Jump to content

Morning Star


Paul Raven

Recommended Posts

  • Members

So Katy and Bill are still around.

 

This episode worked a bit better for me. While I didn't like the musical cue, I thought the opening with the Carousel Building was an effective shot and more than we would get today in a world where the camera doesn't seem to move much.

 

Edward Mallory was a bit over the top in some of those scenes and the actress playing Katy appears very mature for the young ingénue role.

 

The Katy/Bill scenes do seem to clear up the very messy first episode we see. The show was definitely leading the audience into a mystery regarding whether it was Grace or Stan who was poisoning Dana. I guess the back and forth in that episode was intended to be suspenseful.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 30
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Members

 

I didn't catch that last part. Thanks. 

 

I liked the scenes in the chambers. The other scenes were decent too but everyone seemed to be on uppers. 

 

The skyline looks a bit more like something from the '50s but I guess they didn't have a budget. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members


Was only on for the one season, it tied for 13th with Dark Shadows and Paradise Bay (according to Wiki, at least)

 

  • 13. Morning Star 4.1 (Debut/Final Season: September 27, 1965 to July 1, 1966)

 

Usually those ones we see in our threads only go to the Top 10, and I doubt this show ever got high enough ratings to rank above 10, so...

Edited by beebs
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

 

What a great article about the show and its music. As a coda to the last sentence, "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" is the most played song in the history of radio!!

 

Cynthia Weil co-wrote another song, this time with Michael Masser and Tom Snow, that would serve as a love theme for a popular soap couple. In 1984, their "If Ever Your In My Arms Again" (sung by Peabo Bryson) became Kelly and Joe's song on the brand-new NBC soap Santa Barbara. The song was #1 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary Chart the day SB debuted.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...
  • Members

Ed Mallory had a week when he was taping on both Morningstar and DOOL. Whether those scenes aired the same week I don't know.

When the show was facing the ax, Ted Corday has a scene taped whereby Mallory's charcter Bill was defending the actions of Norman Burton's character Joe. He faced the camera and asked the audience directly something along the lines of 'Do you believe Joe deserves a second chance? If so write to NBC and gave an address. Thousands of letters poured in which Ted Corday hoped would show the execs that the show had a following.It didn't work...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 6 months later...
  • Members

NBC press release

 Stars of 'Morning Star' -- Elizabeth Perry plays the role of Katy Elliot, a young girl seeking her career in New York City, and Edward Mallory is seen as Bill Riley, a free-lance photographer, in "Morning Star," NBC-TV's new daytime color serial drama. 

 

 

1965-press-photo-actors-elizabeth_1_1e91

 
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
  • Members

Scrolling through some old Australian TV listings from 1966 and there is Morning Star.

I have read that Young Dr Malone screened on Aussie TV in the early 60's but apart so Morning Star becomes the second US daytime soap to get a run in Australia.

I wonder if the entire series was shown and if the tapes were wiped?

 

HSV7 Melbourne Wed June 8 1966
12.23 First Edition News
12.30 Lunch Time Movie “Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary?” (A)
1.55 Talking Programs
2.00 Morning Star (A)
2.30 People in Conflict
3.00 Time for Terry

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...
  • 1 year later...
  • Members

Carolyn Weston, who wrote for Morning Star later authored a series (3) of books that formed the basis for 'The Streets of San Francisco' so I imagine she made a bit of money out of that.

A TV Guide article from 65 says she had a 7 yr contract to write the show. Later she wrote for Days.

The article says she was a struggling novelist when she took on the show but no details of how she got the gig.

Her co writer was another novelist Jan Huckins .She and Weston wrote the novel "Face of My Assassin' in 1959. Huckins had written for Irna Phillips on radio.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
  • Members

The TV Guide article about Carolyn Weston. Do we have any other info on Morning Star writers?

This short-order cook is now frying soap-opera scripts with relish

Until one day last August, fry-cook Carolyn Weston had never seen a television script, let alone written one, nor had she ever watched a daytime soap opera. Suddenly last summer, there were some changes made in the hours, wages and fringe benefits of the Hickoryburger Lady of Malibu.

This year, tied to a seven-year contract as head writer of NBC’s soap opera Morning Star, the same Carolyn Weston routinely turns out a script a day, five days a week, the pages flowing out of her typewriter, without rewrites, straight to mimeo, thence to the actors in Studio 2 at Burbank, Cal., and she is making pots of money. “Pots,” in her case, is defined as something in the neighborhood of $2000 a week.

