Sunset Beach is a short-running American
television
soap opera, first broadcast in
the United States on
NBC on January 6, 1997, and
last airing on December 31, 1999.
The show followed the loves and lives of
the people living in a fictional coastal city named Sunset
Beach, on the coast of California
. Although there is a town in California
called Sunset Beach, the show's beach scenes were shot on nearby
Seal Beach. The show was co-produced by NBC and
Spelling Television. It aired in over 70
countries around the world.
Sunset Beach won two
Daytime Emmy Awards and was nominated
another 11 times. The show also received 22 nominations for various
other awards.
Sunset Beach was released on DVD for the
first time on 25 July 2008 by the German company
Koch Media. The first 12 episodes were released
on four DVDs (in German and English).
Conception and development
Sunset Beach was created early in 1996, in an attempt to
rebuild the
NBC Daytime lineup and
target the younger audience. It was the first daytime soap opera
produced by
Aaron Spelling, the chief
of
Spelling Television (Spelling
had also produced several primetime soap operas, and was the
executive producer of the 1991 film
Soapdish, a satirical look at daytime soap
operas).
Jonathan Levin, one of the
show's consulting producers, commented on the change that a new
soap opera brings to the lineup, and the tough process of a viewer
getting to know a new soap: "It is very difficult to change the
loyalty of the daytime viewer, and we’re talking about shows that
have been on for 30 years. That's one of the reasons we’re
targeting young viewers — they’re the most available and the most
flexible in their viewing habits."
In the process of making the show,
Aaron
Spelling liked the idea of naming it
Never Say
Goodbye, as suggested by Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone
during a dinner with Spelling, but later tests proved that the
viewers were more drawn to the title
Sunset Beach. At
first, the show was given a one-year deal, with 255 episodes to
produce. All 255 episodes were shown on Channel 5 in the UK and
episodes often got more viewers in the UK than in America.
Before getting cancelled, the show was renewed twice, but it failed
to grab the show's audience. Through its short existence,
Sunset Beach remained in the daytime
ratings basement. However, during the
Shockwave storyline of 1998 it received its best ratings
and showed signs that it might move off the bottom. This spike
proved to be brief and was not sustained.
Cast and crew

Cast circa 1997
First Row: Cole, Annie, Tim
Second Row: Caitlin, Mark, Meg, Eddie
Third Row: Tiffany, Ricardo, Paula, Ben, Vanessa, Michael,
Sean
the show first aired, it started with 21 contract characters, of
which 7 had left the show during its three year run.
The first actress to leave the series was
Kelly Hu, whose character didn't mix well with the
others, and she was followed by the exit of
Adrienne Frantz.
Her character was recast after her but the change didn't work
out, resulting in the character eventually being written out.
The final original character to be written off was Eddie
Connors, played by
Peter
Barton, who exited in mid-1998.
The remaining 14 original characters stayed on the show until its
end, and three of those characters were recast during the
three-year run. The first recast happened soon after the show
started airing. The role of
Cole
Deschanel, initially played by
Ashley Hamilton, was recast with
Eddie Cibrian. In mid-1998, following contract
disputes,
Vanessa Dorman vacated the
role of Cole's wife
Caitlin, and
Kam Heskin was cast instead of her. The final
recast was a temporary one. When
Susan
Ward left to film a movie,
Sydney
Penny stepped in to replace her, with Ward later returning to
play the character for the show's final few weeks. Shortly after
the show premiered,
Dominique
Jennings,
V.P. Oliver and
Russell
Curry joined the cast, but the first two were written off by
March 1999, exactly two years after their introduction.
The exits of many characters opened the doors to the introduction
of new ones.
Carol Potter and
John Martin, who had been recurring
during the show's first year, were promoted to contract status, and
the expansion of Meg's family also included the arrival of her
sister
Sara. The role was first played
by then-unknown actress
Lauren
Woodland, but she was fired two weeks later and replaced by
Shawn Batten, who played the role for
the remainder of the series. Aside from Meg's family,
Ricardo got his family
expanded, including the introduction of his mother Carmen (played
Margarita Cordova), brother
Antonio (played by
Nick Kiriazis) and
the sudden reappearance of his sister Maria (played by
Christina Chambers), Ben Evans' presumed
dead wife.
The teen scene was revived in 1998, when Bette's daughter Emily
(played by
Cristi Harris) arrived in
town and fell in love with Sean, prompting Amy (played by
Krissy Carlson) and Brad (played by
Michael Strickland) to intervene. The
final teen cast was Leo Deschanel, Cole's brother (played by
David Mathiessen). A long-time
legend, A.J. Deschanel, was also cast in the form of
Gordon Thomson, and a villain named Francesca
(played by
Lisa Guerrero) was added to
the cast in the middle of 1998.
In 1999, the show cast only three contract roles, the first two
being in March, when
Tracy Melchior
and
Chase Parker stunned the soap with
their sudden arrival in town. The final role to be cast on the show
was the one played by
Sean Kanan in late
August. Things changed at the end of the year, when fan favorite
Eddie Cibrian left the show to pursue
a career in primetime. Several other cast members, including a few
original ones, considered leaving, but the show's cancellation came
before they could make a decision.
During its entire run,
Sunset Beach was executive produced
by
Gary Tomlin. However, the
head-writing history was much different.
Robert Guza, Jr. was the first head writer
(and also a co-creator), but he exited the show in October 1997,
when
Meg Bennett, who had been serving
as Associate Head Writer was promoted to Head Writing status. Four
months after being the sole head writer, Bennett got a co-head
writer in the form of
Christopher
Whitesell. During the summer of 1998, Bennett was fired and
replaced by
Margaret DePriest, who
stayed with the show until its cancellation.
