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Paul Raven

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Does anyone have clips of the opening and closing with Alison Steele announcing the show there in late '81 and early '82? I know there was one on Youtube a couple years ago her voice was pleasing to hear I wish she announced other soaps at the time as well. 

 

By the way after rewatching the Murder She Wrote episode "Murder in the Afternoon" I'm convinced it was written by an angry SFT fan. 

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Dashiell Mortell has been killed in an automobile accident.   His grandmother, Lee Grant, played Rose Peabody on Search for Tomorrow (and was later on the primetime serial Peyton Place as Stella Chernak.)

 

 

 

Actress Dinah Manoff's son has died. his Grandmother is actress Lee Grant

 

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND — A Bainbridge Island man was killed in a nine-vehicle crash Saturday while traveling back to school at Washington State University.

Dashiell Mortell, 19, was a passenger in a vehicle taking five WSU students back to Pullman ahead of the first day of spring semester classes Monday. The vehicle flipped on its side after it hit another vehicle that was slowing around a wreck on Interst...ate 90 near Cle Elum. Mortell was killed when a truck then struck the roof of the vehicle he was in, according to Washington State Patrol Trooper Brian Moore. That crash set off a six-vehicle wreck caused by drivers attempting to avoid the first crash.

 

Two Bremerton natives and a Vancouver man from the vehicle traveling to Pullman were taken to a Kittitas County hospital with minor injuries. Another Vancouver man from the vehicle was taken to Seattle's Harborview Medical Center in critical condition.

 

Moore said the crash was caused by driving too fast for the conditions and noted that there had been significant snowfall in the area.

 

Mortell was a 2015 graduate of Bainbridge High School. He had been involved with student government at the school, rowed with the Bainbridge Island Rowing Club and participated in theater productions with Bainbridge Performing Arts.

 

Mortell was the son of well-known actress and islander Dinah (Mortell) Manoff and Arthur Mortell. Manoff was a fixture in the “Golden Girls” spin-off show, “Empty Nest,” and made appearances in several movies throughout her acting career, including in a role in “Grease.”

 

The teen followed in his mother’s footsteps in acting, perhaps most fittingly as a greaser in BPA's 2012 production of "The Outsiders." The show was produced and directed by Manoff.

 

The young actor's stage presence took that show to a different level, BPA Executive Director Dominique Cantwell said. The young man could fill the stage with magnetic energy, she added.

 

“He had the talent and the ability for those skills to take him absolutely anywhere on or off the stage,” she said. “He had just this enormous spark and potential that anybody watching could see from a mile away.”

Mortell was widely beloved in the island's theater community and beyond, Cantwell said.

 

“He had talent and intensity and generosity," she said. "It was just endless, and it will live on in those who loved him on and offstage.”

 

Funeral arrangements for Dashiell Mortell are pending.

 

 

 

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Article from Channels magazine 1981

 

One Man's Soap

One Amherst don is happily hooked on a venerable daytime soap opera. He tells here what he gains from it and how it keeps him from faculty meetings, scholarly works, and healthful jogging.

 

FOUR YEARS AGO I suffered what I feared would be an irreparable loss; not of the tragic sort -the death of loved one or the grievous ending to some human relationship -but of a sort curiously painful nonetheless . Somerset, a soap opera I had become deeply devoted to, ended its run; and on December 31, 1976 -in a shocking half hour of reconciliations, tying up loose ends (not all of them got tied up), and generally empty affirmations ,the show disappeared forever. It would have been a sensible time for me to form a New Year's resolution and decide to spend that half -hour after lunch engaged in some admirable pursuit like reading through Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, or buying a pair of running shoes, some funny clothes, and preparing to run a bit up and down my local Northampton Road. Oddly enough these alternatives never entered my head. After a few days of mourning, and of surly midday dissatisfactions, I sat down for a serious session with TV Guide by way of mapping out a strategy for latching onto a new Soap. Although for the leisured housewife or lazy college student, many Soap viewing possibilities exist, the rigidity of my own habits precluded much freedom in choosing. The Soap had to occur in the 12:30 -1:30 time period and had to be of the half -hour variety -a whole hour of watching takes too large a chunk out of the day in which books have to be read. For a time I tried Lovers and Friends, a charmless, short -lived replacement for Somerset; then I watched a bit of The Young and the Restless, but found it filled with too many beautiful young people talking to excess about their various "hangups" and how so- and -so had "copped out" or been "hassled" in some manner or other, usually sexual. Clearly The Young and the Restless would not do for a man of settled habits, even though it dealt with controversial matters like birth control pills. Ryan's Hope had been highly praised for its vigorous characterizations and on -site photography, but it was an Irish soap, filled with wonderful lovable Irish characters -not the sort of thing for a Welshman of morose leanings. That left Search for Tomorrow, a half -hour show which I was delighted to find out had premiered in 1951, thus making it, along with Love of Life (since deceased), the most venerable of all the Soaps.

