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Over the years, Port Charles became a soap opera with complex younger characters and ended up focusing on stories about forbidden love, vampires, and resurrection to life after death. The soap opera switched from the regular writing format, instead creating thirteen-week story arcs which are more commonly used on Spanish ''[[telenovelas]]''. This allowed the cast, crew, and writing staff to only work six months out of the year.
Over the years, Port Charles became a soap opera with complex younger characters and ended up focusing on stories about forbidden love, vampires, and resurrection to life after death. The soap opera switched from the regular writing format, instead creating thirteen-week story arcs which are more commonly used on Spanish ''[[telenovelas]]''. This allowed the cast, crew, and writing staff to only work six months out of the year.


The show was canceled in the summer of [[2003]]; some fans speculated that it was due to the fact that the show was nominated for ''Best Daytime Drama'' and lost at the [[Daytime Emmy Awards]]. Since the show only taped for six months out of the year, the remaining episodes were aired with the cast not allowed to return to tape resolutions to storylines. In fact, the final episode was a cliffhanger; heroine Alison didn't know who the father of her baby was.
The show was canceled in the summer of [[2003]]; some fans speculated that it was due to the fact that the show was nominated for ''Best Daytime Drama'' and lost at the [[Daytime Emmy Awards]]. In reality, the show, which was owned by ABC, was losing money with each week and was not aired in many parts of the country. This, in turn, brought down ratings and halted revenue.
Since the show only taped for six months out of the year, the remaining episodes were aired with the cast not allowed to return to tape resolutions to storylines. In fact, the final episode was a cliffhanger; heroine Alison didn't know who the father of her baby was.


The seven interns were:
The seven interns were:

Revision as of 06:54, 13 November 2004

Port Charles was a soap opera which aired on ABC from 1997 to 2003.

The show was a spin-off of the popular General Hospital. It first featured seven interns in a competitive medical school program. In the first episode, tenured nurse Audrey Hardy (played first on General Hospital by Rachel Ames, who reprised the role on the new serial) was injured and an intern had to operate on her with a power drill to save her life.

Over the years, Port Charles became a soap opera with complex younger characters and ended up focusing on stories about forbidden love, vampires, and resurrection to life after death. The soap opera switched from the regular writing format, instead creating thirteen-week story arcs which are more commonly used on Spanish telenovelas. This allowed the cast, crew, and writing staff to only work six months out of the year.

The show was canceled in the summer of 2003; some fans speculated that it was due to the fact that the show was nominated for Best Daytime Drama and lost at the Daytime Emmy Awards. In reality, the show, which was owned by ABC, was losing money with each week and was not aired in many parts of the country. This, in turn, brought down ratings and halted revenue.

Since the show only taped for six months out of the year, the remaining episodes were aired with the cast not allowed to return to tape resolutions to storylines. In fact, the final episode was a cliffhanger; heroine Alison didn't know who the father of her baby was.

The seven interns were:

Other key characters included: