General Hospital
(commonly abbreviated GH) is an American
daytime television drama and is credited by the
Guiness Book of World
Records as being the second longest-running soap opera currently in production and the third
longest
running drama in television in history after Guiding Light and As the World Turns. It
premiered on the
ABC
television network on April 1, 1963.
Broadcast weekdays and
currently repeated nightly on SOAPnet, it is
the longest-running serial produced in Hollywood
, and the longest-running entertainment program in
ABC television history. General Hospital rose to
the top of the ratings in the early 1980s in part thanks to the
monumentally popular "
supercouple"
Luke and Laura, whose
1981 wedding brought in 30 million viewers and remains the
highest-rated hour in American soap opera history. In 2003,
TV Guide named
General Hospital
the 'Great Soap Opera of All Time.' In 2007,
General
Hospital was ranked #31 in
Time magazine's
100 best TV shows of all-TIME.
General Hospital was created by husband-and-wife soap
writers
Frank and Doris
Hursley, and is set in the fictional city of
Port Charles, New
York. It was only the second soap to air on ABC (after the
short-lived
Road to Reality, which aired for several
months during the 1960-61 season).
Currently taped at The Prospect
Studios
, General Hospital originally aired for a
half-hour. The series was expanded from 30 minutes to 45
minutes in 1976, and then to a full hour on
November 7,
1977. It holds
the record for most
Daytime Emmy
Awards for
Outstanding
Drama Series, with 10 wins. In 1964, a sister soap was created
for
General Hospital,
The Young Marrieds. It ran for only
two years, and was cancelled due to low ratings in 1966.
General Hospital also spawned a
prime time spin-off with
the same name in the United Kingdom
from 1972 to 1979, as well as the daytime series
Port Charles (1997-2003) and
the prime time spin-off General Hospital: Night
Shift (2007-2008) in the United States.
On September 18, 2009,
General Hospital became the second
longest running soap opera currently on air. With the cancellation
of
CBS's
Guiding
Light,
As the World
Turns took the number one spot, having premiered in 1956,
just 7 years prior to
General Hospital.
Show history
Launched in 1963, the first stories were mainly set at General
Hospital in an unnamed mid-sized Eastern city (the name of the
city,
Port Charles, would not be
mentioned until the 1970s), revolving around
Dr. Steve Hardy (
John
Beradino) and his friend, Nurse
Jessie
Brewer (
Emily McLaughlin).
Steve was Chief Of Internal Medicine on the hospital's seventh
floor and dedicated his life to healing and caring for the sick,
ably assisted by Nurse Jessie. Jessie's turbulent marriage to the
much-younger
Dr. Phil Brewer (originally
portrayed by
Roy Thinnes; lastly by
Martin West) was the center of many
early storylines.
The 1981 wedding of
Luke
and Laura, played by
Anthony Geary
and
Genie Francis, was the most
watched event in daytime serial history.
In the 1990s, General Hospital entered a transitional phase as the
action/adventure storylines of the 1980s became less popular. The
show gained critical acclaim for its sensitive handling of social
issues, most notable of which were the heart transplant storyline
which involved the death of eight-year-old
BJ
Jones (daughter of
Dr. Tony Jones and
R.N. Bobbie
Spencer) in a bus crash and the subsequent donation of her
heart to her dying cousin
Maxie Jones.
Shortly afterwards,
Monica
Quartermaine (
Leslie Charleson)
began a long battle with breast cancer, which led to her adopting
Emily Quartermaine, a young girl
who had been orphaned when her mother died of breast cancer. Her
adpoted daughter was later murdered by an unknown killer, leaving
Dr. Monica Quartermanine
heartbroken. GH was also praised for yet another storyline in the
form of the beautiful but tragic love story of teenagers
Stone Cates (
Michael
Sutton) and
Robin Scorpio
(
Kimberly McCullough). After a
struggle that lasted throughout most of 1995, Stone died from AIDS
at the age of 19 and his death was followed by storylines in which
17 year old Robin had to deal with being HIV-positive as a result
of her and Stone's relationship. The storyline got Sutton a
Daytime Emmy nomination for Outstanding
Supporting Actor and won McCullough an
Outstanding Younger Actress
award.
