Friday, February 21, 2014

You Wanted to Know: . . . about Jane Fonda on TV. Was she ever on Perry Mason?




You Wanted to Know appears on TV Banter from time to time and it deals with just the fact, ma'am.  I have tracked some of the key word readers have used in their Internet searches and have discovered some questions they would like answered.  Someone wanted to know if Jane Fonda had ever appeared on the Perry Mason television series starring Raymond Burr.  Here's the answer.


Many celebrities appeared in guest roles on Perry Mason (1957-1966but Academy Award winner Jane Fonda wasn't one of them. The answer is no.  Jane never had a role on the show.  In fact, the actress has taken very few television roles.  She played Gloria Winters in a little known 60 minute television movie entitled A String of Beads. A String of Beads aired on February 7, 1961.  Twenty years later, she appeared in another TV film, Lily: Sold Out, a 1981 comedy featuring Lily Tomlin. Tomlin had co-starred with Jane and Dolly Parton in the popular film comedy 9 to 5.

In 1982, Jane Fonda made a guest appearance on the television version of 9 to 5. She played a character named O'Neil in an episode of the series entitled "The Security Guard" (Season 2, Episode 2, Air Date: October 12, 1982).  Fonda received an Emmy for her stellar performance as Gertie Nevels. a sharecropper's wife, in The Dollmaker, a television movie that aired on the ABC network on May 13, 1984.  In the film, Gertie, a mother of five from the Kentucky Hills, uproots her children so that she can join her husband, Clovis.(Levon Helm) in Detroit, where he has found employment in a factory during World War I.  The family is reunited and settles in a shack in an industrial area of the city.


Jane in The Dollmaker

It was not until 2012, however, that Jane had a recurring guest star role on a television series.  To date, she has portrayed the character of Leona Lansing on seven episodes of The Newsroom on HBO.  Her most recent appearance as Leona occurred in a September 15. 2013 episode entitled "Election Night: Part II" (Season 2, Episode 9).


Jane Fonda in The Newsroom


The Newsroom was created by Aaron Sorkin, who also created the hit American political drama The West Wing.  The series revolves around the happenings at the fictional Atlantis Cable News (ACN).  Jeff Daniels stars as anchorman Will McAvoy. Jane Fonda's character is the owner of ACN.  In a 2012 interview with The Huffington Post, Jane described Leona Lansing as "somewhere in between" media mogul Rupert Murdoch and her ex-husband, CNN founder Ted Turner.  When asked to comment on whether she had some inside knowledge of newsrooms, she replied, "Well, I do. Being with Ted for ten years, it helps me feel comfortable in that environment.  I know what it looks like.  I know what it feels like - it doesn't intimidate me."

Jane told The Huffington Post that The Newsroom is "a fantastic series" and that she was "proud to be in it." She stated that being a "recurring guest star" on a television show was something new to her.  She said she didn't know how to describe what she does because "I've never done a series like this before."


END NOTES

* Some notable guest stars on the Perry Mason television series include Burt Reynolds #150, 4/8/1962,, Dick Clark #271, 5/2/1966, Barbara Eden #7, 11/2/1957, Barry Sullivan #227, 1/14/1965, Yvonne Craig #35, 5/31/58, Robert Redford #96, 9/17/1960, Walter Pidgeon #172, 2/28/1963, Bette Davis #169, 1/31/1963, Angie Dickinson #23, 2/22/1958, Fay Wray #36, 6/7/1958, Ruth Warrick #224, 12/17/1964, George Kennedy #178, 4/18/1963, Diane Ladd #183,10/3/1963, Frankie Laine #57, 2/21/1959, Jerry Van Dyke #204, 3/26/1964, Adam West #115, 3/18/1961, Paul Winfield #251, 11/14/1965, Richard Deacon #106, 12/10/1960, Cloris Leachman #270, 5/15/1966, June Lockhart #214, 10/8/1964, David McCallum #214, 10/8/1964, Lee Meriwether #226, 1/7/1965, Leonard Nimoy #166, 1/3/1963, Billy Mumy #183, 10/3/1963, Barbara Parkins #160, 11/8//1962, Gavin MacLeod #122, 5/27/1961, Hugh O'Brian #171, 2/14/1963, Nancy Kulp #36, 6/7/1958, Harvey Korman #160, 11/8/1962, Mike Connors #218, 11/5/1964, Jeanne Cooper #40, 9/20/1958, Michael Constantine #224, 12/17/1964, Louise Fletcher #86, 2/27/1960, Ryan O'Neal  #198, 2/6/1964, James Coburn #108, 1/7/1960, Carl Betz #17, 1/11/1958, Whitney Blake #1, 9/21/1957, Joseph Kearns #50, 12/20/1958, Frances Bavier #8, 11/9/1957, Alejandro Rey #133, 11/18/1961, Jackie Coogan #128, 10/14/1961 and Alan Hale, Jr. #137, 12/16/1961.


* HBO has officially renewed The Newsroom for a third and final season, scheduled to air in the fall of 2014.

* Last year, Fonda was nominated for an Emmy in the category of Outstanding Guest Actress in a drama for The Newsroom.  She lost out to Carrie Preston of The Good Wife.  Jeff Daniels, however, won an Emmy for Outstanding Actor in a Drama for his role in The Newsroom.

* In his ShowBiz 411 column of August 28, 2013, Roger Friedman praised Jane Fonda's performance on The Newsroom effusively.  Friedman wrote:

Last night’s HBO drama The Newsroom got a jolt of electricity–at last. It came from two time Oscar winner Jane Fonda, who gave an Oscar worthy performance and stole the entire season in one fell swoop. Fonda plays ACN owner Leona Lansing, and is used sparingly by show creator Aaron Sorkin. She’s nominated for an Emmy from last season (and deserves to win, hands down).

If you want to see lightning strike through a scene, then this is it. Why Fonda doesn’t get a “special guest star” credit up front when she’s on perplexes me. “The Newsroom” needs her. The show can be very whiny otherwise….



- Joanne

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Y&R Report (Feb. 15, 2014): The Latest on The Young and the Restless




Hey Y&R fans, every second Saturday TV Banter discusses the latest happenings and provides commentary on your favourite daytime drama.  Note to U.S. readers - SPOILER ALERT:  Here in Canada, I watch the show on Global TV which is one episode ahead of CBS.  I will inevitably refer to incidents you haven't seen yet. Read at your own risk.  If you are the curious type, though, you may prefer to discover some things in advance.

