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*[http://www.jumptheshark.com/forum/edge-night/619 Jump The Shark's Edge of Night page]
*[http://www.jumptheshark.com/forum/edge-night/619 Jump The Shark's Edge of Night page]
*[http://soapworldclassicsoaps.yuku.com/forums/85 Link to Edge of Night fan discussion board]
*[http://soapworldclassicsoaps.yuku.com/forums/85 Link to Edge of Night fan discussion board]
*[http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/page49533.html Episodes (scripts) of Edge of Night on microfilm]


[[Category:American television soap operas|Edge of Night, The]]
[[Category:American television soap operas|Edge of Night, The]]

Revision as of 21:10, 18 February 2009

The Edge of Night
Original main title (1956–1967)
Created byIrving Vendig
StarringAnn Flood
Forrest Compton
Joel Crothers
Lois Kibbee
Sharon Gabet
Country of originUSA
No. of episodes7,420
Production
Running time30 Minutes
Original release
NetworkCBS (1956–1975)
ABC (1975–1984)
ReleaseApril 2, 1956 –
December 28, 1984

The Edge of Night (or known informally as Edge or EON, by fans) is a long-running American television mystery series/soap opera produced by Procter & Gamble. It debuted on CBS on April 2, 1956, and ran on that network until November 28, 1975; the series then aired on ABC from December 1, 1975, until December 28, 1984. There were 7,420 episodes, with some 1,800 available for syndication.

Format

The Edge of Night (the working title of the show was The Edge of Darkness) premiered on April 2, 1956 as one of the first two half-hour soaps on television -- the other being As The World Turns. Both shows were aired on CBS and sponsored by Procter and Gamble.

The show was originally conceived as the daytime version of Perry Mason, which was popular in novel and radio formats at the time. Mason's creator Erle Stanley Gardner was to create and write the show, but a last-minute tiff between him and the CBS network caused Gardner to pull his support from the idea. CBS insisted that Mason be given a love interest to placate daytime soap opera audiences, but Gardner flatly refused to take Mason in that direction. Gardner would eventually patch up his differences with CBS and Perry Mason would debut in prime time in 1957.

It was in 1956, however, that a writer from the Perry Mason radio show, Irving Vendig, created a retooled idea for daytime -- and The Edge of Night was born. Unlike Perry Mason, which took place in Southern California, the daytime series was set in the fictional Midwest city of Monticello. This setting was presumably modeled after Cincinnati, home base of sponsor Procter and Gamble, whose skyline served as the show's logo until 1980. A frequent backdrop for the show's early scenes was a restaurant called the Ho-Hi-Ho. The state capital, however, was known generically as "Capital City."

In later years, the jazzier Los Angeles skyline replaced that of Cincinnati. The skyline was eventually eliminated in the final two years of the show, as was the word, "the". The title was then called "Edge of Night" for the final years of the show.

During most of the show's run, the show's fans were treated to an announcer enthusiastically and energetically announcing the show's title, "Theee Eeeeeeeedge...of Night!". Bob Dixon was the first announcer in 1956, followed by Herbert Duncan. The two voices most synonymous with the show, however, were those of Harry Kramer (1957-'72) and Hal Simms who announced the show until the series ended in 1984.

The Edge of Night played on more artistic levels than probably any other soap of its time. It was unique among daytime soap operas in that it focused on crime, rather than domestic and romantic matters. The police, district attorneys and medical examiners of fictional Monticello, USA, dealt with a steady onslaught of gangsters, drug dealers, blackmailers, cultists, international spies, corrupt politicians, psychopaths and murderous debutantes while coping with more usual soap opera problems such as courtship, marriage, divorce, child custody battles and amnesia. The show's particular focus on crime was recognized in 1980, when, in honor of its 25 years on the air, The Edge of Night was given a Special Edgar Award by the Mystery Writers of America. It also must be stated that Edge had stronger and more believable male characters than most soaps, and included genuine humor in its scripts to balance the heaviness of the storylines.

Finally, while most soaps centered on extended families or large hospitals that tended to be insular in their scope, Edge was probably the only daytime serial to truly capture the dynamics of a medium-sized city. Indeed, the city of Monticello -- for all of its longtime friendships, age-old family vendettas, and insidiously cut-throat DA's and bad cops in the proverbial pockets of white-collar mobsters -- was as vital a "character" as any human being depicted on the show.

