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GENERAL HOSPITAL Features
Remembering Gloria MontyThe soap world lost one of its last legends when director-turned-producer Gloria Monty died of cancer March 30 at her home in Rancho Mirage, Calif., at the age of 84. Although Monty directed and produced THE SECRET STORM and BRIGHT PROMISE on CBS, she will always be remembered as the miracle worker who brought GENERAL HOSPITAL back to life in 1978. In 1977 Monty reluctantly took a meeting with ABC honcho Fred Silverman, who was looking for an executive to shepherd the ailing GH into the sunset of TV history "so that it would not go down in complete disgrace," Monty once told Weekly. After a tour of the studio designed to entice Monty backfired ("We went over and saw some appalling conditions there."), Silverman plied Monty with alternating doses of liquor and charm, "and, by the time I finished the last drink, I was doing GENERAL HOSPITAL," she recalled in a 1998 interview. Exasperated by the show's existing stories, Monty called a now-infamous meeting of the cast in which she remarked, "The only thing I can think of doing is to put you all (your characters) on a plane and crash it."
Instead, she overhauled the sets and lighting, brought in a new team of directors and collaborated with new head writer Douglas Marland to revamp the stories. With a keen eye for casting, Monty discovered many of GH's biggest stars. Her innovations proved so successful that the ratings rebounded and the soap was granted a stay of execution by ABC. By the end of the year, GH moved from last place to first in the Nielsens. Monty's controversial decisions sparked a nationwide GH frenzy, culminating in the highest ratings in soap history for Luke and Laura's 1981 wedding, with over 30 million viewers. Monty left GH in 1987; the show remained the No. 1 soap for nearly a decade. After a second stint with GH in 1991, Monty produced several TV-movies based on friend Mary Higgins Clark's novels, and chaired the New Jersey Motion Picture & Television Commission. Reflecting on her career, Monty once said, "I think my best talent was directing. I'm basically a director; that's what made it for me at GENERAL HOSPITAL." Monty won two Emmys for GH as Outstanding Drama Series in 1981 and 1984; was named by People magazine as one of the 50 Most Interesting People in the World; inspired the soap producer character in the film Tootsie; and was inducted into the Soap Opera Hall of Fame in 1998. Monty left a huge impression on the actors who, under her direction, rocketed GH to the top. Here are some memories and thoughts of some of the stars she made famous.
Finola Hughes (Anna):
Anthony Geary (Luke):
Ian Buchanan (ex-Duke; Greg, ALL MY CHILDREN):
Emma Samms (Holly):
Tristan Rogers (Robert):
John Stamos (ex-Blackie):
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