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Guiding Light discussion thread


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I wonder if that's not disingenuous. ... Well, if Agnes said that it's interesting, of course, but in point of fact, the reason she created OLTL for ABC is because they invited to do a soap for them. Previously she had attempted to sell her AMC bible to P&G & they declined. They also did not solicit her to do a brand new soap for them. But this sense of freedom to write is an excellent point, I think. When the Dobsons went to GL they had a new sense of freedom because that was out from under the thumbs of the Hursleys. Then, of course, the NBC offer was another several degrees of "more freedom" and it may well have gone to their heads. But, I also believe it tapped into their most creative impulses. 

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Regarding the Dobsons at GL and ATWT

They took over GL when it was a half hour show and there were fewer characters and stories to accomodate.

But by the time they took over ATWT it had been an hour show for 5 years and there were many more characters they had to deal with.

It was probably easier for them to make changes at GL than ATWT.

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In soaps, nothing is a coincidence, so it seems fitting that I got back into watching, and talking about, the Dobsons' work on GL, we hear about Bridget passing away.  I just wish more of their run was around because so much of what I have seen is top-tier, breathtakingly complex, and engrossing to watch. I often feel that the GL I prefer is messy, wild, mixed with the straight drama (similar to where the show was in the late '80s and early '90s), but somehow Bridget and Jerome got the tone so perfect in their run that they remind me just what a lost artform this more restrained, psychological touch could be.

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I know you had said one of the things you noticed about Marland's GL was that his ability to write more complex characters, especially the female ones, was not as strong as the Dobsons.

And I think it's because Bridget Dobson was a complex person and because of that, she was able to write very complicated women that people either loved or didn't like... and I don't think Marland could have written them as well because he wasn't a woman and because he seemed to believe that therapy fixed everything.

I think the Dobson's figured that tapping into unresolved issues in their lives was the way to go when writing.. while Marland had a more pragmatic approach to his writing.

Case in point, an example of something the Dobson's wrote for Diane Ballard

There's an episode from 1979 where Diane finds out from Roger about something unethical that Alan did.. and she's tortured by this.  She confides in her good friend Ann about her father.. and how he had disappointed her so much by being an embezzler.  She then went on to say Alan was what she wished her father was like and that if Roger was telling her the truth, she didn't know what she'd do if her image of Alan was tainted.  It was a rare moment of emotion from Diane and a way to show behind the pragmatic nature of Diane was a human being hurt by her parent.

I think that Diane under Marland had less layers and was more of a villainess.. rather then a pragmatic anti-heroine.

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It's possible, but Phillips has a history of claiming ownership over things that aren't hers. Orin Tovrov created "The Brighter Day," but she eventually usurped the show from him and proclaimed she had created it so this wouldn't have been unusual. 

Do other genres have as many issues with the issue of creator credits as soaps do? 

 

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Oh no!  Another GL mystery?  Are you really telling us that GL's move from Five Points to Selby Flats took place off-camera (off-radio [since there were no cameras])??  And if so, did any characters actually move?  And did they discuss moving in the scripts?  Or was the show just magically transferred from Five Points to Selby Flats without explanation?    This conversation is like Deja Vu!!

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When TGL resumed in June 47 it was acompletely different show, now set in Selby Flats. 

Dr Charles Matthews (Hugh Studebaker) was pastor of Church of Good Samaritan in Selby Flats , an underpriveleged area of LA.

The good doctor's philosophy of life was keynoted in the opening installment by a lamp of friendship delivered to him by a divinity student from Five Points.

'It's the symbol of 'The Guiding Light' says Dr Matthews.Now I know what to say at the state prison.'

The next scene took place at the prison and the new storylines unfolded

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I always enjoyed the idea of GL calling back to Reverend Rutledge and the lamp/lighthouse/etc. near the end of the run. I just think the execution of it was very poor. If GL was ever rebooted it would be nice to find a way to tie all these little details together - maybe a location bit or someone's correspondence, or a character from Selby Flats or Five Points, etc.

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Thanks for that information. I wish your post could somehow get into some of the soap opera history books.  I'm sure 99 percent of GL fans are unaware of the completely different show in 1947.   How coincidental (or down-right strange) that Guiding Light went through two changes of locale during it's history, and it is likely that neither change occurred within the scripted narrative.    

I agree.  I enjoyed those nods to history in the later years of the show.  But you are very right, the execution was poor.  For example, Meta's (Mary Stuart's) speech at the end of one of the anniversary episodes -- where she mentions Five Points and Selby Flats, and even Reverend Rutledge.  But none of the Bauers lived in Five Points, and none of them had ever met Reverend Rutledge. So how would Meta be aware of them?   And then in even later years, TPTB seemed to try repeatedly to introduce a descendent of Reverend Rutledge, even though the original Reverend Rutledge had no sons, so his name could not have been carried-down through the generations to another male descendant.  There was just no logic to the way TPTB tried to call back to the show's earliest days.   It could have been done well and respectfully, but someone just didn't do enough research.  

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Dr. Jonathan McNeil and his wife, Clare Lawrence McNeil, were also in the original series. Jonathan had been on since the early 1940s being played by Arthur Kohl and then Sidney Breese.  

The prison story that @Paul Raven referred to is the Roger Barton. He had spent several years in prison for embezzlement, a crime he hadn't committed. Upon returning, he learned his wife had married another man and that his son was a college student romantically involved with the daughter of the man who had set him up. In order to integrate himself back into his old world without the baggage, he rechristened himself Ray Brandon. 

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