On Saturday,
December 14,
1996, General Hospital aired its one and only primetime
episode,
General
Hospital: Twist of Fate, which picked up where that
Friday's episode had left off. The special centered around Laura's
supposed death at the hands of
Stefan
Cassadine.
The series' 11,000th episode aired on
February 20,
2006.
On April 23, 2009,
General Hospital became ABC's first
regular daytime drama to be taped and broadcast in
high definition, though the 2008
season of its primetime spin-off
General Hospital: Night
Shift was in high definition. This is the second daytime
drama to move to high definition after
CBS's
The Young and the
Restless.
Cast
Title sequence
Since the series' debut in 1963,
General Hospital has had
five opening
title sequence packages
and six
theme songs.
During 1963-1967, the ABC announcer says "GENERAL
HOSPITAL...brought to you by [product name]"; when the show moved
to color on
October 30,
1967, until circa early 1970s, announcer
Ed Chandler would say, "GENERAL HOSPITAL in
color". During the end of each scene just seconds before
commercial break, Chandler would say "We'll
return to GENERAL HOSPITAL in just a moment"; that announcement was
phased out in the early 1970s. During 1973 to 1976, Chandler would
simply say "
General Hospital". "General Hospital" was the
last
ABC show to move
to color.
For the
closing credits sequence,
Chandler's original line from late 1963-circa 1970s was, "This is
Ed Chandler inviting you to tune in tomorrow (Monday) and every
weekday for GENERAL HOSPITAL". It was changed during circa 1973 to
"This is Ed Chandler inviting you to tune in every day, Monday
through Friday for GENERAL HOSPITAL." This spiel was used until
July 1976. Since 1976, the only show announcements are the daily
sponsor tags by ABC staff announcers ("
General Hospital,
brought to you by..."), and until the late 1990's, that immediately
preceded the title at the end of the opening sequence. Currently,
these announcements are done on network bumpers after the first
scene.
Although Ed Chandler ceased his live announcing duties for the show
in July 1976, a recording of his voice was retained for the first
mid-program bumper ("
General Hospital will continue in a
moment"). There continued to be two mid-bumpers until January 1978,
when a third was added during mid-break, after
station identification, representing
the expansion to an hour. The latter two bumpers would have no
announcement. The three-bumper format was in place until circa
1986, with only the first and last mid-bumpers remaining. Starting
in 1986, a muted display of the zooming title from the opening
sequence was inserted to accommodate the mandate for
affiliates to run their station ID over a
program's still or logo. Ed Chandler's recorded mid-break
announcement on the first bumper lasted until 1989. From 1989 to
March 31, 1993, the rotating staff of ABC announcers would say
"
General Hospital will continue in a moment"; well-known
voice actor
Bill Ratner was also
commonly heard during this time. Then, from 1996 until 1999,
various
GH cast members would voice the first mid-bumper
("
General Hospital will continue in just a moment, here,
on ABC"). Also, from late 1996 to September 1999, various cast
members (but most often
Ingo
Rademacher (
Jasper Jacks) would
introduce next-episode previews off camera. Since the fall of 1999,
mid-bumpers and previews have been done on network graphics. In
2008, due to tight budgets, ABC cut the spoiler promos.
| April 1, 1963 - November 22, 1963 |
The Nurse's Station[71556]In the early episodes of 1963, General
Hospital used a scene of doctors and nurses going about their
business in the hospital, which then freezes and turns into a
negative image, with the title appearing in the Craw Clarendon
Condensed font (which remained the same until 1993). Accompanying
this was a delightful, rather expansive piano piece by Kip
Walton.
Mid-bumpers and closing sequences from day one featured the show's
title, in the same font and size, centered on the screen against a
black background. In the closings, a second sponsor plug would be
included after the title, which would then return to the black
screen where the credits would start running. In the first several
years, credits would be carded one at a time for the most part on
Monday-Thursday episodes; after production principals, the top
billing stars would be credited (during this era, they were mainly
John Beradino, Emily McLaughlin, Rachel Ames, Peter Hansen and Patricia Breslin).