 

By that spring I had settled into becoming a Search watcher, and now, four years later, consider myself an authoritative commentator on the whole affair. Let me therefore tell you a bit about the characters and their situations, and then try to explain how someone in his right mind (my current illusion about myself) could become enthralled with the whole operation for years on end. To begin with, there is the amorphous, elusive title. Somerset was the straightforward name of a small town in Michigan where things took place, but Search for Tomorrow? Whose search, and just how "for tomorrow "? Clearly an old- fashioned radio soap opera title, like Life Can Be Beautiful or The Guiding Light (the latter now on television), meant to evoke romantic yearnings and a vaguely uplifted sense that there's Something More To It All than there appears to be day by day. It would have been too simple, I guess, to title the show Henderson, the imaginary town where its action takes place. Henderson is out there somewhere in the Midwest, southern Illinois maybe. There are oil fields to the south, and people often have to fly down to New Orleans, home of the powerful Sentell family, a number of whose members have moved to Henderson for obvious reasons of plot. Henderson has, of course, a hospital, in fact two hospitals (one on the "other side of town "), into which various members of the cast are taken or wheeled for attention to their assorted brands of blindness, leukemia, slight skull fractures, or brain tumors pressing on the optic nerve causing major headaches. They will be cared for there, in Henderson Hospital, by Dr. Bob Rogers, head of it all, good friends with most of the cast (he's seen 'em come and go), and filled with the richest bedside manner. When people are not in the hospital they tend to gather at the Hartford House or Inn, run by the two oldest members ,from point of service ,of the Search cast, Joanne (Jo) Tourneur (for years Jo Vincent, but recently married yet once more) and "Stu" Bergmann. Jo (played by Mary Stuart, who has been with the show since its inception and is thus accorded star status) is, quite simply, the finest person in the world. Not an ounce of pretentiousness, or greed, or envy, or lust (that I can detect) or pettiness or rancor or any other of the deadly and not -so- deadly sins stains this lady's character. A fount of homely wisdom with a wonderful temperament, Jo has lived all her life in Henderson; indeed she behaved in New Orleans, when she visited there recently, as if it were as morally remote as Tangier. "Stu," co -owner of the inn and married to Ellie -a woman whose simplicity makes Jo look sophisticated -is, as he would like to say about himself and often does, a man of relatively few words and basic human decency. He will take a drink, but only now and then, and if he has more than one becomes wholly confused and infantile, then winds up being put to bed by Ellie and catching a bad cold as a result of his folly. Though Stu is simple, he knows what he likes (and it's not Art). Or rather what he doesn't like. He doesn't like charming, verbally articulate men who attempt and succeed in winning the affections of (1) Jo, or (2) his daughter, Janet Collins, who is especially prone to disastrous affairs of the heart. He would be equally enraged if one of these men tried to cotton up to (3) Janet's daughter, Liza, or (4) Ellie. Fortunately for Stu, Liza is completely wrapped up in her dashingly handsome, extraordinarily rich and powerful husband, Travis Tourneur ( "Rusty ") Sentell, and their recently adopted baby. While no- body has ever been seen making a play for Ellie. Anyone who watches Search for a while becomes aware of certain patterns, which by their repetition provide an odd satisfaction.

 

Let me run through a few of these, by subject:

reading a book, unless he or she (most probably she) is in a blue funk about her love life. If she is interrupted while reading a book (and it will never be named, just referred to as "a book," not the Aeneid or Shogun), she will gratefully put it down and launch into an explanation, to the interruptor, of "what's wrong." More likely she will be leafing through a magazine in the most idle man- ner, just looking to begin the next con- versation about Problems. (Of course, it would be hard to make an exciting scene out of someone reading the Aeneid, or even Shogun.) At times (at least on Search) poetry is quoted, usually Shakespeare, often inaccurately or with lines left out so as to make it more "understandable." Shakespeare by the way - especially Romeo and Juliet -is Wonderful, even though no sane person would be found reading him.

Food. People are often seen dining, either at the Hartford House or at Ernesto's (one òf those terrific little Italian restaurants everybody loves), but there is never a visible piece of food disappearing into anyone's chops. Usually people toy with their food ( "You're hardly eating anything"), find that they're "not hungry," and launch once more into talk about Problems. Women tend to eat something like a spinach salad for lunch, never (say) corned beef and cabbage or Yankee Pot Roast (perhaps unavailable in Henderson). They are tempted by the dessert, but abstain because of the calorie count. Men are inclined to eat more meat.

Drink. Stephanie Wyatt, the closest thing to a "bad" woman on the Soap, is allowed to have a martini, which she does quite often. Other women, if they indulge at all, will invariably have a glass of white wine (what, by the way, is wrong with red wine ?) but never seem to drink it. Whiskey in private houses is always there in a decanter; never is a bottle visible. Younger, poorer types have been known to have a beer. Everybody drinks coffee, endlessly, all the time, all characters evidently possessing cast -iron stomachs. Nobody asks for Sanka instead. Diet soda is a possibility; also champagne on festive occasions.

