Soap (TV series)
Soap | |
---|---|
Created by | Susan Harris |
Starring | Jimmy Baio Roscoe Lee Browne Diana Canova Billy Crystal Cathryn Damon Robert Guillaume Katherine Helmond Jay Johnson Robert Mandan Dinah Manoff Richard Mulligan Arthur Peterson Donnelly Rhodes Jennifer Salt Robert Urich Sal Viscuso Ted Wass |
Narrated by | Rod Roddy |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 85 (93 in syndication) |
Production | |
Running time | 77 x 30 minutes 8 x 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | September 13, 1977 – April 20, 1981 |
Soap is an American sitcom that originally ran on ABC from 1977 to 1981.
The show was created as a parody of daytime soap operas, presented as a weekly half-hour long primetime comedy. Like a soap opera, the show's story was presented in a serial format and included melodramatic plot elements such as amnesia, alien abduction, demonic possession, murder, and kidnapping.
The cast included former soap opera actors: Robert Mandan (who played Chester Tate) had previously appeared on Search for Tomorrow as a leading man for Mary Stuart, and Donnelly Rhodes (who played Dutch Leitner) had played the first husband of Katherine Chancellor on The Young and the Restless.
The show aired for four seasons and 85 episodes, including some one-hour-long episodes. (The hour-long episodes were later split in two, yielding 93 half-hour episodes for syndication.) The show was created, written, and produced by Susan Harris. The final four episodes of the series aired as one-hour episodes during the original run on ABC. Each returning season was preceded by a 90-minute retrospective of the previous season. Two of these retrospectives were made available on VHS in 1994. [1]
All episodes are currently available on region 1 DVD in 4 separate box sets. They are available as well in a less expensive "Complete Series" set containing the same discs stacked on a slide-out spindle, sacrificing the artwork and individual disc holders of the individual boxes in order to offer a cheaper set. In the past, the series has rerun on local syndicated channels as well as on cable on Comedy Central and TV Land.
Plot
Soap is set in the fictional town of Dunn's River, Connecticut. In the very first opening sequence, the announcer says that the Tates live in a neighborhood known as "Rich". The wealthy Tate family employs a sarcastic butler, Benson DuBois (referred to only as "Benson" on this series), played by Robert Guillaume, who is perhaps the only "normal" character on the series. In 1979, Guillaume's character was spun off into his own series, Benson. In Soap, the name "DuBois" is never mentioned, and there are several suggestions that Benson is his surname.
Jessica and her husband, Chester, are hardly models of fidelity, as their various love affairs result in several family mishaps, including the murder of Mary's stepson, Peter Campbell (Robert Urich). Even though everyone tells Jessica about Chester's affairs, she does not believe them until she sees his philandering with her own eyes: while out to lunch with Mary, Jessica spots Chester necking with his secretary. Heartbroken, she sobs in her sister's arms. On later occasions, it becomes clear Jess has always known on some level about Chester's affairs but never allowed herself to process the information.
Mary's family, the Campbells, are more middle-class, and as the series begins, her son Danny Dallas, a product of her first marriage to Johnny Dallas, is a junior gangster-in-training. Danny is told to kill his stepfather, Burt Campbell, Mary's current husband, who, Danny is told, murdered his father Johnny. It is later revealed that Danny's father was killed by Burt in self-defense. Danny refuses to kill Burt and goes on the run from the Mob in a variety of disguises. This eventually ends when Elaine Lefkowitz (played by Dinah Manoff), the spoiled daughter of the Mob Boss (played by Sorrell Booke), falls in love with Danny and stops her father, who then tells Danny he will have to marry Elaine or he will kill him. In the fourth season, it is revealed that Chester is, in fact, Danny's true father, the product of a secret affair between him and Mary before his marriage to Jessica.
The first season ends with Jessica convicted of the murder of Peter Campbell. The announcer concludes the season by announcing that Jessica is innocent, and that one of five characters - Burt, Chester, Jodie, Benson or Corinne - killed Peter Campbell. The interest over this cliffhanger precursored interest over the "Who shot J.R.?" cliffhanger on Dallas. Chester later confesses to Peter's murder and is sent to prison.
Major plots of later seasons
Other plot lines include Jessica's adopted daughter Corinne courting Father Tim Flotsky, with the two eventually marrying and having a child who is possessed by the Devil; Chester being imprisoned for Peter's murder, escaping with his prison roommate Dutch, and coming down with amnesia after a failed operation; Jessica's other daughter, Eunice, sleeps with a married congressman, and then falls in love with Dutch; Mary's stepson Chuck, a ventriloquist whose hostilities are expressed through his alter ego, a quick-witted dummy named Bob; Jessica's love affairs with several men, including Donahue, a private investigator hired to find the missing presumed-dead Chester, her psychiatrist, and a Latin American revolutionary known as "El Puerco" (his friends just call him "El"); Billy Tate's confinement by a cult called the "Sunnies" (a parody of Sun Myung Moon's Unification Movement, called the "Moonies" by its critics), and then his affair with his school teacher who becomes unhinged; Danny and his romantic trials with the daughter of a mobster, a black woman, a prostitute, and Chester's second wife, Annie; and Burt's confinement to a mental institution, his abduction by aliens while being replaced with an oversexed alien look-a-like on Earth, and getting blackmailed by the Mob after becoming sheriff of their small town.