1.  So, fans, how do you like David Tom as Billy Abbott?  I have nothing against him but I much prefer Billy Miller.  I suppose if Miller had to be replaced, David Tom would have been a good choice since he's played the part of Billy Abbott before.  The point is that Y&R did not have to replace Billy Miller.  All they had to do was allow him some time to pursue other acting assignments.  Why didn't they?  It's a decision that really irks me.

2.  Why did Clueless (police chief Paul Williams) question Billy Boy Abbott so relentlessly when Billy was injured and traumatized from the car explosion?  Clueless told Princess Victoria Newman that the questioning was urgent but failed to explain why the interrogation couldn't wait until Billy was feeling better. Clueless was even trying to force Billy Boy to answer questions without a lawyer present.

Speaking of the Princess, I strongly doubt that she'll keep her vow about being truly finished with Daddy Victor in her life.  I hate to say it but I think The Big Man was right when he said, "She'll come back.  She always does."  Now that Victoria knows about Billy and Kelly, she'll need some support.  Victor will say, "Sweetheart, I've told you all along that Billy Boy isn't good enough for your.  He's a punk and a playboy!"

3.  Poor Fenmore Baldwin!  He's the Rodney Dangerfield of Genoa City.  He just can't get any respect.  That slimy Richard Womack calls him "Mouse" and a Genoa City cop called him "Junior."

4.  Why did Sharon react so calmly to the news of Adam's supposed death?  She didn't even shed a tear. She was quite composed and didn't seem as if she were grieving at all.  She chatted with Summer as if she had only experienced a minor disappointment.  The writers were really asleep at the switch because Sharon really cared about Adam.

5.  It's amazing how easily one can find a dead ringer for someone in Genoa City! Victor Newman just happened to stumble on Cassie's exact look-alike.  What a coincidence!  How convenient for Victor!  He was able to use Cassie's doppelganger to scare Sharon and to find out the secret she is keeping from his son, Nick.  I know soaps are not expected to accurately reflect reality but why are viewers expected to overlook all those frequent look-alikes?

6.  That sneaky Aussie con man, Colin Atkinson, is back!  I just wish the writers hadn't taken so long to explain the Jill kidnapping caper and her quick, unexpected marriage to that sly criminal.  Jill just can't seem to help herself because he's so suave and she's so attracted to him.

7.  There was plenty of high drama at the Valentine gala event for the Delia Fund. Michael Baldwin was conveniently out of town, of course, because he would have recognized Womack.  Speaking of Womack, didn't he look different all dressed up in a suit and tie?

8.  It looks like Chloe has gone off the deep end where baby Connor is concerned. She obviously thinks of The Cute One as a replacement for Delia.  Now she's kidnapping him and leaving town.  I really don't understand how she plans to get past airport security using a passport with Chelsea's picture on it.  How convenient that she was able to get possession of it in the first place!


VIEWER FORUM

From CC from Etobicoke:

I don't think Carmine and Lauren are done yet.
It is ludicrous for a chief to never have been in the ranks, not be able to ever be in uniform, and leave the crime solving to a semi-criminal like Kevin.
Time for Paul and Christine to ride off into the sunset...maybe they should get away from the Wisconsin winter by flying off to Florida.

Well, CC,  I really hope you are wrong about Carmine and Lauren.  That ship has sailed.  Lauren's storyline should move on to other things.  I hope that the writers only brought Carmine back to prevent Fen from serving a prison sentence for murder.

I couldn't agree with you more about Paul Williams.  That's why I call him Clueless. He would never have become police chief without wearing a uniform himself.  How many private detectives become police chiefs? Not only that, but he's terrible at solving crimes.  No wonder Victor's investigator discovered the truth about Adam before Clueless Williams.  Paul has been far more concerned about helping Nikki find her long-lost son and dealing with Ian Ward.  I think he still has a thing for The Big Man's wife.  Christine (also known as The Cricketmeister or The Bug) had better keep her eyes open.

Having said all that, I like Doug Davidson.  He's been a fixture on the show for many years and I don't want him to leave.


CAST NEWS

It appears that Adam Newman has somehow survived that car explosion and now there is speculation that Chris McKenna will eventually replace Michael Muhney in the role.  McKenna, formerly Joey Buchanan on One Life to Live, announced via Twitter that he will be coming to the Y&R.  "It appears I'll be making a bit of a return to soaps," he tweeted.  "At least for a few episodes. #theyoungandtherestless" Although McKenna will be taking on the recurring role of Mark Harding, many believe that he will turn out to be Adam.  Plastic surgery? No, couldn't be!  Nothing personal against Chris McKenna, but I think Y&R should have allowed the character of Adam Newman to die.  If the speculation turns out to be true, McKenna will have the unenviable task of replacing Michael Muhney and it will be more difficult to bring closure to the bitter firing of his predecessor.  Why does everyone have to come back from the dead on soaps anyway? Carmine Basco has just returned to life.   Isn't that enough for now?  Not only that, but we still have the ghosts of John Abbott and Cassie Newman hanging around!  Hey, Drucilla's body was never found.  Maybe someday, they'll resurrect her to come between Neil and Leslie.


Chris McKenna


Cynthia Watros, who plays Kelly Andrews on The Young and the Restless, will most likely be leaving the show.  She has a co-starring role in a new MTV drama called Finding Carter.  Finding Carter is a series about a teenage girl named Carter (Kathryn Prescott) who returns to live with her biological parents after discovering her adopted mother abducted her as a young child.  Watros will portray Carter's birth mother.

Since Kelly is an integral part of the storyline, I don't think the character will be written out.  A new actress will likely take over the part.


BEST LINE

Esther: "Never trust a man with thin lips - present company excepted." (meaning Kevin).


That's all for now.  The February sweeps continue and don't forget that the next edition of the Y&R Report will appear on Saturday, March 1, 2014.

- Joanne

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Twilight Zone episode with Wally Cox has similarities to the movie Her








              Wally Cox in the Twilight Zone episode "From Agnes - With Love"


Last week I viewed the film Her, starring Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams and Olivia Wilde. In this 2013 science fiction romance, Phoenix plays Theodore Twombly, a lonely writer going through a divorce. He falls madly in love with Samantha, his computer operating system, voiced by Scarlett Johansson.  Yes, you read that right! Not only that, but Theodore's friends don't find anything strange about it.  They don't even bat an eyelash when he reveals that he is dating his computer operating system.  Believe it or not, he and Samantha even go on a double date with another couple.  It's a rather sad commentary, I think, about our growing attachment to computer devices and our disconnection from other human beings.

After watching the movie Her, I could not help but be reminded of a classic Twilight Zone episode that was aired on television almost 50 years ago - "From Agnes - With Love" (Season 5, Episode 20), featuring Wally Cox.  The movie Her can be regarded a 21st century version of "From Agnes With Love" and I am more convinced than ever that Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling was a genius.  He was extremely creative, imaginative and prescient.  He had a great sense of the future.