Sex. Perhaps I should have put this earlier, but there is relatively little sex on Search, though heterosexual relationships are the staple of the show (no homosexuals that I've noticed). Lovemaking is highly romanticized, bodies and faces blur and swirl so you can't make out what's going on and of course nothing really is. "Haunting" melodies fill the air. There is occasionally some intense kissing that is not much fun to watch. Some characters are allowed dream -fantasies in which they meet their partner all dressed up in beautiful clothes, at some fancy occasion. The heroic male really does Sweep the Heroine Off Her Feet, something that is often difficult to accomplish in real life (I speak from personal experience). In very serious scenes preparatory to lovemaking, we get a glimpse of the male's naked torso. This must be fairly well covered with hair, at least it seems to be de rigueur for a job on Search. There is little extra -marital sex - not much at all in the way of "illicit" goings -on. We must remember that this show has been running for thirty years and has its roots in the sensible pieties of the fifties. Sometimes the dialogue becomes forcefully explicit, as when Stephanie, speaking of the perils her eighteen -year -old daughter Wendy is ex- posed to, opines that young people of that age like to get to know each other well - "and I do mean in bed," she adds, with one of her fine wisdom -of- experience facial expressions. Or there was the following exchange just the other day, when lawyer Kathy Phillips tried to compliment Garth the Artist (he is a very difficult, uncon- ventional fellow) on his dealings with her young son, Doug. Kathy: "You're very good with little boys." Garth: "I'm not so bad with big girls either." You see the force of that innuendo.

Religion. Almost everybody believes in Something, but nobody has any words for it. People don't go to church except for the occasional funeral or wedding. Catholic, Protestant, Jew -it's all the same, presumably.

Race. There is an occasional black, often an assistant lieutenant in the police department who works for a slower - witted white man (the black is invariably clever). But nonwhites appear only intermittently and are never given quite enough to do.

Children. Invariably blond- headed, incredibly cute, good at putting their arms around their (divorced) mother and saying how much they love her, which brings tears to her lonely eyes. Infants, of course , are always a good investment of time.

The Aged. Not usually visible on Search, though at the moment a whole series of credulous oldsters have gone to Jamaica with evil Dr. Winston Kyle to be (don't they wish) cured of their afflictions by his faith -healing.

Pot. Nobody on Search smokes pot, thank God.

Jogging or Running. Nobody on Search jogs or runs, except in pursuit of someone. I don't quite understand the absence of this practice but don't really object to it either.

Christmas is a good time to watch Search because it shows off, by contrast, one's own real life Scrooge -like tendencies. "I love Christmas, I love to wrap presents," breathes Jo, a light in her eyes, many wrapped presents testifying to this enthusiasm. But we know it can't go on for long, that happiness, and indeed within minutes Martin's playing of the market has become an issue, has caused the light in Jo's eyes to be replaced by the pained, martyred forbearance she is so good at expressing. In the midst of Christmas joy, trouble lies ahead. But of course in the Soap, as in life, trouble always lies ahead, the difference being that the hooked viewer feeds on this trouble and finds it exhilarating, both in anticipation and in the event. I know someone who avoids depressing movies because she says there's enough sadness in life. The viewer of a Soap would like to avoid, or postpone considering until evening, the sadness and trouble lying about him in the world outside, and ahead in his own life -so he cultivates its daily occurrence on the television screen. At least my life is not, for the moment, as hopeless as that one, says he. At least (looking at despondent Lee Sentell, staring gloomily at a beautifully decorated Christmas tree) my fiancée does not have a brain tumor and has not been spirited away by Dr. Kyle to Jamaica, there to be subject to his "incredible power over women, in every way" (as Lee has been informed). But then, a paper Santa Claus hung on the tree miraculously turns into the fiancée, Sunny Adamson, who says to her Lee, "Hello there, Gloomy- Face," and proceeds to remove her Santa Claus cap and cloak! They embrace fiercely, until the vision fades.

From the tone of this report it may seem to you that my interest in Search consists wholly in picking apart its absurdities, unrealities, and generally half -baked attitudes, which I as a superior person don't share. I think you would, however, be wrong. How superior can one be toward an event that provides one daily sustenance? On the other hand, there has of late been a compensatory inflation in the value of Soaps - claims made that here is where the finest acting anywhere is to be found, or where certain social, cultural, medical facts are at least recognized. Though the acting is good enough for my tastes, and though I suppose you could say that an issue (like Alternatives to Surgery) is at least raised, I can't believe that therein lies the Soap's real power to compel. Its compellingness has more to do with the construction of a world -not a world of complex thought or psychological penetration, but a world nonetheless -full of names, faces, voices, gestures, and attitudes that impress themselves on our ears and eyes and that don't disappear after a half -hour or hour as they do on evening television. Or rather, we know that they will be back tomorrow, certainly the next day; that five days a week, give or take an occa-sional national holiday (or Presidential Inauguration, damn it) they will be there for us on CBS. It is the ongoingness of Search, or of any Soap, that is the key to its power and that a person untouched by this power can never understand. How many times have I heard someone say authoritatively about a Soap that "nothing ever happens in them. I watched one for a while, missed three weeks of it, turned it back on and they were still talking about the same things" -as if that settled it for the Soap. I may ask in return, "What do you want to happen on the shows you watch ?" Try Vegas or Starsky and Hutch if you like a snappy little incident begun, middled, and ended over the course of an hour. Something happens in our life every clay; at least we grow older, finish one thing, begin another, lose this and gain that. But Search, though certain characters come and eventually go, remains essentially the same. Time stretches out endlessly, it seems, for the latest complication is clearly going to take months until it begins, even slightly, to unravel. And as it just goes along, nothing really happening, one suddenly finds oneself pleased or moved by the merest, smallest thing -a gesture, a twist of the voice, a way of saying something. (David Sutton, an admirable character who I fear may be about to leave the show, has a way of saying "Thank you," sincerely, that makes me feel life is worth living.) You never quite know at what moment some- thing strangely evocative may occur, but you can only respond to these moments if you've sat around many months or years and watched programs that evoke nothing.

