Members RavenWhitney Posted December 20, 2021 Members Share Posted December 20, 2021 I don't believe these photos were from April 1984. Henry Slesar was fired in March 1983; he would not have been in attendance at the 1984 celebration, and unlikely he would have attended an April 1983 celebration since he had just been fired). Lee Sheldon was head writer. This may have been 1982 or earlier. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members amybrickwallace Posted December 20, 2021 Members Share Posted December 20, 2021 Thanks. The Getty Images site had the date as 1984 in the captions. Another nice pic of the first couple of Monticello: Please register in order to view this content 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members TEdgeofNight Posted December 22, 2021 Members Share Posted December 22, 2021 The little how that could. Miss it. The Edge of Night has been off the air for 37 years. I remember meeting the actors when they made an appearance at our local college. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members amybrickwallace Posted December 22, 2021 Members Share Posted December 22, 2021 Here's another pic: 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Broderick Posted December 23, 2021 Members Share Posted December 23, 2021 That's two vampires going out for a festive New Years Eve bash Really, it's Margaret Colin playing Paige Madison on "Edge" in costume as the ingenue in "Mansion of the Damned", being seduced by Lee Godart playing Eliot Dorn on "Edge" in costume as Satan in "Mansion of the Damned". 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members amybrickwallace Posted December 23, 2021 Members Share Posted December 23, 2021 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members TEdgeofNight Posted December 27, 2021 Members Share Posted December 27, 2021 The first couple indeed. I loved Mike and Nancy Karr. The first couple indeed. I loved Mike and Nancy Karr. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Broderick Posted December 27, 2021 Members Share Posted December 27, 2021 And they're standing in front of one of the best backdrops on daytime TV (in my opinion). 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members dc11786 Posted December 30, 2021 Members Share Posted December 30, 2021 I believe the cake says the show is celebrating its 25th anniversary so it should be April, 1981. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members mphs19952003 Posted January 4, 2022 Members Share Posted January 4, 2022 Wasn't it DM who wouldn't agree to go along with ABC's idea of EON becoming a late night show? I would think if most of the cast and crew were good w/ it, he would have to put up or shut up. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members danfling Posted January 5, 2022 Members Share Posted January 5, 2022 Actress Joan Copeland, who played Mary Appleton on The Edge of Night in 1959, has passed away. Joan Copeland, Broadway Star and Soap Opera Actress, Dies at 99 ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett C Joan Copeland, who graced both the stage and screen for decades as a Broadway star and soap opera actress, died the morning of Jan. 4 in her New York City home, Copeland’s family confirmed to Variety. She was 99. Copeland’s career included performances on numerous daytime soap operas — including “Search for Tomorrow” (1967-72) “Love of Life” (1960-63), “The Edge of the Night” (1956) and “How to Survive a Marriage” (1974). As one of the first members of The Actors Studio, she made her Broadway debut in 1948 as Nadine in “Sundown Beach.” Her other Broadway credits include “Detective Story,” (1950) “Coco,” (1969) and “45 Seconds From Broadway” (2001). Copeland was the sister of playwright Arthur Miller, who died in 2005. She appeared in one of Miller’s plays, “The American Clock” (1980), a performance for which she earned a Drama Desk award. “From the time I was a little girl I had the stage bug,” Copeland told The New York Times in 1981. “It was like a big dream, like kids who want to fly to the moon today. Perhaps I was unconsciously influenced by my brother. He had made it. I was desperate to get out of the dreariness I was living in.” Still, Copeland worked to separate her career from her brother’s — which influenced her to take on the stage name “Joan Copeland.” “I did not want to trade on my brother’s name,” she told the Times. While most of Copeland’s career was on the Broadway stage and in television series, she also made it to the big screen. Her first film, Paddy Chayefsky’s “The Goddess” (1958), was said to be based on Miller’s second wife (and Copeland’s onetime sister-in-law) Marilyn Monroe. In addition, Copeland appeared in “Roseland” (1977), “A Little Sex” (1982), “The Object of My Affection” (1998) and as the voice of Tanana in Disney’s “Brother Bear” (2003). She is survived by her son, Eric Kupchik, and her niece, actress Rebecca Miller. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Nicholas Blair Posted January 12, 2022 Members Share Posted January 12, 2022 Joan Copeland also starred on Broadway as Noah's wife opposite Danny Kaye in Richard Rodgers' Two by Two. Her best movie role is probably in Middle of the Night. Astonishingly, in The Goddess she plays a character with a Southern accent. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Paul Raven Posted January 12, 2022 Members Share Posted January 12, 2022 (edited) i've read that before but never seen it verified. My understanding is that ABC wanted to replay EON late night. My guess is some sort of deal was in the works for those involved to receive minimum payments as this was new territory and probably there was no compensation payments agreement set up. ABC saw this as a chance to pay peanuts and make extra money on the deal compared to primetime reruns. Donald May was probably the most outspoken at what he saw as exploitation of soap actors and the blame was pinned on him for it not going ahead. Just speculation... Edited January 12, 2022 by Paul Raven 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members danfling Posted January 13, 2022 Members Share Posted January 13, 2022 I heard that the whole ABC cast was in favor of the additional airing on late night television, but that Donald May demanded that his salary be doubled. That demand stopped the idea of late night airings of the show. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members TVFAN1144 Posted January 13, 2022 Members Share Posted January 13, 2022 (edited) Well then he was off the show shortly after either by his choice or the show’s. I loved his character But the unique thing about daytime is that it is supposed to be an ensemble effort. Good or bad no one is irreplaceable. So if actors start to get demanding they are plotting their own demise. I don’t know if Donald May was like that or not. And even though painful the show (and others with similar situations) survived. Joel Corruthers was basically the replacement And lord knows in the current cost cutting climate the attitude seems to be they are lucky to have a contract that continues to the next day Edited January 13, 2022 by TVFAN1144 Changed actor name 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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