Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 69
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • 1 year later...
  • 3 months later...
  • Members

Billboard review July 1957

Living on borrowed time from extension to extension, "Valiant Lady" is making valiant attempts to wind up and then extend its story line with each reprieve. Author Robert J. Shaw is currently heavily dependent on significant looks from the actors to imply suspense and conflict. The excellent cast continues to feature Flora Campbell in the title role, with Robert Webber and Joy Hodges especially good as a mismatched couple shadowing her life. Herb Kenwith's direction is inventive and lends a different air from the average soap opera, a theater quality in the movement and gestures. This pleasant approach is echoed in the sets and costumes of the Leonard Blair production.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...
  • 2 months later...
  • 1 month later...
  • Members

Who is the actress playing Myrtil?  (is her name Myrtil or Margo?)    I recognize Lawrence Weber.

 

I thought that Helen Wagner played Trudy (or was on The Guiding Light?).   Here, she is called "Jane."  Does she have a last name?   Is she supposed to be an Eve Arden-type character?

 

 

 

Edited by danfling
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
  • 2 years later...
  • Members

July 1957 HOOSIER IN MANHATTAN By JANE ALLISON

Very shortly now, on Aug. 2, a very famous lady is going off the air, perhaps never to be seen in the same valiant form again. She is Flora Campbell, the "Valiant Lady" of CBS television, one, of the most popular daytime heroines of all time, who, as Helen Emerson, has visited daily in the homes of the nation tor the past two and a half years. During that time, she has, in spite of the frantic communications from her fans, managed to be jilted in three most unfortunate romances, has suffered a major crisis a week, and many, many minor ones, and lived through a constant procession of nagging worries and fears attendant to the rearing of three television children, all distinctly difficult cases.

Two and a half years of that would tire anyone, whether he took his soap opera life seriously or not. And it has definitely tired  Flora Campbell, who has lived Helen Emerson's  life almost as deeply and intensely as her own. When she goes off the air in August, she's going off to rest, and unless she's more valiant than she thinks she is at the moment, the next few weeks will be Flora Campbell's swan song to the role, of Helen Emerson.

For what some critics are apt to ignore in their ridicule of network soap opera is this: the stars of these daily dramas are really fine actors and actresses, most of them with a long background of Broadway successes. And it is because they are really good and convincing that shows like "Valiant Lady" have the hold they do on the viewing public. And secondly, these stars can't go on giving first-rate performances over a long period of time without becoming genuinely interested in the character they're portraying, feeling the next turn of the story-book plot line almost as deeply as the next turn of life in their off-camera living. Such has certainly been the case with Flora Campbell, former Broadway star of George Kauffman's "The Land Is Bright," "Foxhold in the Parlor" with Montgomery Clift, "Many Mansions" and a host of Robert Montgomery Presents, Date With Judy, Studio One and Kraft Theatre productions, from many of which she won awards.

But after months and months of portraying, and really believing in Helen Emerson ("I think she's a pretty balanced, pretty straightforward woman, with, thank God, a good sense of humor, but more good-looking beaus than anyone has a right to have.") Flora Campbell's schizophrenic life has caught up with her, and she's almost too weary to go on being valiant. Up each day at six, she catches the seven o'clock train from Darien to New York. By eight she's rehearsing at CBS. At 9:30 she goes into costume and by 10: 15 she's back on camera, rehearsing straight through until noon, when the show is televised. After a quick hamburger, she grabs the next train for home, where, by 3 p.m., she begins to cope with the pleasures and problems attendant to raising two real life children, tall Tommy, 17, and little Creel,  7, running a big remodeled Connecticut farmhouse, and trying to arrange a normal home-life for her prominent society band leader husband, Ben Cutler, whose hours are hopelessly askew and never the same. When bedtime finally comes, she can never flop instantly into gorgeous slumber. Instead she sits up for an hour or so, memorizing tomorrow's lines.

