16 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- A fan since the beginning., 20 February 2006
Author:
bonnieegg from United States
As The World Turns started on my birthday in 1956. I was in high school
and since the show was only 1/2 hour, I was able to watch it on my
lunch hour. I have watched it all these years and really love it. ATWT
has produced some great actors and actresses. I loved Meg Ryan as Betsy
and Julianne Moore as Franny. I thought Brian Bloome was terrific as
Dusty. I was very saddened when the Judge and then Christopher Hughes
died. I feel I have grown old with Bob, Kim and Lisa. I wish some of
the older actresses could be brought back. I really miss Frannie and
Betsy. This year (April 2, 2006) I will have been watching this show
for 50 years. So, happy birthday to me and to As The World Turns.
16 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :- Tune into this great daytime drama!, 17 February 2003
Author:
vs661966 from Scranton, PA
If you have never watched ATWT, do yourself a favor and check out this
wonderful program. I have been a faithful viewer of this show since 1986
when the legendary Douglas Marland penned those well-crafted stories that
incorporated the show's history and kept the viewer glued to the
television
set. Actually, if you count the time that my mother watched when I was a
little kid, then I have been watching a lot longer than that! Incredibly,
there are still many talented actors (and their characters) whom I
remember
from that time who are still on the show today: Helen Wagner (Nancy), Don
Hastings (Bob), Eileen Fulton (Lisa), Kathryn Hays (Kim), Larry Bryggman
(John) and Marie Masters (Susan). There have also been many great actors
who have appeared later who are equally as brilliant and have been on the
show for more that 10 years: Elizabeth Hubbard (Lucinda), Colleen Zenk
Pinter (Barbara), Benjamin Hendrickson (Hal), Tamara Tunie (Jessica),
Scott
Holmes (Tom), Ellen Dolan (Margo), Kelley Menighan Hensley (Emily), Jon
Hensley (Holden), and Martha Byrne (Lily/Rose). Other notable actors who
just grab your attention in the current storylines include: Maura West
(Carly), Lesli Kay (Molly), Michael Park (Jack), Mark Collier (Mike),
Lamman Rucker (Marshall), Scott Holroyd (Paul) and Hunt Block (Craig).
The entire cast is great and the stories are more rooted in reality than
most other shows (no aliens, demonic possessions or stereotypical mobster
types here!) and this is exactly why I watch this show! Yes, there have
been people coming back from the dead (remember James Stenbeck?), the
premature aging syndrome of children (Bonnie is supposed to be 11 years
old
in "real time"!) and some things that seem odd to the very astute viewer
(I
must have missed the episode where Ellen Stewart left town and entrusted
her
home to Susan Stewart, her ex-daughter-in-law with whom she never really
got
along!), but, for the most part, things make sense and characters behave
in
ways that are logical and therefore help to maintain their integrity.
Hogan
Sheffer is doing a fine job of writing and developing stories. Actors
Marie
Masters and Courtney Sherman (Dr. Susan Stewart and Dr. Lynn Michaels,
respectively) are also on the writing team.
Another thing I appreciate as a longtime viewer is characters who come
back
for brief visits and are played by the original actors. Caleb Snyder and
his wife Julie recently came to town to visit their son Aaron and the rest
of the Snyder clan. And Iva Snyder returned when the Lily/Rose story was
initially unraveling. It would be great to see other old favorites come
back to visit or permanently move back to town. It was a real disservice
when Patricia Bruder, who played Ellen Stewart, was let go in 1995. She
joined the show in 1960 and was the last remnant of the Lowell/Stewart
family. She should move back (and reclaim her house!) and then get
involved
in the life of her granddaughter, Emily. She might even help Alison (she
needs it!) who would be both her step-granddaughter and
great-granddaughter.
(Too long to explain here!) It would be great if the other Snyder family
members would return. Or, perhaps, the other lost members of the Hughes
family--they've been in fictional Montega long enough! Personally, I
would
like to see these actors and their characters again: Allyson Rice (Connor
Walsh, Lucinda's despised relative & a great business foil for Lucinda);
Greg Watkins (Evan Walsh, Connor's brother & Rosanna's old beau); Scott
DeFrietas (Andy Dixon, son of Kim and John & Paul's cousin); Lindsay Frost
(Betsy Stewart Andropoulos, Ellen's other granddaughter and Emily's
half-sister); Anne Sward (Lyla Montgomery Peretti, mother of Margo, Craig,
Cricket and Katie); and Robin Morse (Pamela Wagner, John's niece who was a
no-nonsense, independent student nurse trainee). Allyson Rice (Connor) and
Daniel Markel (David Allen/Stenbeck) should never have been let go! It
would be great if Trent Dawson (Henry Coleman) and Anne Sayre (Mitzi
Matters) were given contracts and more air time--their characters are
really
outrageously funny!