"From Agnes - With Love" was originally broadcast on CBS on February 14, 1964 - yes Valentine's Day! Somehow, I don't think that was a coincidence.  In the episode, Wally Cox plays the central role of James Elwood, a computer programmer who takes advice on his love life from a computer named Agnes.  The cast also includes Ralph Taeger, Sue Randall, Raymond Bailey, Don Keefer, Byron Kane and Nan Peterson.

Narrator Rod Serling introduces the episode as his rich voice intones these words:

James Elwod, master programmer, in charge of Mark 502-741, commonly known as ‘Agnes,’ the world’s most advanced electronic computer.  Machines are made by man for man’s benefit and progress, but when man ceases to control the products of his ingenuity and imagination, he not only loses the benefit, but he takes a long and unpredictable step into - The Twilight Zone.

Here is a synopsis of the plot of "From Agnes - With Love":

A company supervisor (Raymond Bailey) calls upon computer programmer James Elwood when the office computer, known affectionately as Agnes, breaks down. The current programmer, Fred Danzinger (Don Keefer), is unable to resolve the functional error and Jim is asked to see if he can figure out what has gone wrong (Agnes, by the way, is a UNIVAC, the first commercial computer produced in the United States).

Jim Elwood solves the problem so quickly and efficiently that he soon finds himself in charge of the machine. Agnes and Jim soon establishes a rapport and the machine begins giving him romantic advice about Millie (Sue Randall), a co-worker with whom he has arranged to go on a date.  Their date ends in disaster after Jim awkwardly spills champagne on her.  The next date doesn't go well either due to poor advice from Agnes who deliberately misleads the lovelorn computer expert. Jim is distraught when Millie winds up meeting and spending the evening with his romantic rival, a fellow computer programmer named Walter Holmes (Ralph Taeger).

It turns out that Agnes has her own agenda.  She (or it?) is in love with Jim herself and is jealous of Millie. Jim soon realizes that the computer has feelings for him and is losing logical control over its own functions. Unable to solve Agnes' dysfunction, the frustrated computer technician breaks down in frustration.  His boss urges him to take a long leave of absence and he is replaced by Walter, his romantic rival and former subordinate.






END NOTES




* The late Wally Cox delivered a superb performance in the role of nerdy Jim Elwood. Although not a Hollywood leading man, Cox was a fine actor/comedian and is strongly associated with the golden era of American television's earliest days.  He was born Wallace Maynard Cox on December 6, 1924 in Royal Oaks, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit.  His father, George W. Cox, was an advertising executive and his mother, Eleanor Atkinson, was a mystery author.  She wrote under the pseudonym Eleanor Blake.and is best known for the detective novel Death Down East, published in 1942.

Wally's parents divorced when he was a young child.  At the age of 10, he moved with his mother and younger sister to Evanston, Illinois.  It was there that he became friends with a neighbourhood boy named Marlon Brando.  In the 1950s, Wally and Brando became roommates in an apartment in New York City. Brando was already involved in acting and he encouraged Wally to become involved in the industry too.. Their friendship lasted for the rest of Cox's life and Brando travelled from his home in Tahiti to attend Cox's wake.

Cox did well academically and developed and interested in botany.  His plans to become a botanist were put on hold when his  mother was stricken with polio.  He worked at a variety of odd jobs to support the family until he was drafted into military service in 1942.  After being honourably discharged from the army, the young man gave up on the idea of being a botanist and studied handicrafts at the school of industrial arts at New York University.  He became a skilled silversmith.  Wally then opened his own shop in New York where he sold men's accessories such as tie clips that he made himself.

Yet Cox had a talent for comic monologue and he enjoyed entertaining his friends with his impersonations. Spurred on by Brando and others, he joined a local improvisational troupe, the American Creative Theater Group.  He built a name for himself in theatre productions and nightclubs around New York City and became a frequent quest on radio and television programs.

A bespectacled man with a high-pitched voice, Wally's onscreen persona was meek and polite, the quintessential milquetoast.   Although only about 5 ft 5 in. (1.65 metres) or 5 ft. 6 in. (1.68 metres), he was actually quite athletic.  The veteran of World War II was also a motorcycle enthusiast, and a skilled chess player, wood carver and jewellery maker.  Nevertheless, he found himself typecast as a prim and proper bookkeeper or a birdwatcher.

From 1952 to 1955, the actor starred in Mr. Peepers, as Robinson J. Peepers, a shy science teacher at Jefferson Junior High.  Other members of the cast were Tony Randall as history teacher named Harvey Weskit, Patricia Benoit as county nurse Nancy Remington (who later wed Peepers) and Marion Lorne as Mrs, Gurney, an often befuddled English teacher. It's interesting to note that Marion went on to play Samantha's  confused Aunt Clara on Bewitched.

Peepers and school nurse Nancy Remington were married  in a live episode at the end of the 1953-1954 season.  Their wedding was one of the highest rated television shoes of 1954.  After that, the show's popularity waned and it went off the air in 1955 due to declining ratings.

Mr. Peepers was a live sitcom.  It was broadcast before an audience at the New Century Theatre in New York City and recorded in kinescope.

Wally Cox as Mr. Peeper with Patricia Benoit 


From 1956 to 1957, Wally starred in another sitcom called The Adventures of Hiram Holliday  He played Hiram Holiday, a mild-mannered proofreader for a New York newspaper who turns out to have exceptional skills in several activities including scuba diving, fencing, airline piloting and even art forgery.  His newspaper's publisher decides to utilize Hiram's talents by sending him on an adventurous trip around the world with a reporter to accompany him. (There seems to be a pattern here. Wally Cox must have had some sort of Clark Kent complex.)

Beginning in 1964, Wally Cox provided the voice of Underdog in the animated series of the same name  . Underdog was the alter ego of  Shoeshine Boy.  He appeared whenever his love interest, Purebred Polly, appeared to be in danger from Simon Bar Sinister and other villainous characters.  The unlikely canine hero spoke in rhymes such as "There's no need to fear, Underdog is here!"

Underdog aired on the NBC network and continued in syndication until 1973. Production of new episodes, however, ceased in 1967.  124 episodes of the cartoon series were made.


