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Could you imagine Susan Seaforth Hayes as Stephanie Forrester? or how about John Aniston as Doug Williams? or Jane Eliot as the great Felicia Gallant?

Well it might have happened. Find out what stars auditioned for other roles or what roles were supposed to have been played by someone else.

  • Mary Kay Adams - auditioned for the role of Jessie Matthews on The Guiding Light
  • Timothy Adams - auditioned for Sean Bridges on Young & the Restless
  • Nancy Addison - originally auditioned for the role of Faith on Ryan's Hope
  • Laura Allen - auditioned for the role of Michelle Bauer on The Guiding Light
  • Laura Allen - auditioned for the role of Dr. Melanie McGiver on One Life To Live
  • John Aniston - auditioned for the role of Doug Williams on Days of Our Lives
  • Rod Arrants - auditioned for the role of Frank "Buzz" Cooper on The Guiding Light
  • Rod Arrants - auditioned for a role on As The World Turns in 1992
  • Nancy Barrett - auditiioned for the role of Victoria Winters on Dark Shadows
  • Les Brandt - auditioned for the role of Tony Viscardi on Young & the Restless
  • Jennifer Bransford - originally auditioned for the role of Reese on General Hospital
  • Tamara Braun - originally audtioned for the role of Sarah Webber on General Hospital
  • Tracy Bregman - auditioned for the role of Sammy Jo on Dynasty
  • Jason Brooks - originally auditioned for the role of Austin Reed on Days of Our Lives
  • Lisa Brown - originally auditioned for the role of Morgan Richards on The Guiding Light
  • Dylan Bruce - tested for the role of Phillip Kiriakis on Days of Our Lives during contract negotiations between the series and Jay Kenneth Johnson in 2008
  • Chris Bruno - auditioned for Sean Bridges on Young & the Restless
  • Rebecca Budig - auditioned for the role of Kelsey Jefferson on All My Children before accepting her GL role
  • Steve Burton - originally auditioned for the role of A. J. Quartermain on General Hospital
  • Judith Chapman - auditioned for the role of Pamela Barnes Ewing on Dallas and was an early contender
  • Chrystal Chappell - was wanted for the role of Dr. Paige Miller on One Life To Live, but the role eventually went to Alexandra Neil
  • Eddie Cibrian - auditioned for the role of Nicholas Newman on Young & the Restless, but lost it due to age and they created Matt Clark for him
  • Christie Clark - auditioned for the role of Victoria Newman on Young & the Restless when Heather Tom chose to leave
  • Christie Clark - auditioned for the role of Summer on General Hospital
  • Juanin Clay - was supposed to be part of the original cast of L. A. Law as a judge but was cut at the last minute
  • Bradley Cole - originally auditioned for the role of Edmund Winslow on The Guiding Light
  • Terri Colombino - originally auditioned for the role of Georgia on As The World Turns
  • Bert Convy - was an early choice for the role of Barnabas Collins on Dark Shadows
  • Kevin Costner - auditioned for the role of Jake Kositcheck on Days of Our Lives
  • Brock Cuchna - auditioned for the role of River on One Life To Live
  • Robert Culp - was set to take over as J. R. Ewing on Dallas but Larry Hagman decided to return in the 3rd season
  • Bryan Dattilo - was set to play Brandon Walsh on Beverly Hills 90210 until his real life sister dropped out of the project
  • Doris Day - was considered as a replacement for Barbara Bel Geddes as Ellie Ewing on Dallas (Donna Reed got the role)
  • Eric Dearborn - auditioned for the role of Jamal Woods on Port Charles
  • Kassie Wesley DePaiva - auditioned for the role of Amanda Cory Fowler on Another World between her stints on The Guiding Light and One Life To Live
  • Leonardo DiCaprio - almost got the role of Hobie on Baywatch; a role eventually won by Brandon Call
  • Michael Dietz - originally auditioned for the role of Dr. Chris Ramsey on Port Charles
  • Josh Duhon - tested for the role of Phillip Kiriakis on Days of Our Lives during contract negotiations between the series and Jay Kenneth Johnson in 2008
  • Jane Elliot - part of Felicia Gallant on Another World was created with her in mind, but she was unable to take the role
  • Linda Evans - was considered for the role of Pamela Barnes Ewing and Sue Ellen Shepherd Ewing on Dallas
  • Sandra Ferguson - was considered for the role of Lily when Martha Byrne was fired from ATWT
  • Frances Fisher - was approached by ABC to take over the role of Siobahn Ryan when Ann Gillespie departed the role
  • Robert Foxworth - approached to play J. R. Ewing on Dallas
  • Mary Frann - considered early on to play Sue Ellen Shepherd Ewing on Dallas
  • Carrie Genzel - auditioned for the role of Victoria Newman on Young & the Restless
  • Jenna Gering - almost became the new Carly on General Hosptial but Jennifer Bransford won the role
  • Zen Gesner - auditioned for Sean Bridges on Young & the Restless
  • Karl Giralamo - tested 3 times for Luke Snyder on As The World Turns
  • Ricky Paull Goldin - auditioned for the role of Tony Viscardi on Young & the Restless
  • Karen Lynn Gorney - originally auditioned for the role of Erica Kane on All My Children
  • Karen Lynn Gorney - mentioned as a possible Nicole Travis recast on The Edge of Night at one time
  • Deidre Hall - auditioned for the role of Krystle Carrington on Dynasty
  • Susan Haskell - was considered for the role of Lily when Martha Byrne was fired from ATWT
  • Susan Seaforth Hayes - was the original choice for the role of Stephanie Forrester on Bold & the Beautiful
