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Unfaithfulness | Medical Research
William Masters and Virginia Johnson are real-life pioneers of the science of human sexuality. Their research touched off the sexual revolution and took them from a midwestern teaching hospital to the cover of Time magazine and multiple appearances on Johnny Carson's couch. He is a brilliant scientist out of touch with his own feelings, and she is a single working mother ahead of her time. The series chronicles their unusual lives, romance, and unlikely pop culture trajectory.
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William Masters and Virginia Johnson are real-life pioneers of the science of human sexuality. Their research touched off the sexual revolution and took them from a midwestern teaching hospital to the cover of Time magazine and multiple appearances on Johnny Carson's couch. He is a brilliant scientist out of touch with his own feelings, and she is a single working mother ahead of her time. The series chronicles their unusual lives, romance, and unlikely pop culture trajectory.
7.9/10
IMDbBest Actress in a Drama Series | 2014 | Lizzy
TV Program of the Year | 2014
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series | 2014 | Allison
Drama Guest Actress | 2014 | Allison
Best Television Series Drama | 2014
Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series Drama | 2014 | Michael
Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series | 2015 | Courtney B.
Drama Guest Actress of the Decade | 2019 | Allison
Drama Guest Actor | 2014 | Beau
Drama Guest Actress | 2014 | Julianne
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Period Program One Hour or More | 2015
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series | 2015 | Allison
Outstanding Hairstyling for a SingleCamera Series | 2016
Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series | 2014 | Beau
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | 2014
Outstanding Main Title Design | 2014
Outstanding Art Direction for a Period Series Miniseries or a Movie SingleCamera | 2014
Best Period andor Character Hair Styling Television and New Media Series | 2015 | Candace
Best Period andor Character Makeup Television and New Media Series | 2015 | Jean Ann
Outstanding Period Television Series | 2016 | Isis
Outstanding PeriodFantasy Television Series | 2015 | Ane
Best dialogue adaptation | 2016
Television | 2016
Outstanding Achievement in Casting Television Pilot Drama | 2015 | Libby
Outstanding Drama Series | 2015
Outstanding Color Grading Television | 2015
Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series | 2014 | Beau
Best Guest Actress in a Drama Series | 2014 | Allison
Best Actor in a Drama Series | 2014 | Michael
Best Production Design in a Series | 2014 | Ellen
Best Actor in a Series Drama | 2014 | Michael
Best Actress in a Series Drama | 2014 | Lizzy
Best Television Series Drama | 2014
Outstanding Color Grading Television | 2015
Outstanding Music Supervision Television | 2014 | Liz
Best Performance in a TV Series Recurring Young Actor and Under | 2014 | Cole
Best TV Series | 2013
Best TV Actor | 2013 | Michael
Best TV Actress | 2013 | Lizzy
Best TV Drama Series | 2013
Johnson, who died in 2013 at 88, is sometimes described as a sexologist or psychologist. In reality, she had been studying for a sociology degree when Masters took her on, but the demands of their work prevented her from completing her degree.
In Masters and Johnson's studies from 1957 until 1965, they recorded laboratory data on the anatomy and physiology of human sexual response based on direct observation of 382 women and 312 men aged between 18 and 89 in having sex or masturbating.
William H. Masters and Virginia Johnson's work began in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Washington University in St. Louis and continued at the not-for-profit research institution they founded in St. Louis in 1964. It was called the "Reproductive Biology Research Foundation" and renamed the "Masters & Johnson Institute" in 1978.
In the late 1990s Johnson opened the "Virginia Johnson Masters Learning Center", in Creve Coeur, Missouri, providing advice on overcoming sexual dysfunction.
They debunked Sigmund Freud's assertions about the difference between "vaginal orgasm" and "clitoral orgasm" (which he deemed "immature", proper only for pubescent girls). In their findings, the physiological response was identical.