Underdog


Although Wally Cox never had a starring role on a TV sitcom during the 1960s, he guess-starred on numerous shows, particularly in 1966 and 1967.  In 1966 he appeared on Mister Roberts, Lost in Space, The Dick Van Dyke Show, Mission Impossible and The Girl from U.N.C.L.E..  He also appeared on two 1966 episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies as Professor P. Caspar Biddle:  "The Bird-Watchers" (Season 4, Episode 29, Air Date: April 13, 1966) and "Granny Tonics a Bird-Watcher" (Season 4, Episode 31, 1966).  In 1967, he had guest roles on Ironside, I SpyThe Monkees and Get Smart.

From 1969 until 1972,  Cox appeared with Lucille Ball in four episodes of the comedy series Here's Lucy.
One of the episodes is "Lucy and Wally Cox."  (Season 2, Episode 21, Air Date: February 9, 1970). In the episode, Wally played Wally Manley, the son of Moose Manley.  The elder Manley was portrayed by Alan Hale, Jr. of Gilligan's Island.

In the years before his death, Wally was a guest star on the Bill Cosby Show (1970), Night Gallery 1971, McMillan & Wife (1971) and Alia Smith and Jones (1972), The Odd Couple (1972) and Search (1973). His appearance on Night Gallery gave him another opportunity to work with Rod Serling.  On The Odd Couple episode, he was reunited with his Mr. Peepers co-star, Tony Randall

Cox was married three times and divorced twice.  He wed his first wife, Marilyn Gennaro, on June 7, 1954. His second marriage, to Milagros Tirado, took place in 1963.  He was survived by his third wife, actress Patricia Tiernan, whom he married in 1967.  Information about his offspring is vague, contradictory and very sparse online. According to IMbd and other sources, however, he had one child with Marilyn Genaro.  The American National Biography Online asserts that he and Genaro adopted a daughter but no name is provided. Wikipedia states that he had two children with Milagros Tirado.

Wally Cox passed away on February 15, 1973, almost 41 years ago.  He died of an apparent heart attack at his home in Bel Air, California.  He was only 48 and there were some reports that the cause of his death was an overdose of sedatives, although it has been officially ruled as a heart attack.   An autopsy concluded that Cox died of a coronary occlusion (the obstruction of blood flow in a coronary artery).

According to an October 17, 2004 article in the Los Angeles Times ("When the wild one met the mild one" by Robert Welkos), few people were aware of Marlon Brando's arrival at Wally Cox's wake in the actor's Bel Air home.  Brando had "crept in through a back window at Cox's residence and hidden out in the room where Cox had died." Wally's widow, Patricia, declared that Brando "was heartbroken, of course," at Wally's death.

Celebrities from the game show The Hollywood Squares, on which Cox was a regular guest star, were at the wake.  Others in attendance were Tom and Dick Smothers, Vincent Price, Ernest Bognine and Twiggy. Patricia told Welkos, however, that "Marlon didn't come out." of the room where he was hidden.

* In The Twilight Zone episode "From Agnes - With Love," Wally Cox's character, James Elwood, uses the term "debug" when referring to the need to "debug" Agnes. This is a very early use of the expression on an American television drama, possibly the first use.

* Wally appeared in the unaired pilot of The Hollywood Squares in 1965 and remained with the NBC series until his death in 1973.  With a few exceptions, he sat in the upper left square. On the show, he was quite witty and sarcastic.


Wally Cox in his Hollywood Square


 * Wally authored some children's books:  The Tenth Life of Osiris Oakes, My Life As A Small Boy (1961) and Ralph Makes Good (1965).     


- Joanne

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Y&R Report (Feb. 1, 2014): The Latest on The Young and the Restless




Hey Y&R fans, every second Saturday TV Banter discusses the latest happenings and provides commentary on your favourite daytime drama.  Note to U.S. readers - SPOILER ALERT:  Here in Canada, I watch the show on Global TV which is one episode ahead of CBS.  I will inevitably refer to incidents you haven't seen yet. Read at your own risk.  If you are the curious type, though, you may prefer to discover some things in advance.


1.  The walls have finally closed in on Adam and his storyline has drawn to a fiery conclusion.  The car exploded and Billy survived.  That's not unexpected since we know that David Tom has replaced Billy Miller in the role.  We caught our first glimpse of David as he fell down in front of Victoria at their doorstep. Boy, that explosion really altered Billy's appearance!

What of Adam?  We are being led to believe that no one could have survived that explosion and that Adam must be dead.  Don't be surprised if he shows up again in a few weeks or months.  According to Michael Muhney, Y&R executive produce Jill Farren Phelps told him that Adam's character would not appear on screen for awhile and then return with a new actor in the role.

I must say, I do have some sympathy for the wretched son of Hope.  Although he is no angel, I think he has been treated far too harshly by Billy Abbott and some of the other residents of Genoa City.  Here are a couple of points to keep in mind: Firstly, Adam did not set out to run over Delia.  That was the furthest thought from his mind.  It was purely an accident.  Secondly, contrary to what Billy and others have stated, Adam did not leave little Delia on the roadside to die.  He wasn't even aware that his car had struck the child.  He thought he might have hit Delia's dog, checked to see if that had happened and was relieved that the dog was still standing.  So, believing that nothing was amiss, he jumped back into his infamous black SUV and drove away.

Adam is guilty of not turning himself in after discovering what he had unintentionally done. He acted out of cowardice and fear of losing Chelsea and cute baby Connor. Yes, he was very wrong not to go to the police but his intent was not malicious.  His actions were all too human, especially since he feared Clueless and the Cops would not believe him with his his history of malfeasance.

Adam rightly pointed out to Billy that he too bore some responsibility for his daughter's death.  After all, Billy was the one who left Delia unattended in the car while he went to buy some ice cream.  Adam's words really hit a nerve with Billy Boy and he had no rebuttal.  Let's play amateur psychologist now.  Perhaps the reason Billy has been so angry and vengeful toward Adam is that he is really angry at himself for leaving Delia alone. He has been projecting his anger onto Adam in order to ease his own guilt.

Delia's parents, Billy and Chloe, come across as extremely vengeful and bloodthirsty. Yes, I can understand that they are in pain and that they lost their daughter.  They claim they want justice but what they really want is revenge.  They want someone to pay for what happened to Delia and they want to blame someone for her death.

The confrontation between Billy and Adam has highlighted the excellent acting ability of both Billy Miller and Michael Muhney.   It's really disappointing to see their departures.  Why couldn't some lesser actor leave the show instead?  Why do the fans have to lose the best?  Sigh!


2.  So if the police come to your door searching for someone and you assure them that the person in question is not on the premises, the police will just take your word for it, won't they?  They will if you are the Great Victor Newman.  Two of Genoa City's finest came to Adam's apartment with a warrant for his arrest. The Black Knight reminded them of his importance and stated categorically that his son was not there.  The police just took his word for it and left.  Why?  He is the Big Man.  He is the Great Victor Newman.  That's why.