  • Anne Heche - a role was created specifically for her on As The World Turns while she was still in high school but she turned the job down as she did not want to leave home at that time
  • Marilu Henner - was considered as a replacement for Victoria Principal on Dallas during some tense contract talks one season
  • Jon Hensley - tested for Another World before being cast as Brody Price on One Life To Live
  • Jon Hensley - was in negotiations with All My Children to play Jake Martin in 1996 when As The World Turns lured him to come back
  • Catherine Hickland - auditioned for the role of Tina Roberts on One Life To Live
  • Catherine Hickland - was reported to be considered heavily for the role of Krystal Carey on All My Children
  • Steve Kanaly - originally auditioned for the role of Bobby Ewing on Dallas
  • Liz Keifer - originally auditioned for Eve Guthrie on The Guiding Light
  • Ken Kercheval - originally auditioned for the role of Ray Krebbs on Dallas
  • Brian Kerwin - auditioned for the role of Clint Buchanan on One Life To Live but the role went to Jerry ver Dorn
  • Stephanie Kramer - of the crime drama Hunter was a strong contender to play Lucy Ewing on Dallas
  • Katherine Kelly Lang - originally auditioned for the role of Caroline on Bold & the Beautiful
  • Eva LaRue - turned down the role of Rosanna Cabot on ATWT to return to All My Children; the role ultimately went to AMC castmate Cady McClain
  • Christian Jules LeBlanc - auditioned for the role of Tad Martin on All My Children
  • Jack Lemmon - auditioned for and was narrowly beaten for the starring role of Tom Corbett in Tom Corbett, Space Cadet by Frankie Thomas
  • Judy Lewis - mentioned as a possible Nicole Travis recast on The Edge of Night at one time
  • Rita Lloyd - was considered for several roles on As The World Turns including Mrs. Eldridge but was considered too young. She eventually came on as Edwina Walsh.
  • Lisa Lociero - almost was cast as Lois when the role was recast; the role went to Lesli Kay
  • Eva Longoria auditioned for the role of Hannah Scott on General Hospital.
  • Susan Lucci - originally auditioned for the role of Tara Martin on All My Children
  • Randolph Mantooth - auditioned for the role of Clint Buchanan on One Life To Live, but role went to Jerry Ver Dorn
  • Juliana Margulies - auditioned for the role of Dr. Maria Santos on All My Children
  • Pamela Sue Martin - was considered as a replacement for Victoria Principal on Dallas during some tense contract talks one season
  • Beverlee McKinsey - the roles of the sisters, Mary & Jessica, were created by Susan Harris with Beverlee McKinsey in mind to play one of the roles
  • Daniel McVicar - originally auditioned for the role of Ridge Forrester on Bold & the Beautiful
  • Johnny Mesner - auditioned for Sean Bridges on Young & the Restless
  • Nolan North - auditioned for the role of Steven Lars Webber on General Hospital
  • J. Eddie Peck - auditioned for the role of A. C. Mallet on Guiding Light
  • Christopher Pennock - originally auditioned for the role of Philip Todd on Dark Shadows
  • Jon Prescott - tested for the role of Phillip Kiriakis on Days of Our Lives during contract negotiations between the series and Jay Kenneth Johnson in 2008
  • Erin Hershey Presley - auditioned for the role of Victoria Newman on Young & the Restless
  • Cynthia Preston - was a strong contender for the part of Cassie Winslow on The Guiding Light when Laura Wright left the show
  • George Reinholt - tested for several roles in the mid-90's but most casting directors were reluctant to hire him
  • Lisa Richards - auditioned for the role of Victoria Winters on Dark Shadows
  • Julia Roberts - auditioned for the role of Linda Warner on All My Children
  • Jada Rowland - was considered for the role of Faith on Ryan's Hope
  • Paul Satterfield - auditioned for the role of Eliot Freeman on All My Children
  • Stephen Schnetzer - auditioned for the role of Eliot Freeman on All My Children
  • Camilla Scott - auditioned for the role of Frankie Frame on Another World
  • Kathryn Leigh Scott - auditioned for the role of Victoria Winters on Dark Shadows
  • Erika Slezak - auditioned for the role of Mary Kennicott on All My Children
  • Jaclyn Smith - auditioned for the role of Victoria Winters on Dark Shadows when Alexandra Moltke left
  • Paul Anthony Stewart - originally auditioned for the role of Cooper Alden on Loving
  • Sharon Stone - auditioned for General Hospital in the late 1970's
  • Susan Sullivan - either tested or was considered for the role of Victoria Lord on One Life To Live before Gillian Spencer won the role
  • Michael Swan - auditioned for the role of Eliot Freeman on All My Children
  • David Tom - originally auditioned for the role of Joey Buchanan before being cast as Paul on One Live To Live
  • Christine Tudor - auditioned and won the role of Karen Wolek on One Life To Live when Judith Light left, but the producers decided at the last minute to write the character out of the show
  • Paul Michael Valley - auditioned for the role of A. C. Mallet on Guiding Light
  • Aaron Van Wagner - originally auditioned for the role of Shawn D. Brady on Days of Our Lives
  • Marcy Walker - originally auditioned for the role of Amanda, Liza Colby's friend, on All My Children
  • Victor Webster - originally auditioned for the role of Brandon Walker on Days of Our Lives
  • Mackenzie Westmore - originally auditioned for the role of Gwen on Passions
  • Sharon Wyatt - was asked to audtion for the role of Gloria Abbott on Young and the Restless when Joan Van Ark departed