FEW FINAL REMARKS: The most painful moment for any Soap watcher is when a visitor or guest says, "Please, go ahead . and watch your program . . . what is it ... Reach For the Sky? maybe I'll watch it with you." In any event, total silence must be enforced, else you may be confronted with questions like "Who is she ?" or "What is that? ",which reduce the hardened viewer to stuttering confusion and despair. How can this outsider ever begin to understand what is so deep within your bones? Also, if you are going to watch Search you must plan to be un- available for any business or friendly lunches, brown -bag, intimate, or otherwise. When colleagues (I am a teacher) suggest that our department might meet next Tuesday at noon or 12:30, I find myself devising various strategems by which to disentangle myself -but how many dental appointments can one legitimately claim to have? Conferences with students must be ended briskly with the phrase, mumbled in some haste, "I have an appointment with ... " (the rest left indistinct). Once I quitted a friend under the pretense of having to see a person named Somerset. I suppose he could as well have been named Search. And since I dislike taking the phone off the hook, there is always the chance that it will ring (who could be calling at this hour ?), in which case the thing to do is to say quite urgently and intensely, "Can I call you back in fifteen, (twenty, ten) minutes ?" then rush back into the inside world. There are some lines from a poem by David Slavitt that say as well as anything I know what is involved in watching a Soap. Mr. Slavitt's favorite appears to be All My Children, but the name hardly matters, as he lays out the essence of them all: They wade through sorrows scriptwriters devise in kitchens , hospital rooms, divorce courts, jails or cemeteries, and nearly everyone tries to do the right thing. And everyone fails. Slavitt goes on to note the usually "desperate" mood of these characters whose "happiness is only a setup for woe," then concludes with the following confession: Stupid, I used to think, and partly still do, deploring the style, the mawkishness. And yet, I watch. I cannot get my fill of lives as dumb as mine: Pine Valley's mess is comforting. I need not wish them ill. I watch, and I delight in, their distress. That "delight" may not be the Eternal Delight that William Blake once identified with Energy, but in a world of time, not Eternity, it does pretty well.

