- July 28, 1988 | Los Angeles Times -
Daytime soap operas are usually thought of as the most formularized of
melodramas. So what was going on the other day on the NBC stage in Burbank where “Santa Barbara ”
is taped?
In one scene being shot for airing Tuesday, actor Justin Deas as sleazy Dist. Atty. Keith Timmons, clad in a
grass skirt, convinced new bride Gina (Robin Mattson) to leave their bedroom immediately to catch a
honeymoon flight to Hawaii--still wearing her wedding-night lingerie and a
mint-green facial masque. In another, deaf actress Phyllis Frelich was using sign language to respond to questions
being asked of her character Sarah, a nun whose disturbing dreams may reveal a
murderer's identity.
Clearly, this is a show that is not afraid to take chances: Roles for
deaf performers are a television rarity day or night, and the Gina-Keith scene,
with its deft timing and sight gags, seemed more appropriate for a sitcom than
a soap.
Just as clearly, the break from tradition is paying off. Lowest rated
among the networks’ daytime serials following its premiere four years ago this
week, “Santa Barbara’s” ratings are up 23% since last year--it now
ranks ninth among the 13 soaps--and it recently won an Emmy as TV’s best
daytime drama series, besting such veteran competitors as 32-year-old “As
the World Turns” and 18-year-old “All My Children.”
“It would be unfair and untrue to
say that other soaps are not good,” said actress Marcy Walker, who plays Eden Capwell. “But the Emmy is an acknowledgment that we belong in the top league.”
The serial also picked up Emmys for Deas as supporting actor and its
second consecutive nod for outstanding music direction and composition.
According to Bridget Dobson, who created “Santa Barbara ” with her husband,
Jerry, the show was meant from its inception to stand apart from others of its
genre.
“We wanted to take risks,” she
said. “Otherwise, we knew the show would
die in that time slot, as other soaps and game shows had.” (It airs
weekdays at 2 p.m. opposite
ABC’s popular “General Hospital,” which was created by Dobson's parents, Frank
and Doris Hursley.)
“So we created two competitive
families, the Capwells and the Lockridges, who were psychologically complicated
but also psychologically and emotionally valid. We took the core of our own
inner souls and put it on screen, for multifaceted characters with
multidimensional personalities. That there was humor made the show unique--each
character has a sense of humor.”
The attempts to differentiate the show take many forms.
“We move faster, have a more rapid
pace than other shows,” said executive producer Jill Farren Phelps. “Our stories often begin and finish in the
same day. There's less of that 'tune in tomorrow' to find out what happened.”
“We wanted to make sure it was the
most contemporary show on the air,” said Brian Frons, NBC's vice
president of daytime programs, who asked the Dobsons to create the show. “We wanted dialogue on the cutting edge, a
new kind of musical sound rather than violins and organs, a warm California look--which
our first lighting director, Kirk Witherspoon, gave us.”
An example of the series’ contemporary bent: the long-suffering romance
and recent marriage of Walker ’s
golden girl character and the Hispanic detective Cruz Castillo, played by A Martinez. Castillo was conceived as “someone with a tremendous sense of morality
and a heroic background,” according to Frons, to reflect the Hispanic
influence in Southern California .
The romance came about as a “fortunate
accident,” Walker
said, as other characters left and a chemistry developed between the two that
viewers noticed and liked. For his part, Martinez recalled, “there had been a prevailing sense that there
was a risk involved in putting us together, but somebody stood up for it. On
the other hand, it does play on the old cliches--lovers from the wrong side of
the tracks, ‘Lady and the Tramp’.”
On the opposite end of the romance spectrum from the idealistic
Castillos are the villainous duo Keith and Gina, the chief practitioners of the
comedy that has become a “Santa
Barbara ” trademark. The couple, whose wedding
airs Monday, has staged pie and mud fights, wreaked havoc as contestants on “Wheel
of Fortune” and parodied everything from mythology to “Moonstruck.”
“We'll look at the script in the
morning and say, ‘They want us to do \o7 what?\f7 ‘” Mattson recounted. “Some actors would be uncomfortable appearing
the way we do, but I think if you just go with it, take it and run, it can be
very winning.”
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