venerdì 7 giugno 2019

Santa Barbara Reunion Cruise (Nov 4th - 8th, 2019)



Santa Barbara has continued to delight devoted fans more than 25 years after the airing of its final episode on January 15, 1993. Now fans of the show will have a rare and exclusive opportunity to catch up with some of their favorite stars on the first-ever Santa Barbara Reunion Cruise, which sails on November 4 through 8 from Miami to The Bahamas on Royal Caribbean’s newly-modernized Navigator of the Seas

All guests who book by June 30 will automatically be entered to win a private lunch with the cast member of their choice.

The five-day and four-night sailing will bring together six original Santa Barbara cast members. Cruisers will be able to meet Lane Davies (Mason Capwell), A Martinez (Cruz Castillo), Judith McConnell (Sophia Capwell), Harley Jane Kozak (Mary Duvall), Louise Sorel (Augusta Wainwright) and Nicolas Coster (Lionel Lockridge). The cruise is a private group within an existing sailing being produced by Davies and Emmy Award-winning TV producer Chrystal Ayers (The Bay) in partnership with Cruises Only, America’s largest cruise travel agency.
During the sailing, Santa Barbara fans will have the opportunity to interact with all participating cast members at several events. The cruise package includes a sail away cocktail party with the cast, a fantastic Q&A, Santa Barbara trivia games, a themed fan gift bag, and cabana rentals in Perfect Day CocoCay, Royal Caribbean’s 125-acre private island. Guests can also choose from two additional options offering even more opportunities to get up close and personal with their favorite Santa Barbara stars. For an additional $150 per person, the Grand Cruz Cabana Experience offers tea and conversation with the ladies of Santa Barbara as well as coffee and conversation with the men of Santa Barbara and a farewell Sip n’ Sail party. For the ultimate fan, the Capwell Concierge Experience, an additional $300 per person, also includes a private meet & greet with the stars, photo & autograph session and wine tasting

Per person prices for the Santa Barbara Reunion Cruise start at $1,262.42 based on double occupancy. Single, triple and quad pricing are available upon request. 

As Michael Ausiello said “First comes the cruise, then comes the revival!”, so it’important you share this event on every social network you are in.

👉 For reservations and more information go to SBreunioncruise.com or contact Cruises Only at 1-800-210-9444.

👉 Open this event and share on the social networks  Santa Barbara Reunion Cruise

👉 Official Facebook pages:  Santa Barbara Reunion Cruise and Santa Barbara Blog




(source soaps.sheknows.com)


lunedì 3 giugno 2019

Exclusive interview with Stephen Meadows

("Peter Flint" on Santa Barbara)


Stephen Meadows now
Stephen Meadows just granted me an interview about his work on “Santa Barbara” as Peter Flint.He played the first villain and psychopath of the show and became very popular thanks to the “Carnation Killer” storyline. He also had a role on “One life to live” and several TV movies since he left “Santa Barbara”. He left the acting career in 1999. I highly recommend you to read this interview because Stephen has been very generous and he has shared with us a lot of memories and anecdotes. You’re gonna enjoy it!


Reading your biography, I see you are a poliedric artist: architect, actor, musical composer, painter, photographer and sculpturist. But could you tell me something about your childhood and your passions back then?
I grew up in Atlanta and was exposed to a great deal of bigotry and prejudice, both in my family and schools. At a young age, I always wanted to experience a more accepting society. As a result, I think my 'crutch' as a kid was drawing and painting. I remember removing myself from very conservative discussions with my parents and heading to a closet I converted to a mini-art studio. God provides all of us with gifts, some help us make a living, and others, not so much. I was very lucky, and as a child felt that drawing/design was a tool that could carry me forward.
Since then, I have been able to utilize that gift when needed to 'service the debts' in life.
Music and other interests were also important to me, but the talent gift was most identifiable in my drawing ability, as I saw many friends quickly surpass me in their understanding and mastery of music.
As for other passions at the time, it was girls and football. So in that regard, I was a typical 'good-ol-boy.

How the acting career came to you?
I was teaching a design course at San Francisco State University when a student, that was also a casting director for commercials, convinced me to try out for an 'Almaden Wine' commercial.
Eve Marie Saint & Jeffrey Hayden
I landed the spot (beginner's luck) and made enough money that it convinced me to jump in. The commercial also allowed me to get a SAG union card, as I would never have ventured into Los Angeles without it.
At the time, (1984), the film and TV business was fairly well controlled by the unions. This is not so much the case any longer due to the Internet.
My time line of six months was just around the corner, and I had not landed any significant roles. I had a guest-starring role on Night Rider and a few day’s work on another episodic I can’t remember, but the feedback from my auditions was holding up, so I held out.
My agents sent me to NBC for a new soap: Santa Barbara. I did not have a high opinion of soaps.  The performances appeared forced, and the high-contrast look of videotape in 1984 made all the characters look plastic. But I was told this was going to be a ‘different’ soap.
Jeffrey Hayden was producing and directing. He had directed Peyton Place and was married to Eva Marie Saint, the Oscar-winning actress.
After multiple auditions and meetings with Jeffrey and the producers, the final day came. I waited in the lobby to be called—and waited. After an hour, I put my feet up on the couch and dozed off. Producers walked by in bewilderment. Finally, I was called and aced the reading. The role was mine.
Being cast on SB was really my first foray into serious acting, and didn't happen until I was 34. That year that I decided to take a leap and switch directions happened really fast, and again, I was extremely lucky. There is no other word for it.


