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  • Member

Sydney Scott was played by Deborah Steinberg Solomon.She had previously had a 4 yr run on ATWT as Amanda Holmes,who was a major character during that time.However,Sydney was a suporting character who was dropped sometime in 71.

Linc was played by James Karen,who had previously been on ATWT as Susan's father.He was 47 at the time.Paul Dumont took over in 1970 until 71

Then Nicholas Pryor in 71,who was 36,so the character was de-aged, Linc was dropped and returned in 74 played by Peter White who at the time was 37.

Ann had already been played by Diane De Vegh.I read that she only appeared once. Is that true? Joanna Miles took over and then Judith assumed the role in 71.

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  • Member

As always, Paul, thanks so much for your information! I know most of the minor supporting characters on AMC from the 80s on, but the ones from particularly the early 70s are largely a mystery, unless they appear in a random episode or a summary. Solomon seems quite appealing though (I wonder if that boutique later became Myrtle's?)

  • Member

Yeah, that's definitely Myrtle's boutique. I can't tell if it's the same set, though. I don't remember the sequence of events, but somehow it went from being Ann's to being Myrtle's to being Ellen's to being Myrtle's again.

  • Member

Thank you for the information on Sydney. I'm surprised that she didn't stay in Anne's life, as AMC seemed to keep supporting characters for quite a long time.

AMC did seem to have a lot of problems finding the right actors to play the Tylers, with the notable exceptions of Charles and Phoebe. The idea is often that Chuck was not well cast until Richard van Vleet, and he didn't take over until about 3-5 years after the show started.

  • Member

Unfortunately, Sydney's abusive husband found her and their four children and demanded she come back home lest she wanted never to see their kids - Braeden, Ryan, Erin and Jonathan - again.

:P

  • Member

This has about a minute, towards the end of the clip, from a mid-1991 episode. Tim and Harold finding someone in a tunnel (?). Not sure of this story.

That's Natalie in the well.

  • Member

LMAO, I totally thought she was talkign about Cindy Chandler at first. I was like, WTF does she have to do with anything?

  • Member

That reminds me of how on OLTL, Michael Malone, I think, refused to have a "good" homophobe to balance out the characters who were spewing anti-gay trash.

In this story, I think it works that they had Tom, who was pro-life, but not an extremist, like the people in those credits.

This story is probably even more timely now than it was in 1994, but no soap would ever go near it today.

  • Member

And therein lies the difference between Michael Malone and Agnes Nixon. Nixon would have allowed all sides to have their say.

In this story, I think it works that they had Tom, who was pro-life, but not an extremist, like the people in those credits.

Tom was a devout Catholic whose faith was important to him. That was one facet to his character that I always appreciated.

  • Member

I thought the Billy Douglas story worked well with the exception of Clint's bile. That felt like an agenda and a bad stereotype and was very unfair to Clint (because it wasn't about him "learning" - as it was with noble-homophobe Sloan - it was about him being an a$$). Unfortunately it seems like most other soap stories that try to deal with the issue often go overboard with cartoon homophobes, when in real life, "nice" people are often the most prejudiced.

I always wonder what it was that took AMC from having genuinely good characters, like Tom, to having the self-righteous, harsh, unforgiving "good" characters, like the latter day Martins. That was one of the main things that drove me away from AMC in the late 90's.

Edited by CarlD2

  • Member
I always wonder what it was that took AMC from having genuinely good characters to having the self-righteous, harsh, unforgiving "good" characters, like the latter day Martins.

I blame the network's sudden inability to trust its audience with human nuances and complexities.

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