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{{Show
[[File:Awlogo.jpg|thumb|Another World's most well known title card (1971-1981)]]ANOTHER WORLD is a soap opera that ran from May 4, 1964 to June 25, 1999 on NBC.  Created by Irna Phillips and William J. Bell, it was the story of the residents of the town of Bay City, Illinois. 
 
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| network = NBC
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| country = United States
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| creator = Irna Phillips<br/>William J. Bell
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| executive_producer =
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| distributor = [[Procter & Gamble Productions, Inc.]] (1964-1999)
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| first_aired = May 4, 1964
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| last_aired = June 25, 1999
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| num_episodes = 8,891
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|image = [[File:AnotherWorldLogo1996-99.png|thumb]]
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|writer =
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|director =|language = English
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|location = New York City, New York
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|runtime = 30 Minutes (1964-75)<br><br>60 minutes (1975-1979, 1980-1999)<br><br>90 minutes (1979-1980)}}
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[[File:Awlogo.jpg|thumb|Another World's most well known title card (1966-1981)]]
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'''''Another World''''' is an American soap opera that ran from May 4, 1964 to June 25, 1999 on NBC.  Created by Irna Phillips and William J. Bell, it was the story of the residents of the town of Bay City, Illinois. 
   
 
The earlier seasons of the series had the epigraph (de rigeur for shows of the time) as intoned by Bill Wolff, "We do not live in this world alone, but in a thousand other worlds."  During its run, it originally ran for 30 minutes, then an hour; then (unusual for soaps) an unprecidented 90 minutes, then back to an hour, where it ran until its cancellation.
 
The earlier seasons of the series had the epigraph (de rigeur for shows of the time) as intoned by Bill Wolff, "We do not live in this world alone, but in a thousand other worlds."  During its run, it originally ran for 30 minutes, then an hour; then (unusual for soaps) an unprecidented 90 minutes, then back to an hour, where it ran until its cancellation.
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The first major family in the story was the Matthews family.  William and Jim, who were brothers at different ends of the societal spectrum, and their respective families.  The death of William had a profound effect on both branches of the family.  William was married to the snobby Liz; and they had two children, Susan (who later married Dr. Daniel Shearer) and Bill who married Missy Palmer and was later killed off in a boating accident. 
 
The first major family in the story was the Matthews family.  William and Jim, who were brothers at different ends of the societal spectrum, and their respective families.  The death of William had a profound effect on both branches of the family.  William was married to the snobby Liz; and they had two children, Susan (who later married Dr. Daniel Shearer) and Bill who married Missy Palmer and was later killed off in a boating accident. 
   
Jim was married to Mary, and had three children, Pat, Russ and Alice.  Pat married John Randolph (she is best remembered as Pat Randolph); Russ eventually married troublesome Rachel Davis and Allice fell in love with Steven Frame (whom Rachel wanted for herself). 
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Jim was married to Mary, and had three children, Pat, Russ and Alice.  Pat married John Randolph (she is best remembered as Pat Randolph); Russ eventually married troublesome Rachel Davis and Alice fell in love with Steven Frame (whom Rachel wanted for herself). 
   
 
As the years went by, Rachel became more of the heroine of the show, having supplanted her former sister in-law, Alice, due to her falling in love with the undisputed love of her life, Mac Cory.  Rachel, in fact, is best remembered as Rachel Cory. 
 
As the years went by, Rachel became more of the heroine of the show, having supplanted her former sister in-law, Alice, due to her falling in love with the undisputed love of her life, Mac Cory.  Rachel, in fact, is best remembered as Rachel Cory. 
   