So, watch this soap opera that will soon be turning 47 years old this
year.
What other program--daytime or nighttime--can boast that it has a
character
(Nancy Hughes McClosky) that's been played by the same actress (Helen
Wagner) since the premiere episode for the last 47 years??? Not
one!
There's also a book called "As the World Turns: The Complete Family
Scrapbook" by Julie Poll that was written to coincide with the show's 40th
anniversary in 1996. This will help new viewers get the entire storyline
(up to 1996) of the members of the Hughes, Lowell, Stewart, Montgomery,
Walsh and Snyder families and all of their friends and
enemies.
13 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- Everyone who Has Watched This Show Has A Fave Moment, 25 May 2004
Author:
richard.fuller1
For me, ironically enough, it was '84, when Meg Ryan left and was replaced
with Lindsey Frost, that I started watching.
Doug Marland became the writer and suddenly this show was truly different
from the other soaps.
We got the Snyder farm family and Lily Walsh was recast.
The standout situation to me was Lucinda Walsh shoving Susan Stewart into
that Christmas tree and injuring Susan's back. Susan is in the hospital and
the gloating Lucinda pays her a visit.
Susan, a recovering alcoholic, becomes addicted to the pain killers for her
back. Kim Hughes is helping her son, Andy Dixon, deal with his alcoholism
after the bad girl he loved, Julie, has dumped him for Tonio
Reyes.
Turns out it was Lucinda who brought Julie to town to begin with.
Kim's husband, Bob Hughes, feels ignored by Kim. He aids Susan with her
withdrawal, and next thing you know, the pristine Bob Hughes is having a one
night stand with Susan, whose husband Dan had had an affair with Kim decades
earlier.
But the fun didn't end there.
Bob and Kim learned they had a long lost daughter, Sabrina Fullerton
(originally played by Julianne Moore).
Sabrina (later played by Claire Beckman) was not the most welcoming person.
She would feel sorry for the villianous Tonio Reyes (Peter Boynton), giving
him all her inheritance from her adopted parents.
Bob would learn of Tonio's evil deeds, and attempt to stop
him.
Tonio shot Bob in the back, then fled to South America with
Sabrina.
As they drove across the outback, Tonio began confessing to Sabrina all he
had done; the lies, the thievery and even shooting her
father.
Tonio would say very calmly "Don't try to escape"
Sabrina would respond "I have no where to run to. You've seen to
that."
I couldn't believe I had just heard such a powerhouse line in a soap opera.
There would be more, with Julie on the rebound from Caleb Snyder and Holden
broken up with Lily, Julie and Holden would have the infamous one night
stand that would rebound throughout the show with Julie getting
pregnant.
Andy would deliver the baby with Snyder sister Iva, who would adopt the
baby.
It was all amazing to watch.
Then Kim would have to trust Bob and Susan again when they went to South
America to do medical duties and they vanished. Turns out they had been
kidnapped and had to operate on the wounded Tonio Reyes!
Remarkable show.
When Conor Jameson was recast, and Neal Alcott (Mary Kay Adams) left the
show (she was murdered), it was losing its fun.
Doug Marland would die as the murderer was revealed, but it wasn't exciting.
Then Iva Snyder would suddenly marry and leave the show, and so did
I.
Ah well. The moment was gone.
But what a moment it was!
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- Save As The World Turns! An American Triumph! Just Watch It!, 18 April 2005
Author:
Sylvia Marciniak (sylviastel@aol.com) from United States
As the World Turns is a piece of Americana culture. Cast members like
Helen Wagner, Bob Hastings, Eileen Fulton, Kathryn Hays, Colleen Zenk
Pinter, Marie Masters, Elizabeth Hubbard, Larry Bryggman etc. have
really helped make my days sometimes. The show was created Irna
Phillips, the creator of daytime television. From her ideas, she
created the world of Oakdale, Illinois. Helen Wagner should be given
many honors besides a Lifetime Emmy Award. Next year, she will be
celebrating 50 years of playing the same character on daytime
television. Where are the accolades that go with such an achievement?