At the beginning of each episode, off-camera announcer Rod Roddy gives a brief description of the convoluted storyline and remarks, "Confused? You won't be, after this week's episode of...Soap". At the end of each episode, he asks a series of life-or-death questions in a deliberately deadpan style -- "Will Jessica discover Chester's affair...? Will Benson discover Chester's affair? Will Benson care?" and concludes each episode with the trademark line, "These questions - and many others - will be answered in the next episode of Soap."
The series ended abruptly on April 20, 1981; the final episode contains several cliffhangers that are never resolved. These involve a suicidal Chester preparing to kill Danny and Annie after catching them in bed, Burt preparing to walk into an ambush set up by his political enemies, and Jessica about to be executed by a communist firing squad.
However, a 1983 episode of Benson mentions Jessica's disappearance, noting the Tate family is seeking to have her declared legally dead. In this episode, Jessica appears as an apparition whom only Benson can see or hear, revealing to Benson that she is not dead, but in a coma somewhere in South America. The other two cliffhangers are not referenced, leaving it to the viewers' imagination as to what might have happened.
Opening title sequence
Initially, the opening sequence was a lunch scene between Mary and Jessica. Announcer Rod Roddy would describe the basic premise of the series. "This is a story about two sisters, Jessica Tate and Mary Campbell. These are the Tates. And these are the Campbells, and this is SOAP". After that, the series consisted of two different title sequences during the first two seasons, with the leading cast members assembled together in a tableau. In the first one, a fight slowly breaks out between the cast members. The second involves wooden beams and plaster from overhead, suddenly and without warning, crashing to the floor, but the cast remains still, apparently unfazed by what would be likely seen by others as catastrophic. In the later seasons, the sequences changed to just a fighting one as cast members left or were added.
Characters and actors
- Main Characters:
- Katherine Helmond - Jessica Tate - The sister of Mary Campbell and one of the two main focus characters of the show. She is married to Chester Tate but divorces him in the later episodes.
- Robert Mandan - Chester Tate - A wealthy stock broker and Jessica's philandering husband.
- Jimmy Baio - Billy Tate - The youngest child and only son of Jessica and Chester. He gets caught up in a cult, and later has an affair with his very young teacher. After he breaks off the affair, she makes multiple attempts to kill him and/or his family.
- Diana Canova - Corinne Tate Flotsky - Jessica and Chester's daughter. It is later revealed that she is adopted and is really the daughter of Jessica's long lost brother Randolph Gatling and family maid Ingrid Svenson. She later gives birth to a baby named Timmy who turns out to be demon possessed, and leaves home to raise her child after the demon is exorcised.
- Sal Viscuso - Father Timothy Flotsky - A former Catholic priest who leaves the priesthood to marry Corinne Tate.
- Robert Guillaume - Benson DuBois - The Tates' wisecracking butler in the early seasons. He was later given his own spin-off, Benson.
- Roscoe Lee Browne - Saunders - Benson's replacement as the Tates' butler. Similar attitude.
- Jennifer Salt - Eunice Tate-Leitner - Jessica and Chester's daughter. A spoiled social climber, she eventually begins a romance with Dutch Leitner and ultimately marries him.
- Donnelly Rhodes - Dutch Leitner - an escaped convict who hides out at the Tates' after helping Chester break out of prison. He eventually marries Chester's daughter Eunice.
- Arthur Peterson, Jr. - The Major - The father of Jessica Tate and Mary Campbell. The major suffers from senility and believes he is in the midst of fighting World War II.
- Cathryn Damon - Mary Campbell - The sister of Jessica Tate and one of the two main focus characters of the show. At the start of the series she is married to her second husband Burt Campbell. It is revealed her first husband, Johnny Dallas, had been a mobster who was killed by Burt. Eventually, she has a baby with "alien" Burt, and by the series' end has slowly become an alcoholic, as no one else sees the baby manifesting alien-esque qualities, such as being able to fly.
- Richard Mulligan - Burt Campbell and X-23 (Alien Burt) - Burt is the second husband of Mary Campbell. Burt is a contractor who later becomes sheriff. In Season one Burt suffers from mental illness and believes he can make himself invisible. He is also at one point abducted by aliens and replaced with a Burt lookalike. X-23 is the alien duplicate of Burt sent to Earth when Burt is abducted.
- Jay Johnson - Chuck and Bob Campbell - Chuck is Burt Campbell's son by his first marriage. A ventriloquist, he is always accompanied by Bob, his dummy and alter ego and the pair are always referred to as "Chuck and Bob".
- Robert Urich - Peter Campbell - Burt Campbell's tennis pro son by his first marriage. His murder in season one leads to the first season cliffhanger.
- Ted Wass - Danny Dallas - Mary Campbell's somewhat dimwitted son. It is widely assumed that he is the son of Mary's first husband Johnny Dallas but in later episodes it is revealed that his real father is Chester Tate. He later becomes Burt's deputy sheriff.