On Fridays, the entire credit setup would scroll, with full cast
and crew. The top-billing stars would still appear in their stacked
format during the scroll, as they did on carded days (with actors'
name, "as" and their characters' name all on separate lines) while
supporting players would appear with their characters' name
positioned to the left followed by periods, with the actors' names
listed below in capitals over on the right. All crew credits would
be centered. The final display of the General Hospital
title in all broadcasts would scroll up itself to include the
Selmur Productions ident at the end of the sequence. |
| November 25, 1963 - April 11, 1975[71557] |
The Definitive First Decade & Transition to
ColorNearly eight months into General Hospital's
run, the nurses' station opening sequence was changed in favor of a
more simple display. At the end of the prologue, the first few
notes of the opening theme began playing as the scene dissolved
into a black screen, with the show's title appearing on it,
centered. The same visual would remain on the screen for the length
of the brief opening theme tune, save for a cut-in to a sponsor
plug, and virtually only as long as the network announcer's (later
Ed Chandler's) spiel. This second theme package was basically an
expansion of the visual format used in the mid-bumpers and closing
since the show's premiere. When the program moved to color in late
October 1967, the black background used for all the visuals changed
to blue, but otherwise the package would go unchanged for its
entire run. The arrival of this first long-running setup for
GH brought a revised version of the April-November 1963
theme, in a higher pitch and faster melody, which was also composed
by Kip Walton.
The same mid-bumpers and closing credits format from the first
package remained in place. The Selmur Productions ident continued
to appear at the conclusion of the credits every episode until
1968, when ABC bought complete ownership of General
Hospital. |
| April 14, 1975 - March 31, 1993[71558] |
The Speeding AmbulanceThe exterior shot of
the hospital in the opening and ending credits is the General
Hospital of the Los Angeles County-USC Medical
Center , located just east of Downtown Los
Angeles (Google Street View image from outside the gate:
[71559]). This shot was used from 1975
to 1993, and remained relatively unchanged between those years. It
consisted of an ambulance rushing through the gates of the medical
center, followed by the show's title zooming outward from the view
of the hospital. The sequence's theme song was led prominently by
George Wright's piano theme
from no later than Monday, April 14, 1975 until Friday, July 23,
1976. Then on Monday, July 26, 1976, the theme music was changed to
"Autumn Breeze" by Jack Urbont, with the horns throughout the
opening sequence (the 1975 opening sequence would remain the same).
The graphic details of the opening would see only one alteration,
in 1978, when the lettering of the show's zooming title became
smaller. It is one of the longest running soap opera theme/visuals
in history, with only the 1970-1989 theme/visuals of All My Children and Days of our Lives' 1972-93 package
ahead of it. The sequence was used until the last episode of
General Hospital with the Autumn Breeze theme aired on
March 31, 1993.
The closing credits during this long era were done over nearly the
same exterior of the LA County-USC Medical Center, with the main
difference here being a blue-sky/cloud visual, as opposed to the
opening having a clear, sunny sky. Occasionally a closer pan of the
hospital was used, but it became more common in the early 1980s and
was used almost exclusively from 1983 until 1993. The Craw
Clarendon Condensed credits continued the tradition of carding
dayplayers one at a time on most days, with the actors' name on
top, the "as" on the middle line and character name below. On
Fridays or during special storylines, a long crawl credits format
also remained. No earlier than the start of the LA-USC Medical
Center visuals era, scrolling cast credits became reformatted where
the actors name appeared first in capitals, positioned to the left
and followed by periods, with their character's name seen below in
mostly lowercase, set on the right. Copyright notice first appeared
at the end of all episodes in 1980, in a small capitalized font. By
late 1981, the notice began appearing in capitalized Arial font,
and would remain this way through the fall of 1982.
In the fall of 1982, the closing format was updated so that now the
credits were electronically generated. The creators' credit, which
had long consisted of "Frank and" on one line, and "Doris Hursley"
below it, now became "Frank &" with "Doris Hursley" underneath.
The end credits became smaller, and the carded dayplayer setup now
used the long-crawl formatting with the actors' name followed by
periods, with character name below. From this point on, the more
inward shot of the hospital was used full time. The copyright
notice, which currently consisted of "(c) (year) American
Broadcasting Companies, Inc.", was changed to small, capitalized
Craw Clarendon Condensed, on two lines. Around the episode marking
GH's 20th anniversary in April 1983, "All Rights Reserved"
was added below the copyright notice, in small, capitalized Arial.
