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teplin

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Posts posted by teplin

  1. Happy 50th to my favorite soap. It never again came close to matching its mid- to late-70s brilliance, but the characters kept me tuning in year after year.

    I wonder what Matt Crane (and Vicky Wyndham and Charles Keating and Linda Dano and Anna Stuart and Anna Holbrook and so many others) are doing today?

  2. Such a terrific actress and presence, and such a squandered opportunity for AW. Her stories just never worked, on any level. I wonder what other role she was considering at the time, replacing another actress as a "rotten person" on a non-NBC, California-based show? Something on Y&R, I assume?

  3. Oh, and Carl, I don't know how many 1980 episodes you've watched, but you've perfectly pinpointed that era's few strengths and many weaknesses. There were some very good performances from Laura Malone, Beverly Penberthy and Susan Keith, but everything else was just so banal -- even the dynamic Wyndham, Watson and Liotta were stuck in snoozeworthy stories, and their performances showed it. Just an awful, awful time, especially coming so soon after LeMay's brilliance.

  4. At a time when ATWT and GL were trying to expand their black canvas, AW became very white, and that didn't change until the show's last few years. It's a shame, since AW had Quinn, Henrietta, Thomasina, Carter, etc. at a time when the best you could get on ATWT and GL was Heather and Tucker, and Lujack's friend, at a push.

    AW had some great African-American actors and characters, going all the way back to Micki Grant's Peggy Nolan. Unfortunately, precious few of them were well served by the writers for any length of time. There was a major influx of AA characters in 1982, with powerhouse actors Morgan Freeman (Roy Bingham), then Oscar-nominee Howard Rollins Jr. (Ed Harding) and Michele Shay (Henrietta) joining the already-featured Petronia Paley (Quinn). To the show's credit, these actors and their stories were prominently featured. Unfortunately, the stories were just as dull as the rest of the show at that point -- though Jackee Harry's Lily, debuting in '83, was a force of nature that couldn't be denied. Freeman, Rollins and Shay were gone within two years, Harry lasted a bit longer (and she had become quite popular by the time she left). Paley's Quinn, of course, was murdered. Oh, I almost forgot Joe Morton as Abel and Leo Marsh in there –- another really strong actor whose story just fizzled.

    The Lawrences, Edwards', Burrells, Marshall Kramer, Chris Madison and more came later, all played by what I thought were vibrant, appealing African-American actors, but none were given the leading story status of the '82 crowd.

  5. IIRC, Mike eventually tried to have sex with Trish, some time after Trish & David's baby was born. Mike couldn't perform and afterward he cried on Linda's shoulder -- I can't remember why he went to the apartment of his father's mistress. Mike was doubting his masculinity -- the script danced around his fear that he might be homosexual -- and Linda took him to bed to prove he was a "real man." I can't remember the fallout -- whether Mike developed feelings for Linda, for example, or ran right back to Trish.

    I don't remember Mike being angry all the time, but he certainly had his moments, especially when he found out Mickey was not his biological father. W

  6. Thanks for the article. As a kid, I loved Wesley Eure and Patty Weaver -- they seemed like the root-for couple to me, I hated that the show moved them both on to other partners. You can certainly tell from the storyline recap that Bill Bell loved to delve into the psychosexual.

    I had to laugh at the sentence, "Out of their mutual need, Trish and David turned to each other ..." I had a friend who used to joke that every DAYS character in the '70s used the phrase "mutual need" to explain any out-of-wedlock sexual encounter. She also used to say that, for all the audience knew, the entire DAYS cast could have been performing in wheelchairs because all we ever saw was massive closeups of faces. That's not true, of course, but I have to say I've never seen a show before or since that relied so much on screen-filling closeups. But the show was blessed with great beauties – notably Susan Hayes, Patty Weaver, Mary Frann, Deidre Hall, Suzanne Rogers – all of whom were wonderful "face actors."

  7. What a treat it would be to see Susan Flannery and Denise Alexander for the 50th anniversary! I don't remember Heather North at all. Odds are they'd use Pamela Roylance -- if they were to give a second thought to bringing that character back, though I can't imagine they would.

    Although it's been 23 years between appearances for Eve Donovan, so never say never!

  8. Thanks, Mr. Brightside, I always thought Stephen Schnetzer was a great soap leading men -- adept at both drama and comedy, and exhibiting great chemistry with all the AW ladies mentioned in the article, plus Nancy Frangione. His stints as Marcello on OLTL and Steve Olson on DAYS were pretty unmemorable, but that was a fault of the writing, not the actor.

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