Do you remember something about your audition on SB? Robin Wright was there? Do you remember if you signed for a long term or short contract?
Sure, I recall the SB audition. Robin was not there, as I don't know if she was cast at that point. The contract was for 3 years, but I stood firm and asked my agents to get me out after one year.
I didn’t let my family know I was one of the main characters on the show. I figured they would find out soon enough and didn’t want to advertise I had left architecture to do the TV gig.

Santa Barbara was a brandnew show and you were part of it since episode #1. Which were the biggest challenges of being part of a newborn show?
The early days of the show are still a blur. Time stood still as I struggled to grasp as much as possible as quickly as I could. I had no experience and was flying by the seat of my pants. My assumption that because of my inexperience the writers would initially go easy on me was the exact opposite of reality.
Robin Wright, my ‘love interest’ on the show, along with Dane Witherspoon, the third member of our ‘love triangle,’ were worked to the breaking point.
We waited hour upon hour in our dressing rooms, running page after page of stiff dialogue from a rapidly revolving door of hired and fired writers.
When we were finally called to the set in the middle of the night, we would shoot back-to-back scenes with no rehearsal. It was complete madness due to the show being behind schedule. Robin, Dane, and I were the focus of the show at the beginning, and I was clearly in new and incredibly challenging territory.
At the onset, the line producers of the show were constantly pushing me to ‘emote’ more. I resisted, as it felt phony to push their one-dimensional dialog to levels that felt embarrassing.
The story line was that my character, ‘Peter Flint,’ was growing jealous of ‘Joe’ (Dane), as he sought to reunite with his lost love, ‘Kelly’ (Robin).
My instincts were to work against the dialog, as jealousy only ends in defeat. As an actor, I wanted to respect the character. But this is not what the producers desired. They wanted visible torment to consume my character. In other words, be a loser.
A Martinez as "Cruz"
Some of the greatest roles written in theatre and film are of ‘losers,’ but this was not one of them. I also questioned the idea of playing this kind of character every day, and how it would affect me personally.
There was a choice—I decided if they were going to push me, I was going to push back.
A Martinez, an actor on the show I respected, had years of experience and knew how to make the absurd, plebian dialog flow naturally. After we became friends, he explained that he rewrote almost every word of his dialog and presented it to the producers at 7AM on the day of shooting to get approval for the changes. I had no idea this was possible.
From then on, each night before shooting, I spent hours finding ways to change the words on the page to something that was more intelligent and fitting of the character.
‘Peter’ was, after all, a college professor—like me.
Each day I worked became a battle. But I did not give in. Finally, after several months, the producers relented and let me write and say whatever I wanted as long as it was consistent with the story line. I was actually enjoying myself and my performances complemented by many. Soap mags said ‘Peter’ was one of the most interesting characters on the show.
At one point, Dame Judith Anderson, the Oscar nominated actress and matriarch of the series, came up and we giggled about the odd ‘tick’ I did with my mouth when ‘Peter’ was going nuts.
Eva Marie Saint told me to never stop acting.
That first year, the other actors on the show nominated me for an Emmy. It felt good to be accepted by my peers in a profession I had just begun.