****************************

Agnes Nixon / Don Hastings - almost both worked togheter on The Brighter Day; Rachel/Ada (AW) and Erica/Mona (BD) were originally intended to be characters on the show

Edited by Gilbert
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These are two more I remember reading/hearing about:

Lisa Locicero auditioned for the role of Ava on DAYS before it went to Tamara Braun.

Jason Gerhardt was up for a role on DAYS (I do believe it was Daniel before they cast Shawn Christian; He talked about it on one of those radio shows right after he was released from GH; he didn't mention a character name exactly but it sound like what became Daniel.)

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Really interesting topic!

I have a few more to add...

Kimberly Simms (ex-Mindy, GL) tested for Santa Barabara's recast Kelly Capwell (replacing Robin Wright's not-so-successful-successor, Kimberly MacArthur). The role went to Carrington Garland.

Ally Walker (Profiler) was set to replace Marcy Walker as Eden on SB when Marcy's contract negotiation broke down. The stalemate was quickly resolved, however, and the role of Andrea Bedford was created for Ally. (Trivia side note: A Martinez - AKA Cruz of Eden-and-Cruz supercouple fame - would years later play Ally's love interest on Profiler... and Ally's Profiler replacement, Jamie Luner, replaced Marcy in the role of Liza Colby on AMC.)

Brody Hutzler (GL, Days) audtioned to replace Nathan Fillion as Joey on OLTL. The role went to Don Jeffcoat.