Another World was also known for spawning two spin-off soaps and one indirect spin-off.  The direct spin-offs were Somerset (Originally called Another World-Somerset, while the parent show was called Another World-Bay City) and Texas (spun off when villainess Iris Carrington, the stepdaughter of Rachel, moved to Houston, Texas). The indirect spin-off was the series, Lovers and Friends (which was later renamed For Richer, For Poorer) which focused on the lives of two families who lived in wealthy Point Clair, Illinois, located near Chicago. AW character Amy Gifford (Christine Jones, who later returned to show as a different character, Janice Frame) was established as the cousin of the upwardly mobile Saxton family.  Somerset ran from 1970-1976; Texas ran from 1980-1982; while Lovers and Friends and For Richer, For Poorer did not fare as well. Lovers and Friends ran for about five months in 1977, was taken off the air to be revamped, and in December 1977, returned as For Richer, For Poorer, and ran until September 1978.
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''Another World'' was also known for spawning two spin-off soaps and one indirect spin-off.  The direct spin-offs were ''Somerset'' (Originally called Another World-Somerset, while the parent show was called Another World-Bay City) and ''Texas'' (spun off when villainess Iris Carrington, the stepdaughter of Rachel, moved to Houston, Texas). The indirect spin-off was the series, Lovers and Friends (which was later renamed For Richer, For Poorer) which focused on the lives of two families who lived in wealthy Point Clair, Illinois, located near Chicago. AW character Amy Gifford (Christine Jones, who later returned to show as a different character, Janice Frame) was established as the cousin of the upwardly mobile Saxton family.  ''Somerset'' ran from 1970-1976; ''Texas'' ran from 1980-1982; while ''Lovers and Friends'' and ''For Richer, For Poorer'' did not fare as well. ''Lovers and Friends'' ran for about five months in 1977, was taken off the air to be revamped, and in December 1977, returned as ''For Richer, For Poorer'', and ran until September 1978. ''Another World'' was also the first soap opera with a theme song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, "(You Take Me Away To) Another World" by Crystal Gayle and Gary Morris, in 1987.
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On April 12, 1999, NBC announced it was canceling ''Another World'' due to low ratings. The show taped its final scenes for NBC on May 4, 1999, part of its 35th and final anniversary, and its final episode on the network aired on June 25, 1999. NBC replaced ''Another World'' with another soap opera, ''[[Passions]]'', on July 5, 1999.
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Many well known actors were a part of ''AW'''s cast over the years. Beverlee McKinsey; Charles Durning; Constance Ford; Christina Pickles; Dolph Sweet; Rue McClanahan are the most notable amongst them.
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==History==
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===1960s===
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====The Beginning====
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[[File:Susan Trustman Michael M. Ryan Another World 1965.JPG|thumb|180px|John and Pat are married, 1965.]]
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The first episode was the aftermath of the funeral of wealthy William Matthews. His widow, Liz ([[Audra Lindley]]), did not like his working-class brother, Jim ([[Shepperd Strudwick]]), or his family. The fights between upper-class Liz and her middle-class in-laws started the show. As the '60s went on, the lives and loves of Jim's children, Russ (Sam Groom), [[Alice Matthews Frame|Alice]] ([[Jacqueline Courtney]]), and Pat (Susan Trustman), took center stage. Jim's wife, Mary ([[Virginia Dwyer]]), usually intervened when there was a crisis, which was most of the time.
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In the first year, the show had a controversial storyline involving Pat having an illegal [[abortion]] after becoming [[pregnant]]. This was the first time that American television had covered the subject. In the story, the abortion made her sterile, and the shock from the news caused her to find her ex-boyfriend, Tom Baxter ([[Nicholas Pryor]]), and shoot him in cold blood. Pat was eventually brought to trial and acquitted. She then fell in love with and married her lawyer, John Randolph ([[Michael M. Ryan]]). Trustman left the role of Pat in 1967 and was replaced by [[Beverly Penberthy]].
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Another notable early storyline revolved around the star-crossed romance of Bill Matthews ([[Joseph Gallison]]) and Melissa Palmer ([[Carol Roux]]). Liz did not consider Melissa good enough for her son and was constantly interfering in their relationship. After many trials and hardships, Bill and Melissa were finally married, but their happiness was short-lived when Bill drowned in a boating accident.
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After a one-year run, NBC was expected to cancel the program. But instead, former [[soap opera]] actor [[James Lipton]] was hired to write the show. His ideas included pushing the Matthews family into the background and introducing the Gregory family. [[Agnes Nixon]], then-[[head writer]] of ''[[Guiding Light]]'', was hired after Lipton's departure to write for the program.
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====Rachel Davis====
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In 1967, Nixon created the show's most iconic character: [[Rachel Cory Hutchins|Rachel Davis]] ([[Robin Strasser]]). Rachel was raised by her single mother, Ada ([[Constance Ford]]), who provided a good foil for Rachel. Down-to-earth Ada could sit in her kitchen on Bowman Street and be perfectly content with her life. Rachel, on the other hand, was a schemer who was determined to escape her impoverished background, even if it meant she had to resort to underhanded means.
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Rachel thought she hit the jackpot when she married Russ, but then she met wealthy businessman, [[Steve Frame]] ([[George Reinholt]]). Steve also grew up poor and he bonded with Rachel over their respective pasts, but it was Rachel's sister-in-law, Alice, who stole his heart. Alice was sophisticated, shy, and demure—everything Rachel was not. They courted and were to marry in 1969, but the marriage was called off when Rachel crashed their engagement party with the news that she was carrying Steve's child. She later gave birth to a son named [[Jamie Frame|Jamie]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reBEonQAzsk|title=Steve meets Alice on ANOTHER WORLD|work=YouTube}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8EmD8imO_DI|title=ANOTHER WORLD 1968|work=YouTube}}</ref>
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===1970s===
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====Steve, Alice, and Rachel====
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[[File:George Reinholt Jacqueline Courtney Another world wedding 1971.JPG|180px|thumb|Steve and Alice are married, 1971.]]
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The love triangle revolving around [[Steve Frame|Steve]], [[Alice Matthews Frame|Alice]], and [[Rachel Cory Hutchins|Rachel]] took ''Another World'' to the top of the ratings. In June 1970, Alice went to live in [[France]] after suffering a breakdown. In her absence, Steve and Rachel bonded yet again, this time over their son. Alice eventually returned and reunited with Steve. The star-crossed lovers finally married.
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When Robert Cenedella stepped down as head writer in 1971, sponsor [[Procter & Gamble]] hired a newcomer, playwright [[Harding Lemay]], to write the program. Lemay's screenplays took the form of tragic plays, as they were carried out in five dramatic acts. Many people consider Lemay's tenure the Golden Age of ''Another World''.
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[[Victoria Wyndham]] took over the role of Rachel from [[Robin Strasser]] in 1972 and remained until the end of the show's run. Rachel was thoroughly convinced her son would be instrumental in breaking up the Frame marriage and snagging her Steve once and for all. She enlisted the help of her drifter father, Gerald ([[Walter Mathews (actor)|Walter Mathews]]), who tricked Alice into finding Steve and Rachel in a compromising position. Alice filed for divorce and left town again. Fed up with Alice's wavering ways, and already feeling an attachment to Rachel and a duty to have more of a role in his son's life, Steve married Rachel.
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Steve tried to settle into his new life with Rachel and Jamie (Robert Doran), but Alice was always on his mind. When Alice returned to Bay City, she exposed Rachel and Gerald's scheme. Steve divorced Rachel and reunited with Alice. Steve was charged with [[embezzlement]] and sentenced to prison. The day before he began his sentence, Steve and Alice married for the second time (on ''AW'''s tenth-anniversary telecast). Rachel continued to scheme, even trying to evict Alice from the house Steve had given her, causing Alice to have another mental breakdown. The triangle finally ended when Steve was supposedly killed in a helicopter crash in [[Australia]].
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As the show rose higher in the ratings, NBC brass wished to expand the show to an hour; the first regularly scheduled hour-long episode was telecast on January 6, 1975.
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====Mac, Rachel, and Iris====
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[[File:Marriage of Mac and Rachel Another World 1975.JPG|thumb|180px|The marriage of Mac and Rachel in Mac's New York City townhouse on [[Valentine's Day]] 1975. [[Ralph Camargo]], the actor who played the [[justice of the peace]], is the real-life father of Victoria Wyndham (Rachel). This was the first time father and daughter had acted together.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/archive/3/3f/20120107073427!Marriage_of_Mac_and_Rachel_Another_World_1975.JPG|title=Press Release|date=February 21, 1975|publisher=NBC Television|accessdate=December 22, 2014}}</ref>]]
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Rachel began a new chapter in her life and stopped being the conniving troublemaker she had been for years. This was in tune with [[Victoria Wyndham]]'s wish that Rachel be played with more facets to her character—for many years, her character was totally "black" in personality, compared to "white," good Alice. Both [[Harding Lemay|Lemay]] and Wyndham wanted to change the character of Rachel as she was so blindly hated by many fans, who wrote to the [[NBC]] studios wishing that she be killed off.
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The love of a good man was ultimately what redeemed Rachel. At a welcoming party thrown in his honor, Rachel crossed paths with wealthy publisher, [[Mac Cory]] ([[Douglass Watson]]). Originally, Mac was a love interest for Liz Matthews, but Lemay noticed the chemistry between Watson and Wyndham and wrote a love story for them. Fearing backlash from viewers who may have found an older man-younger woman relationship tasteless, Lemay penned chance encounters for the two characters, which led to innocent yet intimate conversations.
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Mac and Rachel were married on [[Valentine's Day]] 1975. Mac accepted Jamie as his own child, but the same could not be said for Rachel and Mac's daughter, [[Iris Wheeler|Iris Carrington]] ([[Beverlee McKinsey]]). Iris was a glamorous socialite who had left her husband, Eliot ([[James Douglas (actor)|James Douglas]]), and their son, Dennis (Mike Hammett), to go jet-setting. She was insanely jealous and resented Rachel, who she saw as beneath her family. The drama produced by Iris interfering in Mac and Rachel's marriage carried the show for the rest of the '70s. Iris pulled numerous schemes to drive Rachel and Mac apart, but, unfortunately for her, they often backfired.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQ5ScTKbXFU|title=YouTube|work=youtube.com}}</ref> After the birth of Mac and Rachel's daughter, [[Sam and Amanda Fowler|Amanda]] (Nicole Catalanotto), it was revealed that Iris was adopted, which devastated her.
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The presence of the Cory maid, Louise Goddard ([[Anne Meacham]]), provided comedic relief in otherwise dramatic storylines. Louise also served as a stern confidante and a sometime voice of reason for the Cory family.
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====The Matthewses, Randolphs, and Ewings====
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After Steve's death, Alice became a backburner character for the first time in eleven years, in tune with Lemay's wish that [[Jacqueline Courtney]] leave the show. She was replaced by actress [[Susan Harney]]. Alice became a [[registered nurse]], and adopted an orphaned girl named Sally (Cathy Greene). For many years, John and Pat had been one of Bay City's most stable couples and loving parents to their twins, Michael and Marianne. However, they began experiencing marital problems and divorced. Russ (now played by [[David Bailey (actor)|David Bailey]]) had a disastrous marriage to Sharlene Frame ([[Laurie Heineman]]).
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Siblings Blaine (Laura Malone) and Larry Ewing (Rick Porter) arrived from Claxton, [[Wyoming]]. Blaine had had a summer romance with Jamie (now played by Tim Holcomb) and wanted to continue their relationship. Jamie and Blaine later married, much to Rachel's disapproval. Larry became a police officer and married Clarice Hobson ([[Gail Brown]]).
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John went on to marry the maniacal Olive Gordon ([[Jennifer Leak]]), who committed a reign of terror on the Matthews & Randolph clans. She cheated on John with Evan Webster ([[Barry Jenner]]), blackmailed Marianne (Ariana Chase) to leave town, and ruined Michael's (Lionel Johnston) marriage to Molly Ordway (Rolanda Mendels), among other misdeeds. Believing Alice and John were romantically involved, Olive decided to murder Alice. The March 6, 1979 episode featured a building being set on fire by Olive with Alice trapped inside. John rescued Alice and was killed in the process.
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====The 90-minute experiment====
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The sensational, [[special effects]]-laden episode coincided with the move to 90-minute episodes each weekday. The details of the episode were meant to be kept secret from the press, but they were leaked a month before the scenes aired. Both ''[[Guiding Light]]'' and ''[[The Edge of Night]]'' decided to counteract with their own shocking episodes to air in the same time slot: the rape of Holly Thorpe by her husband Roger (''GL'') and the shocking murder storyline of Wade Meecham (''EON''), respectively. The reason for the change was because the ratings for ''AW'' had gone to #1 in 1978 and, in order to keep the top spot, executive producer, [[Paul Rauch]], pitched the idea to [[NBC]] to make the show longer. The change prompted Lemay to quit after eight years, citing overwork.
