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One Life to Live

ONE LIFE TO LIVE

  • July 15, 1968 - January 13, 2012 on ABC

  • April 29 - August 19, 2013 on Hulu

One Life to Live Tribute Thread

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  • Member
On 6/10/2026 at 12:36 PM, janea4old said:

Judith Light almost-50-year career retrospective,
June 9, 2026. (what a goddess!)
This is really great and worth watching the whole thing.

Thanks for posting. Absolutely love her.

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  • vetsoapfan
    vetsoapfan

    I watched OLTL religiously from 1968 to 1983. I find it amusing (well, baffling, really) that complaints about the writing would arise "en masse" about Gordon Russell. From 1968-72, with Agnes Nixon a

  • IIRC Van Devere once said she only did OLTL to make money for her downtown theater company or something. She has a very colorful history both as Mrs. George C. Scott (who usually insisted on her being

  • Paul Raven
    Paul Raven

    Enid Rudd was an actress turned playwright. Enid (Pulver) Rudd 86 years old, passed away on August 7, 2015 in Jensen Beach, Florida, her second home for over 40 years. Enid (Pulver) Rudd was an accomp

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  • Member

TV/Radio & Cable Week, Aug, 23, 1981

This actor's in the eye of the storm By VALERIE DAVISON

Actor Michael Storm who plays Dr. Larry Wolek on ABCs highly rated soap, "One Life to Live, 2 p.m. weekdays is very much like the character be portrays - straightforward, ingenuous, solid as a rock - and much more. He is an intelligent, honest man with a facility for putting others at ease, and an actor who is proud of and dedicated to his profession. Does he see a lot of himself in Larry Wolek? "Well, it's hard not to," he says seriously. "I've been doing it for 13 years and many of the acting choices I make are made on the basis of 'What would I do?' Sometimes, though, it's wrong to impose Michael's standards on Larry's performance."

Nor have many of Michael's talents been imposed on Larry. It's difficult to imagine the conservative, almost square Dr. Wolek painting, playing the guitar and writing songs, or being an avid sportsman. Storm, on the other hand, was a fine arts major in college, supported himself by playing the guitar and writing songs, and was a member of "The Good Times Singers," who appeared on the Andy Williams show. He has obviously taken a pass at just about every sport ever invented, his current fascination being "wind surfing," which he describes euphorically as "the new love of my life." Storm and the other love of his life - his wife Sally - live in Dobbs Ferry with their two children,. Maggie, 7, and Jason, 11.

Back in the early '70s, they were living in Manhattan's upper West Side, where, be remembers that, "It meant that every time Jason wanted to go to the park, one of us bad to get into the elevator with him, go over to the park with him, sit with him among the broken beer bottles and the drunks. Furthermore, the cost of putting him in nursery school was phenomenal." When they began to consider leaving the city, someone recommended Dobbs Ferry. "I liked the sound of it," he laughs. "It Just had a neat ring to it. I really, really love it up there. It's very much like California. Sally and I are both from California, and we feel very much at home."

It was Michael's brother James who lured the Storms to the East Coast Curiously enough, it was James (also an actor) who actually originated the role of Larry Wolek when the serial began in 1968. Preparing to leave the show, James called his brother in California and asked him if be would like to audition for the part "The studios just weren't hiring new actors," Michael recalls, I had spent an awful lot of time learning my craft, but couldn't buy a job. So, on a Sunday, I decided to go back to college and get my master's degree in painting. By Tuesday my brother had called. That taught me that the minute I start planning things, forget it It goes in some other direction."

The direction Storm's life took in 1968 would appear to be a happy one. Some actors are uncomfortable with and sometimes chagrined by the intense exposure of the soap opera medium, and that they as actors are so identified with a particular character. But not this actor. "That's how people make contact with us," be says warmly of the public who frequently recognize him. "They approach us in character. That's what we're known as. They know Larry. They relate to Larry. My face comes into people's bouses. I'm not at all offended by it " What does offend biro, however, is the attitude (ostensibly) held by many that the soap opera medium is something less than an art form, and that if you do, indeed, watch soaps you should not admit it in sophisticated circles. "Well, let me tell you right now that that could not be farther from the truth!" he states emphatically, his voice rising. "Let me tell you, when you cross this country, as I have, and stop in Moline, Illinois, or St. Louis, or Florida or .Arizona — or France or the Carribean or Mexico — and people come up to you, with genuine happiness in their hearts, and say how pleased they are to see you, how happy you make the m feel...well, I'm tellin' you, it is the biggest thing since sliced bread. Not just our show. Soap operas. Daytime serials. Whatever name you want to put to them."