Between December 1983 and February 1984, the space between
General and Hospital in the closing title
displays were removed, so that the title was stacked together; and,
"Frank & Doris Hurley" became "Frank And Doris" on one line,
with "Hursley" below. At the beginning of 1985, Gloria Monty finally became credited as
"Executive Producer", replacing the simple "Produced By" title
which had been a standard from the early days of TV.
By 1988, the carded credits format had long become occasional, and
ceased during that year. Thereafter, on days that had short
closings, the credits scrolled production principals only up until
the role of associate producer, which would then be followed by the
closing title display and copyright. Beginning in September 1989,
on long crawl days listing the cast, John
Beradino and Emily McLaughlin's
credits scrolled on screen one at a time before the rest of the
cast was listed in the large group. This was a nod by
then-executive producer H. Wesley Kenney to Beradino and McLaughlin's
seniority to the program. When Emily McLaughlin died in 1991,
Beradino was listed alone before the rest of the cast, with
Rachel Ames now always leading first on
the main cast list.In 2008,It was brought back for an episode of
General Hospital : NightShift as a tribute to the opening and the
character of Robert Scorpio. |
| April 1, 1993 - August 27, 2004 |
Faces of the
HeartWendy Riche made her
most visible change as she decided to retire the long-running 1976
opening in favor of something new. The new opening, Faces Of The
Heart by Dave Koz, debuted at the beginning
of the first episode on April 1, 1993 that marked General
Hospital's thirtieth anniversary. The theme begins with a heartbeat
rhythm played on a bass guitar as we dissolve to a shot of an
ambulance. That, in turn, dissolves into a tinted,
letterboxed view of the exterior of the LA County-USC Medical
Center in Los Angeles,
California . This is followed by a series of video
headshots of all the contract cast members, either solo or in
pairs, against a red background. After every few clips, there is an
action clip from the show. At the end of the sequence, we go back
to the letterboxed, tinted hospital exterior and the title of the
show in Goudy Bold type. For the 32nd Anniversary week in April
1995, the theme was remixed with a longer version with a reprise at
the end, also the cast montage had a major update, which several
cast members received new footage and new Puerto Rico actions
scenes were added. On April 1, 2003, the show's 40th anniversary,
the characters’ first names were added to the opening.
For a few weeks into the new "Faces of the Heart" package, the end
credits remained in the same Craw Clarendon Condensed type used in
past years. Now, however, the long crawl was done over stills from
that day's episode. In one of the last episodes to use the Craw
Clarendon Condensed, the closing credits were actually turned red,
experimentally, to represent the color of the show's new visual
image. By no later than Monday, April 19, 1993, the credits resumed
being white and were now in Goudy font, to match the new
General Hospital title logo. Short credit sequences now
ran over a variation of the red-tinted view of the hospital seen in
the opening, which had motion effects that slowly pulled outward
from the exterior. From March 1996 to September 1999, each end
credit segment was done in smaller lettering on a separate card for
each still. The separate card setup is still used in the end titles
shown on SoapNet rebroadcasts, but the credits are done over a shot
of the hospital. |
| August 30, 2004 - Present |
SirensDuring the May 2004 sweeps, ABC Daytime began a significant re-branding
process. New graphics and new promotional bumpers were created, and
the visuals in the new promos were incorporated into new openings
that were unveiled on all three ABC soaps in subsequent weeks. On
August 30, 2004, GH unveiled a new opening that incorporated many
of the character visuals used in a new set of ABC Daytime promos
and bumpers that debuted in May 2004. The nods to the show’s past
seem quite minimal in this new opening as we get only an extremely
brief glimpse of an ambulance and an almost equally brief upward
pan of the hospital exterior. This new opening sequence ends with a
shot of the male cast members clad in tuxedos and posing against a
white background, with Anthony Geary walking out of the shot,
followed by the title of the show. The portion featuring the male
cast members has remained the same since this sequence was first
used in 2004, in spite of the fact that a few of the cast members
featured in this portion of the sequence such as Ted King, Ignacio
Serricchio and M'fundo Morrison
have since departed the show. The title appears in white letters in
a single line across the screen against a black background, which
is framed by letterboxing. On April 20, 2009, this sequence was
updated slightly - the open was stretched to fill the 16x9 picture
ratio for the show's move to HD, but the video quality of the
opening was still in standard definition. It is during this era
that main technical credits (including the day's producer,
director, etc. and the Hursleys' creative credit (even though they
had passed away years previously) began to appear during the
opening prologue scene, a practice only one other soap
(The Young and the
Restless) currently utilizes. |
Main crew members
- Producers: Jill
Farren Phelps (Executive
Producer), Mary O'Leary, Mercer
Barrows , Michelle Henry, Deborah Genovese, Robert Guza, Jr. (Consulting Producer)
- Directors: Matthew
Diamond, Joseph Behar, Danielle Faraldo, Craig McManus, William Ludel, Phideaux Xavier, Scott McKinsey, Owen
Renfroe, Penny Pengra, Christine Magarian, Ron Cates, Peter
Fillmore, Ronald C. Cates, Dave MacLeod
- Head Writer: Robert Guza, Jr.