Robin Wright's Kelly & Stephen Meadows' Peter
“Santa Barbara” was a newborn show so, as you said somehow, it took a few months to find the right way: I mean there is a character on paper, then comes the actor and they need to discover each other until the writer find out how the character could fit the actor and viceversa. Definitely it takes time and a lot of failed attempts, but when the right balance is found, wow you all made a great job and Peter Flint is one of the most loved villain still today! I personally think the character’s peak has been the shocking “Carnation Killer” storyline: Peter got crazy and so obsessed with Kelly than he can’t stop to kill every single blond girl he sees around. When it first aired in Italy I was 10 years old and I remember I was really scared by it, but excited at the same time (you have been the firt one to give me the pleasure to be scared, thanks for this!). When I asked to Bridget Dobson how that storyline was conceived, she told me that they had accidentally cast too many blondes on the show. They were too beautiful and similar.  It was almost hard to distinguish between them. So they found a solution (and had a few laughs) as they devised the Carnation Killer storyline to get rid of them. Did you know? By the way, my question is: it was so easy to get obsessed with Robin Wright? She is my fav actress since then, could you tell me everything you remember about her, your relationship, her attitude with others, please?
Robin is an amazing girl. We had great fun and laughed a lot after the crazy 'stalking' scenes. When I started the show, Robin was 18 and I was 34, so I was somewhat of an 'older brother' off camera. Of course, the audience did not know our real age difference. She and Dane were also very involved at the time and I had a live-in girlfriend. Robin's personality is that of an effervescent, friendly and outgoing woman. When I see her performances as an 'ice queen' today, I laugh because I know she is not at all like those characters and imagine her belly-laughing after shooting some of the stuff that is very serious. She's a great actor.
I ran into her and Sean Penn a few years ago in Santa Monica. She ran across the lobby of the hotel and jumped in my arms. That's the Robin I know.
One fact about the old daytime soaps, a different writer writes each show. There are not separate writers for each character. Therefore, an actor's task is to make words from different writers 'real.' Very challenging, which is why I started rewriting all my lines.

You left the show on February 1985. One year later you were asked to come back for a few episodes as Peter “ghost”. Then you starred on many tv series and movie till 1999, when you seem to have left the acting career. Why? Would you reconsider your choice, if a good role come to you?
In the mid-90’s, I worked on a TV movie series in the Virgin Islands. The production company was cutting corners, and as a result, the cast and crew were subjected to dangerous safety conditions. In one incident, three people received gunshot wounds due to improperly handled ammunition.
Without getting too detailed, another member of the cast and myself reported the violations to the proper union officials. It took a few years to get around that I was a “whistleblower”, but eventually, the badge of ‘difficult’ was obtained.
I think being fortunate enough to focus my life in different directions provided the courage to stand up for what is right.
I will always love acting and have been offered a few roles since. But as life is shorter, my time is better devoted to my kids and ventures I am passionate about. I would love to play and old redneck-moonshiner or disturbed drifter, but those fun character roles seem to elude me.


mercoledì 6 marzo 2019

Exclusive interview with Suzanne Marshall (Maggie Gillis on "Santa Barbara")



It is during the hostage crisis by Peter Flint at the Perkins house that we meet a new officer of the city: the young police sergeant Maggie Gillis. Maggie comes on her own to propose to Cruz to serve as a bait, by disguising herself as Kelly Capwell to enter the house. However, during the hostage crisis, she is unable to shoot Peter Flint, which could have put an end to the drama (synopsis from “Santa Barbara: le site francais”).


Suzanne Marshall, who left the acting career in 1997, has grant an exclusive interview to the Santa Barbara Blog, remembering her beginnings, "Santa Barbara" of course and sharing her current life with us. Enjoy!

How acting came to you?
Well it was always in my blood I suppose. My mother was a professional singer and both of my sisters were actors. I guess you can say I started as in infant as my older sister put on plays and I was always the baby in them LOL. Acting was always one of my great passions, even when I was young. Horses and singing were the other two (although I did toy with the idea of being an astronaut!). I got my first pro job while still in college at UCLA on the soap Capitol. I was classically trained, focusing on Shakespeare (oh the hours spent rehearsing with a cork between my teeth for enunciation LOL). To me it was always about taking people to places they had never been before - making them feel things - making them see things differently.  So acting was very much a family affair.

I didn’t know you were on CAPITOL. Do you remember what was your character name and what was the plot?
I played the young Clarissa McCandless...Constance Towers...In her flashbacks.

How SB came to you? Do you remember your audition? Was it with John Allen Nelson?
I was visiting my folks in CA. I lived in NYC at the time. My LA agent called me to audition. It was with a John Allen... what a sweetheart! Such a nice guy! We had a lot of fun.

And... you got the role of Maggie Gillis, a police officer who fails her first mission: to kill the Carnation Killer. Do you remember your first day on set, starring with A Martinez?
Actually I remember it very clearly. I was pretty nervous having been mostly on stage. A Martinez was fabulous and funny and put me totally at ease. Its hard coming into a show where everyone knows each other and you are the "new kid" but A made sure I felt welcome. He talked to me about Shakespeare and made subtle jokes to me throughout the day.

Did you have any time to rehearse on set or was it like rush rush rush?
Well A had a classical background too so he and I liked to rehearse. Se we would meet in his dressing room to run our lines and talk about the scenes. Most of my scenes were with A or John Allen - John Allen would also rehearse with me.  The first day there really wasn't much rehearsing but John Allen was there that day - even though we had no scenes and he made sure to make me feel comfortable. I was very fortunate.

