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One Life to Live Tribute Thread

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On 2/25/2026 at 10:57 AM, DRW50 said:

That is very true. You still have some of those strays but the structure of the show moves more and more away from them. By the end of Rauch's run that aspect is reduced to the likes of DuAnn and Lee Ann and that redheaded girl Danny Wolek rescued - Lettie Jean or Laura Jean or whatever her name was.

The community of broken people around the late '70s and early '80s is so affecting to watch and so unique. I was very moved by the scene in the 1980 episode which appeared last year where Karen was holding a weeping Edwina in her arms. That sense of reality, fragility, and empathy is just something you don't really get on soaps now and you rarely have for a very long time.

On 2/25/2026 at 11:57 AM, Khan said:

I think the best way to differentiate AMC and OLTL would be like this: on AMC, Foxy's is a joint with trashy waitresses in skimpy outfits that's SO sleazy, it's in a different town (one which Pine Valley residents never trek to unless they're on the run, suffering from amnesia, or looking for someone who's on the run or suffering from amnesia). But, on OLTL, it's in the heart of Llanview, down the street from the hospital; and it's frequented even by the town's most well-respected citizens (more so than the town's most elegant restaurant) with nary an eye being blinked by anyone.

I was actually rewatching some of the 1975-1976 stuff with Matt/Dorian a week ago, and it's funny, I've always beat up on OLTL for going in and out various identities over its run, but it really dawned on me how that "street urchins trying to make good" current stayed present in some form or another all the way through the end. In a very vague way, Matt and Dorian hanging around, plotting schemes, and rolling eyes at one another low-key reminded me of Dorian and David decades later. It's almost a riff on the haves/have-nots trope.

When you're lucky enough to come across AMC from the late 70s or early 80s, the episode almost always starts off with a sense of warmth, happiness, comfort, etc. Myrtle's dusting fixtures at the Boutique, Kate's drying her hands in the middle of cooking, etc. OLTL starts right off with the drama, tension, characters who look like they're about to sht themselves because they're a breath away from getting caught up. And both shows worked beautifully. When soaps really leaned into their individual vibes, there was truly nothing better.

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50 minutes ago, All My Shadows said:

When you're lucky enough to come across AMC from the late 70s or early 80s, the episode almost always starts off with a sense of warmth, happiness, comfort, etc. Myrtle's dusting fixtures at the Boutique, Kate's drying her hands in the middle of cooking, etc. OLTL starts right off with the drama, tension, characters who look like they're about to sht themselves because they're a breath away from getting caught up. And both shows worked beautifully. When soaps really leaned into their individual vibes, there was truly nothing better.

True! And it's remarkable to me, too, how Agnes Nixon set the tone for both shows, despite their contrasting vibes. It's almost as if AMC represented the "Victoria Lord" side of her personality, while OLTL represented the "Niki Smith" side. (Which, I guess, means that LOVING was her "Jean Randolph" showing out, lol?)

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6 minutes ago, Khan said:

True! And it's remarkable to me, too, how Agnes Nixon set the tone for both shows, despite their contrasting vibes. It's almost as if AMC represented the "Victoria Lord" side of her personality, while OLTL represented the "Niki Smith" side. (Which, I guess, means that LOVING was her "Jean Randolph" showing out, lol?)

Loving did end on a "what if Viki Lord had slaughtered her entire family?" pastiche, so you aren't wrong. Some mix of Jean and Tori.

(I know Agnes had nothing to do with that story but it would have been a natural conclusion for how far they took Viki compared to the '00s Niki hijinks).

Edited by DRW50

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1 minute ago, DRW50 said:

Loving did end on a "what if Viki Lord had slaughtered her entire family?" pastiche, so you aren't wrong.

(I know Agnes had nothing to do with that story but it would have been a natural conclusion for how far they took Viki compared to the '00s Niki hijinks).

Well, when you put it that way, lol.

Continuing with the analogies: which personality does THE CITY represent? The "Tommy" side, or the "Tori," lol?

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2 minutes ago, Khan said:

Well, when you put it that way, lol.

Continuing with the analogies: which personality does THE CITY represent? The "Tommy" side, or the "Tori," lol?

I would say a mix of '90s Niki and Tommy, as Niki would get to have fun with hip young singles like herself and Tommy would get to randomly kill people.