Sarah Buxton (Sunset Beach) was being heavily lobbied by then-OLTL Executive Producer Gary Tomlin to revive the role of Tina Lord Roberts. But the network (and arguably viewers) couldn't see Buxton in the role and blocked the idea.

Susan Scannel (ex-Gabrielle Dubujak, RH; ex-Nicole Simpson, Dynasty) auditioned for the role of OLTL's Tina during a tense contract re-negotiation with Andrea Evans.

Cali Timmins (ex-Maggie Shelby, RH; ex-Paulina Cory, AW) auditioned for OLTL's Tina twice... losing out to eventual Tinas, Karen Witter and Krista Tesreau, respectively. (Tesreau was handed the role without an audition, by then OLTL-EP Susan Bedsow Horgan, whom Tesreau had worked with during her first run as Mindy on GL.) ETA: "Losing out" was at least partially a poor choice of words: Timmins technically didn't lose out to Witter, she just won the role of AW's Paulina before OLTL was ready to actually bring Tina back on-screen... though OLTL evidently didn't jump at offering her the role at that time.

It was down to the wire between Nancy Sorel (ex-Monique, Generations) and Lisa Peluso to replace (the late) Roya Megnot as Ava Rescott on Loving. After a number of screen tests, the role was given to Peluso.

Kristina Wagner, before playing GH's Felicia, tested for the role of Hillary Wilson (Tad's former wife / Damon's eventual mom) on AMC. The role went to Carmen Thomas.

Carmen Thomas tested for the role of Pru Shepherd (Rick Hyde's first love interest, before Ryan) on RH. The role went to Tracy Lin, who lasted less than a year before being written out. Thomas' RH audition led her straight to AMC.

In the mid-1980's, Noelle Beck (ex-Trisha, Loving; currently Lily, ATWT) and Yasmine Bleeth (ex-Ryan, RH) each tested for the other's roles at the time they were being introduced.

Alice Barret (ex-Frankie, AW) first tested for the role of Siobhann on RH. The role went to Barbara Blackburn.

Patricia Mauceri (ex-Carlotta, OLTL) auditioned for AMC's Erica Kane.

Robin Strasser (Dorian, OLTL) was in negotiations with GL to replace (the late) Beverlee McKinsey as Alexandra Spaulding. However, Strasser promptly informed her former colleagues at OLTL of this development and offered her availability. Dorian was then being played by Elaine Princi, who was just finishing her third year as Dorian - and in the middle of a contract renewal negotiation. OLTL abruptly withdrew and Princi's contract was not renewed. Strasser was offered her former role back, leaving GL in the dust. GL saw several actresses, but eventually chose Marj Dusay.

Edited by YurSoakinginit
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I can't see Eva LaRue as Rosanna. While she can play that cold bitchiness it's still odd to imagine her in that role. Cady was a better choice.

Christie Clark as Summer on GH? What a wretched role that was.

For a long time I've been fascinated by Frances Fisher playing a tough redheaded cop on EON and then Marg Helgenberger being a tough redheaded cop on RH. I guess they were tied together. They cast a Frances type. Lucky break for Marj, who has since gone on to a big career.

Sandra Ferguson as Lily seems like an odd fit, although she did play a teen princess on AW. Susan Haskell seems like a little better choice.

I don't think Jane Elliott would have been right for Felicia Gallant, and since she has left most of her soaps after a few years they were probably better off with Linda Dano, as Felicia and her friends basically helped carry the show through a lot of lean periods.

Did Carrie Genzel audition for Victoria after Heather Tom left in 2003 or after Heather Tom left in 1997? For some reason I thought it was 97.

Poor Nolan North. I would love to see him on a soap again, he's so cute and so funny. Scott Reeves is dull and leathery. I guess it pays to be pals with Steve Burton.

Hiring Tesreau without an audition was a mistake in this case.

Timmins would have been a much better Tina.

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Megan Rutherford auditioned to play Vicky/Marley when Jensen Buchanan left AW in 1994.

Hillary Bailey Smith auditioned to play Becky Lee Abbott on OLTL in 1979.

Phillip Brown was supposed to play Ben Warren on GL, but left very early on, and was replaced by Hunt Block.