- Associate Head Writer/Script Editor: Elizabeth Korte
- Story
Consultant: Brian
Frons
- Breakdown Writers: Jim Reitzel, Michael Conforti, Heidi Ploen, Sasha
Cartullo, Nathan Fissel, David
Goldschmid, Meg Bennett
- Script Writers: Susan Wald (playwright), Michele
Val Jean, Mary Sue Price,
Karen Harris, Elizabeth Korte
- Casting
Directors: Mark Teschner,
Gwen Hillier
- Former Notable Crew Members: John William Corrington , Lewis Arlt [71560],
Lynda Myles [71561],
Alan Pultz , Judith Pinsker [71562],
Joseph Behar [71563],
Stephanie Braxton [71564],
Norma Monty , Frank South [71565],
Ralph Ellis [71566],
Shelley Curtis [71567],
Hope Harmel Smith
Setting
The series is set in the fictional city of Port Charles, New York.
Port Charles is a midsized to large city located in
Upstate New York. Contained within the city
are popular establishments such as General Hospital, the large
hospital for which the show is named; the
Metro Court Hotel, a five star, luxury
inn; Kelly's Diner, a popular, vintage-type diner; Jake's, a
popular bar in Old Town run by
Coleman. Prominent citizens
include
the Quartermaines,
the Cassadines,
Sonny Corinthos,
Jason Morgan,
Patrick
Drake,
Robin Scorpio,
Jasper Jacks,
Alexis
Davis,
Sam McCall,and
Carly Corinthos Jacks.
Awards
Daytime Emmy Award wins
Drama series and performer categories
- Drama Series: Gloria Monty 1981,
1984; Wendy Riche 1995, 1996, 1997,
1999, 2000; Jill Farren Phelps
2005, 2006, 2008
- Lead Actor: Anthony Geary (Luke
Spencer) 1982, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2008; Maurice Benard (Sonny Corinthos) 2003
- Lead Actress: Finola Hughes
(Anna Devane) 1991
- Supporting Actor: Peter
Hansen (Lee Baldwin) 1979; David Lewis (Edward Quartermaine) 1982; Gerald Anthony (Marco Dane) 1993; Steve Burton (Jason Morgan) 1998; Stuart Damon (Alan
Quartermaine) 1999; Rick Hearst
(Ric Lansing) 2004, 2007
- Supporting Actress: Jane Elliot
(Tracy Quartermaine) 1981;
Rena Sofer (Lois
Cerullo) 1995; Sarah Brown
(Carly Benson) 2000; Vanessa Marcil (Brenda Barrett), 2003; Natalia Livingston (Emily Quartermaine), 2005; Genie Francis (Laura
Spencer), 2007;
- Younger Actor: Jonathan
Jackson (Lucky Spencer) 1995,
1998, 1999; Jacob Young (Lucky Spencer)
2002; Chad Brannon (Zander Smith)
2004
- Younger Actress: Kimberly
McCullough (Robin Scorpio) 1989,
1996; Sarah Brown (Carly Benson) 1997, 1998; Julie Marie Berman (Lulu Spencer), 2009
- Lifetime Achievement: Rachel Ames
(Audrey March Hardy) 2004;
Anna Lee (Lila
Quartermaine) 2004 (posthumous)
Other categories
- 2009 "Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team"
- 2008 "Outstanding Achievement in Casting for a Drama
Series"
- 2007 "Outstanding Achievement in Casting for a Drama
Series"
- 2006 "Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team"
- 2006 "Outstanding Achievement in Casting for a Drama
Series"
- 2006 "Outstanding Achievement in Hairstyling for a Drama
Series"
- 2005 "Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team"
- 2004 "Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team"
- 2004 "Outstanding Achievement in Makeup for a Drama
Series"
- 2003 "Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team"
- 2004 "Lifetime Achievement 2003 "Outstanding Achievement in
Multiple Camera Editing for a Drama Series"
- 2002 "Outstanding Original Song"
- 2000 "Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team"
- 1999 "Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team"
- 1999 "Outstanding Achievement in Makeup for a Drama
Series"