The Big Man is also guilty of obstruction of justice.  He knew Adam was the driver of the SUV and he didn't inform the police (It's no surprise Victor's investigator discovered the truth before Clueless Paul Williams). Victor used that information to blackmail his own son, Adam.  When confronted about it by Nikki, he used his one-size-fits-all excuse for everything.  He declared that he had to protect his family.  He uses that excuse to justify almost anything.


3.  Ian Ward showed up at Nikki's doorstep and he's quite a piece of work.  He's so sly and slippery, isn't he?  It seems as if Supermodel Summer will be his next victim. He gave her his card and you can bet she's going to look him up.  Summer is young and naive, the perfect candidate for Ian Ward to lead down his disastrous Path. She's also not the sharpest knife in the drawer - just as Nikki was at her age.  What a coincidence that she's Nikki's granddaughter! Like grandmother, like granddaughter. Wait until Ian discovers that they are related!

4.  There are now pictures of outdoor scenes before the indoor scenes take place. For example, we have been shown outdoor images of the Abbott home in winter and the Genoa City prison.

5.  So Carmine Basco is still alive.  Are you happy about that, fans?  I just hope they don't have him stalking Lauren again.  I understand that he had to turn up alive in order to establish Fen's innocence but those stalking storylines are getting tiresome. I could do without the one about Tyler's ex, Mariah, stalking him and girlfriend Abby.

6.  Wherefore art thou, Jill.Foster Abbott Fenmore?  I am astounded that Y&R's producers and writers have left Jill's kidnapping storyline just hanging for such a lengthy period of time.  I realize that the Adam storyline has been front and centre but could't they have devoted a few scenes to Jill.  Why is no one concerned about her absence?  The show has a terrible tendency to leave stories hanging far too long. It's very annoying and disconcerting to fans.  Continuity is important.


CAST NEWS

Steve Burton (Dylan McAvoy) and his wife, Sheree, are expecting their third child. Their daughter, Makena Grace, was born in 2003 and son Jack Marshall was born in 2006.  Baby Number Three is due in mid-July.

Soap writer Dan J. Kroll has reported that Eileen Davidson is returning to her role as Kristen Blake on Days of Our Lives rather than to her Ashley Abbott character on Y&R.  Eileen will be seen on screen this summer. That's great news for Days fans but another disappointment for Y&R fans.  I have been hoping for a storyline involving Ashley and Dr. Stitch.  That isn't likely to happen any time soon.


Young and Restless TRIVIA

You will have to be a long-time Y&R fan to remember this:

What was the name of the hair salon that Jill Foster once worked at with her boss, Derek.Thurston. Jill and Mrs. Chancellor fought over him.  Derek married Katherine Chancellor after she got him drunk, although he eventually fell in love with Jill.

Derek first appeared on the show in 1976.  His last appearance was in 1984 when he attended the wedding of Victor and Nikki.

The answer is further down the page.



BEST LINES

Abby after finding herself locked in her new apartment and her cell phone taken - the work of a stalker:

"Trapped in a cold apartment all night and then break a nail."


"A skunk with perfume is a skunk."

- Dylan referring to his biological father, Ian Ward



ANSWER TO Y&R TRIVIA QUESTION:

The hair salon managed by Derek Thurston was called The Golden Comb.


That's all for now, Y&R fans.  Get ready for the February sweeps and Valentine's Day on the show.  There is going to be a big Valentine's gala n Genoa City and it's going to be filled with intrigue.  Remember to check out the next edition of Y&R Report on Saturday, February 15, 2005.

I leave you with a Reader's Poll.


Y&R REPORT READER'S POLL

Are you pleased that Carmine Basco is still alive?
  
pollcode.com free polls 




- Joanne



Friday, January 24, 2014

You Wanted to Know: How tall is Mark Harmon?




"I don't care who's No. 1 on the call sheet or how big my trailer is. I care about the work. I don't care who gets the laughs. I just care that the laugh comes."

- Mark Harmon


Today I am introducing a new feature on TV Banter that will appear from time to time.  It's called You Wanted to Know and it deals with just the fact, ma'am.  I have tracked some of the key words readers have used in their Internet searches and have discovered some questions they would like answered.  Several people have been curious about NCIS star Mark Harmon's height.  So without further ado, here's the answer.  (Drum role, please!)

Mark Harmon is about 1.82 or 1.83 metres according to various sources.  That makes him just under or just over 6 feet tall.

Mark's full name is Thomas Mark Harmon and he was born in Burbank, California on September 2, 1951. He is now 62 years old.

Mark Harmon's wife, Pam Dawber, is 1.69 metres or just under 5 feet, 7 inches.

Sean T. Harmon, Mark and Pam's 26-year old son, is slightly shorter than his father. On his website, Sean (born April 25, 1988) lists his height at 5 feet, 11 inches or 1.8034 metres.  Sean's younger brother, Ty Christian Harmon, was born on June 25, 1992.


Note: Some readers have been wondering if Mark Harmon is related to Dallas-born actress Angie Harmon. No, they are not related.


- Joanne

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Farewell to The Professor from Gilligan's Island and Reuben Kinkaid from The Partridge Family


Two supporting actors on popular television comedies died this week on the same day - Russell Johnson and Dave Madden  Although they were not leading men, both made an impact.


RUSSELL JOHNSON (1924 - 2014)



The Professor was a good-looking but nerdy academic, an exaggerated stereotype of the man of capacious intelligence with little or no social awareness. Occasionally approached romantically by Ginger (and guest stars, including Zsa Zsa Gabor), he remained chaste and unaffected.

But he was pretty much the only character on the show who possessed anything resembling actual knowledge, and he was forever inventing methods to increase the castaways’ chance of rescue  . . .

- Bruce Weber
From New York Times obituary of Russell Johnson


Russell Johnson, the actor who portrayed The Professor on Gilligan's Island, passed away on January 16, 2014 at the age of 89.  He died from kidney failure at his home on Brainbridge Island in Kitsap County, Washington.  Johnson was the only surviving male member of the cast of Gilligan's Island.  The CBS comedy only lasted for three seasons (1964-1967) and it was widely panned by television critics. Yet the show found a new audience in reruns and became something of a cult classic.  It was especially popular with children.

Gilligan's Island chronicled the adventures of seven castaways as they attempted to survive and escape from a tropical island on which they were shipwrecked after a storm.  The uncharted island was located somewhere in the Pacific.