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MISS FIRECRACKER  Preacher Mann   1989    SHOCKER      Talk Show Guest   1989 CRAZY FROM THE HEART    1991      (Made for T. V.) CORRINA, CORRINA     Brent Witherspoon   1994 STAR TREK: GENERATIONS      Data   1994 JOURNEY'S END: THE SAGA OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION   1994   (Made for T. V.) STAR TREK: RETURN OF THE NEXT GENERATION   1994 KINGFISH: A STORY OF HUEY P. LONG       1995    (Made for T. V.) PIE IN THE SKY    Upscale Guy    1995 PHENOMENON     Dr. Bob        1996 INDEPENDENCE DAY    Dr. Brakish Okun     1996    STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT     Data      1996 TREKKIES     1997 OUT TO SEA    Gil Godwyn    1997 STAR TREK: INSURRECTION    Data   1998 SOUTH PARK: BIGGER, LONGER AND UNCUT    Conan O'Brien   (V) 1995 INTRODUCING DOROTHY DANDRIDGE    Earl Mills    1999    (Made for T. V.) GEPPETTO     Stromboli     2000     (Made for T. V.) DUDE, WHERE'S MY CAR?   Pierre     2000 HOLLYWOOD REMEMBERS WALTER MATTHAU    2001    (Made for T. V.) A GIRL THING   Bob    2001      (Made for T. V.) ASK ME NO QUESTIONS      2001     (Made for T. V.) THE PONDER HEART    Dorris Grabney  2001    (Made for T. V.) I AM SAM   Shoe Salesman    2001 THE MASTER OF DISGUISE   Devlin Bowman    2002 STAR TREK: NEMESIS    Data; B-4      2002 IDENTITY CRISIS: THE MAKING OF A MASTER    2003 AN UNEXPECTED LOVE    Brad     2003     (Made for T. V.) JACK        Vernon    2004    (Made for T. V.) THE AVIATOR   Robert Gross     2004 MATERIAL GIRLS    Tommy Katzenbach   2006 CAST OF CHARACTERS: THE MAKING OF MATERIAL GIRLS      2006 SUPERHERO MOVIE   Dr. Strom   2008 QUANTUM QUEST: A CASSINI SPACE ODYSSEY    Coach Mackey (V) 2010 STARDATE REVISITED: THE ORIGINS OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION    2012 REUNIFICATION: 25 YEARS AFTER STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION    2012 RESISTANCE IS FUTILE: ASSIMILATING STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION    2013 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION: REGENERATION -- ENGAGING THE BORG    2013 RELATIVITY: THE FAMILY SAGA OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION   2013 REQUIEM: A REMEMBRANCE OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION     2013 STAR TREK: FROM ONE GENERATION TO THE NEXT     2013 BEYOND THE FIVE YEAR MISSION: THE EVOLUTION OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION 2014 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION -- THE SKY'S THE LIMIT  THE ECLIPSE OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION   2014 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION -- THE UNKNOWN POSSIBILITIES OF EXISTENCE: MAKING ALL GOOD THINGS...      2014 THE MIDNIGHT MAN     Ezekiel   2016 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE   Dr. Brakish Okun     2016 INDEPENDENCE DAY: A LEGACY SURGING FORWARD     Self; Dr. Brakish Okun    2016 ANOTHER DAY: THE MAKING OF INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE    Self; Dr. Brakish Okun  2016 BRENTWOOD    Brent     2018 NEVER SURRENDER: A GALAXY QUEST DOCUMENTARY    Data   2019 STAR TREK: PICARD: THE IMAX LIVE SERIES FINALE EVENT    2023 Video Games STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION -- A FINAL UNITY       Data     1995 CHRONOMASTER      Milo     1995 STAR TREK: GENERATIONS   Data     1997 STAR TREK: HIDDEN EVIL      Data    1999 STAR TREK: AWAY TEAM      Data   2001 STAR TREK: BRIDGE COMMANDER     Data   2002 FAMILY GUY: THE QUEST FOR STUFF     Data    2014 ELITE: DANGEROUS       Vega    2014 HCS   HOMEPACKS      2014 BROADWAY A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN FILM    3/30/1978 - 4/16/1978      Hank SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE     5/2/1984 - 10/13/1985      Franz; Dennis THE THREE MUSKETEERS   11/11/1984 - 11/18/1984     Aramis BIG RIVER      4/25/1985 - 9/20/1987     Replacement -- The Duke  10/8/1985 - ??? 1776     8/19/1997 - 6/14/1998       John Adams     **** DRAMA DESK AWARD NOMINEE -- OUTSTANDING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL LIFE    (X)3      3/31/2003 - 6/29/2003      Hubert THEATER THE FAMILY PLAY 1 AND II    1975        Kil   Westside Theatre  Downstairs MARCO POLO       1976     Counselor 2     Marymount Manhattan Theatre LEAVE IT TO BEAVER IS DEAD   1979      Luke   New York Shakespeare Festival EMIGRES   1979     AA      Brooklyn Academy of Music THE SEAGULL  (World Premiere)    1980    Konstantin Treplev      Joseph Papp Public Theatre -- Newman Theater TABLE SETTINGS     1980      Older Son       Playwrights Horizons -- Judy Theater NO END OF BLAME    1981   Mr. Mik; Art Student; 2nd Male Nurse; 2nd Hungarian Soldier; 3rd Airman       Stage 73    MARVELOUS GRAY      1982     Electrician    Judith Anderson Theatre THE CHERRY ORCHARD    1983       Long Wharf Theater     New Haven, CTTHE PHILANTHROPIST      1983     John      Stage 73 SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE     1983   Jed; Franz  Playwrights Horizons -- Judy Theater LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS   1983       Replacement -- Seymour Krelborn EVERY GOOD BOY DESERVES FAVOR      1992; 1993   Ivanov MAN OF LA MANCHA       2009      Don Quixote/ Miguel de Cervantes    Freud Playhouse at UCLA     Los Angeles, CA BOOK --    FAN-FICTION: A MEM-NOIR, INSPIRED BY TRUE EVENTS     October 2021 Family Ties Parents --     Sylvia Schwartz  and Jack Spiner    Step-father -- Sol Mintz Marriage --   Loree McBride      ???? - Present    1 Child -- Jackson Spiner   Before Brent Spiner was Famous There are many similarities between forensicators and Lt. Commander Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Both are highly intelligent, but rarely understood by the outside world. Both aim only to evolve, to be better than what they are. And both belong to the NFL. Data, who is actually Brent Spiner, was born February 2, 1949 in Houston, TX. He was the son of Sylvia, a corporate VP and Jack, a furniture store owner. When Jack suddenly died, Sylvia was left to raise infant Brent and his brother alone. She eventually remarried a man named Sol Mintz. Although Mintz adopted Brent, Brent changed his last name back to Spiner when he became a professional actor. Spiner attended Bellaire High School in Houston and was heavily involved in baseball and the drama club, in addition to being a member of the NFL. While on the speech team, he gained 143 points and even earned the title of Dramatic