- 1999 "Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design for a Drama
Series"
- 1999 "Outstanding Original Song" (TIED with As the World Turns)
- 1998 "Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design for a Drama
Series"
- 1996 "Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design for a Drama
Series"
- 1995 "Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team"
- 1995 "Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design for a Drama
Series"
- 1982 "Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team"
- 1981 "Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team"
Directors Guild of America
- 1996, 1998, 2002, and 2004 "Outstanding Directorial Achievement
in Daytime Serials"
Writers Guild of America
- 1995, 1996, and 1998 "Daytime Serials"
Broadcast history
When
ABC premiered
General Hospital on April 1, 1963, the network placed it
in the 1 p.m./12 Noon Central timeslot against local newscasts on
NBC and
CBS affiliates. But
on the day before
New Year's Eve that
year,
General Hospital assumed a place on the daytime
schedule that, except for eighteen months between July 1976 and
January 1978 when it ran as one half of a 90-minute bloc with
One Life to Live between
2:30/1:30 and 4/3, it has maintained to this day, 3/2
Central.
During the 1960s,
General Hospital earned decent ratings
against the likes of
To Tell the
Truth and
The Secret
Storm on
CBS, but there was a decline
as the 1970s came, especially when
NBC's
Another World
became highly popular; for two years, it also faced
CBS' The Price is
Right, already a major hit. After continued mediocrity in
the
Nielsen ratings,
ABC was prepared to cancel
General Hospital, but decided to give it a second chance
in 1978 when it expanded the show to a full hour, from an
experimental 45 minutes. However, the expansion came with an
ultimatum to the producers that they had six months to improve the
show's ratings. Head writer
Douglas
Marland &
Gloria Monty was
hired as executive producer, and on her first day, she spent an
extra $100,000 re-taping four episodes. A miracle occurred and
thanks to Monty, the show became the most watched daytime drama by
1979, marking a rare instance of a daytime serial's comeback from
near-extinction. During the wedding of
Luke and Laura Spencer on November
16, 1981, about 30 million people tuned in to watch them exchange
vows and be cursed by
Elizabeth
Taylor's Helena Cassadine
(
later played by Constance
Towers).
From 1979 to 1988,
General Hospital remained number one in
the ratings, competing against two low-rated soaps on
NBC --
Texas
and
Santa Barbara
-- and the long-running
Guiding
Light (
GL) over on
CBS
(although, it should be noted, that for a brief period in the
middle of 1984,
Guiding Light experienced a renaissance
and became the #1 soap, dethroning
General Hospital from
the top ratings spot, thanks to well-regarded storylines written by
then-
GL head writer
Pam Long). For
the most part, however,
General Hospital continued to
triumph, even after the departure of popular actors
Anthony Geary and
Genie Francis in the
mid-1980s. Although
The Young and the Restless
took
General Hospital's place as the highest-rated serial
in 1989,
General Hospital continued to maintain excellent
ratings.
Ever since the 1991-1992 season of
General Hospital, the
show has had a steady decline in ratings. On and off they would be
in between third and fifth place in the Nielsen Ratings, placing
CBS's
The Young And The Restless and
The Bold and the
Beautiful in first and second place, respectively.
