaās general article on āembalmingā and asĀ Edrisa points out,Ā āthe beginnings of the art and techniques of embalming are associated principally with ancient Egypt.ā
[Screenshots from a scene in Prodigal Son]