She deserves a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and even to be an
honoree at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Center Honors. Don't stop there!
She should be inducted into the television hall of fame for her
contributions to television. I think CBS is the best, most supportive
network of the three. While Guiding Light needs ever viewer, this year
will determine both Guiding Light and As The World Turns future. If you
want to know where Desperate Housewives' ideas came from, this is the
place and it has been there for most of our lives. I just wish more
people would appreciate the fine quality of work that these cast of
brilliant actors do for daytime. I would like to see prime time players
do the hectic schedules of any daytime player. It goes unappreciated.
The story lines have not been the same since Douglas Marland's death
but his legacy is his creative contributions to the show like the
Snyder family. I will never forget the Angel incest storyline as the
most shocking entertaining informing and brilliant portrayal ever
anywhere else. Marland weaved stories like his predecessors Irna
Phillips, Agnes Nixon, Bill Bell, etc. He is sorely missed even now. I
hope As the World Turns and Guiding Light live on television forever so
please give daytime a try. You might like it better than prime time, I
usually do and I have watched it for 20 years.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Best Writing Winner, and deservedly so, 21 July 2004
Author:
modhatter from Cypress, CA
I am an aspiring soap writer, and I have watched most of the shows on
the air as research. Somewhere along the way, I discovered As The World
Turns. When I first caught glimpses of it, Carly was just home from The
Spa, found in a carnival fun house after Hal was brainwashed by James
Stenbeck. Emily was being kept in a trunk. Bonnie was a duchess.
Molly's family was being threatened by an evil babysitter, eventually
resulting in Jake's death and the near-death of Oakdale's neighbor, Bay
City. It was sort of weird and awful at first, but I would tune in just
to see the Oakdale hunks, especially Jack Snyder. Woof!
I can't remember when the tides really turned with this show. All I
know for sure is, I discovered Ben Harris when Bonnie finally came
home. Not only Grade A prime soap beef, but he and Jessica were
electric on the screen. These were clearly two people who deserved much
more screen time, and eventually got it. Margo, a staple character for
years according to the ATWT scrapbook, got to be on the front burner
for a week or two when she discovered she had hepatitis, contracted
during a rape she was now being forced to relive. It would take a
while, but eventually she moved back to the front burner again as well.
In short, this show has an incredible pool of talented actors, and the
writing team, receiving back to back Emmys for their work, have a knack
for utilizing the vast talents of their cast.
It's not always perfect. The Oakdale 3 were awful. But from that
terrible plot we eventually got a (somewhat) reformed Allison, who is
now one of my favorite characters on the show. And, as with most shows,
an emergency rewrite for a departing or pregnant actor can yield some
substandard plots. Of course, I blame a lot of that on the soap fans,
who can be pretty unwelcoming of temporary recasts (and that means you
especially, Passions fans!) But As The World Turns is honestly the best
soap on TV, and that includes the primetime dramas, and reality shows
which are nothing more than soaps with real people for characters. I
would love to see another attempt at Our Private World, a primetime
spin-off featuring the amazing Eileen Fulton, following Lisa Hughes as
she moved from Oakdale to Chicago. Imagine a revamped Another World,
where Molly goes back to Bay City to fight for her daughters Bridget
and Michelle. With enough shared writers, I'd watch both series
faithfully. In the meantime, I will have to settle for the five hours a
week of ATWT I have now and hope a few other writing teams can tune in
and take a few notes.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- The classic soap opera, 23 July 2002
Author:
danfling (terryj1@bellsouth.net)
This show, the first half-hour soap opera, had the classic soap
opera setting - a suburb with two families who were good friends.
Three and later four or five generations of these families were
featured. The two families were the Hughes (middle-class) and
the wealthier Lowell family. Chris and Nancy Hughes had a more
secure marriage than did Jim and Claire Lowell. In fact, Chris's
sister had an affair with Jim, who later divorced and was
killed.
The show was the first to offer the teen romance of Penny and Jeff.
Penny's friend Ellen, after being rejected by Don Hughes, had an
affair with a married, older doctor and bore an illegitimate
son
The Hughes family's storylines were more conventional and less
plot driven, but those of the Lowell family were daring for their time.
Penny and Jeff eloped, but the marriage was annulled. Later, they
had a grand wedding to which the viewers were actually invited to
attend at the end of the program.