Cast

The show's protagonist was Mike Karr. A tireless crime-fighter, Karr was introduced as a cop who was finishing law school. This character eveolved out of the earlier Perry Mason character on radio[1]. He then progressed to the District Attorney's office as an ADA, hung his own shingle as a defense attorney for several years, then became DA of Monticello. Karr was played by three stellar actors: John Larkin, (radio's Perry Mason[1]), from 1956 to 1962, Laurence Hugo from 1962 to 1970, then Forrest Compton from 1971 to the end of the series.

The series hired many revered stage performers. Among those who appeared on the show in the 1960s and early 1970s were Kay Campbell, Tony Roberts, Keith Charles, Millette Alexander, Larry Hagman, Lester Rawlins, Irene Dailey, Anne Revere, John Cullum, Scott Glenn, Richard Thomas, James Mitchell, Barbara Berjer, Bernard Barrow, Mari Gorman; Dan Resin, Ernest Graves, Jane White and Kate Wilkinson.

Among its stars on ABC were Tony Craig, Terry Davis, Frances Fisher, Joel Crothers, Dennis Parker, Charles Flohe, Lori Loughlin, Irving Allen Lee, Denny Albee, Lori Cardille, Stephanie Braxton, Mariann Aalda, David Froman, Lee Godart, Holland Taylor, Marcia Cross, and Kiel Martin — who were helped by guest stars Kim Hunter, Farley Granger, Alfred Drake, Frank Gorshin, Amanda Blake and stage director Jerry Zaks. Schuyler Whitney (Larkin Malloy) and his indefatigable wife Raven (Sharon Gabet) became private detectives and were the new hero and heroine of the show. The Edge of Night also provided Dixie Carter with one of her first significant TV roles, playing strong-willed assistant district attorney Brandy Henderson from 1974-1976. Also, actress, Dorothy Lyman played the memorably evil Elly Jo Jamison in the early 1970s.

Storylines

For the show's entire duration, the stories either revolved around or had much to do with Monticello lawyer (and former Monticello police officer) Mike Karr. As the show began, Mike Karr's relationship with Sara Lane (Teal Ames) essentially reproduced the radio serial's Perry Mason/Della Street relationship. The added complication for Mike Karr was that Sara's family was involved in organized crime; her younger brother (Don Hastings) slowly being drawn into the criminal world in the early years of the show through corrupt uncle Harry Lane (Lauren Gilbert). Nevertheless, Mike and Sara eventually married. Their happiness was short-lived, however, when Sara was written out of the show as being killed as she saved the life of their daughter Laurie Ann, who had run into the street into the path of an automobile. By the 1960s, Laurie Ann was a teenager, supplying many plots for the show, and a young wife and mother by the 1970s.

Mike later married Nancy Pollock (Ann Flood) who was a journalist and helped in many of his cases. Other important characters were Police Chief Bill Marceau (Mandel Kramer), who was one of Karr's best friends and with whom was shared a tremendous mutual respect, rare between a defense attorney and a chief of police (perhaps due to the fact that Mike had once been a police officer himself), Marceau's secretary (and later on wife) Martha (Teri Keane), fellow lawyer Adam Drake (Donald May), his client (and later on, his wife) television personality Nicole Travis (Maeve McGuire; Jayne Bentzen; Lisa Sloan), and wealthy socialite Geraldine Whitney (Lois Kibbee), whose fall down a flight of stairs (which put her into a coma for several months) provided one of the show's more memorable mysteries. Nancy had two siblings: Lee, who eventually married Geri McGrath, and Elaine nicknamed "Cookie."

Nicole had the most interesting history, as she was married to Adam Drake, feared dead in a boating accident, came back to life, and when her marriage to Adam was finished for good after Adam was murdered (in one of the foremost startling moments in this television serial's history), the character was replaced with a new actress and was subsequently de-aged a decade, a rarity for an adult character in the genre. Now younger and more vibrant, Nicole was suitable for a relationship with young doctor Miles Cavanaugh. She was eventually killed off when her makeup powder was poisoned.