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At first, the ratings got a slight boost, but most viewers did not like the change to longer episodes. The episode duration opened up space for many new characters to be introduced, but most of them did not catch on with the audience. The soap also started facing strong competition from ABC's ''[[General Hospital]]'' which enjoyed a significant resurgence in the ratings starting around mid-1978 under the direction of [[Gloria Monty]] with its more action and youth-oriented storylines.
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===1980s===
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====Iris moves to ''Texas''====
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[[File:texastitlecard.jpg|thumb|200px|''Texas'' title card]]
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In the final months of the 90-minute experiment, many characters debuted on ''Another World'' in storylines that focused on Iris as she planned a move to [[Houston, Texas]].
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This fictional move was incorporated in the new [[spin-off (media)|spin-off]] serial, ''[[Texas (TV series)|Texas]]'', which debuted on August 4, 1980. The initial concept was for a show set in the [[Antebellum era|Antebellum]] South entitled ''Reunion'', but NBC wanted something more in line with the hugely successful primetime soap, ''[[Dallas (1978 TV series)|Dallas]]''.<ref name="Grunwald, D pages 23-27">Grunwald, D: "Who Shot Texas", pages 23-27. ''TV Guide'' (Canadian edition), March 5, 1983.</ref> The show was renamed ''Texas'' and series producer, [[Paul Rauch]], chose to have it revolve around Iris. Iris initially set out to visit her son, Dennis (now played by Jim Poyner), who had relocated from Bay City to [[Houston]]. Within a matter of weeks, Iris became involved with her first love (and Dennis's biological father), Alex Wheeler ([[Bert Kramer]]).
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A range of new characters, who had been introduced in the storyline connected to Iris's move, also moved to the new series. To accommodate ''Texas'', ''Another World'' went back to 60 minutes, and was moved from 2:30PM to 2:00PM. Two million viewers defected from ''AW'', partly due to McKinsey's departure, partly due to the time change, and partly due to the influx of new characters who then moved to ''Texas''. Because of the audience erosion, the move to 90-minute installments is generally regarded as a failure.
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====Mac, Rachel, Janice, Mitch, (and again) Steve and Alice====
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[[Mac Cory|Mac]] and [[Rachel Cory Hutchins|Rachel]] had their own marital troubles, mostly regarding Rachel's decision to work full-time as a sculptress. Mac became close with the editor of ''Brava'' magazine (a part of Cory Publishing), Janice Frame ([[Christine Jones (actress)|Christine Jones]]), who was also Steve's sister. Rachel and Mac began fighting regularly, which eventually lead to a divorce. Janice and Mac married, but she only wanted him for his money. Janice was having an affair with photographer and owner of a popular local [[discotheque]], Mitch Blake ([[William Gray Espy]]), and the two plotted to kill Mac and acquire his estate.
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The Mac/Rachel/Janice/Mitch storyline had carried on for a year when it culminated in scenes shot on [[location shooting|location]] in [[St. Croix]]. To crack the scheme that Rachel suspected Janice was spearheading, Rachel slept with Mitch, who by then had backed out of Janice's plan. Rachel found Mac just as the poison Janice had given him was taking effect. After a scuffle involving a knife, the two women fell into a swimming pool and only Rachel came out alive, having killed Janice.
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Weeks later, Rachel was mortified to find out that she was pregnant with Mitch's child, but she still remarried Mac. When Mitch was supposedly murdered by Rachel, she was put on trial. During the trial it came out that Mitch was the father of Rachel's baby, which devastated Mac. Rachel was found guilty and sentenced to eight years in prison. Shortly after, she gave birth to a son named [[Matthew Cory|Matthew]] (Matthew Maienczyk). It turned out Mitch was still alive and was suffering from amnesia. Rachel was set free and the future seemed bright for the Cory family, but then Mitch and Rachel began an affair. Rachel decided to start a new life with Mitch and divorced Mac.
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Further straining the Cory family was the arrival of Mac's illegitimate son, Sandy Alexander ([[Christopher Rich (actor)|Christopher Rich]]). Jamie (now played by [[Richard Bekins]]) and Sandy formed a brotherly relationship, but it was damaged when Jamie's scheming wife, Cecile ([[Nancy Frangione]]), and Sandy had an affair. Cecile and Sandy married and had a daughter named Maggie (Nicole Schrink). Sandy left Cecile when he realized what kind of woman she was and started a relationship with Blaine. Mac became engaged to Rachel's former rival [[Alice Matthews Frame|Alice Frame]] (now played by Vana Tribbey), who had returned to Bay City and was serving as his private nurse following a near-fatal gunshot wound.
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[[Steve Frame]] (now played by [[David Canary]]) was "resurrected" in 1981, first masquerading as the mysterious, wealthy Edward Black. It was revealed he was suffering amnesia and had had plastic surgery. Alice (now played by Linda Borgeson) broke off her engagement to Mac and they reunited. Rachel ended her relationship with Mitch and returned to Bay City from [[San Francisco]]. Mitch kidnapped Matthew, but luckily he was caught and sent to prison. Rachel and Steve reconnected and, after his relationship with Alice went sour and she left town, they reunited. Sadly, on their wedding day, a car accident claimed Steve's life—this time for good. Rachel was blinded in the accident and Mac helped her recover. They fell in love again and were married in a double wedding in the summer of 1983, along with Sandy and Blaine. In 1984, Alice (once again played by [[Jacqueline Courtney]]) returned and tended to Rachel during her bout with amnesia after being kidnapped by Carl Hutchins ([[Charles Keating]]).
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====A new ''Another World''====
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Between 1981 and 1982, almost the entire Matthews family left the canvas: Pat moved to [[New York City]], Marianne (now played by Beth Collins) left to resurrect her marriage to Rick Halloway (Tony Cummings), Russ departed for [[Seattle]], Alice left to attend medical school, and patriarch Jim died (his portrayer, [[Hugh Marlowe]], had died in May 1982). Only Liz, her granddaughter, Julia Shearer ([[Kyra Sedgwick]]), and Sally (now played by [[Jennifer Runyon]]) remained in Bay City.
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After the departure of the Matthews family, the wealthy Love family was introduced. They were made up of siblings Peter (John Hutton), Donna ([[Anna Stuart]]), Nicole ([[Kim Morgan Greene]]), and [[Marley Love|Marley]] ([[Ellen Wheeler]]), who was actually Donna's daughter. Their tyrannical father, Reginald ([[John Considine (actor)|John Considine]]), came back from the dead to cause trouble for his children. He had spent the last twenty years living under the alias LaSalle and had a whole other family, a wife, Marissa ([[Denise Alexander]]), who was none other than Mary McKinnon suffering from amnesia, and an adopted son, Scott ([[Hank Cheyne]]).
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Donna had started off as a snobbish troublemaker, a la Iris, but mellowed somewhat when she married the love of her life, stable boy-turned-businessman Michael Hudson ([[Kale Browne]]). Michael and Donna had identical twins, [[Vicky Hudson|Vicky]] (also played by [[Ellen Wheeler]]) and Marley, when they were teenagers. Vicky was put up for adoption by Reginald and grew up poor in Lassiter, [[Pennsylvania]]. Vicky came to town with her nanny, Bridget Connell ([[Barbara Berjer]]), and her best friend, [[Jake McKinnon]] ([[Tom Eplin]]) and they planned to swindle the Love family, but then Jake fell in love with Marley. Vicky eventually bonded with her family and Jake married Marley.
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Glamorous novelist [[Felicia Gallant]] ([[Linda Dano]]), was introduced and became a mainstay in Bay City until the end of the show's run.
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====The Romance====
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Many popular love stories emerged in the 1980s. Felicia fell in love with ex-con, Mitch Blake, and the two had a storybook wedding. A down-to-earth love story came about between troubled Vietnam vet, John Hudson ([[David Forsyth (actor)|David Forsyth]]), and a newly returned Sharlene (now played by [[Anna Kathryn Holbrook]]). [[Jamie Frame|Jamie]] (now played by [[Laurence Lau]]) and Lisa Grady ([[Joanna Going]]) were going to tie the knot, but Vicky (now played by [[Anne Heche]]) broke them up when she became pregnant by Jamie. The pairing of journalist Kathleen McKinnon (Julie Osburn) and playboy lawyer [[Cass Winthrop]] ([[Stephen Schnetzer]]) also proved extremely popular.
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Sally (now played by [[Mary Page Keller]]) fell for Blaine and Larry's long-lost brother, Catlin ([[Thomas Ian Griffith]]), and ran out on her wedding to David Thatcher ([[Lewis Arlt]]) to be with him. When David was murdered, Catlin took the fall thinking Sally had murdered him, but she hadn't. After going on the run, Catlin was cleared and the pair married. Their marriage was declared invalid when Catlin's presumed-dead wife, Brittany Peterson ([[Sharon Gabet]]), arrived in town. Sally (now played by [[Taylor Miller]]) and Catlin legally married a year later, even though Catlin knew Brittany was pregnant with his child and was claiming Peter (now played by Marcus Smythe) was the father. Sally was tragically killed in a car accident caused by Reginald mere days after her wedding to Catlin.
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One aborted love story was the impending marriage between police officers M.J. McKinnon (Sally Spencer) and Adam Cory (Ed Fry). M.J. desperately tried to hide her past as a high class prostitute in [[Chicago]], but then her former pimp and lover, Chad Rollo ([[Richard Burgi]]), arrived in town. A video surfaced of M.J. having sex with a Mafia boss and Adam dumped her. She decided to move to [[Minnesota]] to give herself a fresh start in life.
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In 1987, the series broke new ground when they introduced Chad's sister, Dawn ([[Barbara Tyson]]). Dawn fell in love with Scott, but then she learned she was [[HIV-positive]]. She had contracted the virus from a [[blood transfusion]] from her prostitute mother. Scott stuck by his girlfriend until Dawn tragically died in his arms. This was the first [[HIV]]/[[AIDS]]-related storyline to air on a daytime [[soap opera]] in the United States.<ref>[http://daytimeconfidential.com/2010/12/01/soap-opera-and-aids-from-tragedies-to-triumph/ "Soap Operas and AIDS: From Tragedies to Triumph"]. ''[[Daytime Confidential]]'', December 1, 2010.</ref>
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====The Old and New Generation====
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The late 1980s saw the two core families of ''AW'' fill out the canvas: new generations of the Cory and Matthews families, as well as the return of older characters.
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By 1986, all of the remaining members of the Matthews family had been written out, but the family began to reemerge in the late 1980s when [[Irene Dailey]] (Liz Matthews) returned on a recurring basis, [[David Bailey]] (Russ Matthews) started making guest appearances, and [[Allison Hossack]] came on as Russ's daughter, Olivia. Liz was, as usual, the town busybody, while Russ was stunned to learn he was the father of Sharlene's daughter, Josie Watts ([[Alexandra Wilson]]), and Olivia pursued a dancing career.
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Mac and Rachel's two youngest children came back as teenagers, [[Sam and Amanda Fowler|Amanda]] was now played by [[Sandra Dee Robinson|Sandra Ferguson]] and [[Matthew Cory|Matthew]] by [[Matt Crane]].<ref name="pghp870619">{{cite news |first=Robert |last=Bianco |newspaper=[[The Pittsburgh Press]] |title=If children's TV turns you off, try 'Kids America' on radio |page=D7 |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=IpccAAAAIBAJ&sjid=cWQEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6865%2C1908193 |date=June 19, 1987 |accessdate=April 21, 2016}}</ref> Amanda married budding artist, [[Sam and Amanda Fowler|Sam Fowler]] ([[Robert Kelker-Kelly]]), and they had a daughter, Alli (Kerri Ann Darling). Matthew started a relationship with Josie, much to both of their families' disapproval due to the ugly history between the Corys and the Frames.
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[[Iris Wheeler]] (now played by [[Carmen Duncan]]) returned to Bay City in 1988. She revealed she was in fact Mac's biological daughter (her birth mother had confessed this on her deathbed). With this knowledge, Iris was more determined than ever to win her beloved "Daddy" over once and for all. Iris claimed she was a changed woman, but it soon became apparent she was up to no good. She set up a [[dummy corporation]] called Bennett Publishing, which she ran under the code name "The Chief." Her plan was to use her company to take down Cory Publishing so she could rush in and save it, winning Mac over in the process. Rachel uncovered the truth and confronted her stepdaughter. Iris confessed all to Mac, who was devastated and left for [[Maine]] to ponder the implications.
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====Turning Point: Mac's death====
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The Cory family continued to be fan favorites, but the family's importance on the show was shaken when Mac Cory's portrayer, [[Douglass Watson]], unexpectedly died of a [[heart attack]] while on vacation in [[Arizona]] in May 1989. At the time of Watson's death, ''Another World'' was about to celebrate its 25th anniversary, which writers had scripted in the form of a 25th anniversary celebration for ''Brava'' magazine. The Corys, minus an absent Mac, hosted a gala that featured the return of several veteran characters, including original characters [[Alice Frame]] ([[Jacqueline Courtney]]) and Pat Randolph ([[Beverly Penberthy]]). It also featured a mystical sequence with Rachel coaxed back from near-death by the ghost of her ex-husband [[Steve Frame|Steve]] ([[George Reinholt]] reprised the role), thwarting Janice's attempt to lure Rachel "into the light".
  +
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Watson's death was written into the show with Mac dying of a heart attack off-screen while in [[Maine]]. Rachel, her family, and a few returning characters tearfully buried Mac on the June 16, 1989 episode. Without Watson, the show was left without a unifying center and it was up to [[Victoria Wyndham]] to fill that void. Much of the show's focus shifted to [[Anne Heche]] who played the dual roles of [[Vicky Hudson|Vicky]] and [[Marley Love|Marley]].