The show moved very slowly in the early days. The ratings were
not the greatest, but eventually this show became the number one
rated soap opera.
1960 proved to be a good year for the show. Don Hastings,
Henderson Forsythe, Patricia Bruder, and Eileen Fulton all joined
the show that year.
Ms. Fulton, as Lisa, was the first great bad lady who was hated by
the public. The role was originally intended to be a minor, short
role, but the performances of Ms. Fulton insured that the audience
would immediately notice the character. In 1965, the production
company and network spun-off Lisa to a twice-a-week primetime
soap opera called Our Private World.
Irna Phillips, the show's creator and headwriter, left the show in
the late 1960s. The show struggled creatively. Eventually Ms.
Phillips returned, but the ratings had suffered. Ms. Phillips killed
off a lot of the Lowell relatives during a short period of time. She
was eventually fired from the show herself.
Two other headwriting teams (Robert Sonderberg and Edith
Sommer, Ralph Ellis and Eugenie Hunt) were able to keep the
show interesting. (Others had failed.)
But, later, a former actor from the show, Douglas Marland, became
the headwriter on two occasions. By the time of his second term,
the show had lost so many of the previous characters and had
failed to add any new, interesting ones that the show seemed
lost.
Mr. Marland allowed the unthinkable to happen when the
sister-in-law of the show's leading physician (Kim) who had once
had an affair with the doctor, was allowed to marry him after the
death of her sister.
The show continued its downward slide while Mr. Marland and his
successors wrote the show.
Helen Wagner (Nancy), Don Hastings (Bob), and Eileen Fulton
(Lisa) continue on the program today. And the show lights up
whenever these performers are given occasionally good storylines
or even scenes. But the show has continued to stray away from
the core families - always a bad sign for a soap opera.
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- 2000-01 was a great season for this series, 15 June 2001
Author:
DeweyQ from Toronto, Canada
The number of nominations this soap opera received at the 2001 Daytime
Emmy Awards is just one indicator of how excellent this show has been
lately. The writing has been especially good, and the acting seems much
better than most daytime fare. Of particular interest is the dual roles
of long-estranged twin sisters Lily/Rose played to perfection by the
talented Martha Byrne. Her scenes opposite herself are brilliant.
This soap opera's best feature, though, is the pace at which story
lines move along. There is no spoon-feeding the audience. You have to
watch consistently to get involved in the plots: there are no recaps of
the past month's twists. Conversely, there have been incredible
flashbacks and memories using real original footage from as far back as
the series first season (1956). This really adds a warm sense of
continuity for characters like Nancy Hughes, played since the beginning
by Helen Wagner.
7 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- It was No. 1 until the last couple yrs., 28 September 1999
Author:
Blunoser from Nova Scotia, Canada
Being of the older generation, Bob & Kim ARE the show, I love them,
however
as write-ups in the T.V.Guides state, you are only interested in the
younger
generation. Too bad because we are the ones at home in the P.M. when the
soap is on. O well, such is life, like the older actors we have served our
time!!
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- "As the World Turns" (1956), 9 October 1998
Author:
anonymous
I've watched "As the World Turns" since 1957. It is my second favorite soap
these day, "Guiding Light" is number one with me. " As the World Turns has
held up over the years. It dropped from number one in my book after they
lost their most terrific writer some years ago whose name escapes me. I
thought this person was brilliant whom I believe wrote the best plot ever
presented on daytime tv which ended at "Dreams End" It's not "As the World
Turn's" fault that their shows plots do not have it's former brilliance,
no-one in daytime soaps comes close to that writer's abilities. I've watched
other soaps over the years & for one reason or another I've dropped them. I
have never dropped "As the World Turns" and "The Guiding Light" I think they
are the best soaps on tv, even if they don't get the ratings.
It's a soap. But it's a good soap., 6 July 2008
Author:
dog_luver12
We all know how soaps are. Over dramatic, cheesy and completely
unrealistic. But this is one soap, I find, that does it in a more
clever way. It's actually enjoyable to watch, and sometimes even funny.