Alan Hale, Jr. portrayed the captain of their small touring boat, the S.S. Minnow. The captain's name was actually Jonas Grumby but he was known as The Skipper. Alan Hale, Jr. died in Los Angeles on January 2, 1990 at the age of  68. The cause of his death was cancer of the thymus (a specialized organ of the immune system).

Bob Denver, who played the title role of the bumbling first mate, Gilligan, passed away on September 2, 2005 at the age of 70.  He died due to complications from cancer at a hospital in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

The part of millionaire Thurston Howell III was played by veteran actor Jim Backus, best known as the voice of Mr. Magoo.  Backus died in Los Angeles, California on July 3, 1989. He was 76 years old and had suffered from Parkinson's disease. Natalie Schafer portrayed Howell's vapid wife, Eunice "Lovey" Wentworth Howell.  Schafer died of cancer at her home in Beverly Hills on April 10, 1991.  She was 90 years old.


Jim Backus as Thuston Howell III

The only surviving cast members are Tina Louise and Dawn Wells.  Tina played the role of Ginger Grant, the movie star, and she had disagreements with producer Sherwood Schwartz over the portrayal of her character.  The actress, singer and author is now 79 years old.  Dawn Wells, now 75,  played Mary Ann Summers, a farm girl from Kansas.  On the day of Russell Johnson's death, Wells posted a message on Facebook.  She wrote ,"My 2 favorite people are now gone.  The professor past (sic) away this morning.  My heart is broken."  (Dawn's other "favorite" person is Bob Denver).

Most people do not recall The Professor's real moniker.  He was a  high school science teacher named Roy Hinkley.  Hinkley constructed generators and other gadgets out of scraps of junk found on the remote Pacific island. Johnson later joked that although The Professor could make a radio from a coconut, he one thing  he never figured out how to do was to repair the leaky boat so that the castaways could return to civilization.  It didn't happen because a return to civilization would have meant the end of the show.

The Professor and Mary Ann were not named in the opening credits of Gilligan's Island during the first season.  In fact, their characters were ignored in the show's theme song.  They were simply dismissed as "the rest."  Complaints were made about the snubbing of the two cast members and  the error was rectified at the start of the second season.

Russell David Johnson was born on November 10, 1924 in Ashley, Pennsylvania, one of the seven children of farmers Russell J. and Minnie K. Johnson.  Following the death of his father, he and his brothers were sent to Girard College, a boarding school in Philadelphia. After high school, with World War II raging, Russell joined the United States Army Air Forces. He became a navigator and bombardier aboard a B-24 Liberator.  His plane was shot down over the Philippines in 1945 and he fractured both of his ankles in the crash.

Johnson served with much distinction and earned a number of military awards, including a Purple Heart. Upon receiving an honourable discharge (with the rank of First Lieutenant) in November of 1945, he used his G.I. funding to study acting at the Actors Labratory in Hollywood, California.

Johnson's first film role was in For Men Only, the 1952 drama about fraternity hazing. Regarded as a character actor, he appeared in several Westerns such as Law and Order (1953), starring Ronald Reagan, and in some science fiction films such as This Island Earth (1955) and It Came from Outer Space (1953). In the late 1950s and early 1960s, he made frequent television appearances, often in Westerns, despite the fact that he was not a good horse rider.  From 1959 to 1960, Johnson had a recurring role as Marshal Gib Scott on the ABC Western series Black Saddle starring Peter Breck as the gunfighter-turned-lawyer Clay Culhane,

Russell Johnson appeared in two episodes of Rod Serling's classic Twilight Zone series during the early 1960s.  In a 1960 episode entitled ""Execution," he portrayed a scientist who, while experimenting with his time machine, accidentally retrieves a 19th century murder.  In a 1961 episode entitled "Back There" (Season 2, Episode 13, Air Date: January 13, 1961, he played a man who, after arguing about whether it's possible to change history by going back in time, finds himself in 1865 on on the eve of Lincoln's assassination.

In 1964, when the opportunity to play The Professor on Gilligan's Island came along, Johnson was reluctant to take on the role.  He turned down the part twice.and only agreed to it after his chances for starring roles on other series fell through.  In a 2004 interview with the Archive of American Television, Johnson stated that he "didn't want to be one of seven (cast members)."

After Gilligan's Island, Russell had guest roles in a number of TV series.  In 1970, he appeared in an episode of The Big Valley entitled "The Good Thieves" (Season 3, Episode 16, Air Date (January 1, 1968). In 1970, he portrayed a character named Jon in two episodes of That Girl, starring Marlo Thomas.  In the episodes, "Fly by NIght" (Season 4, Episode 18, Air Date: January 29, 1970) and "Ugly Wilderness" (Season 4, Episode 19, Air Date: February 5, 1970), aspiring New York actress Ann Marie (Marlo Thomas) and her boyfriend Don Hollinger (Ted Bessell) fly to her father's cabin in Vermont.  They are forced to make an emergency landing when their plane runs out of gas.

Russell played Dr. Leonard Colman in a 1971 episode of the medical drama Marcus Welby, M.D. entitled "I Can Hardly Tell You Apart" (Season 3, Episode 4, Air Date: October 5, 1971).  That next year, he appeared as Martin Lucas in an Ironside episode, "Programmed for Panic" (Season 6, Episode 3, Air Date: September 28, 1972).  He continued to make guest appearances throughout the 1970s  - on Cannon (1974) (1975), McMillan & Wife (1977), Police Story (1978), Wonder Woman (1978) and Lou Grant (1978).
From 1971 to 1973, Johnson had a recurring role as Assistant District Attorney Brenton Grant in eight episodes of the legal drama Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law.

During the 1980s, Russell Johnson had guest roles in a two-part episode of The Jeffersons (1982) and in single episodes of MacGwyer (1986) and Newhart (1987), Knot's Landing (1987) and My Two Dads (1989).  He also appeared as character named Earl Thompson in two episodes of Dynasty - "The Arrangement" (Season 7, Episode 5, Air Date: November 5, 1986) and "Shadow Play" (Season 7, Episode 28, Air Date: May 6, 1987).  In 1986, Johnson portrayed Sheriff Wyatt Mansfield on an episode of Dallas entitled "Twemty-Four Hours (Season 9, Episode 16, Air Date: January 10, 1986).

During the 1990s, Russell was considerably less active.  He portrayed Dr. Jesse Butler in a 1992 television movie called With a Vengeance, a thriller starring Melissa Gilbert. In 1995, he appeared in an episode of Roseanne entitled "Sherwood Schwartz - A Loving Tribute" (Season 7, Episode 25, Air Date: May 24, 1995) along with Bob Denver and Tina Louise.  Part of the episode is a fantasy sequence in which Gilligan's Island is parodied by the cast of Roseanne.

