DAYTIME Classics
How Not To Wreck A Show
— By Douglas Marland
A little birdie (okay, TV Guide Canada's Nelson Branco) suggested we dip into the archives for classic interviews from daytime greats. This week we feature an interview from soap legend Douglas Marland that's been copied all over the Internet — here's the real thing. Something you'd like us to track down? Email us at soaplook@soapoperadigest.com.
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Douglas Marland accepting the 1993 Soap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Social Issue Storyline
— Kenneth Bank
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• Watch the show
• Learn the history of the show. You would be surprised at the ideas that you can get from the back story of your characters
• Read the fan mail. The very characters that are not thrilling to you may be the audience's favorites
• Be objective. When I came in to ATWT, the first thing I said was, what is pleasing the audience? You have to put your own personal likes and dislikes aside and develop the characters that the audience wants to see
• Talk to everyone; writers and actors especially. There may be something in a character's history that will work beautifully for you, and who would know better than the actor who has been playing the role?
• Don't change a core character. You can certainly give them edges they didn't have before, or give them a logical reason to change their behavior. But when the audience says, "He would never do that," then you have failed
• Build new characters slowly. Everyone knows that it takes six months to a year for an audience to care about a new character. Tie them in to existing characters. Don't shove them down the viewers' throats
• If you feel staff changes are in order, look within the organization first. P&G [Procter & Gamble] does a lot of promoting from within. Almost all of our producers worked their way up from staff positions, and that means they know the show.
• Don't fire anyone for six months. I feel very deeply that you should look at the show's canvas before you do anything
• Good soap opera is good storytelling. It's very simple.
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RELATED RESOURCES
YES!! I wrote to SOD a decade or so ago, when SOD first started having a web presence. I urged one of your editors at the time to start putting up "classic fare". I argued that if you wanted to restrict that fare to subscribers only, that might be another incentive to maintain subscriptions. Regardless, SOD owns the MOTHER LODE of classic content, and it is popular and loved (see other websites, not naming them here). Thank you, thank you, thank you! This stuff earns (a) my repeat visits, and (b) my continued subscription
Could you tell me who was the substitute announcer on an episode of "The Edge of Night" late December, 1974?
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