I never liked day time drama. Sure, I'd watch for the sake of laughing
at the awful writing and acting. But then I watched an episode of As
The World Turns. And then the next day. Soon, I was addicted to it. The
characters intrigued me and there story lines often made sense and were
logical. The Luke and Noah story line made the show for me. Not many
times do you find a day time drama with a gay couple on it, and the
fact that ATWT took the risk, really impressed me and I enjoyed the
show ever more. If anything, watch this show for them. I am a new
viewer of this show, as new as they come. 1 months to be exact, but
I've heard many people say that it's not as good as it was back then,
when it first began. Well, I wouldn't know. As I see the show right
now, I would say it is the best day time drama on television today.
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16 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
A fan since the beginning., 20 February 2006
Author: bonnieegg from United States
As The World Turns started on my birthday in 1956. I was in high school and since the show was only 1/2 hour, I was able to watch it on my lunch hour. I have watched it all these years and really love it. ATWT has produced some great actors and actresses. I loved Meg Ryan as Betsy and Julianne Moore as Franny. I thought Brian Bloome was terrific as Dusty. I was very saddened when the Judge and then Christopher Hughes died. I feel I have grown old with Bob, Kim and Lisa. I wish some of the older actresses could be brought back. I really miss Frannie and Betsy. This year (April 2, 2006) I will have been watching this show for 50 years. So, happy birthday to me and to As The World Turns.
16 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :-

Tune into this great daytime drama!, 17 February 2003
Author: vs661966 from Scranton, PA
If you have never watched ATWT, do yourself a favor and check out this wonderful program. I have been a faithful viewer of this show since 1986 when the legendary Douglas Marland penned those well-crafted stories that incorporated the show's history and kept the viewer glued to the television set. Actually, if you count the time that my mother watched when I was a little kid, then I have been watching a lot longer than that! Incredibly, there are still many talented actors (and their characters) whom I remember from that time who are still on the show today: Helen Wagner (Nancy), Don Hastings (Bob), Eileen Fulton (Lisa), Kathryn Hays (Kim), Larry Bryggman (John) and Marie Masters (Susan). There have also been many great actors who have appeared later who are equally as brilliant and have been on the show for more that 10 years: Elizabeth Hubbard (Lucinda), Colleen Zenk Pinter (Barbara), Benjamin Hendrickson (Hal), Tamara Tunie (Jessica), Scott Holmes (Tom), Ellen Dolan (Margo), Kelley Menighan Hensley (Emily), Jon Hensley (Holden), and Martha Byrne (Lily/Rose). Other notable actors who just grab your attention in the current storylines include: Maura West (Carly), Lesli Kay (Molly), Michael Park (Jack), Mark Collier (Mike), Lamman Rucker (Marshall), Scott Holroyd (Paul) and Hunt Block (Craig).
The entire cast is great and the stories are more rooted in reality than most other shows (no aliens, demonic possessions or stereotypical mobster types here!) and this is exactly why I watch this show! Yes, there have been people coming back from the dead (remember James Stenbeck?), the premature aging syndrome of children (Bonnie is supposed to be 11 years old in "real time"!) and some things that seem odd to the very astute viewer (I must have missed the episode where Ellen Stewart left town and entrusted her home to Susan Stewart, her ex-daughter-in-law with whom she never really got along!), but, for the most part, things make sense and characters behave in ways that are logical and therefore help to maintain their integrity. Hogan Sheffer is doing a fine job of writing and developing stories. Actors Marie Masters and Courtney Sherman (Dr. Susan Stewart and Dr. Lynn Michaels, respectively) are also on the writing team.
Another thing I appreciate as a longtime viewer is characters who come back for brief visits and are played by the original actors. Caleb Snyder and his wife Julie recently came to town to visit their son Aaron and the rest of the Snyder clan. And Iva Snyder returned when the Lily/Rose story was initially unraveling. It would be great to see other old favorites come back to visit or permanently move back to town. It was a real disservice when Patricia Bruder, who played Ellen Stewart, was let go in 1995. She joined the show in 1960 and was the last remnant of the Lowell/Stewart family. She should move back (and reclaim her house!) and then get involved in the life of her granddaughter, Emily. She might even help Alison (she needs it!) who would be both her step-granddaughter and great-granddaughter. (Too long to explain here!) It would be great if the other Snyder family members would return. Or, perhaps, the other lost members of the Hughes family--they've been in fictional Montega long enough! Personally, I would like to see these actors and their characters again: Allyson Rice (Connor Walsh, Lucinda's despised relative & a great business foil for Lucinda); Greg Watkins (Evan Walsh, Connor's brother & Rosanna's old beau); Scott DeFrietas (Andy Dixon, son of Kim and John & Paul's cousin); Lindsay Frost (Betsy Stewart Andropoulos, Ellen's other granddaughter and Emily's half-sister); Anne Sward (Lyla Montgomery Peretti, mother of Margo, Craig, Cricket and Katie); and Robin Morse (Pamela Wagner, John's niece who was a no-nonsense, independent student nurse trainee). Allyson Rice (Connor) and Daniel Markel (David Allen/Stenbeck) should never have been let go! It would be great if Trent Dawson (Henry Coleman) and Anne Sayre (Mitzi Matters) were given contracts and more air time--their characters are really outrageously funny!
