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Guiding Light, GL

GUIDING LIGHT

  • January 25, 1937 - June 29, 1956 on NBC Radio/CBS Radio

  • June 30, 1952 - September 18, 2009 on CBS

Guiding Light Discussion Thread

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  • Member
19 hours ago, DeeVee said:

I'm going to say something that's probably going to be unpopular:

I hated those friggin' fantasies. You would think as a fan of old movies I would have loved them, but to me they were cringe and stopped the story cold.

Lisa was tremendously talented and I get wanting to take advantage of that, but if I wanted to watch a musical comedy, I would watch a musical comedy.

I only really started to appreciate Lisa because so few of those fantasy sequences survive today.

I think some were better than others, and you could tell when the heart wasn't there. The best were the old dramatic film parodies like Now, Voyager.

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    Bright Eyes

    Ellen Weston passed away on May 28. https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/ellen-weston-dead-get-smart-guiding-light-1236631021/

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IMDB has Gillian Spencer credited as writing the January 28th, 2005 episode. Does anyone know if that is accurate?

  • Member
2 hours ago, DRW50 said:

IMDB has Gillian Spencer credited as writing the January 28th, 2005 episode. Does anyone know if that is accurate?

Wikipedia lists her tenure as writer on GL this way:

Guiding Light

  • Script Writer (March 2004 – May 13, 2005)

  • Occasional Script Writer (2003)

So definitely possible that is accurate.

  • Member
5 minutes ago, DeeVee said:

Wikipedia lists her tenure as writer on GL this way:

Guiding Light

  • Script Writer (March 2004 – May 13, 2005)

  • Occasional Script Writer (2003)

So definitely possible that is accurate.

I never knew (or had completely forgotten). I'd love to have heard her talk about how different it was writing for GL vs playing Robin 40 years earlier.

  • Member
16 hours ago, DRW50 said:

I never knew (or had completely forgotten). I'd love to have heard her talk about how different it was writing for GL vs playing Robin 40 years earlier.

I remember her listed in the credits around the time Lorraine Broderick was brought in to help guide Krezman his first year as HW. I'm sure Stephanie Braxton was listed too. Around the time their names were gone from the credits, the show began going off the rails

  • Member

instead of conboy, I would've snapped up Gary Tomlin. One Life to Live won its only Best series EMMY during his tenure there. For writer I would pick the Cullitons, at least Richard Culltion. Richard and Gary worked well together in the past. and Carolyn was there with Millee Taggart intitially. I would've kept Taggart as a consultant, if possible. Conboy was an ill-fit for any NYC soap, his lavish west-coast style just didn't mesh.

  • Member

I found Tomlin's best on OLTL was after the show qualified for its Emmy as best show. But a bit too bizarre for Emmy consideration.

  • Member
25 minutes ago, Spoon said:

instead of conboy, I would've snapped up Gary Tomlin. One Life to Live won its only Best series EMMY during his tenure there. For writer I would pick the Cullitons, at least Richard Culltion. Richard and Gary worked well together in the past. and Carolyn was there with Millee Taggart intitially. I would've kept Taggart as a consultant, if possible. Conboy was an ill-fit for any NYC soap, his lavish west-coast style just didn't mesh.

The Cullitons wrote for GL in 1983. They came in right after L. Virginia Browne was fired. They were ones who had to wrap up the dreadful Mark Evans story. Richard stayed and was co-head writer with Pam Long for several months after she started. I think they did really well together--they wrote Quint and Nola's wedding, Alan and Hope's breakup, Phillip finding out his paternity--in spite of all the firings, they gave the show a real shot in the arm with lots of good stuff. So yeah, I would have been for that.

  • Member

The Cullitons seem to be better at balancing out head writers than being HWs themselves. I'm convinced Hogan Sheffer owes his laurels to Carolyn Culliton, who guided him through the first year at ATWT.

Long and Richard also wrote Billy and Vanessa's falling in love, which is frakkin' adorable.

  • Author
  • Member

1968 Ellen Weston: Adorable Star and Poor Soul?

Hollywood—Would you believe Ellen Weston is a showgirl? Would you believe .. . a chemist? Would you believe Ellen Weston is Dr. Steele? Would you believe Dr. Steele is a showgirl? A chemist? Would you believe Ellen Weston portrays Dr. Steele, chemist for CONTROL, employing a showgirl cover, on NBC - Channel 40's Get Smart series Saturdays? You better believe it, even though Ellen still finds it hard to believe.

"Talent Associates was casting for a pilot and sent for me recently," said Ellen. "Somehow nobody knew anything about it when I showed up and a secretary suggested I try for the new role on 'Get Smart.' She said it was a woman scientist using a showgirl cover. I said, -'Forget it.' I felt I wasn't the sexy type." Talent Associates thought otherwise and she got the part. "I brought up the matter of the pilot but they refused to consider me," Ellen laughed.They said I was just too sexy—after they created the image. Now they believed it themselves."

Ellen was born in New York where she lived until a year and a half ago when she and her husband, Ami Hadani (owner of a recording studio), moved to Hollywood. They have a baby boy, Jonathan. "We just bought an old house," said Ellen. "I love it. because it has a past. We brought a lot of antiques with us—I love them. "When I polish the furniture I wonder how many others polished the same wood. "When we were in Israel recently a colosseum had just been excavated at Caesaria. It was so fresh that tourists hadn't wiped off the ancient footprints yet. It was thrilling. I thought, 'Here I stand where Caesar "stood.' If I could, I would live in a palace that's centuries old. We don't learn anything by tearing things up."

Ellen, who had a drama scholarship, majored in speech therapy while attending Hofstra University, Hunter College and New York University. She left college in her senior year to work as an actress but completed her work for a BA degree two years later. "I was determined that a child of mine would never say to me, 'But you didn't finish college,'" said Ellen, who is seriously considering going for a PhD at UCLA. So far acting has claimed her life. She spent a year on daytime TV as Robin in Guiding Light and five months as Karen in Another World. She's done such nighttime TV as Bewitched, N.Y.P.D. and Run for Your Life. She appeared on Broadway in such long-running plays as "A Far Country" and "Mary Mary." When Ellen was a child she used to daydream that she was a twin. "One was always the adorable, well-loved star," said Ellen. "The other was the poor soul, the nebbish. Show business always seemed so untouchable, like Cinderella. "But I also always felt instictively that there was something destructive about it and I sensed some imminent danger in wanting it badly. I never dared to dream of myself as a star." And so she became a twin. Like Dr. Steele, she found a cover.

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