Jump to content

ALL: Resting long term characters


Recommended Posts

  • Members

Bold's new generations are so one-dimensional and badly conceived copy/pastes of past characters, that I'm afraid the show can't fully function on them alone. Not that the vets help much, but...  just seeing some of their faces... makes me think - Ok, this is Bold. At least that. In all other situations the current show is not The Bold And The Beautiful, but something entirely different. 

The new generations flopped tremendously, because Bradley attempted to re-tell the classic storylines his father told, but in his uninspired, rushed, no-character-development-latest-twist-of-the-day modus operandi. Bill Bell made us care about the people before he started mixing them up and putting them in front of challenges. Bradley just writes in someone new and in 2 episodes this character is acting like they are living their worst dramatic conflict of their life. It just feels fake. The biggest flop was the Hope, Steffy and Liam triangle that Bradley attempted to do many times to no success. Bradley wanted Hope to be Caroline/Taylor, Steffy to be Brooke and Liam to be Ridge. Didn't happen. Bradley failed to repeat the success of Brooke/Ridge and Taylor and this has haunted him his whole career. 

All of this is very sad, since I believe Bold have an amazing cast and these younger actors definitely deserve better than to be in a love triangle with Liam for 15 years.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 72
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Members

B&B needs to cut their losses with the Spencer (kill Bill, ahem, or just send him over to Genoa City/figure out a way to make Brad alive if the Bells want to stay in the Don Diamont business—Victoria needs him), ditch Liam (hello, Dylan Quartermaine) and Katie (let HT focus on directing or perhaps producing), and start rebuilding the younger Forresters, with some satellite characters around them. I’d even start phasing out Eric, Thomas, and/or Hope for a bit in the hopes of getting a couple of unrelated new characters for potential love interests. 

This is just pie in the sky, of course. I get the sense Bradley loves keeping certain friends on the payroll, even if they contribute nothing to the show (HT).

Edited by Faulkner
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

And one person I would return - Bridget, whoever plays her. She has been the most harmed and ridiculed person on this soap. Bridget's childhood was a nightmare - her mother changed her daddy every sunday, then she grew up to be completely outshined sexually by her own mother who slept with all her husbands. This character needs to come back and be the show's ultimate antagonist - someone who hates her mother with such venom and wants to be the head of Forrester... make Brooke's life hell. I have NEVER understood why all of Brooke's children act so loving towards that monster of a mother. It's funny to me that Bradley invested sooo much in Bridget to then not do anything with the character other stupid taboo love triangles. 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

There's enough incestuous relation on the show! That's why I think they should introduce a modeling agency with a house. It can be full of unrelated characters with endless opportunities. It can be owned by an ice cold bitch played by Kristian Alfonso.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Bridget was great in the Jennifer Finnegan era but to me she's the poster child for a character that needed to be rested/phased out. After the Deacon/Brooke affair she was reduced to being the wet blanket in various love triangles apart from that icky flirtation with Ridge. Her presence with Hope & Deacon on the canvas also ages Brooke & Ridge to their 70s. Unfair to the character perhaps, but the D/B/B triangle was the show's most memorable story of the past 25 years.

Being 30 minutes helps but B&B is the best show at phasing out once popular characters that no longer serve a purpose. That said I agree with the previous posters saying Ridge can use a rest - at least for a few months.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Absolutely not true. Just an example - Susan Flannery was quite older when she STARTED on Bold (she was if I am not mistaken - nearly 50 years old) and she MADE the show for the next 25 years. Your statement is against all my beliefs and I don't want to say the word ageist, but I said it. Older characters SHOULD lead in soaps, just like younger ones should too.

You should also think about the target demos. If anyone here thinks that soaps are being watched by teens or youngsters only.... and not middle aged women primarily, they are horribly mistaken. This genre is not the netflix teen show crowd. A lot of soaps are watched by women and men long past 50 or 60 and these people need the characters to associate with.

Older characters ROCK and should not be in the shadows. The typical strong woman matriarch that always leads storylines on soap operas is never a youngster. I can go with examples and examples. They SHOULD be leading soaps. 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

The very essence of traditional soap opera is what? Multi-generational, that's what. And, what does that exactly mean? Well, it means characters of all ages. Grandparents, parents, teens & young adults & kids. Of course, quite naturally, you ARE going to have older characters who are leads. But, you may also have some the next age group down who are also leads. 

Let's look at the example of a classic, ATWT. Lucinda, lead female, age group: oldest. Lily her daughter, lead female, age group: Adults. Her son Luke, young adult male lead, age group: teens & young adults. So, you see? What's the problem? 

