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On [[E! True Hollywood Story]] Dickson indicated that she was terminated from her role as Jill because she was ill, and that she unsuccessfully pursued litigation regarding her termination. [http://www.wrf.com/docs/newsletter_issues/278.pdf]. Industry magazines attributed her termination to diva-like conflict with costars or executives. Publicly, she and [[Jeanne Cooper]], who plays Katherine Chancellor, expressed warm feelings toward each other. In 1988, Dickson hugged and then thanked Cooper in her acceptance speech when she won the [[Soap Opera Digest Award]] Outstanding Villainess in a Daytime Serial. Cooper was quoted in a January 2007 issue of Soap Opera Digest as stating that she "adores Brenda". However, fellow cast member [[Jerry Douglas]] who played Dickson's on-screen spouse was quoted in Soap Opera Digest as saying of Dickson, "I really cannot stand that woman and you can print that!"
On [[E! True Hollywood Story]] Dickson indicated that she was terminated from her role as Jill because she was ill, and that she unsuccessfully pursued litigation regarding her termination. [http://www.wrf.com/docs/newsletter_issues/278.pdf]. Industry magazines attributed her termination to diva-like conflict with costars or executives. Publicly, she and [[Jeanne Cooper]], who plays Katherine Chancellor, expressed warm feelings toward each other. In 1988, Dickson hugged and then thanked Cooper in her acceptance speech when she won the [[Soap Opera Digest Award]] Outstanding Villainess in a Daytime Serial. Cooper was quoted in a January 2007 issue of Soap Opera Digest as stating that she "adores Brenda". However, fellow cast member [[Jerry Douglas]] who played Dickson's on-screen spouse was quoted in Soap Opera Digest as saying of Dickson, "I really cannot stand that woman and you can print that!"


Dickson has earned a reputation for occasionally living up to her character's wild and colorful nature. Among media related to Dickson is a vanity video production titled "Welcome to my Home" taped in 1987, for which she is credited as writer, director and executive producer. It has resurfaced on several video-based websites, and has gained unintentional [[Camp (style)|camp]] status. This video was parodied on video sharing websites. Dickson also changed her look over the years, from being a brunette to redhead to currently a blonde.
Dickson has earned a reputation for occasionally living up to her character's wild and colorful nature. Among media related to Dickson is a vanity video production titled "Welcome to my Home" taped in 1987, for which she is credited as writer, director and executive producer. It has resurfaced on several video-based websites, and has gained unintentional [[Camp (style)|camp]] status.

"Welcome to my Home" was parodied on video sharing websites, most famously by comedienne Deven Green, who simply took Dickson's videos and dubbed over the original audio with an improvised track. Initially removed from youtube.com for alleged copyright infringement issues, Green's parody video later resurfaced after she released a second parody video debunking Dickson's allegations. In it, Green, dressed as Dickson in a long blond wig and garish fashions, reads aloud an actual letter, supposedly written by Dickson in the third person, expressing disgust at Green. "I hear the narrator is so ugly," it reads, "she can't look in the mirror without it cracking...[and] wieghs (sic) 300 pounds." Green has since posted three additional parody videos targeting Dickson's self-promotion. The five videos, which can be seen at devengreen.com, have been viewed by hundreds of thousands and, though reviled by Dickson herself, are largely responsible for bringing her back into the public eye.


== Personal life ==
== Personal life ==

Revision as of 22:28, 26 December 2007

Brenda Dickson (born February 3, 1949 in Long Beach, California) is an American actress.

Dickson was a beauty pageant contestant who won the title of Miss California (preliminary to Miss World) 1967. After a number of years making commercials and appearing on game shows as a panelist, she was cast as one of the first cast members of the daytime drama The Young and the Restless. She was on the show as Jill Foster Abbott when it launched in 1973 until 1980. She left the show to become a real-life housewife. However, her marriage soon ended and she returned to acting. In 1983, she reprised the role of Jill on The Young and the Restless, and her performance as the show's villainess supposedly pushed the soap opera to the top of the ratings. She played the role until 1987, when she was replaced by Jess Walton, who continues to play the role to this day.

The role of vampy, trampy Jill garnered Dickson and the show a great deal of attention. During her first run on the show, she was given the controversial storyline of the ingenue Jill falling in love with the rich husband of client Katherine Chancellor. Her involvement on the serial merited a brief cameo in the film Taxi Driver, where Robert De Niro's character accidentally knocks over and breaks his television set while he watches Dickson play Jill. During Dickson's second run on the show, she was given another controversial storyline where Jill sleeps with her stepson Jack Abbott and then is blackmailed for it.

On E! True Hollywood Story Dickson indicated that she was terminated from her role as Jill because she was ill, and that she unsuccessfully pursued litigation regarding her termination. [1]. Industry magazines attributed her termination to diva-like conflict with costars or executives. Publicly, she and Jeanne Cooper, who plays Katherine Chancellor, expressed warm feelings toward each other. In 1988, Dickson hugged and then thanked Cooper in her acceptance speech when she won the Soap Opera Digest Award Outstanding Villainess in a Daytime Serial. Cooper was quoted in a January 2007 issue of Soap Opera Digest as stating that she "adores Brenda". However, fellow cast member Jerry Douglas who played Dickson's on-screen spouse was quoted in Soap Opera Digest as saying of Dickson, "I really cannot stand that woman and you can print that!"

Dickson has earned a reputation for occasionally living up to her character's wild and colorful nature. Among media related to Dickson is a vanity video production titled "Welcome to my Home" taped in 1987, for which she is credited as writer, director and executive producer. It has resurfaced on several video-based websites, and has gained unintentional camp status.

"Welcome to my Home" was parodied on video sharing websites, most famously by comedienne Deven Green, who simply took Dickson's videos and dubbed over the original audio with an improvised track. Initially removed from youtube.com for alleged copyright infringement issues, Green's parody video later resurfaced after she released a second parody video debunking Dickson's allegations. In it, Green, dressed as Dickson in a long blond wig and garish fashions, reads aloud an actual letter, supposedly written by Dickson in the third person, expressing disgust at Green. "I hear the narrator is so ugly," it reads, "she can't look in the mirror without it cracking...[and] wieghs (sic) 300 pounds." Green has since posted three additional parody videos targeting Dickson's self-promotion. The five videos, which can be seen at devengreen.com, have been viewed by hundreds of thousands and, though reviled by Dickson herself, are largely responsible for bringing her back into the public eye.

Personal life

Dickson was married twice: her first marriage was to a dentist named Robert Rifkin, but it ended in divorce as did her second marriage to attorney Jan Weinberg. In 2007, Dickson was jailed in Hawaii because of a civil contempt order stemming from divorce judgment from her second marriage. [1] The judge released her after sixteen days in jail when she told him that she would vacate the Hollywood condo that was part of the marital estate, so it could be put up for sale.[2] Because of this incident, Dickson received a flurry of publicity. In a television interview conducted by her former co-star, Michael Corbett from The Young and the Restless, she indicated that she would not move out of the marital condo, reneging on her word to the judge, which landed her in jail again. After nearly three months in jail, the judge released her on June 27, 2007, because the Hollywood condo was sold and her ex-husband had withdrawn his objection to her release.[3]

Awards and nominations

References