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It was both times, the first time losing out to the actress that ended up on Port Charles.

I completely agree, Carl. I actually am curious to this day how it would have played out had Timmins been Tina, instead of Tesreau. Timmins always had that slinky, sultry, trouble-plagued factor that Tesreau just woefully lacked... not to mention the "girl from the wrong side of the tracks" vibe. Tesreau was purely "spoiled rich girl," - and Tina was supposed to be, at that point, both.

There are a few more I recall since my previous post:

Joanna Going (ex-Lisa, AW; Dark Shadows the primetime series) tested to replace Ava Haddad as OLTL's Cassie. Holly Gagnier (ex-Ivy, Days) got the part.

Melissa Claire Egan (Annie, AMC) in her days as a child actress, audtioned to replace Lacey Chabert (Party of Five; Mean Girls) as Bianca. The show chose Gina Gallagher.

Elizabeth Hendrickson (Chloe, Y&R; ex-Maggie, AMC) tested for GL's Michelle when Joie Lenz (One Tree Hill) exited. (Lenz replaced Rebecca Budig two years earlier). Hendrickson lost out to Nancy St. Alban.

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Andrea is scheming again. “Nobody can match Andrea in the scheming department,” a CBS plot summary says. I do see that.) I simply don’t understand “Search for Tomorrow” now. Some characters seem to be buying a house. My second-happiest moment on a soap was a mistake. Several years ago, a girl named Rachel had, by the most unscrupulous means, ensnared Russ Matthews, son of one of the most decent families on “Another World.” They married. Many months later, a very rich self-made young man called Steven Frame came into town and fell in love with Russ’s sister, Alice. Alice Matthews loved Steven, too, but so did Rachel (by this time Mrs. Russ Matthews), in her own unscrupulous way. Rachel seduced Steve. She became pregnant, and claimed the child was Steve’s. Her husband, Russ, was naturally upset, as was his sister, Alice, who immediately broke it off with Steve. For several months I stopped watching. Then one recent soap afternoon (recent in soap terms, —that is, around July), when I was on the telephone, I had “Another World” on, with the sound off. The scene was a christening. The characters were Lenore and Walter Curtin (who had a difficult history of their own) , a chaplain, a baby, Alice, and Steve. I thought —I truly hoped—that Alice and Steve had been reconciled and married along the way and that the child was theirs. All wrong. The baby was Lenore and Walter’s although Walter had grave doubts at this time. Alice and Steve were the godparents. Since then, Alice and Steve have really married. I missed that scene, but they have passed their honeymoon, and so I know. Russ and Rachel have divorced. Rachel has remarried —a young man whose business is now being financed by Steven Frame. Russ is engaged to Rachel’s new husband’s sister. Or he was, until a few weeks ago. People have to keep meeting at parties, where there are so many problems about previous marriages and affairs and present babies. Now Rachel’s husband has been in a coma and has made sordid revelations about his past. Walter Curtin has vanished, under mysterious circumstances. Lenore has received, by messenger, a scarf. Walter has confessed by phone to the murder, in a jealous rage. of Steve’s secretary’s former husband, whom he suspected of having slept with his (Walter’s) wife, Lenore. Most recently—in fact tomorrow, as I write this—Walter has died. But om the whole such sudden acceleration of the plot are better on quick, episodic soaps, like “Edge of Night”, which are akin to close, formed, Aristotelian thrillers, which I never watch. There are moments when some aesthetic things, all art set aside are simply so. People know it, without any impulse or attempt to argue: Something is on. Such a moment, years back, protracted over many months, was the Moon Maid episode in the “Dick Tracy” comic strip. Long before the slogan “Black is beautiful” appeared in and receded from the news, longer before the astronauts reached the moon, Dick Tracy’s son, Junior, returned from the moon with Moon Maid, pleaded with her not to remove her horns or try to conceal them with a beehive hairdo, married her, and delighted in their little baby’s little horns. The word would not even be miscegenation now. Junior was light years beyond the country’s perception of its race relations problems then. The McCarthy time of “Pogo” was less golden. It was one of those finest hours that “Peanuts,” in another key, has sustained over many years with genius consistency. Something was touched. The same was true for years of the talk shows on television. They were on. They meant something. Now, regardless of Nielsen ratings, watchers, they are off. One knows it. They simply do not matter in the sense they did. It is also true, oddly enough, of television coverage of the news. It had its years and faces. Then it had the instant