Another important relationship was that between Nancy and her younger sister Cookie, who was married first to Malcom Thomas and later to Ron Christopher, whose dealings with loan sharks affected Mike's good friends Louise and Philip Capice. In the show's later years, the Karrs' beautiful daughter Laurie Ann, by now a young adult, was an important character. Her relationship with Jonah Lockwood, a sociopath, almost cost her her life, but he was revealed to be an alternate persona of Keith Whitney, scion of the wealthy Whitney family, nemesis of the Karrs and Marceau! One of the later major story arcs was about a train wreck and a prisoner, Draper Scott, who had been unjustly convicted of murder, escaping from the train accident, much in the style of Richard Kimble of The Fugitive. Although in Draper's case, he also had amnesia, for quite a few months! There was also an interesting storyline in the mid-1970s involving a troubled woman (Adam's cousin, Serena Faraday) who would change her personality as she donned a frizzy, black wig.

Near the end of the series run, came an unusual story where Mike and Nancy, after having slept in twin beds for nearly their whole married life, finally decided to "go all out, and buy a double bed", thereby retiring their twin beds for good and all. It was one of the more unusual moments of the show.

Broadcast history

See: Ratings: 1956-1984

Unlike most soap operas which build a solid audience slowly over many years, The Edge of Night was an instant hit with daytime viewers, amassing an audience of nine million viewers its first year, in some respects because the public did in fact perceive it as a daytime Perry Mason, as the producers had intended. Through the 1960s, the show continued to flourish, consistently ranking as one of the top six rated soap operas, alongside the rest of CBS' daytime lineup. It peaked at #2 in the 1966–1967 season and came in at #2 between 1969 and 1971.

Due to the show's crime format, and its late start time of 4:30 p.m/3:30 Central, The Edge of Night had an audience which was estimated, at one time, to be more than 50% male. In July 1963, the show was moved to the 3:30/2:30 time period (the 4:30/3:30 slot was given back to the affiliates), which it dominated, even over otherwise hit programs like NBC's You Don't Say and ABC's Dark Shadows and One Life to Live. When the show moved to 2:30/1:30 p.m. in 1972 at Procter and Gamble's insistence, the show slid from a solid #2 in the Nielsen ratings to near the bottom of the pack, and it has been hypothesized that this drop was due to the exodus of many male viewers and teenagers who could not make it home from work or school earlier in the afternoon to watch.

By the summer of 1975, CBS prepared to make its first-ever expansion of a serial to 60 minutes daily, in response to NBC's lengthening of both Another World and Days of our Lives some months earlier. Not surprisingly, daytime executives chose the ratings-leading As the World Turns, which faced Days directly at 1:30/12:30. Since the network's affiliates would not cede the 1 p.m./Noon access slot (or allow it to be moved to an earlier time) because they usually aired newscasts there, and affiliates also would pre-empt Edge if it returned to 4:30/3:30, CBS had no vacant time slot to expand into, meaning the network had to cancel an existing show.

Edge's audience had so eroded to the point that it was CBS' lowest-rated afternoon program; NBC's The Doctors had been easily defeating it in the Nielsens for some time. So CBS informed P&G that it would have to let Edge go. Meanwhile, ABC had experienced success with bringing other networks' daytime cancellations onto its schedule, namely Let's Make a Deal and the $10,000 Pyramid. It also was the only network to have never had a P&G-packaged program on its schedule. Thus, ABC responded positively when P&G approached it about moving the program there, but officials informed P&G that contractual obligations to other programs would not permit the network to admit Edge onto the lineup until early December.

This raised a serious problem because CBS wanted to begin an expanded ATWT in September, meaning that Edge would have to leave the air for at least two months. Had this happened, it is likely that ABC would have rescinded its decision to acquire Edge due to near-certain loss of viewer interest caused by the interruption. Fortunately, P&G negotiated with CBS to delay the ATWT expansion until ABC had an available slot for Edge. On December 1, Edge moved to ABC in a 90-minute one-day special, and, on CBS, ATWT began occupying the 1:30/12:30-2:30/1:30 hour block, with Guiding Light moving down one half hour to Edge's old place.