So, watch this soap opera that will soon be turning 47 years old this year. What other program--daytime or nighttime--can boast that it has a character (Nancy Hughes McClosky) that's been played by the same actress (Helen Wagner) since the premiere episode for the last 47 years??? Not one!
There's also a book called "As the World Turns: The Complete Family Scrapbook" by Julie Poll that was written to coincide with the show's 40th anniversary in 1996. This will help new viewers get the entire storyline (up to 1996) of the members of the Hughes, Lowell, Stewart, Montgomery, Walsh and Snyder families and all of their friends and enemies.
13 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-
Everyone who Has Watched This Show Has A Fave Moment, 25 May 2004
Author: richard.fuller1
For me, ironically enough, it was '84, when Meg Ryan left and was replaced with Lindsey Frost, that I started watching.
Doug Marland became the writer and suddenly this show was truly different from the other soaps.
We got the Snyder farm family and Lily Walsh was recast.
The standout situation to me was Lucinda Walsh shoving Susan Stewart into that Christmas tree and injuring Susan's back. Susan is in the hospital and the gloating Lucinda pays her a visit.
Susan, a recovering alcoholic, becomes addicted to the pain killers for her back. Kim Hughes is helping her son, Andy Dixon, deal with his alcoholism after the bad girl he loved, Julie, has dumped him for Tonio Reyes.
Turns out it was Lucinda who brought Julie to town to begin with.
Kim's husband, Bob Hughes, feels ignored by Kim. He aids Susan with her withdrawal, and next thing you know, the pristine Bob Hughes is having a one night stand with Susan, whose husband Dan had had an affair with Kim decades earlier.
But the fun didn't end there.
Bob and Kim learned they had a long lost daughter, Sabrina Fullerton (originally played by Julianne Moore).
Sabrina (later played by Claire Beckman) was not the most welcoming person. She would feel sorry for the villianous Tonio Reyes (Peter Boynton), giving him all her inheritance from her adopted parents.
Bob would learn of Tonio's evil deeds, and attempt to stop him.
Tonio shot Bob in the back, then fled to South America with Sabrina.
As they drove across the outback, Tonio began confessing to Sabrina all he had done; the lies, the thievery and even shooting her father.
Tonio would say very calmly "Don't try to escape"
Sabrina would respond "I have no where to run to. You've seen to that."
I couldn't believe I had just heard such a powerhouse line in a soap opera.
There would be more, with Julie on the rebound from Caleb Snyder and Holden broken up with Lily, Julie and Holden would have the infamous one night stand that would rebound throughout the show with Julie getting pregnant.
Andy would deliver the baby with Snyder sister Iva, who would adopt the baby.
It was all amazing to watch.
Then Kim would have to trust Bob and Susan again when they went to South America to do medical duties and they vanished. Turns out they had been kidnapped and had to operate on the wounded Tonio Reyes!
Remarkable show.
When Conor Jameson was recast, and Neal Alcott (Mary Kay Adams) left the show (she was murdered), it was losing its fun.
Doug Marland would die as the murderer was revealed, but it wasn't exciting.
Then Iva Snyder would suddenly marry and leave the show, and so did I.
Ah well. The moment was gone.
But what a moment it was!