And, as to that old saw that people only watch to see people their own age, I call bullsh*t on that. In my experience - and I've been watching soaps & talking to other soap fans since the 70s/80s - people watch to see interesting people. They are not chained somehow to only watching one certain narrow age group. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Agreed...but I think the poster might have a point...the last ten years of GL had Reva and Josh acting like they were still 27, passionately "always," until they are not..lather rinse repeat...boring. Josh acted more mature without Reva being a dad and friend, but as soon as they were together (part of that was the actors egos to be on all the time, but ..) Alan Spaulding never changed, etc. the show would have been much better by allowing the actually at that time 40 something crowd of Rick, Phillip Harley, Beth grow up, appropriately age up there kids ) and using the older generation of course, but not having them repeat the same damn stuff over and over. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Of course I completely agree that writing for characters should show growth, experience, even changes, as that is the way life happens. With B&B Stephanie Forrrester did not act like some sweet young thing. At GL, when Josh was tied to Reva, he had to do & act & be like Reva did. I think that some of those adult leads acted less adult than others did. Probably Erica & Reva are examples. But, at AW Rachel did not remain always the same. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Soaps are ensembles. But you see how often soaps hedge their bets with young characters to the point they’re ciphers. They are experiments that they seem to know will fail. They hire cheap, green actors and let them flail around in the hopes they’ll improve or write them off/do emergency recasts. Sometimes several emergency recasts.

DAYS and GH actually try to develop fully formed, fleshed-out young characters, but their stories let them down, the characterizations either feel self-conscious to the point of parody (making a character a representative for “today’s teen” instead of simply a person) or hopelessly outdated (as if the writers never met a young person since they were young themselves), and the casting is very hit-or-miss.

Young characters on the Bell soaps often feel underwritten to the point of nothingness. It’s basically “we need a hot hunk” or “CBS said we need some youth” instead of having a well-shaped vision for the character.

These characters have to find a purpose beyond simply causing headaches for their parents and get integrated into the canvas. Connections with other adult characters and peers are essential. You can’t just have one or two young characters and think that’s gonna work unless they’re mixing it up with the adults.

Any character’s success is almost wholly dependent on the charisma and personality the young performer brings to the role because they are getting bupkis in the scripts.

Edited by Faulkner
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Older characters acting like teens or 25 is a completely different topic.  The statement that old characters should not be leading story is the one I don't agree with. I not only NOT agree with it, but I find that older characters sometimes are desperately needed and missed.

What Bold for example is LACKING right now is that older-matriarch type.  I am starving for a character that brings wisdom. Age gives opportunity for experience and that is not a negative - we need characters that have been through it. I am bored with the virgin in distress or the whore of the week, which Bradley always writes. I need some substance.

And yes, people don't always watch to see people their own age, but anyone who reads and knows psychology, knows that what you see - you unconsciously associate with or don't. It is not even conscious process. So yes, I do want variety and older characters who people can relate to and which problems and issues are relevant to them. I will quote my mother who watches tv all the time (she is definitely a target audience, since she also watches commercials and buys things) and always says to me, when I try to suggest to her some too-teen or too-hip show. 

I don't find these shows funny, it's not my type of humor and these are issues that I am long past. Please don't make me watch this.

And then she starts watching a show where there are people over 40 in it. People who some may call older. This is a completely normal thing for some people. I myself can't stomach some things anymore and I'm only 29. And that's why shows have target demos and all the world of ads and commercials KNOW who they are selling to. To know the age of your main audience is CRITICAL for success. 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I agree that the current shows aren't allowing their characters to "age" and this keeps the younger set from being fully developed. IMO, Nick on Y&R is the perfect example of this, and as a result, his children are not allowed to become fully developed characters. 

Honestly, I think Liam on B&B wins the award for this thread. The show keeps recycling the same triangle for him over and over. Somehow, despite being the most wishy-washy man on daytime, we're supposed to believe that these smart, beautiful women (Steffy and Hope) stay hung up on him...why????

