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"Secret Storm" memories.

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10 minutes ago, slick jones said:

I don't have a "Dr. Haskell" in the cast list I've compiled, so I'm assuming it was a minor role. Powell was Dr. Spencer Hadley (as needed) from 1966 - 73. It's possible that the actor that was to play Haskell didn't show, so they pulled him in at the last minute.

I'll add the role to the cast list  as well as his Hopper Profile.

Thanks. That makes sense. It's interesting they assumed viewers wouldn't really notice bringing him in for another part when he was recurring as another doctor. I wonder why they didn't just have him as Hadley. Maybe there was already a Haskell in story for this period.

(unless the voiceover just misspoke)

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On 1/22/2025 at 7:28 AM, Contessa Donatella said:

This person is IMO doing such a fine thing. Scammers, like the other person you describe are the lowest of the low! And, your advice is sound. Always, if you have the space to do so, download an episode. You never know. You might be saving an episode that otherwise would vanish.

 

Who’s the scammer?  Forester?

  • 1 month later...
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Diane Ladd Dead: 'Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore' Actress Was 89

Years ago I posted a soap magazine article with Diane. The scan is now gone. If I ever find it again I will repost (or if someone else has it, feel free, not that you need my permission). I was so surprised to learn she was on a soap but she would have been a great soap goddess.

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https://archive.org/details/blue-book-v-100-n-01-1954-11/

A men's magazine from 1954. The mention of Secret Storm is just a lead-in to the rest of the jokey article but I still thought it was worth sharing as it's so interesting to see how people felt about the soaps at the times they were airing, and getting to read a brief recap of the early story.

Blue Book v100 n01 [1954-11] (sas)_0081.jpg

Blue Book v100 n01 [1954-11] (sas)_0082.jpg

Blue Book v100 n01 [1954-11] (sas)_0083.jpg

  • 2 months later...
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The Writer Soap Opera Is a Dirty Word COAP opera is a dirty word fo Carl Bixby. He writes Secret Storm, and he prefers to hear his show called daytime drama, thank you. "I'm a holdover from 'way back yonder in the old radio days when people tried to downgrade daytime drama by calling it soap opera," he laughed. Among his radio writing credits, Bixby lists Big Sister and Life Can Be Beautiful, which he wrote for 17 years. For seven vears after that. he wrote Edge of Night. another TV drama. And he's been with Secret Storm since the first of this vear. Lives With Ameses Bixby spends practically every waking hour embroiled in the problems of his "Ames faimly." He works at his home in Connecticut from daylight to dark, and even into the wee small hours if the idea strikes then. Bixby figures his present assignment calls for writing the equivalent of a fulllength play a week. He knows what will be happening to the Ameses for the next 12 months, but he isn't telling any trade secrets. "My family learned long ago not to badger me about that," he laughed. "But a lot of my friends still ask. I'm a clam. I know how that marriage between Kate and Jerry is going to work out, but I'll never tell." Plots Year Ahead Bixby plots the long-term story for the show a year ahead. He knows exactly how it will develop for four to six weeks ahead, and written scripts "are completed three weeks in advance. "The author of a TV serial is also the most avid watcher of his own show," Bixby added. "Not to hear his own priceless words pronounced, but to find out how the playing of them is developing and progressing. I may visualize a character one way, but the actor who plays the role gives it his own characterization. He may make it so good that you write him more of a part. Or he may be so bad you have to get rid of him." Secret Storm is more difficult to write than some serial dramas, Bixby maintains, because it is simply the story of the Ames family and their friends. Its aim is to explore their characters in depth. Violence Easiest "The easiest way to write one of these shows is to have murder, mayhem, and court trials. But the hardest thing in the world is to make normal, credible situations interesting." Bixby declared. "And I am not content with having two or three characters sitting around having tea and discussing. I want vitality. Each episode should be a story of a kind in itself." But. Bixby added, a TV series cannot possibly remain the same. It must constantly change in mood and direction. And if it moves slowly sometimes, that is done purposely, to compensate for the fact that all viewers--no matter how faithful--cannot see all five episodes a week. 4 Artel •Writer Carl 'Bixby's TV Family, Played by June Graham and Cec Linder on "Secret Storm" • Page 2 .TV PULLOUT.. Sundoy, April 21, 1963

  • 1 month later...
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A newspaper article from late 1971 included a section on SS happenings around that time.

...Just then, some waves start crashing in on a Homer Winslow shoreline and "The Secret Storm" comes on. By now I am reeling, but will hang in there. This one is also a gem. Dr. Ian Northcoat, who has a cool beard, is talking with his wife (pardon me, second wife) Valerie, who is Amy Britton's step-mother. They are talking about Susan Carver, Amy's sister, who is married to Frank Carver, managing editor of the Woodbridge paper (yeah). Susan has big troubles, as they say in the city.

She was married to a creep named Allan, who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam for long enough to get himself declared dead by the state department. Surprise, he came home, right after Susan married Frank. Now he's using Kitty Styles, a floozy blonde babe going to fat, to try and get his wife back. Poor Kitty thinks Allan likes her. These people are all on committees at the Woodbridge Country Club, They hate each other. This is the soapy that gained fame around last Christmas time by bumping off two of its leads, Jill Clayborne and her husband Hugh, a rich publisher. Apparently the plot got too thick even for the soap opera writers and some driftwood had to be cut. The fatal plane crash even shocked my wife. The housewives were really mad for about two weeks. Jill was a good friend of Amy and Sue. She probably didn't want to leave because a few weeks later she did a bit scene on Edge of Night and then took over the role of Leslie Norris on Guiding Light (remember?), The soap opera family charts have more lines than the Mafia's.

Anyway, Allan is trying to make Frank think Susan still has the hots for him. Kitty keeps running around in public yelling "Get your wife to keep her hands off my Allan" and stuff like that. This naturally upsets Frank. So he does what any good newspaperman would do. He sneaks around trying to find out what's up.

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