Bridget and Jerome Dobson - the creators of the show - were known for taking risks with their storylines and Maggie story was definitely a powerful and risky one: she was married with a tetraplegic husband and suddenly she began to feel sexually attracted by Warren, feeling guilty soon after. I think that it was kinda of minefield to explore on daytime back then. How was the audience reaction to that story and your feelings about it?
The audience was upset with me at first for not shooting LOL - Joe died because of me. But as they got to know Maggie I got some lovely feedback. Personally I thought the story was interesting and there was certainly enough to sink my teeth into. Also being raised by a woman in a wheelchair (she had had polio as a child but was a very active mom - still is at 85!) did perhaps give me a different take than others. I don't think I thought of it as being a risky storyline - I was used to Shakespeare - now talk about risky storylines LOL. It was just my story to tell and was a great chance to make people think about things.

When I said “risky”, I thought to the typical daytime audience: exploring the sexual life of a married woman “unfaithful” to her tetraplegic husband was not so common on soaps. Let’s talk about the 2 different actors who played Ben Gillis, your husband. I can imagine the director saying them “don’t talk, don’t move”. Poor actors LOL Any memory of them?
Oh looking back I agree the story was "risky" for the audience. I just didn't really think about it at the time.  Gosh - for the life of me I can't remember the actors names - isn't that terrible of me! Well it has been 34 years LOL. The first actor to play Ben was a super guy. He used to make jokes about moving his finger or something when he wasn't supposed to. The second actor was only there for a couple shows if I remember correctly. But - yea - it was pretty frustrating for them. The first actor kept hoping they would let him "come it of it".  I remember that it was the first actors birthday and a friend of mine (actually Mike Pniewski who does a lot of TV work in GA) and I went and found a street sign that had his name on it and we took it and I gave it to him for his birthday LOL.  Do you have their names?

Ahahah. What a nice anecdote!! No, there is no trace of their names, but I get their pic for you. Let me make an appeal to both of them: if you are reading this interview and you recognize in these pics, please contact me!



But Maggie's main love interest was of course John Allen Nelson's Warren Lockridge and I have to say that I felt a lot of chemistry between the both of you. Was it just my projection?
Aah John Allen... he was a sweetheart! There was definitely chemistry. But we were just friends. He had a lovely girlfriend that he ended up marrying.  Turns out he grew up with a good friend of mine from NYC.  Can’t think of anything funny off the top of my head...just was a lovely person he was. He was always making little jokes and making me less nervous.  Oh I remember the first day... he wasn’t in my first scene but was there to support me. Well the director’s voice came booming out from above our heads... I was startled as I had always had the director on set and so I looked up at the sky/ceiling. John came up to me and told me not to worry that it was just God putting his two cents in. That got me laughing and my nervousness went away. He was always there for me ... and the other actors too.  He was just terrific.  Gosh I hadn’t thought about all of this for so long.

Did you ever meet the creators/head writers of the show, Bridget and Jerome Dobson?
Yes... I met them before they cast me and once briefly after I left the show they came up to say how much they enjoyed my work.  They were very nice.

Toward the end you also had several scenes with Lane Davies and Joel Crothers, who died soon later...
Lane was very funny. Really laid back and had a really sharp wit.  Don’t remember Joel as well ... just that he was very down to earth and professional.

Then your storyline was suddenly dropped after just few months. Maggie backtracks and goes with Ben to New York. The 10 million dollars she finally wins in her fight against the Capwell Enterprises would be used to treat Ben and try to give him a better life. What really happened? Was it your decision to leave the show?
It was not my decision. Im not sure how accurate this is but I was told that a new producer entered into the picture and he wanted a friend of his in the Maggie role so they let me go. However A and John Allen didn’t want to work with the new actress so the role was cancelled.  I was understandably disappointed. Maggie and Warren were just making headlines and magazine covers.  At first I thought I had done something wrong, then it was explained to me. I believe that is why the Dobson’s searches me out at a party to tell me they enjoyed my work. I enjoyed the cast and crew of the show and was sorry to see it end but I moved back to NYC and moved on.

You worked both on Capitol (briefly) and SB. Did you notice any difference in the production? Which?
Not really as I only did a few shows on Capitol ... it was all so new as I had only done stage that it all seemed foreign to me.

What did you do after SB?
Mostly stage... off broadway, regional theater etc. Did a few days on General Hospital as they were exploring a new character but they decided against it. Lots of industrial films... but mostly stage. But I left the industry 20 something years ago. Was singing in a rock band for about 8 years and then left that too. Returned to my greatest love... horses. I own a training, breeding horse farm in NJ where I teach and train classical dressage, travel the east cost performing on horseback and teaching. I also breed Lusitano horses and Great Pyrenees dogs. It’s a fun life!  And when I miss the stage I just book a performance on one of my horses.

What would you like to say to all the people who still loves SB all around the world?
As with all performing, it is the audience that makes a show. SB is fortunate to have such a great group of fans.


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