Interpretation Champion in at the 1967 National Tournament (the same year actress Shelley Long won Oratory). After his success in high school, Spiner moved on to the University of Houston and began performing in local theatre in Houston. Eventually he dropped out of college to move to New York City and try his acting luck there. While in New York, Spiner gained more stage acting experience, performing in several Broadway and Off-Broadway plays, including The Three Musketeers and Stephen Sondheim’s Sunday in the Park with George. In 1984, Spiner decided to try film acting and moved again, this time to LA, where he appeared in several pilots and made-for-TV movies. He then auditioned for the up-and-coming show Star Trek: The Next Generation. Spiner himself was never a fan of science fiction or of the original Star Trek, but figured the show would soon be cancelled and he desperately needed the money. Starting in 1987, Spiner played Data for 15 years, during the show’s 7 seasons and the four feature films that followed. Even when the show was cancelled in 1994, Spiner’s career as a performer barely paused. He is most remembered for his role in Independence Day as Dr. Okun, the somewhat awkward chief scientist of Area 51 who is attacked and killed by his alien subjects. He has also made appearances on Law & Order, Friends, Dude, Where’s My Car?, I Am Sam, and The Aviator. Spiner returned to the theatre and appeared in the Broadway revival 1776 as John Adams. Unlike most of his co-stars, Spiner is not very active in the Star Trek convention scene. He has made a few appearances, but overall his lack of interest in science fiction gets the best of him. However, he still regards Patrick Stewart and LeVar Burton as two of his best friends. One of the challenges forensicators face is finding the human element in their events; to not be robotic and detached, but simply themselves. It is this crucial element that separates the good from the great. As the character Data, Spiner sums up the NFL experience the best: “If being human is not simply a matter of being born flesh and blood – if it is instead a way of thinking, acting, and feeling, then I am hopeful that one day I will discover my own humanity. Until then…I will continue learning, changing, growing, and trying to become more than what I am.”   https://www.ign.com/articles/2002/12/09/an-interview-with-brent-spiner https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-02-17-ca-1835-story.html https://www.discogs.com/artist/1224629-Brent-Spiner?srsltid=AfmBOorfw9Nl3EZ4fc-plhbgU3ng2bSQTruygkdJxZgsPquzQ6sBhCbj     Leslie Charleson    pg. 435   PILOTS/PROPOSALS ANOTHER APRIL      April Weston Moss   1974    (Made for T. V.)   Article including James Rebhorn, Catherine Cox and Peter Kluge -- all former daytime actors .https://www.wittenberg.edu/administration/universitycommunications/magazine/spring1999/curtaincalling
    • For anyone who missed the end of Friday June 6 due to news interruption, the last five minutes of every episode is uploaded to the official GH facebook late in the evening, usually around 11:30pm Eastern. Here's the end of that episode: https://www.facebook.com/generalhospital/videos/3649028845342563
    • Thanks so much for posting this. Since they had retconned Roger/Holly's relationship after his return as being "Roger was always in love with Holly" when it was actually the other way around, they kept up this narrative in this video. Understandable, but it still bugs me. Holly was never his "heart." That's baloney. He only married her to be in Christina's life and was screwing other women like Diane and Hillary the whole time. Peggy was truly the only woman that Roger ever loved, and even that wasn't a very healthy relationship. Holly only really fell out of love with Roger after she realized she loved Ed while they were divorcing. I'm glad he reminded people that the rape scenes were taped in a day. It's amazing what they accomplished with very little rehearsal. That scene still has great impact after all these years. And OMG, watching the scenes of Roger's return in comparison...the quality in the writing really nosedived. The stupid mask. (I love the way they joke about the mask at the end). Alan's insanely over-the-top reaction to his return when Roger had no hold against him anymore. Yikes, one of the worst things Long did while she was still writing the show, though I will cut her a break since she absolutely had a tough task bringing back a guy who fell off a cliff.
    •   Thanks! You reminded me I did not remember to add in the preemptions for the dark weeks, since those are not listed on the sortable charts, so these are the additional preemptions per newspaper listings and Vanderbilt News for the 1973-1978 dark weeks. I have added them in to the full lists above.   8/26/74-8/30/74 Another World Wednesday episode- 3:04PM (26 minutes) 8/26/74-8/30/74 Doctors Preempted Wednesday- Ford News Conference 8/26/74-8/30/74 Edge of Night Preempted Wednesday- Ford News Conference 12/22/75-12/26/75 As the World Turns Preempted Friday- Sun Bowl 12/22/75-12/26/75 Guiding Light Preempted Friday- Sun Bowl 12/22/75-12/26/75 Search for Tomorrow Preempted Friday- Sun Bowl 12/22/75-12/26/75 Young and the Restless Preempted Friday- Sun Bowl 8/22/77-8/26/77 Doctors Preempted Tuesday- Carter News Conference 8/22/77-8/26/77 Guiding Light Preempted Tuesday- Carter News Conference 8/22/77-8/26/77 One Life to Live Preempted Tuesday- Carter News Conference (possibly aired just 3-315PM) 4/24/78-4/28/78 Another World Preempted Tuesday- Carter News Conference 4/24/78-4/28/78 General Hospital Preempted Tuesday- Carter News Conference 4/24/78-4/28/78 Guiding Light Tuesday ep- 230-3PM (30 minutes) 6/26/78-6/30/78 Edge of Night Preempted Monday- Carter News Conference 12/25/78-12/29/78 Another World Preempted Monday- (Local Fill) & Fiesta Bowl 12/25/78-12/29/78 As the World Turns Preempted Monday- Peach Bowl 12/25/78-12/29/78 Guiding Light Preempted Monday- Peach Bowl
    • Breakdown writers can pitch stories and obviously they have influence over what is included in the breakdown but MVJ is the final decision maker. It depends on the faith you have in MVJ if you feel Carlivati is going to be a problem. I don't think a throwaway having a book author named after him is a sign he's taken over the show. Most people didn't even catch the reference.
    • Tamara Tunie reading that damn letter is exactly why I wish this show had more experienced actors.
    • BETH CORRELL'S FRIEND