thing it was perfectly designed for: the shooting through the head of a man by the chief of Saigon’s national police; the moon landing. Then it lost its purchase on events and, no matter how many people watched it, it faded. The anchorman would mention an event, switch to the local correspondent, who would mention it again, then interview its source, who would mention in in his own idiom. No depth, no time, and lots of waste of time. McLuhanism was wrong. The mind needs print. Perhaps the news as captured by TV will matter again. Maybe tomorrow. The soap operas, which have endured as long as anything in television, have their own rhythms, fade, recur. It was on “Another World”, some years ago that there was a moment— or, rather, nearly a half hour—of dramatic brilliance. It was just after Rachel, still married then to Russ, had slept with Steve and spent a weekend searching for her father. Russ naturally knew that she had been away, but not where or with whom. Suddenly Russ insisted that he and Rachel pay a call that night on everyone they knew in town—to keep up appearances. Rachel resisted, in her usual sulky way, and then gave in. They made the tour. It was a masterpiece of compression. Russ and Rachel acted out their drama in such a way (by concealing it, and pretending that all was well) that all the other dramas on the program—and there were many, and of long standing— were called to mind, as though the audience were going through an Andrea flashback on the witness stand. They went to visit, for example, Walter Curtin and Lenore. Walter Curtin had been the prosecutor, several years before, in a case in which Missy Fargo was mistakenly convicted of the murder of her husband, Dan. She mad married Danny Fargo, in the first place, because Liz Matthews (another unrelenting villainess) had tried to prevent the love match of Missy and Lee’s son, Bill. Liz, the mother, had decided at the time that her son Bill should marry Lenore (now Curtin but then single and in love with Bill.) Walter, the prosecutor, and Lenore all had an interest in seeing Missy go to prison. Several years later, Missy was sprung and married Bill. Then Walter, anyhow, repentant, and in love, married Lenore. Liz, the villainess, was hysterically distressed, but she had other lives to wreck, including a long-lost daughter’s, and she did. Russ and Rachel, in their tour, met others, —-several generations of the Randolph family, for example, and Rachel’s mother, Ada, of humble origins but of major significance in solving the Missy case. What had happened since Missy’s trial (Can I go on with this?) was an interminable riveting episode in which Lee Randolph, a daughter of the Randolphs (who are related to the Matthewses by innumerable ties of blood and misunderstanding), being in love with Sam Lucas, a relative of the humble Ada’s, had, under the influence of LSD, killed someone, whose name I don’t remember, of the criminal element. This business of not remembering has an importance of its own, although insanity has replaced amnesia as the soaps operas’ most common infirmity. The files of the soaps are so sketchy that their history is almost irretrievable. “Laura comforts Susan, and Scott is surprised by a statement from Julie,” for example, is NBC’s plot note for the March 13, 1970, “Days of our Lives”. And “Nick and Althea did make it to the Powers apartment, and the dinner did not burn” was NBC’s summary of two weeks on “The Doctors” during the AFTRA strike of 1967. The only true archivists of the whole history of a soap are the perpetual watchers, the loyal audience, whom, out of a truly decent sense of tradition and constancy, the ever-changing writers try not to betray. This requires careful and intuitive examination of those files, and an attempt to avoid anything that might violate the truth of the story as it existed before a given writer’s time. Only the audience knows, and yet there are so many Scotts and Steves and Lees on various programs that even the most loyal audience can get mixed up. Anyway, Sam Lucas took the blame for Lee Randolph’s having murdered, under LSD, a thug. Everyone was acquitted in the end. Of course, there is no end. But, Lee, thinking that LSD had impaired her chromosomes, kept far away from Sam, who misunderstood her motives as having to do with the milieu from which he came. Sam Lucas married a girl named Lahoma, an earthy character who was meant to appear only briefly in the plot but who was so good she had to stay. Lee Randolph eventually killed herself. Sam, Lahoma, Missy, (now widowed again) and Missy’s baby by Danny Fargo have all moved to “Somerset.” Strangely, none of the catastrophes on soaps —and nearly every soap event is a catastrophe— are set up with much sentiment. I do not think the audience ever cries, except at Christmas, anniversaries, and other holidays, all of which are celebrated on their proper day. The celebrations are bleak enough, but it is the purest gloom to find oneself on December 