General
Hospital still remains in between third and fifth place in the
ratings to this day. During the 1990s
General Hospital was
put up against fellow soap opera,
All My Children, CBS's
As The World Turns and NBC's
Days of our
Lives.
- Highest-rated week in daytime history (November 16 - November
20, 1981)
- (Household ratings, Nielsen
Media Research)
| Serial |
Household rating |
(Time slot) Network |
Millions of households |
| 1. General Hospital |
16.0 |
(3-4pm) ABC |
17.5 |
| 2. All My Children |
10.2 |
(1-2pm) ABC |
11.7 |
| 3. One Life To Live |
10.2 |
(2-3pm) ABC |
11.6 |
| 4. Guiding Light |
7.9 |
(3-4pm) CBS |
8.2 |
- Years as #1 series
| Year(s) |
Household Rating |
| Sept. 1979-Sept. 1980 |
9.9 |
| 1980-1981 |
11.4 |
| 1981-1982 |
11.2 |
| 1982-1983 |
9.8 |
| 1983-1984 |
10.0 |
| 1984-1985 |
9.1 |
| 1985-1986 |
9.2 |
| 1986-1987 |
8.3
|-
|
1987-1988 |
8.1 |
1988-1989 season
1989-1990 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 8.0
- 2. General Hospital 7.4
1989-1990 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 8.0
- 2. General Hospital 7.4
1990-1991 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 8.1
- 2. General Hospital 6.7
1995 ratings
- 1. The Young and the Restless 7.155
- 3. General Hospital 5.343
1996-1997 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 7.1
- 4. General Hospital 4.8
1997-1998 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 7.0
- 4. General Hospital 4.6
1998-1999 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 6.9
- 4. General Hospital 4.3
1999-2000 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 6.8
- 4. General Hospital 4.0
2000-2001 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 6.7
- 3. General Hospital
2001-2002 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 6.3
- 4. General Hospital 3.7
2002-2003 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless
- 3. General Hospital 3.5
2003-2004 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless
- 3. General Hospital 3.3
2004-2005 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless
- 4. General Hospital 3.2
2005-2006 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless
- 3. General Hospital
2006-2007 season
- 1. The Young and the Restless 4.1
- 3. General Hospital 2.6
With the
show still number one in the Nielsens, WDTN
in Dayton, Ohio
canceled GH in May 1983 in favor of Woody Woodpecker and SuperFriends cartoons. Later, the
station would air such shows as
Hour
Magazine,
Geraldo and
Maury in GH's time slot until
September
2000 in television,
when the station's new owners,
Sunrise Broadcasting, canceled Maury,
due to what it called "community standards", and brought GH
back.
Cultural influence
The popularity of
General Hospital has caused it be
parodied or referred to in other mainstream programs. For example,
in the early 1990s, some episodes of GH were featured as "shorts"
during the fourth season of the parody show
Mystery Science Theater
3000. GH was also parodied/homaged in the song
General
Hospi-Tale by
The Afternoon
Delights, and in the film
Tootsie, which took place among the cast and
crew of a fictional soap opera program. In the
Fox medical drama
House,
Dr.
House enjoys
Prescription: Passion which is a poorly
acted, over-the-top parody of
General Hospital that he
watches constantly, even when he should be working. In the season
three episode, "
Half-Wit,"
House hides his blood test results under the name, "Luke N. Laura",
referring to
GH's legendary couple.
Famous Fans
General Hospital has many famous fans, including
The Sopranos actor
Vincent Pastore, who would join the show in
late 2008 for short guest stint. World renowned skier
Kristi Leskinen is a devout fan of the show,
along with actor
Jason
Gray-Stanford and singer
Billy
Currington.
Laura Wright, GH's
Carly, was a huge fan of the show in the 1980s before joining the
show in 2005. Motocross driver
Mike
Metzger is also a fan of the program, rarely missing an
episode.