  +
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Vicky was the town schemer, very reminiscent of Rachel at her worst, while Marley remained the "good" twin. Vicky married Jamie and gave birth to a son named Steven, while Marley reconciled with Jake after they nearly divorced. It soon came out that Jake had a [[one-night stand]] with Vicky and might be Steven's father. Jamie turned out to be the father, but both marriages were destroyed. After an intense custody battle, Jamie won full custody of Steven.
  +
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In Mac's will, Iris, Amanda, and Rachel had all been left equal shares of Cory Publishing. Rachel attempted to head the company and counter Iris's continued interference. When the vote for CEO came down, Rachel and Iris were tied. Vicky offered to use her shares to vote for Rachel if she was given custody of Steven, but Rachel turned her down. In an unforgettable moment, Vicky walked into the Cory Publishing boardroom and, to get back at Rachel for rejecting her blackmail, broke the tie by voting for Iris.
  +
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===1990s===
  +
  +
====A New Era====
  +
The absence of Mac continued to affect the show as it moved into the new decade. However, some of the show's most popular storylines came about in the 1990s.
  +
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After divorcing Mitch, Felicia was reunited with her old flame, Lucas Castigliano ([[John Aprea]]). Lucas hunted Felicia down in an attempt to find their daughter, who turned out to be none other than Felicia's enemy, Lorna Devon ([[Alicia Coppola]]). Lorna had gone behind the scenes at Felicia's talk show and switched the live footage with a pornographic videotape that Lucas and Felicia's adoptive daughter, Jenna Norris ([[Alla Korot]]), had unwittingly made. Felicia and Lucas ended up repairing their relationship with Lorna, but their time as a family was short-lived when Lucas was murdered. Meanwhile, Jenna found true love with rocker Dean Frame ([[Ricky Paull Goldin]]). Their happiness, and Dean's success as a rock star, was chronicled in the nighttime special, ''[[Summer Desire]]''.
  +
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Mac's death ushered in the appearance of his illegitimate daughter, [[Paulina Cory Carlino|Paulina Cantrell]] ([[Cali Timmins]]), who fought to prove her legitimacy as a Cory. [[Cass Winthrop|Cass]] fell in love with eccentric detective, Frankie Frame ([[Alice Barrett]]), but they faced numerous obstacles to be together. One such hindrance was Cass's presumed-dead wife Kathleen returning to Bay City after being in the [[Witness Protection Program]]. Sharlene dealt with [[multiple personality disorder]] and was terrorized by her psychiatrist, Dr. Taylor Benson ([[Christine Andreas]]), who was obsessed with John. Sharlene was later presumed dead in a boat explosion engineered by Taylor.
  +
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The 1990 story ''Who shot Jake McKinnon?'' was one of the biggest storylines the show ever told. After his split from Marley, Jake threw caution to the wind and began scheming his way through Bay City. He blackmailed [[Iris Wheeler|Iris]] after she bribed him to prove Paulina was not Mac's daughter, blackmailed Paulina with fake proof that Mac was not her father, and slept with his former mother-in-law, Donna. Marley and Jake reconciled once again, but then she found out that he was in the midst of an affair with Paulina. When Marley dumped Jake, he became enraged and raped her. He was later shot by a mystery assailant.
  +
  +
Jake survived and, considering his recent actions, the list of suspects included almost all of Bay City. Marley was ultimately charged with his attempted murder, though she was innocent. Luckily, Marley was not convicted, but the perpetrator remained a mystery. Jake awoke from his coma and remembered the night in question: it was none other than Paulina who had shot him! Instead of turning her in, Jake decided to use Paulina for his own nefarious purposes, including trying to break up Marley's relationship with Jamie (now played by [[Russell Todd]]). Jake eventually blackmailed Paulina into marriage to get his hands on the Cory fortune.
  +
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Vicky's romance with kindhearted police officer, Ryan Harrison ([[Paul Michael Valley]]), became one of the show's most popular love stories of the '90s. However, Vicky (now played by [[Jensen Buchanan]]) ruined her relationship with Ryan when she cheated on him with his brother, Grant ([[Mark Pinter]]). Vicky would come to regret the day she ever got involved with Grant as he continued to terrorize her for years. Amanda saw her marriage to Sam crash and burn when she had an affair with Janice's son, Evan Frame ([[Charles Grant (actor)|Charles Grant]]). Marley and Jamie's relationship fell apart due to her inability to become pregnant.
  +
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Between 1992 and 1993, there was another Matthews family exodus: Olivia left town because she was pregnant by Iris's son, Dennis (now played by [[Chris Bruno]]), Liz departed, and Russ made his last appearance.
  +
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====Renewal====
  +
Despite low ratings, NBC renewed ''Another World'' in 1993. The lower rated ''[[Santa Barbara]]'' was canceled instead. But ''Another World's'' ratings still were not performing well, becoming the second-lowest rated soap opera on U.S. television at the time (ahead of only ABC's ''[[Loving]]'') after ''Santa Barbara's'' cancellation. The odds were not in the show's favor that it would be renewed again in 1999.
  +
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Rachel's beloved mother, Ada Hobson, died in Summer 1993 (veteran actress [[Constance Ford]] had died earlier that year). Rachel needed support more than ever, and she found it in the unlikeliest source, Mac's former enemy, reformed villain Carl Hutchins. The two fell in love and became engaged. Iris did not like this news one bit, and at Rachel and Carl's wedding, she planned to startle Carl by firing blanks at him. Evan (now played by Eric Scott Woods) placed real bullets into Iris's gun, causing Iris to gravely wound Carl. She was convicted of the crime and sent to prison.
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Matthew Cory developed a May–December romance with his business partner, Donna Hudson. Vicky married Grant, but left him to reunite with Ryan. Vicky later gave birth to Grant's son, Kirkland (Austin and Evan Tennenbaum), and the two fought tooth and nail over the child. Cass and Frankie were finally wed and they honeymooned on the [[Orient Express]]. Sharlene turned up alive and reunited with John. Jake and Paulina (now played by [[Judi Evans]]) beat the odds and fell in love with each other, but continued to have a tumultuous relationship.
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The show also covered many social issue storylines, including [[sexual assault]], [[mental illness]], and [[alcoholism]]. When Lorna was raped after a night of heavy drinking, viewers watched as she dealt with the aftermath of her brutal attack. She originally pointed the finger at Morgan Winthrop ([[Grayson McCouch]]), but her rapist turned out to be Kyle Barkley (Roger Floyd). Cass and Frankie were devastated when their daughter, Charlie (Lindsay Fabes), became ill. Luckily, she recovered, but Cass had begun acting strangely. He was diagnosed with [[bipolar disorder]], which had been triggered by Charlie's illness. Again, viewers were informed: they learned both the symptoms of the illness and how to treat it by watching Cass see a counselor and start to take medication. Felicia had begun drinking heavily after Lucas's death, but she refused to call herself an alcoholic. After her friends staged an intervention, she found help through [[Alcoholics Anonymous]].
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====Decline====
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Early in 1995, news at the top signaled a change in executive producer. [[Jill Farren Phelps]], who had won [[Daytime Emmys|Emmys]] for her work on ''[[Santa Barbara]]'', was given the job. Phelps made several changes to take the show in a more youthful direction. Both cast members over 55, [[Barbara Berjer]] (Bridget Connell) and [[David Hedison]] (Spencer Harrison), were fired. Even though Matthew and Donna were a popular couple, Phelps insisted the characters be paired with others their own age so they were broken up when Donna cheated with her ex-husband, Michael.
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Many other romances began and ended. After years of putting up with Jake's cons, swindles, and lies, Paulina had enough and left him to tie the knot with police officer, Joe Carlino ([[Joseph Barbara (actor)|Joseph Barbara]]). John and Sharlene's marriage was ruined by John's affair with [[Felicia Gallant|Felicia]]. Grant wrecked his marriage to Amanda (now played by [[Christine Tucci]]) by cheating on her with Lorna (now played by [[Robin Christopher]]). Police trainee Josie (now played by [[Amy Carlson]]) fell for her instructor, Gary Sinclair ([[Timothy Gibbs]]).
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One of the show's most maligned storylines of all-time involved show matriarch [[Rachel Cory Hutchins]] being kidnapped and then impersonated by an evil [[doppelgänger]] countess, Justine Duvalier (also played by [[Victoria Wyndham]]). It was panned by the soap press as being worthy of a ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' level of ridicule. During the storyline, the show was dealt another major blow when fan favorite [[Paul Michael Valley]] was fired and his character, Ryan, was killed off. Fans were relieved when Justine's reign of terror was put to an end when Carl finished her off with a letter opener. Wyndham was quoted as liking the storyline at first, but after it played out, she stated that she wished she had never appeared in it.
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Budget cuts caused Phelps to institute a serial killer storyline. Phelps decided to kill off one major character and it was originally decided that popular character, Donna Hudson, was to be offed, but massive fan protest caused Phelps to scrap that plan. Phelps then decided to kill off either Frankie Frame or Paulina Carlino. When a focus group responded lukewarm to Frankie but warmer to Paulina, Phelps gave the greenlight to axe Frankie. When word got out about Frankie's exit, another massive rampage of fan protests arose. Phelps quickly asked then-head writer [[Margaret DePriest]] to re-write Frankie's exit so that the character would at least still live. DePriest, eager to satisfy her wish to see Frankie's husband, Cass, return to his former rogue ways, vehemently refused. Frankie was murdered in what many people felt were overly brutal and gruesome scenes.
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Rachel gave birth to twins, even though she was in her early fifties. Although the believability of this story was debated by fans, it was a nod back to when her mother, Ada, gave birth to Rachel's sister Nancy late in life. [[Robert Kelker-Kelly]] was lured back to the show, but not as his former role, [[Sam and Amanda Fowler|Sam Fowler]]. Instead, he came on as the mysterious Bobby Reno, a love interest for Vicky. Bobby's backstory became convoluted when his identity was rewritten as a fugitive named Shane Roberts and his former wife, Lila ([[Lisa Peluso]]), came to town to reclaim him. Vicky began dating her lifelong friend Jake and they later married.
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After the Justine story and the deaths of Ryan and Frankie, ''AW'' took a serious blow creatively. Frankie was one of the show's most beloved characters, Ryan and Vicky had been the show's most popular couple, and it had never done something as outlandish as a doppelgänger before. The show continued to decline creatively, which eventually led to its demise.
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====Cancellation====
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On April 12, 1999, as part of a shakeup of the network's daytime and early morning schedules (in which NBC also cancelled ''[[NBC News at Sunrise]]'' – with newcomer ''[[Early Today]]'' replacing it as the network's early-morning newscast – and picked up the daytime talk show ''Later Today'', a short-lived spinoff of ''[[Today (U.S. TV program)|Today]]''), NBC announced that it would not renew ''Another World'', ending the series' run after 35 years once the show's previous renewal agreement ended that June. Many reasons abounded for ''Another World's'' cancellation, one of the more notable events occurred in the summer of 1998: the network's [[San Francisco]] affiliate [[KRON-TV]] (now a [[MyNetworkTV]] affiliate) – at the time one of NBC's highest-rated stations – stopped airing the show altogether, leaving ''[[Days of Our Lives]]'' and ''[[Sunset Beach]]'' as the only NBC soaps that the station cleared on its schedule; the move resulted in ''Another World'' being unavailable in around two million television households within the large [[San Francisco Bay Area|San Francisco–Oakland–San Jose]] market, resulting in additional erosion of the program's already below-mediocre ratings (it was later picked up by smaller independent station [[KICU-TV]]).
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Another reason behind the cancellation decision was that a new soap opera produced and owned by NBC (through its NBC Studios unit), ''[[Passions]]'', had entered into production and was slated to begin airing on the network in the summer of 1999. To add ''Passions'' to its daytime schedule, NBC opted to cancel one of its existing serials instead of reclaiming one hour of programming time allocated for syndicated or local programming from its stations. Rumors abounded that ''Days of our Lives'' would be cancelled (despite being NBC's highest-rated daytime series), as renewal talks between NBC and [[Columbia Pictures Television]] were going poorly at the time (at the same time, there were rumors that ABC would cancel ''[[Port Charles]]'' to make room for ''Days'' on its schedule). There were also rumors that the low-rated, younger-skewing soap ''Sunset Beach'' (the lowest-rated of NBC's three daytime serials at the time) would be cancelled.
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''Days of our Lives'' was ultimately renewed for five more years (through March of 2004) in September 1998, leaving only the fates of ''Another World'' and ''Sunset Beach'' up in the air until the following April, when ''Another World'''s cancellation was announced. ''Sunset Beach'' was picked up through the end of 1999 (largely due to its slightly better ratings in the younger demographics) before being cancelled itself, with its final episode airing in December of that year.
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The final episode of ''Another World'' aired on June 25, 1999. The episode revolved around the wedding of Cass and Lila. In the show's final scene, Rachel and Carl happily embraced in the Cory living room, she remarked "All's well that ends well," and, after looking at the pictures of all her loved ones, Rachel went upstairs with Carl. The final image was a still frame of Mac and the show faded to black.
   