The strategic factor in this dramatic switch in her workday is the fact  that she has been a lifelong secret writer who has been stacking up unpublished manuscripts by the closetful ever since her first full-length novel written at the age of 11. She always used to hide everything she wrote. Eventually the bulk of it was lost or thrown out. “I wrote millions and millions of words,’ she says today. “Sometimes it horrifies me to think of the waterfall of language that has poured out of my typewriter.”

Of this torrent of outpourings, only two of her works, possibly as a consequence of her secretiveness, survived. They sort of accidentally got printed, though causing scarcely a ripple in the publishing pond. Just splash enough, however, for NBC to enter the scene.

Soap operas have traditionally “emanated,” as they say, from the East. But Morning Star, even though it’s all about a fashion designer in mid-Manhattan, was unaccountably scheduled to emanate from the West Coast. And it seems that NBC, in its executive wisdom, decided that Hollywood-type writers were not ideally suited to soapsuds, that a novelist’s emotional makeup was more appropriate, and that a 40-year-old West Coast lady novelist would be just the ticket. That’s when they got wind of the Hickoryburger Lady of Malibu who went home to write novels at night after she turned off the grill.

In recent years Miss Weston had become even more diffident about the writing that she did after work. That’s because, though she had always written with serious intent, the publishers marketed her first novel with a lurid dust jacket and equally lurid slogans. One blurb ran: “The beast within found voice as it vented its savage rage of desire.” The reader was promised “surging passion,” “savage pleasure” and “a triangle of the flesh.”

“I was mortified,” says the authoress. “And you can’t imagine my shock when I saw those naked orgies on the cover.” She became more of an attic typist than ever.

She recalls her childhood in Hollywood: “I was unbelievably, fantastically shy. I didn’t talk to anybody. I had no friends. Books were my friends. All I. ever did was daydream and read novels. Before I ever went to high school, I had decided that I was going to be a lady novelist someday.

“At 11 I wrote my first full-length novel, a romantic saga about a girl named Carlotta (coincidentally also age 11), who inherits a great rancho in Spanish California. Everything I wrote I hid. One day I came home and there was my older brother reading my manuscript out loud to two boys in the neighborhood, making fun of it. ‘Har-de-har-har’ and all that. I went in the bathroom and cried.”

For several years recently Carolyn Weston supported her secret writing habit by working, for $1.60 an hour, at a roadside stand called the Malibu Frostie Freeze, down the Pacific Coast Highway from Malibu Colony, where the movie stars live. Among her customers were Louis Jourdan, David Niven, Ann Sothern,: Burt Lancaster and Doris Day. “For years the major part of my conversation was limited to a few phrases such as ‘with or without’ [onions].”

The best-selling item on the menu was the “hickoryburger” (seven patties to a pound of meat; eight on holidays), whose flavor, an amber-colored fluid called “liquid smoke,” was squirted on from plastic bottles. “A customer might order ‘one well-done, one medium-rare and two mediums’ but they all came out the same. What can you do with a piece of meat a quarter of an inch thick?”

Too, of course, there was the Frostie freeze itself, a whipped ice-milk concoction produced from a machine looking not unlike an iron lung. “I called it ‘Gertrude, the Money-Making Fool.” A number of her regular customers were dogs. “An astonishing number of people buy Frosties for their pooches. Always Frosties, never hickoryburgers. Any number of poodles preferred vanilla Frosties. A pair of Chinese pugs ate any flavor.”

Today, Carolyn Weston never watches other people’s soap operas, though she follows Morning Star with interest. Each day’s episode is one she wrote four weeks earlier. How are soapers different from novels? “Well, the dialog is more conventional. I guess pedestrian is the word. Also, I’ve learned that an interrupted speech like ‘John (pause), you see (pause), I’m (pause) dying,’ works beautifully.”

The serial’s “promo” shows a big eye with a teardrop and a narrator saying: “Into each life some rain must fall. Cry yourself a bucketful. Watch Morning Star, 11 o’clock weekdays.”

Carolyn Weston cries all the way to the Bank of America in Santa Monica, corner of 4th & Arizona.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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