Elizabeth Taylor, a huge
fan of the show, asked for a role on the soap opera and joined the
cast temporarily as
Helena
Cassadine, the widow of Mikkos Cassadine, to be a part of Luke
and Laura's 1981 wedding. Surprisingly,
Princess Diana was a devout fan of the show,
and went as far as to send two bottles of
Bollinger champagne to
Anthony Geary and
Genie Francis in time for Luke and Laura's
1981 wedding. Geary turned his into a lamp. Diana's wedding to
Prince Charles earlier that year
outrated Luke and Laura's in number of viewers.
Spin-offs and Specials
The
success of the long-running soap opera has had one sister soap, one
spin-off in the United States, and
two primetime spin-offs in the U.S. and the United Kingdom
.
The Young Marrieds
The Young Marrieds (1964-1966)
was ABC's first attempt at a sister soap for
General
Hospital. It ran for only two years, racking up a total of
only 380 episodes. Despite its moderate popularity, it was put up
against
CBS's top-rated
The Edge of Night, which it could not
compete against. The series finale aired on March 25, 1966, with
the show's main protagonist contemplating suicide. It ended in a
cliffhanger, leaving the audience wondering if the man had killed
himself or not.
The Young Marrieds was set in the
fictional suburb of Queen's Point, which was considered by the
writers to be a suburb of
Port Charles.
Many fans consider
Robin Scorpio and
Elizabeth Webber's homes to be in
this area of the town.
General Hospital: U. K. series
The U.K. series
General Hospital
(1972-1979) did not feature any characters from the American show,
but was modeled after its format. It started as a half-hour program
broadcast in the afternoons, which was unusual for UK serials that
normally aired in prime time. In 1975 it was expanded to an
hour-long format and moved to Friday evenings.
Port Charles
Port Charles (1997-2003) was a
daytime drama that initially featured interns in a competitive
medical school program, and was known for having more action
actually in the hospital than
General Hospital itself. It
also included the characters of
Scott
Baldwin.
Serena Baldwin,
Lucy Coe,
Kevin Collins, and
Karen Wexler, all of whom originally appeared
as characters on
General Hospital. As the show evolved, it
tended more towards gothic intrigue, including supernatural
elements such as
vampires and
life after death. It also switched formats
from an open-ended daytime serial to 13-week story arcs known as
"books," similar to
Spanish
language telenovelas.
General Hospital: Night Shift
General Hospital:
Night Shift (2007-2008) is the second American
prime time spin-off of a daytime drama (the first
being
Our Private World,
a spin-off of
As the World Turns). Its first season aired
from July 12, 2007 to October 4, 2007 on
SOAPnet, a cable channel owned by ABC. The series
follows the nighttime adventures of familiar and new characters
around the hospital. As of March 2008, the first season of the
series was "SOAPnet's most-watched series ever," with ABC Daytime
and SOAPnet President
Brian Frons noting
that
Night Shift drew more than 1 million new viewers to
the channel during its first season.
General Hospital: Twist of Fate
General Hospital: Twist
of Fate (1996) was a primetime special that aired on Saturday,
December 14,
1996.
The episode picked up where that Friday's show had left off. The
special centered around Laura's supposed death at the hands of
Stefan Cassadine.
35th Anniversary Special
On
April 2,
1998,
General Hospital aired a
primetime special in celebration of the program's
35th anniversary. Hosted by
Anthony
Geary, the show focused and recapped on many popular storylines
including
Monica's breast
cancer,
BJ's death, and
Stone's battle with
HIV. To
date, this is the only anniversary special that was broadcast in
primetime and that didn't include any of the current
storyline.
References
Notes
- Wolf, Buck. "Luke and Laura: Still the Ultimate TV Wedding."
ABC.com November 16, 2006.
-
http://soap-operas.lovetoknow.com/General_Hospital_Soap_Opera
-
http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1651341_1659192_1652529,00.html
-
http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/news/2006-10-24-luke-and-laura_x.htm
- "GH Spinoff Planned For SOAPnet." -
SoapCentral.com February 12, 2007.
- Nordyke, Kimberly. "SoapNet renews Night Shift." The
Hollywood Reporter. May 27, 2008.
Bibliography
- Gary Warner, General Hospital: The Complete Scrapbook,
Stoddart (November 1995), ISBN 1881649407
- Gerard J. Waggett, The Official General Hospital Trivia
Book, ABC (October 1997), ISBN 0786882751