Members DRW50 Posted May 31, 2012 Members Share Posted May 31, 2012 September 1974 Daytime TV John Considine joined the cast in late May. John was last seen as Phillip Chancelor on The Young and the Restless. Walter Matthews has been reappearing in his role of Gerald Davis for a short time. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Paul Raven Posted May 31, 2012 Author Members Share Posted May 31, 2012 Variety October 16th 1974 Jeanne Lange, David Ackroyd and John Getz into cast of NBC's "Another World" soaper. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members danfling Posted May 31, 2012 Members Share Posted May 31, 2012 Jeanne Lang was great as Carol Lamont! I don't know why she disappeared after having played that role. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members DRW50 Posted May 31, 2012 Members Share Posted May 31, 2012 Wasn't she mostly a theatre actress? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members teplin Posted May 31, 2012 Members Share Posted May 31, 2012 Jeanne Lange was great! I really liked John Getz and David Ackroyd (the original Gary Ewing), too. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members DRW50 Posted June 3, 2012 Members Share Posted June 3, 2012 Please register in order to view this content 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members DRW50 Posted June 4, 2012 Members Share Posted June 4, 2012 You can find two more at AddieCate's channel. Some of the last episodes for the underrated Laura Moss as Amanda. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Td7IGK2TFzU Please register in order to view this content 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members DRW50 Posted June 5, 2012 Members Share Posted June 5, 2012 I don't know how you go from this to sleepytime RC Lorna. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkTu14vXNBc&feature=channel&list=UL 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members zanereed Posted June 5, 2012 Members Share Posted June 5, 2012 vetsoapfan, Is the quality of the 1974 Tenth Anniversary episode that you have videotape quality or color kinescope quality? I was just curious. Thank you for any reply. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members sungrey Posted June 6, 2012 Members Share Posted June 6, 2012 I think it's been documented in interviews, but in one of the first rehearsals involving Vicky and Constance Ford there was something in the scene that Vicky did and Constance jumped right out and said "Rachel wouldn't do that." Without batting an eyelash, Vicky turned to Constance and said "THIS Rachel would." I think that broke the ice between the two. If Constance sensed that you were a stand-up actress and didn't cave in, she thought you were a stronger person, or so it seems. I could be wrong. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members toml1962 Posted June 6, 2012 Members Share Posted June 6, 2012 Funny, but IMO Strasser DID see the vulnerabilities in the role. It was Wyndham who played it full on the first two years or so. This from an interview. Star: VICTORIA WYNDHAM Role: Rachel Hutchins, ANOTHER WORLD AW Debut: July 15, 1972 Birthday: May 22 Children: Darian and Christian A WOMAN OF INDEPENDENT MEANS Victoria Wyndham Celebrates Her Silver Anniversary as Bay City's Beloved, Self-Reliant Heroine DIGEST ONLINE: When you joined ANOTHER WORLD back in 1972, you and Constance Ford (Ada) reportedly got off to a bad start? VICTORIA WYNDHAM: I remember that first day rehearsing with her. I had made it very clear to the people who'd hired me that I didn't want to hear, "Oh, well, Robbie [Robin Strasser] would have done it differently." The problem with taking over from somebody is that you're going to bring in your own bag of tricks. That's what they were hiring, that's what they wanted. [The producer] assured me [there would be no comparisons to Robin Strasser's interpretation of the role]. "Oh, no, no, that's not going to happen," they said, "because we're hiring you. We've tried other people and it hasn't worked. We've wanted you for the whole year, even though we weren't able to get you because you were retired with your babies. [FYI: Wyndham had put her acting career on hold while her sons were infants.] And now we've got you. We hired you because we want to change this character [and make her sympathetic]. It's what you do that we want." So that first day I come in, and I'm doing a scene with Connie, and we finish the scene, and she looks at the director du jour and she says, "Well, Robbie never would have played it like that, is that the way you're gonna play it?" I put my script down and I waited for the director to run interference, and it was clear to me that he was a little intimidated by her, so I put my script down and I said, "When you've all sorted this out, I'll be in my dressing room!" I walked off the set, and that was the end of that -- that was the moment that Connie decided that I was a great replacement for Robin. DIGEST ONLINE: So you didn't let Constance Ford intimidate you? WYNDHAM: I'd worked with people like this before. I'd been on Broadway, I'd been off-Broadway. I'd been working with