There were also three Gilligan's Island TV movie sequels in which Russell appeared: Rescue from Gilligan's Island (1978), The Castaways on Gilligan's Island (1979) and The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan's Island (1981).

Russell Johnson was married three times.  His first marriage to Edith Cahoon (from 1943 to 1948) ended in divorce.  On July 23, 1949, he married his second wife, Kay Levey, whom he had met at acting school. Russell and Kay had two children, a son named David and a daughter named Kim.  David Johnson,  an AIDS activist, died of complications from the disease on October 27, 1994.  He was 39.  Kay Levey passed away in Century City, California on January 20, 1980. Russell then married Constance "Connie" Dane in 1982 and they remained together until his death.

Russell Johnson published his autobiography, Here on Gilligan's Island, in 1993.  He is survived by his wife, Connie, daughter Kim, a stepson named Court Dane and a grandson, Max.


DAVE MADDEN (1931 - 2014)




 I try not to look back on my career. I told somebody this one time and I'll tell you. I never did anything as an actor that I was extremely proud of. I wish I could look back and say, OK here was a TV show or a movie that I thought was so perfect for me, or I did such a good job that if I died tomorrow at least I could say I left that as my legacy. But there isn't anything that falls into that category. So, from that point of view I suppose the career was a disappointment.

- Dave Madden
Reflecting on his career in a interview on the C'mon Get Happy fan site


The Partridge Family has lost its manager.  Canadian-born Dave Madden, who played Reuben Kinkaid, the family's agent on the 1970s sitcom,  passed away on January 16, 2014.  Madden died at a hospice in the Jacksonville, Florida area,  He was 82 years old.

David Joseph Madden was born in Sarnia, Ontario on December 17, 1931, the son of Verna and Roger Madden.  He was the youngest of four siblings, one of whom became a nun (Sister Mary Roger, born in 1919).  Dave's early childhood was spent in Port Huron, Michigan.  In 1939, however, he was sent to live with his Aunt Bess and Uncle Frank in Terre Haute, Indiana.

Madden started his show business career as a nightclub comic before finding success on television.  He first recurring role on a TV series was as Counselor Pruett in Camp Runamuck, a short-lived NBC comedy about hijinks at a summer camp for boys.  It was located across the lake from a camp for girls and many pranks were exchanged in a battle of the sexes.  Camp Runamuck only lasted one season from 1965 to 1966 and only 26 episodes of the show were produced.  Dave Madden appeared in 17 of them.

Dave Madden as Pruett on Camp Runamuck

Dave began to make a name for himself in the late 1960s.  From 1968 to 1969, he was a regular performer on the popular variety/comedy show Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In.  He is particularly remembered for his comic portrayal of a milk-drinking, milk spilling sad sack  The actor also appeared in two episodes of Bewitched, the first in 1967 and the second in 1969. The episodes are "Super Car" (Season 3, Episode 19, Air Date: January 19, 1967) and "Samantha's Shopping Spree" (Season 5, Episode 29, Air Date: April 17, 1969).



The Laugh-In cast: (bottom) Dave Madden, Judy Carne, Henry Gibson, Ruth Buzzi, Jo Ann Worley; (on ladder) Chelsea Brown, Goldie Hawn, Arte Johnson, and Alan Sues.


It was David Madden's role as Reuben Kinkaid, the stressed-out manager of a musical family on The Partridge Family that brought him television fame.  The Partridge Family, starring Shirley Jones and her real-life stepson David Cassidy, aired on the ABC network from 1970 until 1974.  The show made lead singer Cassidy a teen heartthrob and produced a huge hit with the song "I Think I Love You."

Reuben's relationship with red-haired, freckle-faced Danny Partridge, played by Danny Bonaduce, provided much of the humour on the show.  The two often clashed and Danny was the source of much frustration for Kinkaid.  The precocious pre-teen was a financial whiz, a younger and earlier version of Michael J. Fox's Alex P. Keaton character on Family Ties.

Upon learning of Dave's passing, Shirley Jones paid tribute to him.  She said, "Dave was a great actor and one of the reasons The Partridge Family worked so well."  She told Variety that he "made the show."  "His relationship with Danny Bonaduce is what made the show work:  this strange, mad little boy and the grown man who was even worse as a father figure.  It was hysterical!"  Although Reuben Kinkaid was constantly annoyed by Danny and the other Partridge Family children, Shirley claimed that off-camera  he "loved kids."

Danny Bonaduce reacted to Madden's death with some comments on Twitter.  He said, "Dave Madden was a great guy & like family to me.  He taught me to drive a car when I was 10.  One of many good memories. I'll truly miss him."

After The Partridge Family, Dave guest-starred on such shows as Happy Days (1974), Starsky and Hutch (1977), Barney Miller (1978), The Love Boat (1978) and Fantasy Island (1979).  From 1978 to 1985, he had a recurring role as Earl Hicks, a customer at Mel's Diner on the sitcom Alice.  During the 1980s, Dave made appearances in episodes of Still the Beaver (1986) and Life with Lucy (1986).  In 1992, he reprised his role as Reuben Kinkaid on a pilot for The Ben Stiller Show (Season 1, Episode 1, Air Date: September 27. 1992) and he made an appearance as a manager on Married . . .with Children in 1994.  In 1998, he appeared in an episode of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch entitled "Good Will Haunting" (Season 3, Episode 6, Air Date: October 30, 1998).  In more recent years, he did voicework for video games.

Dave Madden was married twice.  In 1975, he married Nena Arnold.  The couple adopted a daughter, Selena, and had a son named Peter Michael.  They divorced in 1985 and Dave went on to wed his former college sweetheart Sandy Martin.  He and Sandy married on May 28, 1998 and remained together until his death.

By the way, I am absolutely not related to Dave Madden.  Other than the same last name, the only thing we have in common is that we were both born in Ontario.

END NOTE

Dave Madden wrote a 2007 autobiography titled Reuben on Wry: The Memoirs of Dave Madden.





- Joanne

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Y&R Report (Jan.18, 2014): The Latest on the Young and the Restless




Hey Y&R fans, every second Saturday TV Banter discusses the latest happenings and provides commentary on your favourite daytime drama.  Note to U.S. readers - SPOILER ALERT:  Here in Canada, I watch the show on Global TV which is one episode ahead of CBS.  I will inevitably refer to incidents you haven't seen yet. Read at your own risk.  If you are the curious type, though, you may prefer to discover some things in advance.

Wasn't little Connor cute at his christening . . . ooops  . . .  I mean "blessing" or was it "naming ceremony?" Anyway, it was just like the Big Man to show up at the ceremony and disrupt everything.  That's just the way Victor operates, isn't it?