25 or January 1 watching a soap or, if the football games are on, deprived of one. The other days are just alterations of being miserable and being bored, or both, and knowing that the characters are the same. Well, there were Russ and Rachel, visiting all these people on “Another World”. To someone who had not been watching, it did all come back. It is not necessary technically to *watch* Since most of the characters address each other incessantly by name, one can catch it all from another room, like radio. On the other hand, one needn’t listen either. I would have found out about my mistake about the christening soon enough. There are the most extravagant visual and aural flashbacks, ranging from “Have I told you what Russ said to me last night?” (answer:”Well, Russ did tell me”: both characters retell it anyway) to visual flashbacks that would have done credit to the cinema. In the case of the temporarily misunderstood christening, it was my telephone that had turned the set on with the sound off. The ring of a telephone is often on the same frequency as the remote control device that operates some television sets; many households have this strange mechanical rapport. A pin dropped on a table will sometimes do it, or the clicking of a belt buckle. One things one is alone. and suddenly the room is full of voices, or faces, or both, from “Another World”. Another moment, this one from “Days of our Lives.” It takes, as the whole addiction does, some bearing with Mickey Horton we know —though he does not —is infertile. Tom Horton , Mickey’s brother, returned several years ago from Korea, face changed, memory gone. His memory came back. About three years ago, Bill Horton, another brother, made pregnant Mickey’s wife, Laura, a psychiatrist. Tom Horton, before he went to Korea, had a ghastly wife, extremely ghastly. When his memory returned, she returned also. Dr. Horton, the father of Tom, Mickey and Bill knows—as Bill found out by accident, as Laura knows, as we have always known—that Laura’s offspring cannot be her husband Mickey’s. Mickey does not know. Last year, there occurred the following episode: Tom’s ghastly wife was at the senior Hortons’, trying to be nice. The senior Hortons of “Days of our Lives,” like the senior Randolphs and Matthewses of “Another World,” or the Tates of “Search for Tomorrow,” are technically known by soap writers as “tentpole characters.” on which the tragedies are raised. Anyway, as she set the table for dinner that evening at the senior Hortons’, Tom’s ghastly wife was singing. The elder Mrs. Horton said that she had a lovely voice, that she ought to make a professional thing of it. The ghastly wife went directly to Dr. Horton’s study and made a tape recording of her singing voice in song. Later that evening, Dr. Horton had a chat with his daughter-in-law Laura about her child, her husband’s infertility, and her brother-in-law’s fatherhood. The tape recorder was still on. Tom’s ghastly wife, trying later to recapture her own singing voice on tape, heard all the rest. It was unbearable. Months of blackmail, we all knew. It might have been a lifelong downer. I turned off for several years. The present moment—since July, I mean—as far as I can tell, is this. The tape incident seems nearly over. Mickey Horton, however, was believed by everyone. including himself, to have made pregnant a girl other than his wife. Even I knew this was impossible, unless Mickey’s medical tests had been in error—in which case he might be the father of Laura’s baby after all—or unless the writers, and Laura and her father-in-law, had forgotten the whole thing. When Mickey’s girl’s baby was born, it did turn out through blood tests, that the baby could not have been Mickey’s. Of course not. Anybody who had watched even five days two years ago knew that. Meanwhile, a friend of the Horton family, Susan, who had a terrible life, has been raped in the park, and is being treated by Laura, the psychiatrist. Well. One thing about a work of art is that it ends. One may wish to know what happens after the last page of “Pride and Prejudice.” Some writers give signs of wishing the reader to abide with a given novel; one of the century’s great prose works, after all, ends in such a way that the reader is obliged to begin again. But narrative time in art is closed. The soaps, although they have their own formal limitations (how many times, for example, a major character is required by contract to appear each week on-screen) are eternal and free. One can have a heart attack during a performance of “King Lear” or fall in love listening to “Mozart” but the quotidian, running-right-along-side-life quality of soaps means that whole audiences can grow up, marry, breed, divorce, leave a mark on history, and die while a single program is still on the air. Aristotle would not have cared for it. The soaps can, and sometimes do, adopt the conventional thriller form, which has a different sort of dialect altogether: the