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Another World Discussion Thread

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On 4/23/2026 at 6:18 PM, SoapDope78 said:

Thanks! They mention that Kale had been on the show for nearly 6 years so it must be close to when he left the first time.

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San Bernadino Sun April 17 1983.

Bekins left in June. I guees that story of him being in 267 eps in ar ow is true? It seems unbelievable- surely they would have rested him here and there?

Richard Is Real 'Jamie' Isn't .

Do soap opera actors ever "become" the roles they play? "There is a symbiosis with the characters," says Richard Bekins, who plays James Frame on NBC's continuing daytime drama Another World, airing weekdays at 1PM. "After five hours a week on the screen, the characters become almost personas of the actors," Bekins reflects. "It's acting, but we're often playing ourselves. The storylines can affect your personal life or the writers may pick up on whatever you're going through-and write for it. So your life and your character's life tend to parallel."

Bekins says Another World fans feel a particular closeness to Bekins' character because they remember the tempetuous affair between Jamie's unmarried parents that resulted in his birth. "Salesmen, strangers in the street all call me 'Jamie' when they see me. Nice young ladies send me romantic letters, inviting me to be their dates at graduation or visit them in Oklahoma City."

When Bekins took over the role three-and-a-half years ago, he had only one year of professional acting experience under his belt. "I was a novice then," he remembers, "but I was very lucky to be working with fine actors such as Doug Watson (as his stepfather) and Vicky Wyndham (his mother) because their style of acting rubbed off on me. Perhaps that's why Vicky and I play mother and son so naturally."

Bekin's popularity has kept him in the forefront of the show. At one point he worked 267 episodes in a row. "Jamie was newly married and working hard for his stepfather. To keep up with the work he started taking drugs and losing his sanity. It was hard to act out the role day after day, month after month," Bekins recalls. "I kept expecting his neurosis to end, but it kept getting worse. I began to have bad dreams. I began having the classic actors' nightmaregetting on stage and not remembering my lines. With an average of 30 pages of dialogue a day I sometimes lived that nightmare!"

In the past year Jamie has given up drugs, divorced Cecile, been reunited with his real father and enjoyed success as a novelist. "Now that Jamie is no longer a victim, it makes me (eel stronger," says Bekins. Just as Jamie has grown up considerably in the past three-and-a-half years, so has Richard. "You have to leave your work behind you when you leave the studio to make it better," says Richard. "I care about my character and I feel a big responsibility to the viewers because I think they care as well. But the totality of Richard is more than this character. One's alive and one's not real and that's the bottom line.

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