    • I felt for Ted early on but as the story unfolded it has changed my opinion on him. To know he was cheating while his wife was struggling to give him a baby is a lot to deal with. Plus, this happened ages ago and still he's paying Leslie off and threatening her to leave town.  What really caused me to lose him in this episode was how even though he was busted, he still refused to take responsibility and come clean and the way he talked to Martin and Eva was terrible. To tell Smitty he better get Martin away from him when that is his SON who he used to cover up his affair? That is true dog behavior. Ted seems upset he got caught but I'm not seeing the remorse I would need to want Nicole to forgive him. I'm curious how I'll feel after Ted gets to talk to Nicole but I need him to fix it with the rest of the family as well.
    • I'm sorry. I well remember Jake doing Doris but I have no independent memory of the story around it.  Krystle with a K Lake, sure, both Tony the Tuna stories & NOT.  And, Jake also impersonated a woman named Bunny Eberhardt but he didn't know she was a woman so there was no drag. This weekend I re-watched Kevin & Mac, GH, and my strong impression is exactly what it was when I watched it in real time: They did not let them look very pretty. Of course, I think the best ever drag on GH was Alexis posing as the Q butler.  In a different use of drag at AW one Halloween, Jensen Buchanan went as Charlie Chaplin & Judi Evans went as, I think, a male gypsy.   

      Please register in order to view this content

    • I'm not sure who wanted them to dump REUNION & instead do a "Dallas-like daytime show" but it seems that it def came from NBC to AW through Rauch, so, yes, it absolutely could have been his (cough-another-stupid?) decision!!!! I've just begun the new Lisanti book so maybe I will find out. (I waited for the kindle version to come out.) I would apologize for being so critical & so sarcastic, too, but, well, I'm not actually sorry!  Silverman was NOT a friend to AW.  And, I believe the critique is on point & deserved! I wanted to explain why I think the timing is off for the 90 minute show to be a reaction to the GH Luke & Laura story & its hype. Because, for sure, networks & production companies did react to it! The first 90 minute show was Monday, March 5, 1979.  And, there was some unknown amount of time ahead of that with people arguing about it & then, planning it.  The Luke & Laura wedding was mid-November 1981.  They were on the run from Frank Smith & stayed overnight in Wyndham's Dept. Store early August 1980. 
    • terrible at using forums and inserting photos, but jake in another world had a drag persona named doris, anyone know the episode or year? http://www.anotherworldhomepage.com/ffad19.jpg
    • Yes, I am familiar with Fred Silverman. Agree, the 90 minute AW a very poor decision by Silverman. I think Silverman was behind the decision to go with Texas.
    • Thanks -- you're doing God's work The Gio reveal was everything I hoped for and more. GH got it right. Head to toe, GM is a stunning physical specimen.
    • I really wonder how they'll handle Netflix's usual long breaks between seasons. That girl is going to grow up fast... makes me wonder if this wouldn't have been a better fit for HBO Max considering they're leaning into a more broadcast style of production model with The Pitt.
    • I agree -- I didn't suspect Ted, either. I think a lot of people are giving themselves way too much credit in predicting Ted's problems

      Please register in order to view this content

      And can I have a different take on Ted here? Yes, he's made a huge mistake with this Leslie debacle, and yes, he has to suffer and pay for it. But does that make Ted a terrible human being? I don't think it does. He made a horrific mistake over 2 decades ago, and as far as we know, he's been a good husband and father since. As far as we know, he hasn't strayed or violated his marriage since. He didn't know that he fathered another child, and thought he "removed" Leslie from his life. I won't blame Nicole if she doesn't forgive him, but I also won't blame her if she decides what they have and what they've had more than makes up for what he did. Ted is getting dragged far more than Bill is on these boards, and I think Bill is MUCH worse as a husband and father. How many times did he cheat on Dani during their marriage? How many times did he do vile things in his role as fixer? How much did he hurt his daughters by screwing their friend and marrying her? With Keith Robinson coming in as Ted, maybe we'll see a character change in direction and we'll discover that Ted has many flaws and always had a dark side. For now, though, I'm inclined to both be angry with Ted for hurting his family while also sympathizing with him. I know what you mean, but I do think that was intentional. So much was going on in that episode, and I think they decided not to let Nicole's reaction be lost in all that. Nicole will get those scenes that you're asking for.  
    • That was the original point of me sending you her 6 airdates, so now with those, and the link to the daily episode guide I've provided, that should help you more easily find the additional Ruth Buzzi scenes. I will always repeat myself when it comes to defending my data that I've taken decades to research and compile. But, as you pointed out in a recent post, I am kind, so at least I will do it with you in a kind way as opposed to the usual social media way most people do with just getting rude/nasty. That's not my style, as you correctly pointed out earlier this week, and never will be.  So, all is well! 

      Please register in order to view this content

    • Ambyr Michelle continues to be *that girl.* She’s just a star, period. Elevates every scene she’s in on the sheer strength of her emotional realism and charisma. Can sell any dialogue. I wish the show veered away from the B&B-style scripting. TMG/Leslie’s tirade stood out, I suppose, but she’s getting a bit mustache-twirly. And I wish DD had more to do in that episode than stand and sob.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

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