solvers, the classicists who demand a beginning, a middle and an end. There was a superb many-month conventional kidnapping episode on “The Doctors,” once, when a trustee of the hospital abducted a nurse, under enthralling circumstances, and the only one who gradually caught on was the nurse’s roommate, Carolee Simpson, a character who, like “Another World”s Lahoma was meant to stay jut briefly but has ever been so good that she is essential to the plot—particularly in the recent matter of Dr. Allison. There was also a young lady physical therapist who thought herself widowed in the Six Day War (her husband had been a correspondent in the Middle East) and who fell in love with the son of the chief of all the doctors. The son was in love with her. Then it turned out that an Israeli girl had been nursing a blind American. He was rude to her for ages. She was kind to him. He turned out, after months, to be the lady therapist’s thought-dead husband, and things were resolved. Such episodes do occur. But they are rare. They are too self-contained. Now the wife of the chief of all the doctors, having been kidnapped and returned some months ago, thinks she is going mad. Her paternal uncle was a schizophrenic in his time. There does not seem to be a single sense in which soap operas can be construed as an escapist form. There is unhappiness enough and time to occupy a real lifetime of afternoons. There is no release: not the scream, shudder, and return to real life that some people get from horror films; not the anxiety, violence, and satisfactory conclusion of detective, spy, or cowboy shows; certainly not the laughing chapters of fantasy home, like “Lucy,” “Bachelor Father,” or the “Mothers-in-law,” There is no escape except, either, from political realities. The allegations that the soaps avoid the topical are simply in error: Vietnam, psychosis, poverty, class, and generational problems—all are there. One thing that soap operas do not do is flinch. They simply bring things home, not as issues but as part of the manic-depressive cycle of the television set. And what they bring home is the most steady, open-ended sadness to be found outside life itself. No one can look forward to a soap unless he looks forward to the day, in which case he is not likely to be a watcher of soaps at all. Watchers resign themselves. There are seventeen soaps on television now [1972], some obviously less good than others ( a soap that fails is not simply dropped from the air; it is, for the audience’s sake, quickly wrapped up: The hero, for example is run over by a truck), and in their uncompromisingly funereal misery there is obviously some sort of key. Most sentimental or suspense forms —dog, horse, or spy stories, for instance—have a plotted curve. Things are briefly fine, then they’re down for a long time, then they rise for a brief finale. There is some reward. The soap line goes along almost straight, though inextricably tangled, down. The soaps are probably more true to the life of their own audience than they appear to be; certainly they are truer in pace, in content, and in subjects of concern than any other kind of television is. Not that there is much amnesia or that much insanity out here. Not that each woman’s secret fear, or hope, is that she is bearing the child of inappropriate member of her family. But the despair, the treachery, the being trapped in a community with people whom one hates and who mean one ill, the secrets one cannot expose—except once or twice — in the course of years when changes and revelations occur in sudden jumps: These must be the days of a lot of lives. This is not the evening’s entertainment, which one watches, presumably, with members of the family; not the shared family situation comedies, which (with the important exception of “All in the Family”) are comfortable distortions of what family life is like. Soap operas are watched in solitude. This is the daytime world of the Randolphs, the Matthewses, the Hortons, the Tates —a daily one-way encounter group, a mirror, an eavesdropping or the apparent depression of being just folks for more than twenty years. It is even entering the commercials now—the utter joylessness. There are still the cheery, inane commercials with white tornadoes and whiter wash. But there are beginning to be hopeless underdogs; unpretty, sarcastic Madge, who, as a manicurist, deals with actors who look as though they knew about life in cold-water flats. the emphasis on cold-water products. The view of life as a bitter, sad, dangerous ordeal, with a few seconds reprieve before the next long jolt to decent souls, cannot be confined to one side of the screen. Not on seventeen daytime serials. When, for millions, a credible villain is a suicide, dead, and well out of it. And, a hero is a man compelled to live his drama out, the daylight view of what life is like is far less sunny on television, anyway, than the view by night.
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