In the "Valiant Lady" studio, no teleprompter is ever used, and pages and pages of dialogue have sometimes to be memorized in a few hours. It's a living, all right, and a good one. But Helen Emerson has given Flora Campbell a split personality that's almost knocked the Oklahoma accent back into her glamorous voice. Should she, as Helen, marry the Governor? Everyone thinks she should. But heavens, everyone wants her, meaning Flora Campbell's, husband Ben to play for their parties, when what she would really like to do is have him stop his crazy hours so she could see more of him. The Governor? No, Ben. Etc. On stage, Helen has a daughter so neurotic she resents all her mother's efforts to help her in any way. Off camera, Flora's daughter also has a problem. It's her hospitality. There's nothing she likes better than having all the neighborhood children in for hamburgers, cokes and some rousing cheers that part just about the time Flora is going over Helen's for the morrow. "I work very hard and I don't like to kid around about the show," says Flora Campbell about "Valiant Lady." Which undoubtedly explains why Helen Emerson has been such a real and beloved daytime heroine for so long. 

Edited by Paul Raven
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • -- We're getting really bad soap. I honestly couldn't care less about any of it, and I wish the ratings would freefall so we'd get a change in writers. -- Does anyone believe Victor would spend his evenings walking around the GCAC and looking for people to talk to? Without Nikki on his arm? -- I'm again left to looking at sets (the few we get each day). Am I right that they moved the bar in at the GCAC to place it more diagonally to the dining room? -- The last time we saw Crimson Lights the room looked smaller to me, so I Googled images of CL, and yeah, it's smaller. Along the back wall where the booths are, there once was wall area behind the booth on the right. That wall area is now gone. -- When Phyllis hijacked Billy's phone to get Dumas' number, I gagged when she went to the park in the middle of the night to break into it. Who does that? -- I feel sorry for these actors. This is all such garbage that I have no words.
    • Please register in order to view this content

    • I think early RH had arguably some of the most complex characters on daytime; people who were truly neither all saints nor all sinners.
    • I remember reading posts a while back theorizing that Hayley and June could be sisters.  I compared their voices in today's episode, and I believe it's possible.  Maybe the photo is Hayley and June as children or teens?
    • I would be lying if I said I cared about the direction of this Mama June storyline. Doesn't make me care that much for Jacob or Naomi...although I actually want to know these characters better, but just not in this capacity.  Honestly, it would be best if she's somehow connected to Hayley, because that character is seriously in a corner. Even after all they did, Eva and Leslie have more reason to interact with the rest of the cast.   
    • -- Great scenes with Andre and Nicole. -- I hope Dani loses Andre because she wants to keep him hidden. He deserves better, and I have no idea why she's acting that way. -- The hair stuff with Eva at the end was fun, but does she carry hair pieces and extensions with her, too? -- Samantha looks 30 lately. I can't unsee it now that I know. -- I am glad we already see Eva and Samantha getting along. I didn't want weeks of Samantha shading her. -- Clifton Davis was pretending he can't sing, and that didn't work. It looked like we were watching someone pretending he can't hit a note. -- They need to step up this Anita storyline. Watching her and Vernon praise each other every day is getting tiresome. -- Hayley clearing Bill's desk to have sex was cringe. He enjoyed it, but it won't be long before he realizes he married a little girl instead of a woman.
    • @Jason47 For Your Information, generally.  I have just exchanged emails with the Paley Center. They got back to me within 24 hours!!  They have  However,  I have suggested to them that it is a clerical error Hart instead of Hunter but gave them the info on her years, her character name & that she did indeed marry David Martin. I referred her to imdb & wiki to double check me, should she wish to make a notation.  Now for the bad news:  So, that's a shame. If anyone is in the vicinity, you can view videos sitting in a cubicle. I did so when we lived in Brooklyn. Their hours: The Paley Center is open to the public Wednesday through Sunday from noon to 6 p.m.
    • The way Andre held Dani afterwards, be still my heart. They think its only booty call hook ups, but I'm sensing a love slowly growing.  Way too much booty popping LOL.
    • I'm just pleased the homeless plotline has a point. I'm surprised they're going here this soon with the kids.
    • All caught up on May 2025, and it was rough. Truly rough. 

      Please register in order to view this content

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy