Santa Barbara (TV series)

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Santa Barbara
Image:590TITLE.jpg
Title sequence of Santa Barbara
Genre Soap opera
Creator(s) Jerome Dobson & Bridget Dobson
Starring Jed Allan
Dame Judith Anderson
Roscoe Born
Joseph Bottoms
Brandon Call
Margarita Cordova
Nicolas Coster
Justin Deas
Eileen Davidson
Lane Davies
Marj Dusay
Gina Gallego
Carrington Garland
Justin Gocke
Nancy Lee Grahn
Vincent Irizarry
Harley Jane Kozak
Terry Lester
A Martinez
Robin Mattson
Judith McConnell
Todd McKee
John Allen Nelson
John O'Hurley
Janis Paige
Sydney Penny
Louise Sorel
Robert Thaler
Gordon Thomson
Jack Wagner
Marcy Walker
Robin Wright Penn
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
No. of episodes 2137
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel NBC
Original run July 30, 1984January 15, 1993
Links

Santa Barbara was an American soap opera which ran on NBC for 2137 episodes from July 30, 1984 to January 15, 1993.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The show covered the exciting, eventful lives of the wealthy Capwell family of Santa Barbara, California. Around the Capwells there are several other families, from the rival Lockridge family to the more modest Andrade and Perkins families, whose lives know the same torments.

Santa Barbara is notable for having a central plot around which many of the others revolved: the murder of Channing Capwell Junior. This killing takes place five years before the series actually begins, at which point Joe Perkins, jailed for the murder, is paroled and returns to Santa Barbara determined to prove his innocence. Over the course of the soap, almost every major character would be accused of the murder of Channing Capwell Jr or find their life involved in it one way or the other: from his illegitimate son to his mysterious, presumed dead, mother and his homosexual relationship.

The series began on an uneven foot, but creators and executive producers Jerome Dobson and Bridget Dobson proceeded to kill off most of the show's actors via natural disaster and a serial killer storyline. When a major earthquake hit Santa Barbara, core character Danny Andrade slept through the entire thing. Minx Lockridge (Dame Judith Anderson) was unfazed, saying that the 1984 Santa Barbara earthquake was nothing like 1925. She was later locked into an empty sarcophagus. Luckily, her grandchildren were around to let her out and she escaped with merely a bruised ego.

By concentrating on such popular characters as Eden Capwell (Marcy Walker) and Cruz Castillo (A Martinez), C.C. Capwell (Charles Bateman, then Jed Allan) and his wife Sophia (Judith McConnell), Mason Capwell (Lane Davies) and Julia Wainwright (Nancy Lee Grahn), Gina Blake DeMott Capwell Timmons (Linda Gibboney, later Robin Mattson), Augusta (Louise Sorel) and Lionel Lockridge (Nicolas Coster), the program managed to achieve critical acclaim as well as slowly but surely rising ratings.

The show was famous for its comedic style and offbeat writing. For example, in July 14, 1986's episode, former nun Mary Duvall McCormack (played by Harley Jane Kozak) was killed by having a giant neon letter "C" (for "Capwell" atop the Capwell Hotel) land on her while she was standing on the hotel roof (this was later referenced in American Dad!, when a minor character mentioned that his wife died from "the big C," the "big C" not being cancer, but an actual neon "C" from the "Coca-Cola" sign), and despite an irate letter-writing campaign by the show's fans (and an offer from the soap to come back), Kozak was reported as saying that she had "no desire to return to SB", or in fact any other daytime soap.

But in 1988 the Dobsons were locked out of NBC studios after repeated attempts to fire the headwriter. They sued, and were eventually allowed to return to the program, but the magic was gone. Ratings never recovered, even as the show won 3 Daytime Emmys in a row for Best Daytime Drama. The first of those wins involved a mini-melodrama of its own as the extremely controversial Jill Farren Phelps (who had replaced Mary-Ellis Bunim as executive producer) shared the stage with Bridget Dobson. Bridget Dobson, whose work partially garnered the award, raced onstage and captured the trophy a few seconds before Phelps could reach the podium.

Under Phelps' tenure most of the show revolved around Cruz and Eden. One controversial storyline involved Eden being brutally raped, and later discovering that her assailer was her gynecologist Zack Kelton (Leigh J. McCloskey), who had examined her after her rape. McCloskey himself stated that he was uncomfortable with the storyline, as he felt that women had enough concerns about visiting gynecologists. After Zack's death, McCloskey returned as a new character, cold DA Ethan Asher.

Phelps left the series in the early 1990s shortly after being demoted and replaced by John Conboy as executive producer. Finally Paul Rauch became the last executive producer (ironically all three would later be producers on longrunning daytime series Guiding Light). Many important actors had left the series for one reason or another (Robin Wright, Lane Davies, Marcy Walker, Justin Deas). Popular actress Louise Sorel (Augusta) was fired because she did not want to have a romance with Dash (Timothy Gibbs), the man who had raped Augusta's sister Julia. Eden, Cruz, and most of the Lockridges had been written out while new characters played by stars from other shows such as Kim Zimmer, Jack Wagner and Sydney Penny took up most of the airtime. Ratings continued to collapse as more and more affiliates cancelled the program. The final episode aired in January 1993. In the finale, Sophia (Judith McConnell) and CC Capwell (then Jed Allan) moved towards a reconciliation, Kelly (Eileen Davidson, the 4th actress to play the role of Kelly) found love with Connor McCabe (Charles Grant), and at Warren and BJ's wedding, unbalanced Andie Klein (Krista Tesreau) aimed a gun at the crowd. The final shot consisted of executive producer Paul Rauch standing in front of the camera, smashing a cigar under his shoe, and walking away. Some soap critics, such as Michael Logan, were deeply angered by what they saw as the crassness of the final shot.

It has also run in several other countries across the world. In Germany, it ran under the title "California Clan" from January 4, 1989 to October 17, 1997 on RTL Television (former RTL plus) (2123 episodes, because the first 14 episodes were not broadcast). In France, it ran from October 14, 1985 to June 24, 1994 on TF1 (1044 episodes) and from December 19, 2000 to June 1, 2001 on TF6 (106 episodes). In Italy, it ran with all its 2137 episodes from April 3, 1989 to September, 1990 on Rai Uno and from June, 1991 to April 6, 1999 on Rai Due. The show was also a smash cult hit in Russia, being the first American program to air there after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Santa Barbara was the first American soap opera to appear on TV in the Czech Republic after the fall of communist regime. The show aired on Premiera TV (recent Prima TV) and the Czech Republic was the first country among other former communist regime countries to present this show. Santa Barbara was also the most popular show in Croatia and one of the most popular shows in Slovenia during the 1990s, the term "Santa Barbara" is used in everyday life for any soap-opera-like real life situation in the three countries.

Santa Barbara even had fans in the White House. In 1985, when Augusta Lockridge (Louise Sorel) was blinded following a tunnel collapse, Ronald Reagan sent Sorel a letter saying he and Nancy were praying for her and hoped she recovered.

[edit] Cast

Santa Barbara  cast picture  circa 1992–1993
Santa Barbara cast picture circa 1992–1993

[edit] Production

[edit] Creators

[edit] Producers

[edit] Screenwriters

[edit] Directors

  • Rick Bennewitz
  • Michael Gliona
  • Nicholas Stamos

[edit] Origination

NBC Burbank Studio 11 (the facility's first production)

[edit] Ratings history

Although Santa Barbara enjoyed considerable worldwide popularity, it never achieved the same heights in the United States. In its debut (1984–1985) season it finished in 11th place and 3.4, and edged up to 10th and 4.2 the next year. By 1987–1988 however it was beginning to generate respectable numbers: it was still in 10th place but achieved a 4.9 rating, the highest in the history of the show. (Incidentially, 1987–1988 also proved to be the best ratings performance for NBC's daytime soap lineup in the 1980s, which had been in ratings trouble since the late 1970s). Unfortunately, this growth in popularity was not sustained although Santa Barbara remained above Loving until it was cancelled.

In the early 1990s, some NBC affiliates tried airing Santa Barbara late morning timeslots. NBC's flagship station WNBC in New York moved the show from 3pm to Noon where it aired in its remaining years on the air. NBC replaced Santa Barbara with games show Scrabble and Scattergories before eventually adding a new soap, Sunset Beach, to its daytime lineup.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links