Initially, Edge showed promise when it changed networks, the first serial to do so (the only other one was the P&G-packaged Search for Tomorrow, from CBS to NBC in 1982), in a late afternoon time slot of 4/3 p.m. for ABC affiliates in the Eastern and Central time zones, and 12 noon for ABC affiliates in the Pacific time zone because of a different scheduling pattern for ABC's West Coast feed. At first, Edge's overall ratings declined because fewer homes had access to it, a situation caused by ABC affiliates who had, for years, opted for local or syndicated programs at the 4/3 slot instead of the network feed and decided not to abandon the practice. Still others tape-delayed the program for broadcast in morning slots, anywhere from one day to two weeks later. Nevertheless, Edge was typically either first (or a close second) in its timeslot for markets that cleared it in its network feed of 4/3 p.m., due mainly to the weakness of competing programs on CBS and NBC. Also, Edge's demographics were significantly better on ABC; thus, the network was actually able to charge higher ad rates for it than several more popular series with higher audience ratings.

The concluding CBS episode, on November 28, 1975, ended with the discovery that Nicole Travis Drake was alive, after she had been presumed dead in an explosion eighteen months earlier while on a boating trip with her husband Adam Drake. On December 1, 1975, ABC aired a special 90-minute episode which picked up where the final CBS episode left off, with Geraldine Whitney still in a coma from an attempted murder by her daughter-in-law Tiffany's second husband Noel Douglas; Nicole, with the help of Geraldine's adopted "son" Kevin Jamison, remembered who she was after suffering from amnesia since the explosion; the final scene of that day's episode was an exciting climax in which Serena Faraday, in her "Josie" split-personality, shot her husband on the steps of the courthouse.

Although it never recovered the ground it lost from its CBS days, during the period from 1980 to 1982 Edge held down 10th or 11th place in the Nielsens, averaging about seven million viewers daily. This put it above Another World, Texas and The Doctors (the first two also P&G-packaged serials) at that stage. However, from 1982, ratings would fall even further as even more affiliates dropped the show altogether, largely due to its 4/3 p.m. timeslot, a popular one for stations to place more lucrative syndicated programming in, instead of network offerings. This caused P&G to lose more money on the program with each passing year. In May 1983, P&G replaced the show's veteran headwriter Henry Slesar, whose 15-year stint with the soap was, at that time, the longest in daytime serial history. New headwriter Lee Sheldon accelerated the pace of the plot, focused on younger characters, and added humor in efforts to capture a new audience for the ailing serial. However, more and more ABC affiliates continued to drop the show.

By Fall 1984, Edge was airing on less than 62% of ABC's affiliates, and over two dozen more had announced their intention to drop the series in the first quarter of 1985. Although ABC was committed to continuing Edge, even offering to move it to a mid-morning timeslot, P&G could no longer afford to produce the show. On October 26, 1984, ABC and P&G made a joint announcement that Edge's December 28 broadcast would be its finale. After Edge ended its 28-year run on December 28, 1984, ABC returned the 4/3 p.m. timeslot to its affiliates, something NBC had done back in 1979; CBS would do so in 1986.

Surviving episodes

Most CBS episodes no longer exist. Episodes that were pre-recorded were most likely erased so the tapes could be re-used. Many black and white and some color episodes were kinescoped (the color kines survive in BW). 45 episodes of the CBS era exist, the best known of which include a Christmas Day episode from 1974 and a September 1975 episode depicting the attempted murder of Geraldine. The early part of the ABC run also followed the practice of wiping. This practice stopped around 1978 with all P&G shows.

Beginning August 5, 1985, just eight short months after Edge's demise, reruns aired in a daily late-night timeslot on cable's USA Network, transmitting episodes from June 1981 up to the series finale. Edge completed its syndicated run on the USA Network January 19, 1989.

In August 2006, Procter & Gamble made several of its classic soap operas available, a few episodes at a time, through AOL Video Service, downloadable free of charge. AOL downloads of The Edge of Night commenced with episode #6051 from July 17, 1979.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Lackmann, Ronald W. The encyclopedia of American radio: an A-Z guide to radio from Jack Benny to Howard Stern. Facts On File. ISBN 0816041377.