(if Ron had kept writing OLTL I imagine Molly "happy now?" Malone would have been another of Viki's kids)

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22 hours ago, DRW50 said:

(if Ron had kept writing OLTL I imagine Molly "happy now?" Malone would have been another of Viki's kids)

Melissa Dye did in fact appear in 2003 as a Dorian 'soundalike' who Mitch used to lure Viki into a trap! (With Robin overdubbing Dye: "Viki, come to the church.") What a weird era.

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14 minutes ago, Vee said:

Melissa Dye did in fact appear in 2003 as a Dorian 'soundalike' who Mitch used to lure Viki into a trap! (With Robin overdubbing Dye: "Viki, come to the church.") What a weird era.

Thanks. I totally forgot...I guess someone at ABC Daytime was doing her a solid.

I have never really understood when soaps do that type of gimmick but I'd take her over Y&R hiring Rich Little for that purpose. (today a character would just use AI, which is depressing)

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Dec. 1991. Luna's so annoying-- hate her. I'm guessing she doesn't improve any. The mini arc with the circus musical was cute, even if it was just time-filler. Blair is very likeable, going to hate to see when she's "whitewashed," as she stands out more this way. Cassie's so dull that I see they're making her a little cray cray to make things interesting. Bo sure knows how to pick 'em.

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I can't remember if this was posted before or not. A 1973 TV movie produced by Dan Curtis and written and directed by various Dark Shadows alum (Addison Powell is also in the cast). There are music cues from The Doctors and Strange Paradise, and a slew of past and future soap names, the most famous being Susan Sarandon.

The star is the divine Pamela Payton Wright, future Addie Cramer, in one of the biggest showcases I've seen for her.

The Haunting of Rosalind 1973

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2 hours ago, Spoon said:

Luna's so annoying-- hate her.

Welcome to the club, lol.

  • Member
1 hour ago, DRW50 said:

I can't remember if this was posted before or not. A 1973 TV movie produced by Dan Curtis and written and directed by various Dark Shadows alum (Addison Powell is also in the cast). There are music cues from The Doctors and Strange Paradise, and a slew of past and future soap names, the most famous being Susan Sarandon.

The star is the divine Pamela Payton Wright, future Addie Cramer, in one of the biggest showcases I've seen for her.

The Haunting of Rosalind 1973

I had no idea this existed, and I know a lot of DCP stuff. Dan, Susan Sarandon and Pamela?? Wow. Thanks.

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9 minutes ago, Vee said:

I had no idea this existed, and I know a lot of DCP stuff. Dan, Susan Sarandon and Pamela?? Wow. Thanks.

As it turns out this doesn't seem to have been from Dan - apologies there.

  • Member

Buffalo Courier Express Sunday June 17 1973

Looks like Melinda #1 was her only soap role although she continued acting into the 90's.

PATRICIA Pearcy is learning to be a day person. A strawberry blonde actress with delicate features, who graduated magna cum laude from the University of Texas, Miss Pearcy plays the recently created role of Melinda Cramer on the ABC television network's daytime drama, "One Life to Live." As a product of repertory theatre that took her to Broadway, she explained: "I was a night person before because my whole life was geared to the 8 p.m. performance as the high point of the day. But now it's eight o'clock in the morning."

That's the time the hectic daily production schedule begins on "One Life to Live." The series, which was nominated for an Emmy award for outstanding achievement in daytime drama, is telecast Mondays through Fridays. Miss Pearcy's new role also marks her debut in television. "NOW I'm having to learn a whole different technique," she explained. "The crew and my fellow actors are just fantastic, though 'They help me a great deal. After receiving a bachelor of fine arts degree with honors in only three years, Miss Pearcy acted in the professional company of the Dallas Theatre Center, At the same time, she started to earn her master's degree through Trinity University San 'Antonio. Her graduate studies were halted, however, when she won the opportunity through auditions to Join the repertory company of the Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven under Arvin Brown as artistic director. There Miss Pearcy appeared in the American premieres of Maxim Gorki's "Yegor Bullchoff" and David Storey's "The Contractor," and the world premiere of Robert Anderson's "Solitaire, Double Solitaire," in a production that moved to Broadway. She also toured with Shelley Winters in "The Effects of Gamma Rays on Man-in-theMoon Marigolds," before joining the cast of "One Life to Live," which is produced in New York.

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