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After ''Another World'' ended, its studio went to ''[[As the World Turns]]'' in 2000, before ''[[Guiding Light]]'' was canceled in 2009, ''[[As the World Turns]]'' was canceled in 2010, ''[[All My Children]]'' was canceled in 2011, and ''[[One Life to Live]]'' was canceled in 2012, and ''[[Fraternity Row]]'', ''[[Our Screams Can Last]]'', and ''[[Passionate Dreams]]'' were also canceled in 2012.
Many well known actors were a part of AW's cast over the years. Beverlee McKinsey; Charles Durning; Constance Ford; Christina Pickles; Dolph Sweet; Rue McClanahan are the most notable amongst them.
 
 
[[Category:Shows]]
 
[[Category:Shows]]
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[[Category:NBC Daytime]]
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[[Category:1964 Soap opera debuts]]
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[[Category:1960s American television programs]]
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[[Category:1970s American television programs]]
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[[Category:1980s American television programs]]
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[[Category:1990s American television programs]]
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[[Category:1999 Soap opera endings]]
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[[Category:2010s American television programs]]
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[[Category:2020s American television programs]]

Latest revision as of 04:25, 17 January 2020

Another World
AnotherWorldLogo1996-99
Created by Irna Phillips
William J. Bell
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 8,891
Production
Location(s) New York City, New York
Running time 30 Minutes (1964-75)

60 minutes (1975-1979, 1980-1999)

90 minutes (1979-1980)
Distributor Procter & Gamble Productions, Inc. (1964-1999)
Broadcast
Original channel NBC
Original run May 4, 1964 – June 25, 1999

Template:Italic title

Awlogo

Another World's most well known title card (1966-1981)

Another World is an American soap opera that ran from May 4, 1964 to June 25, 1999 on NBC.  Created by Irna Phillips and William J. Bell, it was the story of the residents of the town of Bay City, Illinois. 

The earlier seasons of the series had the epigraph (de rigeur for shows of the time) as intoned by Bill Wolff, "We do not live in this world alone, but in a thousand other worlds."  During its run, it originally ran for 30 minutes, then an hour; then (unusual for soaps) an unprecidented 90 minutes, then back to an hour, where it ran until its cancellation.

The first major family in the story was the Matthews family.  William and Jim, who were brothers at different ends of the societal spectrum, and their respective families.  The death of William had a profound effect on both branches of the family.  William was married to the snobby Liz; and they had two children, Susan (who later married Dr. Daniel Shearer) and Bill who married Missy Palmer and was later killed off in a boating accident. 

Jim was married to Mary, and had three children, Pat, Russ and Alice.  Pat married John Randolph (she is best remembered as Pat Randolph); Russ eventually married troublesome Rachel Davis and Alice fell in love with Steven Frame (whom Rachel wanted for herself). 

As the years went by, Rachel became more of the heroine of the show, having supplanted her former sister in-law, Alice, due to her falling in love with the undisputed love of her life, Mac Cory.  Rachel, in fact, is best remembered as Rachel Cory. 

Another World was also known for spawning two spin-off soaps and one indirect spin-off.  The direct spin-offs were Somerset (Originally called Another World-Somerset, while the parent show was called Another World-Bay City) and Texas (spun off when villainess Iris Carrington, the stepdaughter of Rachel, moved to Houston, Texas). The indirect spin-off was the series, Lovers and Friends (which was later renamed For Richer, For Poorer) which focused on the lives of two families who lived in wealthy Point Clair, Illinois, located near Chicago. AW character Amy Gifford (Christine Jones, who later returned to show as a different character, Janice Frame) was established as the cousin of the upwardly mobile Saxton family.  Somerset ran from 1970-1976; Texas ran from 1980-1982; while Lovers and Friends and For Richer, For Poorer did not fare as well. Lovers and Friends ran for about five months in 1977, was taken off the air to be revamped, and in December 1977, returned as For Richer, For Poorer, and ran until September 1978. Another World was also the first soap opera with a theme song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, "(You Take Me Away To) Another World" by Crystal Gayle and Gary Morris, in 1987.

On April 12, 1999, NBC announced it was canceling Another World due to low ratings. The show taped its final scenes for NBC on May 4, 1999, part of its 35th and final anniversary, and its final episode on the network aired on June 25, 1999. NBC replaced Another World with another soap opera, Passions, on July 5, 1999.

Many well known actors were a part of AW's cast over the years. Beverlee McKinsey; Charles Durning; Constance Ford; Christina Pickles; Dolph Sweet; Rue McClanahan are the most notable amongst them.

History

1960s

The Beginning

File:Susan Trustman Michael M. Ryan Another World 1965.JPG

John and Pat are married, 1965.

The first episode was the aftermath of the funeral of wealthy William Matthews. His widow, Liz (Audra Lindley), did not like his working-class brother, Jim (Shepperd Strudwick), or his family. The fights between upper-class Liz and her middle-class in-laws started the show. As the '60s went on, the lives and loves of Jim's children, Russ (Sam Groom), Alice (Jacqueline Courtney), and Pat (Susan Trustman), took center stage. Jim's wife, Mary (Virginia Dwyer), usually intervened when there was a crisis, which was most of the time.

In the first year, the show had a controversial storyline involving Pat having an illegal abortion after becoming pregnant. This was the first time that American television had covered the subject. In the story, the abortion made her sterile, and the shock from the news caused her to find her ex-boyfriend, Tom Baxter (Nicholas Pryor), and shoot him in cold blood. Pat was eventually brought to trial and acquitted. She then fell in love with and married her lawyer, John Randolph (Michael M. Ryan). Trustman left the role of Pat in 1967 and was replaced by Beverly Penberthy.

Another notable early storyline revolved around the star-crossed romance of Bill Matthews (Joseph Gallison) and Melissa Palmer (Carol Roux). Liz did not consider Melissa good enough for her son and was constantly interfering in their relationship. After many trials and hardships, Bill and Melissa were finally married, but their happiness was short-lived when Bill drowned in a boating accident.

After a one-year run, NBC was expected to cancel the program. But instead, former soap opera actor James Lipton was hired to write the show. His ideas included pushing the Matthews family into the background and introducing the Gregory family. Agnes Nixon, then-head writer of Guiding Light, was hired after Lipton's departure to write for the program.

Rachel Davis

In 1967, Nixon created the show's most iconic character: Rachel Davis (Robin Strasser). Rachel was raised by her single mother, Ada (Constance Ford), who provided a good foil for Rachel. Down-to-earth Ada could sit in her kitchen on Bowman Street and be perfectly content with her life. Rachel, on the other hand, was a schemer who was determined to escape her impoverished background, even if it meant she had to resort to underhanded means.

Rachel thought she hit the jackpot when she married Russ, but then she met wealthy businessman, Steve Frame (George Reinholt). Steve also grew up poor and he bonded with Rachel over their respective pasts, but it was Rachel's sister-in-law, Alice, who stole his heart. Alice was sophisticated, shy, and demure—everything Rachel was not. They courted and were to marry in 1969, but the marriage was called off when Rachel crashed their engagement party with the news that she was carrying Steve's child. She later gave birth to a son named Jamie.[1][2]

1970s

Steve, Alice, and Rachel

File:George Reinholt Jacqueline Courtney Another world wedding 1971.JPG

Steve and Alice are married, 1971.