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

    • 40 years ago this month, the best and most pivotal television season of the 1980s came to an end. Here’s how the rookie breakout and the four soaps wrapped up the season. The Cosby Show – Cliff’s Birthday (season 1 finale, May 9): Clair and the children surprise Cliff by planning a birthday celebration around a Lena Horne concert. Dallas – Deliverance (May 10): Bobby seeks evidence to free Jenna. The Ewings go confidently to court. Mitch asks Lucy to move in. J.R. wants Sue Ellen hospitalized. Dynasty - The Heiress (May 8): Krystle learns Daniel is dead. King Galen courts Alexis. Amanda sees Michael with Elena. Sammy Jo learns Krystle will handle her money and is furious about the decision. Knots Landing – One Day in a Row (May 9): Ben aids in Karen's search for Val's babies. Mack replies to the governor's offer. Ruth uses Abby to break up Laura and Greg. Falcon Crest – Cold Comfort (May 10): Fugitive Lance desperately searches for Lorraine, who lies comatose in a San Francisco hospital. Robin returns with startling news.   Dallas – Swan Song (season 8 finale, May 17): Jenna's release from jail depresses Pam. Sue Ellen thinks she saw Dusty. Donna tells Ray about her pregnancy. Cliff consults an attorney about an annulment. Lucy and Mitch remarry. Sudden tragedy strikes Bobby. Dynasty – Royal Wedding (season 5 finale, May 15): Sammy Jo makes her roommate look like Krystle. Elena reassures Amanda about her upcoming marriage. Terrorists come for the royal wedding of Prince Michael and Amanda. Falcon Crest – Confessions (May 17): Melissa confesses to framing Lance. Pamela gives Maggie proof that Richard bribed Judge Holder. Connie reveals her love for Chase. Knots Landing – Vulnerable (May 16): Ruth wants Abby to break up Greg and Laura. Karen makes a breakthrough in her hunt for Val's babies. Joshua hampers Val's recovery. Knots Landing – The Long and Winding Road (season 6 finale, May 23): Abby fears being linked to the disappearance of Val's babies. Laura leaves Greg. The Fishers are determined to keep Val's babies. Falcon Crest – The Avenging Angel (season 4 finale, May 24): Lorraine dies. Angela throws a victory party. Cassandra's mother arrives. An explosion rips through Richard's house. 1984/85 was the season the primetime soaps pulled out all the stops to out-do each other and everything culminated in the spring. May 1985 was the zenith of primetime soaps as a genre.
    • Please register in order to view this content

       
    • Charles Grant first appeared as Evan in September 1988. I was surprised to come across this item from December 1985, almost 3 years earlier: "Lots of action behind the scenes at Another World . . . I have bad news for fans of Christopher Holder (Peter Love). He will be leaving the show in the new year. I have heard that the producers are recasting the part and are also seeing actors for new roles. One of the main characters this spring will be Marlee [sic] and Victoria's father. The producers have been talking to Charles Flohe (John "Preacher" Emerson, Edge Of Night) about another new character to be featured. I will fill you in on the results as soon as I know." It seems obviously too early for anyone to have been planning to introduce Evan Frame. Based on the context he's not being considered as a recast of Peter. Maybe they were considering him for the character that turned out to be Neal, who started around the same time as Marcus Smythe as Peter?
    • Randall Edwards (and Brian Tarantina), with the opening night cast of 1985's Biloxi Blues, plus director Gene Saks and playwright Neil Simon.  

      Please register in order to view this content

    • That was my point really. These anniversary party scenes are the first ones, and now they won't be able to use them (meaning these actual scenes, as aired, with OG Ted). They can recreate them but I doubt they will spring for all the extras to come back and film and recreate everything, so it will be more like tight closed in shots of Ted with one or two other actors, or snippets of Leslie's original speech where Ted wasn't visible. It would be hard to recapture the original energy of the scenes are as they were filmed in their full context. I just think that's too bad, but maybe they will prove me wrong. I never really saw what was so off in his portrayal to warrant a recast, anyway, so that colors my perception as well.
    • Yeah, and quite honestly, are there really that many scenes that are flashback-worthy at this point in the run?
    • I know at one point they were on Hulu & i-Tunes. I just checked it on JustWatch.com & it indicates 1 season on Prime Video & on AppleTV. Have fun!
    • That era is so weird...they made a big deal out of all three of those characters and then they just..disappeared! Not that I am complaining. We talk about the bad out of character writing for Alex under JFP..but this was one example that may have led them to write her being so obsessive with Nick.  WHY would Alex accept Flock of Seagulls guy as her brother? They had her in one scene (setting up the Alan return) complain that Alan abandoned her...she blackmailed him into leaving town and she had been angry at him for helping Brandon with Lujack and also using Spaulding for that dumb dreaming death thing. Endless scenes of her with Simon, I can't believe Bev wasn't bored to death! I would also add Pam writing the scene where she lets Ms. Sally die in front of her to protect Alan and  the writing for Alex could be screwy even before JFP.
    • On this day 34 years ago the final episode of Dallas and came in at an astonishing #2 in the ratings after two straight seasons of weak ratings. Interesting Knots was #27 for that week as well:  

      Please register in order to view this content

    • Thank you for clearing that up. I wasn't watching GL regularly yet at that point, but seems to me I should have remembered the big wedding after Leslie's death (which I do remember) described in the profile. Is there a web archive of SOD summaries, or are referring to your own personal collection?
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

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