Nip/Tuck season 4

The fourth season of Nip/Tuck premiered on September 5, 2006 and concluded on December 12, 2006. It consisted of 15 episodes.

Main cast

 * Dylan Walsh as Dr. Sean McNamara
 * Julian McMahon as Dr. Christian Troy
 * John Hensley as Matt McNamara
 * Roma Maffia as Liz Cruz
 * Kelly Carlson as Kimber Henry
 * Joely Richardson as Julia McNamara

Special guest stars
• Kathleen Turner as Cindy Plumb

• Brooke Shields as Dr. Faith Wolper

• Sanaa Lathan as Michelle Landau

• Larry Hagman as Burt Landau

• Jacqueline Bisset as James LeBeau

• Peter Dinklage as Marlowe Sawyer

• Rosie O'Donnell as Dawn Budge

• Mo'Nique as Evetta Washington

• Alanis Morissette as Poppy

• Catherine Deneuve as Diana Lubey

• Brenda Vaccaro as Beatrice Madsen

• Jessalyn Gilsig as Gina Russo

• Natasha Alam as Analise

Recurring cast
• Colleen Flynn as Dr. Allamby

• Kelsey Lynn Batelaan as Annie McNamara

• Jennifer Hall as Monica Wilder

• Mario Lopez as Dr. Mike Hamoui

• Robert LaSardo as Escobar Gallardo

• Julie Warner as Megan O'Hara

• Meera Simhan as Dr. Meera Muthara

• Adria Dawn as Parker

• Ruth Williamson as Hedda Grubman

• Jack Yang as Chiyo

• Raymond Cruz as Alejandro Perez

• Joey Slotnick as Dr. Merril Bobolit

• Rebecca Gayheart as Natasha Charles

• Rebecca Metz as Abby Mays

Reception
The fourth season received positive reviews from critics, holding a 71% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Maria Elena Fernandez of the Los Angeles Times wrote "Perhaps the show's continued success can be attributed to its restless energy and how in one hour it offers a taste of several different genres, mixing the real with the outrageous", whilst Brian Lowry wrote for Variety, "As always, the series manages to glorify surface beauty while subjecting society's obsession with it to a harsh glare, holding up the strange cases that waltz in as a mirror to the Sean-Julia-Christian triangle. The dialogue remains biting as well." Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune praised the character development, writing "That sense of saucy transgression married to surprisingly effective character development – the magic formula of the first two seasons – is a bit wobbly this year, but Nip/Tuck is more or less back on track." Some reviews were less favorable, with Joe Reid of The Atlantic writing "This stretch of Nip/Tuck was just uninspired ... [It has] its own urban-legend charm, but all the main characters were seriously spinning their wheels", whilst other critics argued the show did not live up to the quality of previous seasons and criticized many imbued scenes.