- Billy Crystal - Jodie Dallas - The son of Mary Campbell and first husband Johnny Dallas. An openly gay man, he later fathers a daughter when a female friend seduces him. Much of his storyline involves getting his daughter back from the mother. The series ends with him believing himself to be an old Jewish man due to a failed hypnotherapy session.
- Dinah Manoff - Elaine Lefkowitz-Dallas - The daughter of a Jewish mob boss. A spoiled and demanding woman, her father forces Danny to marry her so that he can get rid of her. She is eventually kidnapped, then shot when fleeing the kidnappers; she dies in Danny's arms.
Announcer
- Rod Roddy (originally Casey Kasem)
Recurring Characters
- Harold Gould - Barney Gerber
- John Byner - Detective Donahue
- Bob Seagren - Dennis Phillips
- Inga Swenson - Ingrid Svenson (Corinne's real mother)
- Eugene Roche - E. Ronald Mallu, Esq.
- Michael Durrell - F. Peter Haversham
- Richard Libertini - The Godfather
- Gordon Jump - Chief of Police Tinkler (Routinely misidentifies himself as Piece of Chalief Tinkler)
- Edward Winter - Congressman Walter McCallum
- Charles Lane - Judge Anthony Petrillo
- Kathryn Reynolds - Claire
- Caroline McWilliams - Sally
- Lynne Moody - Polly Dawson
- Marla Pennington - Leslie Walker
- Candice Azzara - Millie
- Jesse Welles - Gwen
- Sorrell Booke - Charles Lefkowitz (Elaine's father)
- Allan Miller - Dr. Alan Posner
- Gregory Sierra - El Puerco (translation: The Pig)
- Howard Hesseman - Mr. Franklin
- Randee Heller - Alice
- Peggy Pope - Mrs. Lurleen David
- Joe Mantegna - Juan One
- Rebecca Balding - Carol David
- Nancy Dolman - Annie Selig Tate
- Barbara Rhoades - Maggie Chandler
- Rae Allen - Judge Betty Small
- Judith-Marie Bergan - Marilyn McCallum (Walter's wife)
- Granville Van Dusen - Dr. Hill
- Jack Gilford - Saul
- Doris Roberts - Flo Flotsky
- Nita Talbot - Mrs. Fine
- Byron Webster - Dr. Medlow
Notable one-off characters
- William Daniels - Heinrich Himmel
Controversy
The show was controversial for its time, dealing openly with the topics of homosexuality, marital infidelity, impotence, interracial marriage, and same-sex parenting.
Soap was among the earliest American primetime series to include a regular gay character (Jodie Dallas, played by Billy Crystal). Soap is commonly cited as the first series to do this, but it was preceded by at least three other such shows: 1972's The Corner Bar, 1975's Hot L Baltimore, and 1976's The Nancy Walker Show. The confusion may result from the fact that none of those shows achieved the ratings success of Soap.
Much of Soap's controversy preceded its September 1977 premiere. In June of that year, a review of the show's pilot by Harry F. Waters stated:
- "SOAP" promises to be the most controversial network series of the coming season, a show so saturated with sex that it could replace violence as the PTA's Video Enemy No. 1."[1]
The review went on to pan the show, while also mischaracterizing some of its basic plot elements and offering exaggerated reports of its sexual content.[citation needed]
A number of organizations then mobilized against Soap, including the Christian Life Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, the International Union of Gay Athletes, and the National Gay Task Force.[citation needed] Also mobilized were the National Council of Churches, the United Church of Christ, the United Methodist Church, and the National Council of Catholic Bishops, although they asked the members of their 138,000 collective churches to watch the show first, and then inform ABC of their feelings about it. Nonetheless, the network reportedly received 32,000 letters of complaint before the show's premiere, and eight out of 195 ABC affiliates refused to air the show.[2]
Reception
On Tuesday, 13 September 1977, Soap premiered to an audience of 19 million homes (39% of the national audience). Executives at ABC described initial public reaction as "mild," even though Vlasic Foods pulled their sponsorship of the program shortly after the episode aired.
Harry F. Waters' 1977 review proved prescient during the following year, when the National PTA declared Soap one of "ten worst" shows in television.
DVD releases
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment has released all 4 Seasons of Soap on DVD in Region 1. Season 1 has been released on DVD in Region 2 in Norway (as Forviklingar), in Sweden (as Lödder) and in Spain (as Enredo).
DVD Name | Ep # | Region 1 | Region 2 (Norway, Sweden, Spain) |
---|---|---|---|
The Complete First Season | 25 | September 16, 2003 | February 25, 2009 |
The Complete Second Season | 23 | July 20, 2004 | |
The Complete Third Season | 22 | January 25, 2005 | |
The Complete Fourth Season | 25 | October 11, 2005 | |
The Complete Series | 95 | June 10, 2008 |
References
External links
- 1977 television series debuts
- 1981 television series endings
- 1970s American television series
- 1980s American television series
- American Broadcasting Company network shows
- Parodies
- LGBT-related television programs
- American television sitcoms
- American television soap operas
- Television series by Sony Pictures Television
- Television shows set in Connecticut