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              CATHERINE COX        Also Credited as Catherine Carpenter; Catherine Carpenter Cox                      12/13/1950 - Present THE EDGE OF NIGHT     Billie Schumann   1984 THE GUIDING LIGHT     Unknown Role     Unknown Year LOVING         Unknown Role     Unknown Year AS THE WORLD TURNS     Phyllis Leonard    Unknown Year ANOTHER WORLD     Nurse Margaret     6/29/1990 and STARS IN THE HOUSE     Self    2021 Appeared in two episodes of LAW AND ORDER  (2002; 2006) and an episode of THE COSBY SHOW (1990). PILOTS/PROPOSALS FOUR IN LOVE      Pam        1980  CBS     movies BUNKO      Cat     2007 TENDERNESS      Bowling Waitress     2009 BROADWAY MUSIC IS     12/20/1976 - 12/26/1976        Viola   **** DRAMA DESK AWARD NOMINEE -- OUTSTANDING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL WHOOPEE!      2/14/1979 - 8/12/1979    Harriet Underwood OKLAHOMA!   12/13/1979 - 8/24/1980    Replacement -- Ado Annie Carnes   July 1980 - ???? BARNUM     4/30/1980 - 5/16/1982    Replacement -- Charley Barnum  3/3/1981 - ???? ONE NIGHT STAND    (Never Officially Opened)  10/25/1980   Amanda Klein SHAKESPEARE'S CABARET   1/21/1981 - 3/8/1981    Catherine BABY     12/4/1983  - 7/1/1984    Pam Sakarian    **** DRAMA DESK AWARD WINNER -- OUTSTANDING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL OH COWARD!    11/17/1986 - 1/3/1987       **** TONY AWARD NOMINEE -- BEST ACTRESS N A MUSICAL RUMORS     11/17/1988 - 2/24/1990    Replacement -- Chris Gorman FOOTLOOSE    10/22/1998 - 7/2/2000      Ethel McCormack TOURING GODSPELL    10/22/1972 - 7/28/1973       Understudy GODSPELL   9/10/1973 - 6/23/1974   Performer GODSPELL     1976 " Bless the Lord"        National Tour MUSIC IS   1976      Viola       National Tur SIDE BY SIDE BY SONDHEIM     1979 STARTING HERE, STARTING NOW CITY OF ANGELS   7/4/1991 - 11/24/1992     Replacement -- Oolie; Donna THEATER COMPANY     1977     Amy    Heinz Hall    Pittsburgh, PA RAP MASTER RONNIE    1984                Village Gate Upstairs IN TROUSERS     1985      His Wife    Promenade Theatre WONDERFUL TOWN    1988      Ruth Sherwood    Goodspeed Opera House    East Haddam, CT THE WAVES     1990    Rhoda    New York Theatre Workshop GODSPELL    2000  York Theatre   NYC HOT AND SWEET    (Staged Reading)   2000    Dodge Stages   NYC ANNIE      2002     Miss Hannigan    Paper Mill Playhouse   Millburn, NJ MEMPHIS      (World Premiere)  2003    Ensemble; Susie; Patti Page; Clara   Understudy -- Gladys Calhoun   North Shore Music Theatre    Beverly, MA MAME     2004   Mame Dennis    Merry Go Round Players     Auburn, NY RICHARD CORY     2005     Mrs. Baker    NY Musical Theatre Festival Production INSPECTING CAROL     2006     Zorah Bloch      George Street Playhouse   New Brunswick, NJ MARRIED ALIVE!      2008      Diane     Gulfshore Playhouse     Naples, FL MEMORY IS THE MOTHER OF ALL WISDOM    2009     Mother    Barrington Stage Company Stage II     Pittsfield, MA THE MEMORY SHOW     2010     Mother     Barrington Stage Company Stage II     Pittsfield, MA VOTE FOR ME: A MUSICAL DEBATE      2010    Governor Janet Tilghman    Urban Stages Theater   NYC FLAMBE DREAMS   2012     Elaine Christiansen     45th Street Theatre THE MEMORY SHOW     2013    Mother   The Duke on 42nd Street BY STROUSE IT'S BETTER WITH A BAND SWING SHIFT!      Vera       Theatre by the Sea Marriages      Keith Hermann   ???? - ????       Divorced      David Evans     1986 - Present    2 Children     THE ORIGINAL ARTICULETTE         SHERITA BOLDEN   BEYOND THE GATES     Barbara that founded the Articulettes   (v)  6/3/2025              Works Behind the Scenes as a Booth Production Assistant     2025 PodCast THE YATRA SISTERS     Co-Host and Organizer       DETECTING LESLIE'S IMAGE?           