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

Save As The World Turns! An American Triumph! Just Watch It!, 18 April 2005
Author: Sylvia Marciniak (sylviastel@aol.com) from United States
As the World Turns is a piece of Americana culture. Cast members like Helen Wagner, Bob Hastings, Eileen Fulton, Kathryn Hays, Colleen Zenk Pinter, Marie Masters, Elizabeth Hubbard, Larry Bryggman etc. have really helped make my days sometimes. The show was created Irna Phillips, the creator of daytime television. From her ideas, she created the world of Oakdale, Illinois. Helen Wagner should be given many honors besides a Lifetime Emmy Award. Next year, she will be celebrating 50 years of playing the same character on daytime television. Where are the accolades that go with such an achievement? She deserves a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and even to be an honoree at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Center Honors. Don't stop there! She should be inducted into the television hall of fame for her contributions to television. I think CBS is the best, most supportive network of the three. While Guiding Light needs ever viewer, this year will determine both Guiding Light and As The World Turns future. If you want to know where Desperate Housewives' ideas came from, this is the place and it has been there for most of our lives. I just wish more people would appreciate the fine quality of work that these cast of brilliant actors do for daytime. I would like to see prime time players do the hectic schedules of any daytime player. It goes unappreciated. The story lines have not been the same since Douglas Marland's death but his legacy is his creative contributions to the show like the Snyder family. I will never forget the Angel incest storyline as the most shocking entertaining informing and brilliant portrayal ever anywhere else. Marland weaved stories like his predecessors Irna Phillips, Agnes Nixon, Bill Bell, etc. He is sorely missed even now. I hope As the World Turns and Guiding Light live on television forever so please give daytime a try. You might like it better than prime time, I usually do and I have watched it for 20 years.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Best Writing Winner, and deservedly so, 21 July 2004
Author: modhatter from Cypress, CA
I am an aspiring soap writer, and I have watched most of the shows on the air as research. Somewhere along the way, I discovered As The World Turns. When I first caught glimpses of it, Carly was just home from The Spa, found in a carnival fun house after Hal was brainwashed by James Stenbeck. Emily was being kept in a trunk. Bonnie was a duchess. Molly's family was being threatened by an evil babysitter, eventually resulting in Jake's death and the near-death of Oakdale's neighbor, Bay City. It was sort of weird and awful at first, but I would tune in just to see the Oakdale hunks, especially Jack Snyder. Woof!
I can't remember when the tides really turned with this show. All I know for sure is, I discovered Ben Harris when Bonnie finally came home. Not only Grade A prime soap beef, but he and Jessica were electric on the screen. These were clearly two people who deserved much more screen time, and eventually got it. Margo, a staple character for years according to the ATWT scrapbook, got to be on the front burner for a week or two when she discovered she had hepatitis, contracted during a rape she was now being forced to relive. It would take a while, but eventually she moved back to the front burner again as well. In short, this show has an incredible pool of talented actors, and the writing team, receiving back to back Emmys for their work, have a knack for utilizing the vast talents of their cast.
It's not always perfect. The Oakdale 3 were awful. But from that terrible plot we eventually got a (somewhat) reformed Allison, who is now one of my favorite characters on the show. And, as with most shows, an emergency rewrite for a departing or pregnant actor can yield some substandard plots. Of course, I blame a lot of that on the soap fans, who can be pretty unwelcoming of temporary recasts (and that means you especially, Passions fans!) But As The World Turns is honestly the best soap on TV, and that includes the primetime dramas, and reality shows which are nothing more than soaps with real people for characters. I would love to see another attempt at Our Private World, a primetime spin-off featuring the amazing Eileen Fulton, following Lisa Hughes as she moved from Oakdale to Chicago. Imagine a revamped Another World, where Molly goes back to Bay City to fight for her daughters Bridget and Michelle. With enough shared writers, I'd watch both series faithfully. In the meantime, I will have to settle for the five hours a week of ATWT I have now and hope a few other writing teams can tune in and take a few notes.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
The classic soap opera, 23 July 2002
Author: danfling (terryj1@bellsouth.net)