Nor does be buy the theory that only women watch daytime dramas. "I wouldn't be surprised if we have more men than women," be says emphatically. "I once picked up my sailboard at the air freight office at the airport and there were the Teamsters with their cigars — young guys — And they'd say 'Hey, aren't you Larry Wolek? Oh, My god!' And they're stopping everything and calling their girlfriends and wives. Tough macho guys, baseball players, football players, golfers, dancers - you name it .They watch."

  • Member

It says a lot when people forget that it was Paul Tulley, and NOT James Storm, who originated the role of Larry Wolek on OLTL, lol.

  • Member

From reading the back pages, and seeing several episodes from 1975 to 1977... the one thing I noticed in the 76/77 episodes was a lot of dragging in regards to baby Kevin being kidnapped and Cathy being in a hospital for what seemed like weeks. It seems like the show was on a hamster wheel in regards to that story though I thought that Jennifer Harmon was a good recast for Cathy in terms of looks... though Jennifer seemed bit softer and less strident then Dorrie had been as Cathy. It is odd that the fiesty Cathy of the fall of 1975 was the clingy delusional Cathy of spring 1977.

  • Member
Just now, Soaplovers said:

From reading the back pages, and seeing several episodes from 1975 to 1977... the one thing I noticed in the 76/77 episodes was a lot of dragging in regards to baby Kevin being kidnapped and Cathy being in a hospital for what seemed like weeks. It seems like the show was on a hamster wheel in regards to that story though I thought that Jennifer Harmon was a good recast for Cathy in terms of looks... though Jennifer seemed bit softer and less strident then Dorrie had been as Cathy. It is odd that the fiesty Cathy of the fall of 1975 was the clingy delusional Cathy of spring 1977.

When I watched some of those I had the same feeling. The story is dreary and also the only real purpose Viki has when she should have been at the center of the show. If Dorian had succeeded in stealing Joe that might have been more interesting, but once Nancy Pinkerton was fired that also wouldn't have been compelling.

  • Member
1 hour ago, Khan said:

It says a lot when people forget that it was Paul Tulley, and NOT James Storm, who originated the role of Larry Wolek on OLTL, lol.

Poor Paul Tulley is easy to forget. He played a forgettable character on AW a few years later. Scott Bradley. I believe he was a recast.

  • Member

No Y&R fan will forget Paul as Edward, who stalked Casey, then Nikki, before blowing himself up.

  • Member

I shouldn't be so mean. He wasn't given much of a chance on AW. At one point he looked like a decent alternative for Gwen.

I was aware of his time on YR but wasn't a fan then.

  • Member
7 hours ago, Soaplovers said:

From reading the back pages, and seeing several episodes from 1975 to 1977... the one thing I noticed in the 76/77 episodes was a lot of dragging in regards to baby Kevin being kidnapped and Cathy being in a hospital for what seemed like weeks. It seems like the show was on a hamster wheel in regards to that story though I thought that Jennifer Harmon was a good recast for Cathy in terms of looks... though Jennifer seemed bit softer and less strident then Dorrie had been as Cathy. It is odd that the fiesty Cathy of the fall of 1975 was the clingy delusional Cathy of spring 1977.

I think you're right about the kidnapping story, but I admit i LOVE the Cathy in the hospital scenes that we've seen (maybe I wouldn't if I had to watch them daily for weeks)--the almost Gothic feeling is just my kind of thing.

I know we often say it but it's easy to forget--partly due to lack of footage--just how much Cathy was one of the main characters in the show for much of the 70s (and of course we see young Cathy on that one 1969 episode...) (Looking at the 1967 All My Children bible I'm reminded that Nixon originally intended Joe Martin and family to be Joe Craig--I guess she poached the name for OLTL)

  • Member

I think Cathy's fate may have been sealed when Robin Strasser passed on the part. We know Agnes wanted her to take over and reignite the popular AW triangle with her, George Reinholt and Jacquie Courtney. Cathy was already a spoiler for Tony and Pat at that point, I believe.

Jennifer Harmon is very solid as the traumatized Cathy but you can tell even from the small amount of episodes we have that she is much more of a suffering figure of pity than Dorrie Kavanaugh's spiky feminist. Tony pities her in order to stay with her, Joe pities her, she denies herself a relationship with Larry near the end, etc. She was a character the audience cared about and who I often thought about having return in some way, whose various iterations I wish I could see much more of (especially Kavanaugh and Catherine Burns, who was so amazing in Last Summer), but by the end it seemed like she just ran out of steam because of how she had changed with the recast. That's not a complaint about the stories for me, because from what I've seen '70s OLTL is pretty damn good. Whatever the actors moaned about then it looks like Shakespeare compared to some stuff down the road.

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