DREY WIGFALL     Born   Andre DeShawn Wigfall                  6/25/1981 - Present BEYOND THE GATES    D. C. Metro Analyst -- Detective __ Walker    6/2/2025 and YO MOMMA      Self           2006   ALL THE QUEEN'S MEN      Officer Green    2023 movies SOLICIT BEHAVIOR     Mr. Young     2007    (Made for T. V.) KISSING STRANGERS    Jeff     2010 THE CANADOO   Derrick     2016 A SOUL BURDENED    Corporal Marcus Andre Hughes    2021 IT HAPPENED IN THE 4TH QUARTER   Mr. Gaines    2023 THE COMEBACK     Paul    2023 ZOMBIE VIRAL STUDIO     RADIO SLAVERY: THE MAKING OF AMERICA Upcoming MEND      TBA    Pre Production THEATER IN THE BLOOD           University of South Carolina MA RAINEY'S BLACK BOTTOM     Trustus Theatre         FOUND KAT LURKING                RICH LOWE       Also Credited as  Rich Lowe Ikenna           8/10/1987 - Present BEYOND THE GATES     Darius -- Hotel Employee   6/6/2025 and BUBBLY BROWN SUGAR      Caleb     2018 Upcoming INTERTWINED PROOF OF CONCEPT     David     TBA     Pre Production movies SEVEN MILES FROM FOREVER    Joshua Wright     VERA'S HOLIDAY FLOP       Ex-Husband      THE LEAST OF ALL     Matthew Reynolds    2017 THE GREAT WAR     Corporal Johnson    2019 HYPOCRITE     Eddie Ogden    2019 THE ORATORY     2021 HEARTBEAT   Cliff     2022 COME OUT FIGHTING   Private Michael "Salty" Buttons     2022 Upcoming    LIONEL       TBA     Completed THEATER THE ROYALE     2017     Fish      Raymond James Theatre     Saint Petersburg, FL         E. M. T.                       NILES AUSTIN      1/8/1994 - Present BEYOND THE GATES      E. M. T.     4/17/2025; 6/6/2025 Appeared on the series SINS OF THE CITY (2023). movies SIGNUM    Michael   2024 Currently working as a studio assistant at Dream Inc.  BTG Recurring actress Jerri Tubbs works there as an Instructor.           Kenjah  (McNeil)    pg. 445 BEYOND THE GATES     Dr. Madison Montgomery     6/4/2025 - Present   Adam Chambers    pg. 445 DAYS OF OUR LIVES     Dave the Skydiving Instructor           June 6,  2025 Leann Hunley       pg. 425   DAYS OF OUR LIVES     Anna Fredericks Brady DiMera    8/2/1982 - 7/10/1986; 6/21/2007 - 4/2/2009; 12/10/2009- 6/5/2010; 1/9/2017 - 2/16/2017; 1/5/2018 - 2/14/2018; 8/9/2019 -  4/21/2020; 12/18/2020 - 5/31/2023;   6/6/2025 - Present     One more on the way!      
    • Oh wow. After reading your post, I realized that they had "Carl Ivati" in the script AGAIN yesterday June 6.    Eva said she was reading his latest, and Tomas said "Work's been so busy, I haven't had time to get into his new series". Then Eva proceeds to tell him that "the first book is called 'Mercy and Goodness' and it's all about how the couple first met and how they got separated".   She goes on and on about how great it is. And she says she has the book in her hotel room if he wants to borrow it. She says it has twists and turns. And meanwhile Kat is snooping in Eva's room to look for the helmet and gloves, and finds the book and dismisses it as "basic". I saw that whole scene -- but I wasn't paying attention to the name of the author.  And when Tomas said the name, I heard it in his accent so I didn't hear "carlivati".  II was mainly trying to see if the acting had improved with the actor playing Tomas, and I think he has improved somewhat.   I only see it when typed out. So they had several scenes yesterday about a "Carl Ivati" book?  Barf! Well at least Kat had the good sense to dismiss it as "basic". Ron Carlivati wrote the breakdown yesterday!   Featuring himself in it! Addressing to the collective "you" whoever you may be: Some of you, months ago, said Oh Ron is only doing breakdowns.  The story comes from MVJ, so he won't influence things, you said. May 27 started it, with Christopher Dunn breakdown and Lynn Martin script. But they didn't need to continue it June 6 with Carlivati breakdown and Jazmen Darnell Brown script.
    • I was completely lost. But it is wonderful that it exists. I didn't really know Robert Mandan had done soaps...well, besides SOAP.
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