The love triangle revolving around Steve, Alice, and Rachel took Another World to the top of the ratings. In June 1970, Alice went to live in France after suffering a breakdown. In her absence, Steve and Rachel bonded yet again, this time over their son. Alice eventually returned and reunited with Steve. The star-crossed lovers finally married.

When Robert Cenedella stepped down as head writer in 1971, sponsor Procter & Gamble hired a newcomer, playwright Harding Lemay, to write the program. Lemay's screenplays took the form of tragic plays, as they were carried out in five dramatic acts. Many people consider Lemay's tenure the Golden Age of Another World.

Victoria Wyndham took over the role of Rachel from Robin Strasser in 1972 and remained until the end of the show's run. Rachel was thoroughly convinced her son would be instrumental in breaking up the Frame marriage and snagging her Steve once and for all. She enlisted the help of her drifter father, Gerald (Walter Mathews), who tricked Alice into finding Steve and Rachel in a compromising position. Alice filed for divorce and left town again. Fed up with Alice's wavering ways, and already feeling an attachment to Rachel and a duty to have more of a role in his son's life, Steve married Rachel.

Steve tried to settle into his new life with Rachel and Jamie (Robert Doran), but Alice was always on his mind. When Alice returned to Bay City, she exposed Rachel and Gerald's scheme. Steve divorced Rachel and reunited with Alice. Steve was charged with embezzlement and sentenced to prison. The day before he began his sentence, Steve and Alice married for the second time (on AW's tenth-anniversary telecast). Rachel continued to scheme, even trying to evict Alice from the house Steve had given her, causing Alice to have another mental breakdown. The triangle finally ended when Steve was supposedly killed in a helicopter crash in Australia.

As the show rose higher in the ratings, NBC brass wished to expand the show to an hour; the first regularly scheduled hour-long episode was telecast on January 6, 1975.

Mac, Rachel, and Iris

File:Marriage of Mac and Rachel Another World 1975.JPG

The marriage of Mac and Rachel in Mac's New York City townhouse on Valentine's Day 1975. Ralph Camargo, the actor who played the justice of the peace, is the real-life father of Victoria Wyndham (Rachel). This was the first time father and daughter had acted together.[3]

Rachel began a new chapter in her life and stopped being the conniving troublemaker she had been for years. This was in tune with Victoria Wyndham's wish that Rachel be played with more facets to her character—for many years, her character was totally "black" in personality, compared to "white," good Alice. Both Lemay and Wyndham wanted to change the character of Rachel as she was so blindly hated by many fans, who wrote to the NBC studios wishing that she be killed off.

The love of a good man was ultimately what redeemed Rachel. At a welcoming party thrown in his honor, Rachel crossed paths with wealthy publisher, Mac Cory (Douglass Watson). Originally, Mac was a love interest for Liz Matthews, but Lemay noticed the chemistry between Watson and Wyndham and wrote a love story for them. Fearing backlash from viewers who may have found an older man-younger woman relationship tasteless, Lemay penned chance encounters for the two characters, which led to innocent yet intimate conversations.

Mac and Rachel were married on Valentine's Day 1975. Mac accepted Jamie as his own child, but the same could not be said for Rachel and Mac's daughter, Iris Carrington (Beverlee McKinsey). Iris was a glamorous socialite who had left her husband, Eliot (James Douglas), and their son, Dennis (Mike Hammett), to go jet-setting. She was insanely jealous and resented Rachel, who she saw as beneath her family. The drama produced by Iris interfering in Mac and Rachel's marriage carried the show for the rest of the '70s. Iris pulled numerous schemes to drive Rachel and Mac apart, but, unfortunately for her, they often backfired.[4] After the birth of Mac and Rachel's daughter, Amanda (Nicole Catalanotto), it was revealed that Iris was adopted, which devastated her.

The presence of the Cory maid, Louise Goddard (Anne Meacham), provided comedic relief in otherwise dramatic storylines. Louise also served as a stern confidante and a sometime voice of reason for the Cory family.

The Matthewses, Randolphs, and Ewings

After Steve's death, Alice became a backburner character for the first time in eleven years, in tune with Lemay's wish that Jacqueline Courtney leave the show. She was replaced by actress Susan Harney. Alice became a registered nurse, and adopted an orphaned girl named Sally (Cathy Greene). For many years, John and Pat had been one of Bay City's most stable couples and loving parents to their twins, Michael and Marianne. However, they began experiencing marital problems and divorced. Russ (now played by David Bailey) had a disastrous marriage to Sharlene Frame (Laurie Heineman).

Siblings Blaine (Laura Malone) and Larry Ewing (Rick Porter) arrived from Claxton, Wyoming. Blaine had had a summer romance with Jamie (now played by Tim Holcomb) and wanted to continue their relationship. Jamie and Blaine later married, much to Rachel's disapproval. Larry became a police officer and married Clarice Hobson (Gail Brown).

John went on to marry the maniacal Olive Gordon (Jennifer Leak), who committed a reign of terror on the Matthews & Randolph clans. She cheated on John with Evan Webster (Barry Jenner), blackmailed Marianne (Ariana Chase) to leave town, and ruined Michael's (Lionel Johnston) marriage to Molly Ordway (Rolanda Mendels), among other misdeeds. Believing Alice and John were romantically involved, Olive decided to murder Alice. The March 6, 1979 episode featured a building being set on fire by Olive with Alice trapped inside. John rescued Alice and was killed in the process.

The 90-minute experiment

The sensational, special effects-laden episode coincided with the move to 90-minute episodes each weekday. The details of the episode were meant to be kept secret from the press, but they were leaked a month before the scenes aired. Both Guiding Light and The Edge of Night decided to counteract with their own shocking episodes to air in the same time slot: the rape of Holly Thorpe by her husband Roger (GL) and the shocking murder storyline of Wade Meecham (EON), respectively. The reason for the change was because the ratings for AW had gone to #1 in 1978 and, in order to keep the top spot, executive producer, Paul Rauch, pitched the idea to NBC to make the show longer. The change prompted Lemay to quit after eight years, citing overwork.

At first, the ratings got a slight boost, but most viewers did not like the change to longer episodes. The episode duration opened up space for many new characters to be introduced, but most of them did not catch on with the audience. The soap also started facing strong competition from ABC's General Hospital which enjoyed a significant resurgence in the ratings starting around mid-1978 under the direction of Gloria Monty with its more action and youth-oriented storylines.

1980s

Iris moves to Texas

File:Texastitlecard.jpg

Texas title card

In the final months of the 90-minute experiment, many characters debuted on Another World in storylines that focused on Iris as she planned a move to Houston, Texas.

This fictional move was incorporated in the new spin-off serial, Texas, which debuted on August 4, 1980. The initial concept was for a show set in the Antebellum South entitled Reunion, but NBC wanted something more in line with the hugely successful primetime soap, Dallas.[5] The show was renamed Texas and series producer, Paul Rauch, chose to have it revolve around Iris. Iris initially set out to visit her son, Dennis (now played by Jim Poyner), who had relocated from Bay City to Houston. Within a matter of weeks, Iris became involved with her first love (and Dennis's biological father), Alex Wheeler (Bert Kramer).

A range of new characters, who had been introduced in the storyline connected to Iris's move, also moved to the new series. To accommodate Texas, Another World went back to 60 minutes, and was moved from 2:30PM to 2:00PM. Two million viewers defected from AW, partly due to McKinsey's departure, partly due to the time change, and partly due to the influx of new characters who then moved to Texas. Because of the audience erosion, the move to 90-minute installments is generally regarded as a failure.

Mac, Rachel, Janice, Mitch, (and again) Steve and Alice

Mac and Rachel had their own marital troubles, mostly regarding Rachel's decision to work full-time as a sculptress. Mac became close with the editor of Brava magazine (a part of Cory Publishing), Janice Frame (Christine Jones), who was also Steve's sister. Rachel and Mac began fighting regularly, which eventually lead to a divorce. Janice and Mac married, but she only wanted him for his money. Janice was having an affair with photographer and owner of a popular local discotheque, Mitch Blake (William Gray Espy), and the two plotted to kill Mac and acquire his estate.

The Mac/Rachel/Janice/Mitch storyline had carried on for a year when it culminated in scenes shot on location in St. Croix. To crack the scheme that Rachel suspected Janice was spearheading, Rachel slept with Mitch, who by then had backed out of Janice's plan. Rachel found Mac just as the poison Janice had given him was taking effect. After a scuffle involving a knife, the two women fell into a swimming pool and only Rachel came out alive, having killed Janice.

Weeks later, Rachel was mortified to find out that she was pregnant with Mitch's child, but she still remarried Mac. When Mitch was supposedly murdered by Rachel, she was put on trial. During the trial it came out that Mitch was the father of Rachel's baby, which devastated Mac. Rachel was found guilty and sentenced to eight years in prison. Shortly after, she gave birth to a son named Matthew (Matthew Maienczyk). It turned out Mitch was still alive and was suffering from amnesia. Rachel was set free and the future seemed bright for the Cory family, but then Mitch and Rachel began an affair. Rachel decided to start a new life with Mitch and divorced Mac.

Further straining the Cory family was the arrival of Mac's illegitimate son, Sandy Alexander (Christopher Rich). Jamie (now played by Richard Bekins) and Sandy formed a brotherly relationship, but it was damaged when Jamie's scheming wife, Cecile (Nancy Frangione), and Sandy had an affair. Cecile and Sandy married and had a daughter named Maggie (Nicole Schrink). Sandy left Cecile when he realized what kind of woman she was and started a relationship with Blaine. Mac became engaged to Rachel's former rival Alice Frame (now played by Vana Tribbey), who had returned to Bay City and was serving as his private nurse following a near-fatal gunshot wound.