It seems as if Phyllis will be coming out of her coma soon.  She has been responding to music and her doctor thinks that this is a positive development.  That must mean that the part of the fiery redhead is being recast. It's becoming more and more likely that Michelle Stafford is not going to return anytime soon and that a new actress will take over the role.  Having said that, I remind myself that there are always surprises ahead.


Supermodel Summer's life was on the line this week.  Jabot worked her much too hard. Those slave drivers! They drove her to drugs!  After consuming too many "energy" pills, she collapsed on the stairs, had a cardiac episode and lost consciousness.  Don't worry! Her two daddies, Jack and Nick, come to the rescue with some help from Sharon.  Phew!  She's going to be all right!  Her health crisis is over.  After the death of Delia, there was no chance of the loss of another young character.

For a 19-year-old, Summer sure been through a great many crises, although she hasn't been divorced yet. Remember that Victoria Newman eloped with Ryan McNeijl at the age of 16 and she was divorced by the time she was Summer's age.  Victor always called Ryan "a punk."  He calls Billy Boy Abbott  "a punk and a playboy."


THE STAGES OF SUMMER

Summer Ann Newman was born on an elevator on December 19, 2006, the daughter of Nick Newman and Phyllis Summer Newman.  Daddy Number Two, Jack Abbott delivered her.  If soaps went on real time, Summer would be seven years old, but it doesn't work that way on a daytime drama.  Soap characters are prone to RAS (Rapid Aging Syndrome).  Poor Summer has lost 12 years of her life.  The character is now 19.

Stage One:  Supergirl - This is the nickname given to her by Daddy Number One, Nicholas Newman when she was just a child.

Stage Two:  Superteen - Summer grew up extremely fast.  Suddenly she was a typical teen, hanging out at the coffee shop with Courtney and Fen.  Then she developed this huge crush on 20-something Kyle Abbott.

Stage Three:  Supermodel - Summer is now in the Supermodel stage of her life. Lights, cameras, action! She may become a star!


Why do the Y&R writers have a tendency to leave stories hanging?  The latest example is the Jill kidnapping. She was abducted by someone, handcuffed and robbed of her cell phone.  For days, this has just been left hanging.  Where is the continuity?  By the way, her kidnapper must be Colin Atkinson as Tristan Rogers is soon to returning to the show.

I like the idea of the Winters family running the Athletic Club.  It's time the writer's came up with something better for this clan.


The controversy over the firing of Michael Muhney from his role as Adam Newman continues.  Some extremely serious allegations have been made against him and if they are true, he deserved to be removed from his job.  Sexual harassment, of course, can not be tolerated.  Yet, even if he were not guilty of such misconduct, it is obvious that Michael has been a disruptive force on the set.  His demeanour and his attitude have upset and alienated several of his castmates.  His presence on the set, it seems, was toxic.  One of the regrettable aspects of this regrettable saga is that Michael is such an outstanding actor.  His portrayal of the
character of Adam Newman is so intense, it's almost eerie.  It's as if Muhney is so into the character that he is possessed.  It's as if Adam is under his skin.


Y&R CAST NEWS

Ignacio Serricchio, the Argentine-American actors who portrays Genoa City police detective Alejandro "Alex" Chavez on the Y&R, has landed a recurring role on Fox TV's Bones.  Serricchio will portray a very prominent forensic anthropologist from Cuba who comes to the U.S. seeking asylum.

All the best to Ignacio.  Yet, I wonder why he was permitted to accept an outside acting role and Billy Miller (Billy Abbott) was not.  Perhaps Billy Miller asked for long periods of time away from his role.

Former One Life to Live star Chris McKenna will be joining the cast of the Young and the Restless in a yet to be specified role.


VIEWER FORUM

Here's an observation from Helen of Scarborough, Ontario about Dr. Ben "Stitch" Rayburn.  Helen says that for a doctor in residency, Stitch spends a great deal of his time in coffee shops eating cookies. Helen also thinks that Clueless Paul Williams' office is rather dumpy for a police chief.

She made some other interesting observations about the old episodes that were shown at Christmas and New Year's.  The impact of cell phones on the show really becomes evident, she said, when viewing shows when they were not around.  She also noticed the large number of people in the episode with the Colonnade Room. They was a slew of extras back then.  Soaps can't afford to pay as many background actors now.


I also received some feedback from regular contributor CC from Etobicoke.  CC writes:

Is the actor who plays Chavez (Ignacio Serricchio) moving on because he is slated to play a part on 'Bones'?  Not that it matters because it appears they write his Detective Chavez role as they go along.
Noah's former girlfriend (Adriana) was his nutty sister.  That role balloon burst quickly.  Could have been a good storyline but they killed it. Who knows why?
Now Courtney and he are connected?


CC, it seems as if Courtney is going undercover to help Chavez bust the drug ring.

As far as I am concerned the casting of both blondes who play Summer and Courtney, one worse than the other, must have been the result of somebody owing someone a favour (it was rumoured that Executive Producer Jill Farren Phelps knew her from another contact) or a deliberate attempt to sabotage the shows popularity.
Actress who plays Courtney is a better actress but doesn't appear to have all the other required parts although they may be acquired in time.

Don't even want to speculate as to how Hunter King's'career is going to go from here on but she should keep other options open.

This week's Delia/Adam/Chelsea/Billy storyline is slowly letting the fizz out of Adam to allow for an easier separation for the fans.

I can feel the fans' separation anxiety waning.

Who will be the next character to end up at the bottom of the staircase?

Good thesis topic for for a Masters Degree in TV and Film: The Importance of the Staircase in Drama!

As for the Michael Muhney situation, CC writes:

It's time for the broadcasting executives to put standard practices in dealing with these kinds of situations as there seem to be more and more of them.
Being let go does not have to be a seemingly first line form of discipline.

CC has also pointed out to me that there is a website Y&R fans might like to take a look at.  It's called Soap Opera Network.  www.soapoperanetwork.com


BEST LINE

"These papers are to Victor-proof The Peanut."

- Adam explaining why it was necessary for Chelsea to sign the papers making Jack the legal guardian of baby Connor.


That's all for now.  There's lots of drama coming up on the Y&R.  We'll see how the Adam storyline plays out.  Victor already knows what is son has done but has agreed to keep quiet in exchange for access to baby Connor.  Question:  Does the Big Man sincerely want to be a grandpa to Connor or is he just looking for someone to succeed Noah as the current heir to the Newman dynasty?

Don't forget to check out the next edition of the Y&R Report on Saturday, February 1, 2014.


- Joanne