This show, the first half-hour soap opera, had the classic soap opera setting - a suburb with two families who were good friends. Three and later four or five generations of these families were featured. The two families were the Hughes (middle-class) and the wealthier Lowell family. Chris and Nancy Hughes had a more secure marriage than did Jim and Claire Lowell. In fact, Chris's sister had an affair with Jim, who later divorced and was killed. The show was the first to offer the teen romance of Penny and Jeff. Penny's friend Ellen, after being rejected by Don Hughes, had an affair with a married, older doctor and bore an illegitimate son The Hughes family's storylines were more conventional and less plot driven, but those of the Lowell family were daring for their time. Penny and Jeff eloped, but the marriage was annulled. Later, they had a grand wedding to which the viewers were actually invited to attend at the end of the program. The show moved very slowly in the early days. The ratings were not the greatest, but eventually this show became the number one rated soap opera. 1960 proved to be a good year for the show. Don Hastings, Henderson Forsythe, Patricia Bruder, and Eileen Fulton all joined the show that year. Ms. Fulton, as Lisa, was the first great bad lady who was hated by the public. The role was originally intended to be a minor, short role, but the performances of Ms. Fulton insured that the audience would immediately notice the character. In 1965, the production company and network spun-off Lisa to a twice-a-week primetime soap opera called Our Private World. Irna Phillips, the show's creator and headwriter, left the show in the late 1960s. The show struggled creatively. Eventually Ms. Phillips returned, but the ratings had suffered. Ms. Phillips killed off a lot of the Lowell relatives during a short period of time. She was eventually fired from the show herself. Two other headwriting teams (Robert Sonderberg and Edith Sommer, Ralph Ellis and Eugenie Hunt) were able to keep the show interesting. (Others had failed.) But, later, a former actor from the show, Douglas Marland, became the headwriter on two occasions. By the time of his second term, the show had lost so many of the previous characters and had failed to add any new, interesting ones that the show seemed lost. Mr. Marland allowed the unthinkable to happen when the sister-in-law of the show's leading physician (Kim) who had once had an affair with the doctor, was allowed to marry him after the death of her sister. The show continued its downward slide while Mr. Marland and his successors wrote the show. Helen Wagner (Nancy), Don Hastings (Bob), and Eileen Fulton (Lisa) continue on the program today. And the show lights up whenever these performers are given occasionally good storylines or even scenes. But the show has continued to stray away from the core families - always a bad sign for a soap opera.
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
2000-01 was a great season for this series, 15 June 2001
Author: DeweyQ from Toronto, Canada
The number of nominations this soap opera received at the 2001 Daytime Emmy Awards is just one indicator of how excellent this show has been lately. The writing has been especially good, and the acting seems much better than most daytime fare. Of particular interest is the dual roles of long-estranged twin sisters Lily/Rose played to perfection by the talented Martha Byrne. Her scenes opposite herself are brilliant.
This soap opera's best feature, though, is the pace at which story lines move along. There is no spoon-feeding the audience. You have to watch consistently to get involved in the plots: there are no recaps of the past month's twists. Conversely, there have been incredible flashbacks and memories using real original footage from as far back as the series first season (1956). This really adds a warm sense of continuity for characters like Nancy Hughes, played since the beginning by Helen Wagner.
7 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

It was No. 1 until the last couple yrs., 28 September 1999
Author: Blunoser from Nova Scotia, Canada
Being of the older generation, Bob & Kim ARE the show, I love them, however as write-ups in the T.V.Guides state, you are only interested in the younger generation. Too bad because we are the ones at home in the P.M. when the soap is on. O well, such is life, like the older actors we have served our time!!
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
"As the World Turns" (1956), 9 October 1998
Author: anonymous
I've watched "As the World Turns" since 1957. It is my second favorite soap these day, "Guiding Light" is number one with me. " As the World Turns has held up over the years. It dropped from number one in my book after they lost their most terrific writer some years ago whose name escapes me. I thought this person was brilliant whom I believe wrote the best plot ever presented on daytime tv which ended at "Dreams End" It's not "As the World Turn's" fault that their shows plots do not have it's former brilliance, no-one in daytime soaps comes close to that writer's abilities. I've watched other soaps over the years & for one reason or another I've dropped them. I have never dropped "As the World Turns" and "The Guiding Light" I think they are the best soaps on tv, even if they don't get the ratings.
It's a soap. But it's a good soap., 6 July 2008

Author: dog_luver12
We all know how soaps are. Over dramatic, cheesy and completely unrealistic. But this is one soap, I find, that does it in a more clever way. It's actually enjoyable to watch, and sometimes even funny. I never liked day time drama. Sure, I'd watch for the sake of laughing at the awful writing and acting. But then I watched an episode of As The World Turns. And then the next day. Soon, I was addicted to it. The characters intrigued me and there story lines often made sense and were logical. The Luke and Noah story line made the show for me. Not many times do you find a day time drama with a gay couple on it, and the fact that ATWT took the risk, really impressed me and I enjoyed the show ever more. If anything, watch this show for them. I am a new viewer of this show, as new as they come. 1 months to be exact, but I've heard many people say that it's not as good as it was back then, when it first began. Well, I wouldn't know. As I see the show right now, I would say it is the best day time drama on television today.
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