Lily Tomlin and Madeline Kahn and everybody else, so Connie ford was certainly not going to intimidate me on my first day. Well, that was all she wanted to do; she was testing my mettle and she found out [i wouldn't wilt] and from that point on we got along famously DIGEST ONLINE: It's interesting. You've become so strongly identified with Rachel, a character that Robin Strasser first portrayed; and Robin has become so identified with Dorian Lord (on ONE LIFE TO LIVE), a role that SHE didn't create. Have you two ever discussed that parallel? WYNDHAM: No I don't see Robin; I don't see anybody really in the business. I live out in the country and when I am working in New York, we're all the way out in Brooklyn [at the NBC studio] and she's in Manhattan [at ABC]. By the time I finish taping, I get back [home] very late at night. I go to bed, learn my words and go to work the next day, and then at the end of the week I go home to the country. You know, I spend so many hours here [at the studio] with this company, more hours than I ever get to spend with my family or my friends, so I don't do a whole lot of business [things]. [Robin and I] see each other at functions, and we enjoy seeing each other, but we hardly talk shop; we usually talk about our sons, do mother stuff. It's strange. We admire each other's work, but I think Robin is so totally identified with my character. The first thing you all say to me is, "Well, of course you took over for Robin Strasser." I took over for Robin Strasser? I've been doing this part for 25 years, she did it for 5. If that's not parity, what am I nuts? I don't consider it as taking over a part; I consider it that I created a new part. DIGEST ONLINE: When you became Rachel, making her more sympathetic was immediately part of your vision for the character, wasn't it? WYNDHAM: That's why they hired me. I just exposed her vulnerabilities, and Robin didn't see the part that way. She saw it differently and it was totally valid. From what I understand that she did, I think it was a very valid way to go. You know, we're different, that's all. I find heavies are interesting because of what you can bring to them from the other side of the deck. Some people play heavies and think they're interesting, because they don't ever want to show any other side of the deck. It's just two different ways of working, and they're both valid. But what [producer] Paul Rauch and [head writer] Pete Lemay wanted was to see a little bit more of what made her tick. That's why they wanted me, that was what the deal was. I was to come on and give them what I do, not what somebody else did. DIGEST ONLINE: After all these years, do fans ever get the two of you confused? WYNDHAM: Do you know my favorite story about Robin? She made quite an impression on everyone. I was coming down from Boston after seeing my son, when he was at college at BU, and I'm on the Boston Turnpike. I'm going through the tollgate and I'm futzing with my handbag, and the girl at the toll booth starts getting all apoplectic and nervous and smiling and getting all short of breath. She's very excited because she recognized me. So I hand her the money and she goes, "Wait, wait, oh you're on my favorite soap." Well, I don't supply my name, I'm waiting for her to get it, and as I'm driving away, she goes, "I just love you Robin Strasser -- for years!" I drive away and I think -- at that point I'd been on the show for 20 years -- and it still isn't my part yet! It was a very funny thing. I laughed I think all the way down to Connecticut. Because Robin and I don't even look alike. This woman obviously was a current viewer; she knew who I was. She wasn't mistaking me for Robin, she just couldn't get the right name. More power to Robin-- what an indelible impression she made. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members toml1962 Posted June 6, 2012 Members Share Posted June 6, 2012 (edited) http://www.celebrity..._952_33517.html Edited June 6, 2012 by toml1962 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Susan Hunter Posted June 7, 2012 Members Share Posted June 7, 2012 Thanks for posting that article Tom. One thing I loved about Wyndham is that she always referred to the show as 'a company'. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members danfling Posted June 7, 2012 Members Share Posted June 7, 2012 It probably should be pointed out that Constance Ford, when starring on the soap opera Woman with a Past, played the mother of actress Felice Carmargo, and Ms. Carmargo and Ms. Wyndham are sisters. So, the two actress probably had thought already about one another. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members toml1962 Posted June 10, 2012 Members Share Posted June 10, 2012 Whoever wrote that article is ill-informed. Cenedella left SOMERSET to concentrate on AW, not the other way around. And he left the show in January 1971. about six weeks before the titles changed on March 1, 1971. This is all backed up by numerous sources including Daytime TV, Afternoon TV and the wonderful Another World website. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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