Steve Frame (now played by David Canary) was "resurrected" in 1981, first masquerading as the mysterious, wealthy Edward Black. It was revealed he was suffering amnesia and had had plastic surgery. Alice (now played by Linda Borgeson) broke off her engagement to Mac and they reunited. Rachel ended her relationship with Mitch and returned to Bay City from San Francisco. Mitch kidnapped Matthew, but luckily he was caught and sent to prison. Rachel and Steve reconnected and, after his relationship with Alice went sour and she left town, they reunited. Sadly, on their wedding day, a car accident claimed Steve's life—this time for good. Rachel was blinded in the accident and Mac helped her recover. They fell in love again and were married in a double wedding in the summer of 1983, along with Sandy and Blaine. In 1984, Alice (once again played by Jacqueline Courtney) returned and tended to Rachel during her bout with amnesia after being kidnapped by Carl Hutchins (Charles Keating).

A new Another World

Between 1981 and 1982, almost the entire Matthews family left the canvas: Pat moved to New York City, Marianne (now played by Beth Collins) left to resurrect her marriage to Rick Halloway (Tony Cummings), Russ departed for Seattle, Alice left to attend medical school, and patriarch Jim died (his portrayer, Hugh Marlowe, had died in May 1982). Only Liz, her granddaughter, Julia Shearer (Kyra Sedgwick), and Sally (now played by Jennifer Runyon) remained in Bay City.

After the departure of the Matthews family, the wealthy Love family was introduced. They were made up of siblings Peter (John Hutton), Donna (Anna Stuart), Nicole (Kim Morgan Greene), and Marley (Ellen Wheeler), who was actually Donna's daughter. Their tyrannical father, Reginald (John Considine), came back from the dead to cause trouble for his children. He had spent the last twenty years living under the alias LaSalle and had a whole other family, a wife, Marissa (Denise Alexander), who was none other than Mary McKinnon suffering from amnesia, and an adopted son, Scott (Hank Cheyne).

Donna had started off as a snobbish troublemaker, a la Iris, but mellowed somewhat when she married the love of her life, stable boy-turned-businessman Michael Hudson (Kale Browne). Michael and Donna had identical twins, Vicky (also played by Ellen Wheeler) and Marley, when they were teenagers. Vicky was put up for adoption by Reginald and grew up poor in Lassiter, Pennsylvania. Vicky came to town with her nanny, Bridget Connell (Barbara Berjer), and her best friend, Jake McKinnon (Tom Eplin) and they planned to swindle the Love family, but then Jake fell in love with Marley. Vicky eventually bonded with her family and Jake married Marley.

Glamorous novelist Felicia Gallant (Linda Dano), was introduced and became a mainstay in Bay City until the end of the show's run.

The Romance

Many popular love stories emerged in the 1980s. Felicia fell in love with ex-con, Mitch Blake, and the two had a storybook wedding. A down-to-earth love story came about between troubled Vietnam vet, John Hudson (David Forsyth), and a newly returned Sharlene (now played by Anna Kathryn Holbrook). Jamie (now played by Laurence Lau) and Lisa Grady (Joanna Going) were going to tie the knot, but Vicky (now played by Anne Heche) broke them up when she became pregnant by Jamie. The pairing of journalist Kathleen McKinnon (Julie Osburn) and playboy lawyer Cass Winthrop (Stephen Schnetzer) also proved extremely popular.

Sally (now played by Mary Page Keller) fell for Blaine and Larry's long-lost brother, Catlin (Thomas Ian Griffith), and ran out on her wedding to David Thatcher (Lewis Arlt) to be with him. When David was murdered, Catlin took the fall thinking Sally had murdered him, but she hadn't. After going on the run, Catlin was cleared and the pair married. Their marriage was declared invalid when Catlin's presumed-dead wife, Brittany Peterson (Sharon Gabet), arrived in town. Sally (now played by Taylor Miller) and Catlin legally married a year later, even though Catlin knew Brittany was pregnant with his child and was claiming Peter (now played by Marcus Smythe) was the father. Sally was tragically killed in a car accident caused by Reginald mere days after her wedding to Catlin.

One aborted love story was the impending marriage between police officers M.J. McKinnon (Sally Spencer) and Adam Cory (Ed Fry). M.J. desperately tried to hide her past as a high class prostitute in Chicago, but then her former pimp and lover, Chad Rollo (Richard Burgi), arrived in town. A video surfaced of M.J. having sex with a Mafia boss and Adam dumped her. She decided to move to Minnesota to give herself a fresh start in life.

In 1987, the series broke new ground when they introduced Chad's sister, Dawn (Barbara Tyson). Dawn fell in love with Scott, but then she learned she was HIV-positive. She had contracted the virus from a blood transfusion from her prostitute mother. Scott stuck by his girlfriend until Dawn tragically died in his arms. This was the first HIV/AIDS-related storyline to air on a daytime soap opera in the United States.[6]

The Old and New Generation

The late 1980s saw the two core families of AW fill out the canvas: new generations of the Cory and Matthews families, as well as the return of older characters.

By 1986, all of the remaining members of the Matthews family had been written out, but the family began to reemerge in the late 1980s when Irene Dailey (Liz Matthews) returned on a recurring basis, David Bailey (Russ Matthews) started making guest appearances, and Allison Hossack came on as Russ's daughter, Olivia. Liz was, as usual, the town busybody, while Russ was stunned to learn he was the father of Sharlene's daughter, Josie Watts (Alexandra Wilson), and Olivia pursued a dancing career.

Mac and Rachel's two youngest children came back as teenagers, Amanda was now played by Sandra Ferguson and Matthew by Matt Crane.[7] Amanda married budding artist, Sam Fowler (Robert Kelker-Kelly), and they had a daughter, Alli (Kerri Ann Darling). Matthew started a relationship with Josie, much to both of their families' disapproval due to the ugly history between the Corys and the Frames.

Iris Wheeler (now played by Carmen Duncan) returned to Bay City in 1988. She revealed she was in fact Mac's biological daughter (her birth mother had confessed this on her deathbed). With this knowledge, Iris was more determined than ever to win her beloved "Daddy" over once and for all. Iris claimed she was a changed woman, but it soon became apparent she was up to no good. She set up a dummy corporation called Bennett Publishing, which she ran under the code name "The Chief." Her plan was to use her company to take down Cory Publishing so she could rush in and save it, winning Mac over in the process. Rachel uncovered the truth and confronted her stepdaughter. Iris confessed all to Mac, who was devastated and left for Maine to ponder the implications.

Turning Point: Mac's death

The Cory family continued to be fan favorites, but the family's importance on the show was shaken when Mac Cory's portrayer, Douglass Watson, unexpectedly died of a heart attack while on vacation in Arizona in May 1989. At the time of Watson's death, Another World was about to celebrate its 25th anniversary, which writers had scripted in the form of a 25th anniversary celebration for Brava magazine. The Corys, minus an absent Mac, hosted a gala that featured the return of several veteran characters, including original characters Alice Frame (Jacqueline Courtney) and Pat Randolph (Beverly Penberthy). It also featured a mystical sequence with Rachel coaxed back from near-death by the ghost of her ex-husband Steve (George Reinholt reprised the role), thwarting Janice's attempt to lure Rachel "into the light".

Watson's death was written into the show with Mac dying of a heart attack off-screen while in Maine. Rachel, her family, and a few returning characters tearfully buried Mac on the June 16, 1989 episode. Without Watson, the show was left without a unifying center and it was up to Victoria Wyndham to fill that void. Much of the show's focus shifted to Anne Heche who played the dual roles of Vicky and Marley.

Vicky was the town schemer, very reminiscent of Rachel at her worst, while Marley remained the "good" twin. Vicky married Jamie and gave birth to a son named Steven, while Marley reconciled with Jake after they nearly divorced. It soon came out that Jake had a one-night stand with Vicky and might be Steven's father. Jamie turned out to be the father, but both marriages were destroyed. After an intense custody battle, Jamie won full custody of Steven.

In Mac's will, Iris, Amanda, and Rachel had all been left equal shares of Cory Publishing. Rachel attempted to head the company and counter Iris's continued interference. When the vote for CEO came down, Rachel and Iris were tied. Vicky offered to use her shares to vote for Rachel if she was given custody of Steven, but Rachel turned her down. In an unforgettable moment, Vicky walked into the Cory Publishing boardroom and, to get back at Rachel for rejecting her blackmail, broke the tie by voting for Iris.

1990s

A New Era

The absence of Mac continued to affect the show as it moved into the new decade. However, some of the show's most popular storylines came about in the 1990s.

After divorcing Mitch, Felicia was reunited with her old flame, Lucas Castigliano (John Aprea). Lucas hunted Felicia down in an attempt to find their daughter, who turned out to be none other than Felicia's enemy, Lorna Devon (Alicia Coppola). Lorna had gone behind the scenes at Felicia's talk show and switched the live footage with a pornographic videotape that Lucas and Felicia's adoptive daughter, Jenna Norris (Alla Korot), had unwittingly made. Felicia and Lucas ended up repairing their relationship with Lorna, but their time as a family was short-lived when Lucas was murdered. Meanwhile, Jenna found true love with rocker Dean Frame (Ricky Paull Goldin). Their happiness, and Dean's success as a rock star, was chronicled in the nighttime special, Summer Desire.

Mac's death ushered in the appearance of his illegitimate daughter, Paulina Cantrell (Cali Timmins), who fought to prove her legitimacy as a Cory. Cass fell in love with eccentric detective, Frankie Frame (Alice Barrett), but they faced numerous obstacles to be together. One such hindrance was Cass's presumed-dead wife Kathleen returning to Bay City after being in the Witness Protection Program. Sharlene dealt with multiple personality disorder and was terrorized by her psychiatrist, Dr. Taylor Benson (Christine Andreas), who was obsessed with John. Sharlene was later presumed dead in a boat explosion engineered by Taylor.

The 1990 story Who shot Jake McKinnon? was one of the biggest storylines the show ever told. After his split from Marley, Jake threw caution to the wind and began scheming his way through Bay City. He blackmailed Iris after she bribed him to prove Paulina was not Mac's daughter, blackmailed Paulina with fake proof that Mac was not her father, and slept with his former mother-in-law, Donna. Marley and Jake reconciled once again, but then she found out that he was in the midst of an affair with Paulina. When Marley dumped Jake, he became enraged and raped her. He was later shot by a mystery assailant.

Jake survived and, considering his recent actions, the list of suspects included almost all of Bay City. Marley was ultimately charged with his attempted murder, though she was innocent. Luckily, Marley was not convicted, but the perpetrator remained a mystery. Jake awoke from his coma and remembered the night in question: it was none other than Paulina who had shot him! Instead of turning her in, Jake decided to use Paulina for his own nefarious purposes, including trying to break up Marley's relationship with Jamie (now played by Russell Todd). Jake eventually blackmailed Paulina into marriage to get his hands on the Cory fortune.

Vicky's romance with kindhearted police officer, Ryan Harrison (Paul Michael Valley), became one of the show's most popular love stories of the '90s. However, Vicky (now played by Jensen Buchanan) ruined her relationship with Ryan when she cheated on him with his brother, Grant (Mark Pinter). Vicky would come to regret the day she ever got involved with Grant as he continued to terrorize her for years. Amanda saw her marriage to Sam crash and burn when she had an affair with Janice's son, Evan Frame (Charles Grant). Marley and Jamie's relationship fell apart due to her inability to become pregnant.

Between 1992 and 1993, there was another Matthews family exodus: Olivia left town because she was pregnant by Iris's son, Dennis (now played by Chris Bruno), Liz departed, and Russ made his last appearance.

Renewal

Despite low ratings, NBC renewed Another World in 1993. The lower rated Santa Barbara was canceled instead. But Another World's ratings still were not performing well, becoming the second-lowest rated soap opera on U.S. television at the time (ahead of only ABC's Loving) after Santa Barbara's cancellation. The odds were not in the show's favor that it would be renewed again in 1999.

Rachel's beloved mother, Ada Hobson, died in Summer 1993 (veteran actress Constance Ford had died earlier that year). Rachel needed support more than ever, and she found it in the unlikeliest source, Mac's former enemy, reformed villain Carl Hutchins. The two fell in love and became engaged. Iris did not like this news one bit, and at Rachel and Carl's wedding, she planned to startle Carl by firing blanks at him. Evan (now played by Eric Scott Woods) placed real bullets into Iris's gun, causing Iris to gravely wound Carl. She was convicted of the crime and sent to prison.

Matthew Cory developed a May–December romance with his business partner, Donna Hudson. Vicky married Grant, but left him to reunite with Ryan. Vicky later gave birth to Grant's son, Kirkland (Austin and Evan Tennenbaum), and the two fought tooth and nail over the child. Cass and Frankie were finally wed and they honeymooned on the Orient Express. Sharlene turned up alive and reunited with John. Jake and Paulina (now played by Judi Evans) beat the odds and fell in love with each other, but continued to have a tumultuous relationship.

The show also covered many social issue storylines, including sexual assault, mental illness, and alcoholism. When Lorna was raped after a night of heavy drinking, viewers watched as she dealt with the aftermath of her brutal attack. She originally pointed the finger at Morgan Winthrop (Grayson McCouch), but her rapist turned out to be Kyle Barkley (Roger Floyd). Cass and Frankie were devastated when their daughter, Charlie (Lindsay Fabes), became ill. Luckily, she recovered, but Cass had begun acting strangely. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, which had been triggered by Charlie's illness. Again, viewers were informed: they learned both the symptoms of the illness and how to treat it by watching Cass see a counselor and start to take medication. Felicia had begun drinking heavily after Lucas's death, but she refused to call herself an alcoholic. After her friends staged an intervention, she found help through Alcoholics Anonymous.

Decline

Early in 1995, news at the top signaled a change in executive producer. Jill Farren Phelps, who had won Emmys for her work on Santa Barbara, was given the job. Phelps made several changes to take the show in a more youthful direction. Both cast members over 55, Barbara Berjer (Bridget Connell) and David Hedison (Spencer Harrison), were fired. Even though Matthew and Donna were a popular couple, Phelps insisted the characters be paired with others their own age so they were broken up when Donna cheated with her ex-husband, Michael.

Many other romances began and ended. After years of putting up with Jake's cons, swindles, and lies, Paulina had enough and left him to tie the knot with police officer, Joe Carlino (Joseph Barbara). John and Sharlene's marriage was ruined by John's affair with Felicia. Grant wrecked his marriage to Amanda (now played by Christine Tucci) by cheating on her with Lorna (now played by Robin Christopher). Police trainee Josie (now played by Amy Carlson) fell for her instructor, Gary Sinclair (Timothy Gibbs).

One of the show's most maligned storylines of all-time involved show matriarch Rachel Cory Hutchins being kidnapped and then impersonated by an evil doppelgänger countess, Justine Duvalier (also played by Victoria Wyndham). It was panned by the soap press as being worthy of a Mystery Science Theater 3000 level of ridicule. During the storyline, the show was dealt another major blow when fan favorite Paul Michael Valley was fired and his character, Ryan, was killed off. Fans were relieved when Justine's reign of terror was put to an end when Carl finished her off with a letter opener. Wyndham was quoted as liking the storyline at first, but after it played out, she stated that she wished she had never appeared in it.

Budget cuts caused Phelps to institute a serial killer storyline. Phelps decided to kill off one major character and it was originally decided that popular character, Donna Hudson, was to be offed, but massive fan protest caused Phelps to scrap that plan. Phelps then decided to kill off either Frankie Frame or Paulina Carlino. When a focus group responded lukewarm to Frankie but warmer to Paulina, Phelps gave the greenlight to axe Frankie. When word got out about Frankie's exit, another massive rampage of fan protests arose. Phelps quickly asked then-head writer Margaret DePriest to re-write Frankie's exit so that the character would at least still live. DePriest, eager to satisfy her wish to see Frankie's husband, Cass, return to his former rogue ways, vehemently refused. Frankie was murdered in what many people felt were overly brutal and gruesome scenes.

Rachel gave birth to twins, even though she was in her early fifties. Although the believability of this story was debated by fans, it was a nod back to when her mother, Ada, gave birth to Rachel's sister Nancy late in life. Robert Kelker-Kelly was lured back to the show, but not as his former role, Sam Fowler. Instead, he came on as the mysterious Bobby Reno, a love interest for Vicky. Bobby's backstory became convoluted when his identity was rewritten as a fugitive named Shane Roberts and his former wife, Lila (Lisa Peluso), came to town to reclaim him. Vicky began dating her lifelong friend Jake and they later married.

After the Justine story and the deaths of Ryan and Frankie, AW took a serious blow creatively. Frankie was one of the show's most beloved characters, Ryan and Vicky had been the show's most popular couple, and it had never done something as outlandish as a doppelgänger before. The show continued to decline creatively, which eventually led to its demise.

Cancellation

On April 12, 1999, as part of a shakeup of the network's daytime and early morning schedules (in which NBC also cancelled NBC News at Sunrise – with newcomer Early Today replacing it as the network's early-morning newscast – and picked up the daytime talk show Later Today, a short-lived spinoff of Today), NBC announced that it would not renew Another World, ending the series' run after 35 years once the show's previous renewal agreement ended that June. Many reasons abounded for Another World's cancellation, one of the more notable events occurred in the summer of 1998: the network's San Francisco affiliate KRON-TV (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate) – at the time one of NBC's highest-rated stations – stopped airing the show altogether, leaving Days of Our Lives and Sunset Beach as the only NBC soaps that the station cleared on its schedule; the move resulted in Another World being unavailable in around two million television households within the large San Francisco–Oakland–San Jose market, resulting in additional erosion of the program's already below-mediocre ratings (it was later picked up by smaller independent station KICU-TV).

Another reason behind the cancellation decision was that a new soap opera produced and owned by NBC (through its NBC Studios unit), Passions, had entered into production and was slated to begin airing on the network in the summer of 1999. To add Passions to its daytime schedule, NBC opted to cancel one of its existing serials instead of reclaiming one hour of programming time allocated for syndicated or local programming from its stations. Rumors abounded that Days of our Lives would be cancelled (despite being NBC's highest-rated daytime series), as renewal talks between NBC and Columbia Pictures Television were going poorly at the time (at the same time, there were rumors that ABC would cancel Port Charles to make room for Days on its schedule). There were also rumors that the low-rated, younger-skewing soap Sunset Beach (the lowest-rated of NBC's three daytime serials at the time) would be cancelled.

Days of our Lives was ultimately renewed for five more years (through March of 2004) in September 1998, leaving only the fates of Another World and Sunset Beach up in the air until the following April, when Another World's cancellation was announced. Sunset Beach was picked up through the end of 1999 (largely due to its slightly better ratings in the younger demographics) before being cancelled itself, with its final episode airing in December of that year.

The final episode of Another World aired on June 25, 1999. The episode revolved around the wedding of Cass and Lila. In the show's final scene, Rachel and Carl happily embraced in the Cory living room, she remarked "All's well that ends well," and, after looking at the pictures of all her loved ones, Rachel went upstairs with Carl. The final image was a still frame of Mac and the show faded to black.

After Another World ended, its studio went to As the World Turns in 2000, before Guiding Light was canceled in 2009, As the World Turns was canceled in 2010, All My Children was canceled in 2011, and One Life to Live was canceled in 2012, and Fraternity Row, Our Screams Can Last, and Passionate Dreams were also canceled in 2012.

  1. ^ Steve meets Alice on ANOTHER WORLD. YouTube.
  2. ^ ANOTHER WORLD 1968. YouTube.
  3. ^ Press Release. NBC Television (February 21, 1975). Retrieved on December 22, 2014.
  4. ^ YouTube. youtube.com.
  5. ^ Grunwald, D: "Who Shot Texas", pages 23-27. TV Guide (Canadian edition), March 5, 1983.
  6. ^ "Soap Operas and AIDS: From Tragedies to Triumph". Daytime Confidential, December 1, 2010.
  7. ^ Bianco, Robert. "If children's TV turns you off, try 'Kids America' on radio", June 19, 1987, p. D7. Retrieved on April 21, 2016.