Storylines
in its nearly three-year run ranged from the traditional to the
supernatural. One of the first
storylines concerned an Internet romance. Kansas farm girl
Meg Cummings discovered her fiancé,
Tim Truman, cheating on her on
their wedding day. Meg had been talking online with SB, a man who
lived in Sunset Beach, California. And after catching Tim with her
maid of honor, Meg fled to Sunset Beach in search of SB, who turned
out to be wealthy, widowed businessman
Ben Evans.
The first year of the show revolved around Meg's pursuit of Ben (including her briefly breaking into his house, stealing a journal she found there, and dressing up in his late wife's clothes), who was initially not interested in her, and the gradual development of a romance between them. A side plot showed the antagonistic relationship between Meg and Annie Douglas, Ben's longtime best friend. Meg hated Annie for being close to Ben and wanted to cut her out of his life; Annie hated Meg out of jealousy for her developing romance with Ben. Their problems reached a head with a physical fight in a hot tub. Meg's ex-fiancé Tim Truman followed her to Sunset Beach to win her back, and ended up becoming Annie's ally and almost love interest. Once Meg and Annie had overcome their differences, Meg soon had a new problem when she began to suspect Ben was a murderer, although this plot line was developed to lead up to the Terror Island storyline. After the Terror Island/Derek storyline (see below) none of the issues raised were ever mentioned again.
Meg and Ben became one of the show's first couples, along with
reformed jewel thief
Cole Deschanel
and local heiress
Caitlin
Richards. Cole slept with and impregnated both Caitlin and
Caitlin's unhappily married, alcoholic mother
Olivia. Olivia and her fiendish husband,
Gregory, planned to steal Caitlin's
baby and pass it off as Olivia's (telling Caitlin her baby had
died) in order to break up Caitlin's relationship with Cole, who
her parents disapproved of because of his criminal past. Caitlin
lost the child in a car accident when she found out about her
parents' horrible plan, and planned to fake the rest of her
pregnancy and adopt a baby to pass off as her own, as she was
worried her inability to have children (caused by the accident)
would cause problems in her marriage to Cole. She enlisted the help
of Annie, who was secretly trying to break up Olivia and Gregory,
due to a term in her father's will that stated she would only get
her inheritance if she wed Gregory (her father's way of breaking up
his marriage to Olivia, who he had been having an affair with).
Annie drugged Olivia and stole her baby, telling her the baby had
been stillborn. Caitlin unknowingly raised her baby half-brother
(who was also her stepson, having been fathered by her husband),
until a grief-stricken Olivia discovered the truth. Olivia was
eventually reunited with her son.
When the show began, it was the only soap on the air featuring
Asian-American characters, though they were written off before the
end of the first year. The show also had daytime television's only
African-American villainess,
Virginia
Harrison, who schemed to break up
lifeguard Michael
Bourne and reporter
Vanessa Hart so
she could have Michael for herself.
Outrageous storylines

Sunset Beach gained most viewers
during its 1998 summer storyline
Shockwave
one of the most outrageous storylines on the show, Virginia drugged
Vanessa and, using a
turkey baster and
some stolen sperm, impregnated her with the child of
Tyus Robinson,
to make it appear Vanessa had been unfaithful to Michael, who was
sterile.
The show was known for other outrageous storylines, such
Terror
Island in which several of the show's main characters were
stranded on an island with a masked serial killer (whose costume
bore a close resemblance to that of the killer from
Scream) intent on killing them,
especially Meg. A handful of characters were killed by the maniac,
mostly minor characters introduced as serial killer-fodder, but
also one lead character, young runaway made good
Mark Wolper. In
his dying moments Mark pulled off the killer's mask and audiences
were stunned to see Ben's face behind it. As it turned out, Ben had
an evil twin,
Derek, who
plagued Ben and Meg's lives off and on for the rest of the run of
the show. Derek was killed after being shot in a struggle with Ben
during the show's final weeks, following a long storyline where
Derek kidnapped and impersonated his twin for months, sleeping with
Ben's wife
Maria (having previously
also slept with Meg).
Maria Torres Evans, who had wed Ben
when she was still a teenager and he was barely in his twenties,
had disappeared and been presumed drowned after a boating accident
that took place some years prior to the start of the show. Ben was
haunted by the terrible secret that he had caught her in bed with
Derek (it was later revealed that Derek -- who had impersonated Ben
to Maria, who was unaware Ben had a twin -- had not slept with
Maria, as she had stabbed him with scissors when he tried to rape
her). Ben's guilt and grief over Maria caused a shadow over his
relationship with Meg from the beginning, which worsened when an
amnesiac Maria came back from the dead at Ben and Meg's October
1998 wedding. Ben and Maria grew closer while he helped her to
regain her memory, and once she did, Ben flip flopped between the
two women for much of the rest of the show's run. During the show's
last year a strange woman, Tess, turned up on his doorstep with a
son she claimed was Ben and Maria's. After a positive paternity
test they raised the child,
Benjy, together,
causing even more problems for Meg, who left Ben and briefly
started dating her sister's boyfriend,
Casey. Derek (who was also wrongfully presumed
dead) returned to kidnap Ben again, and it was revealed he and Tess
were Benjy's parents.
Another outrageous storyline was the
earthquake/
tsunami story,
in which Sunset Beach was struck by a massive earthquake, trapping
many characters - most of them each other's rival - together in
life and death situations. While half the cast battled the disaster
on land, the rest of the cast was on a pleasure cruise aboard a
ship that was overturned - à la
The Poseidon Adventure - by a
tsunami created by the earthquake. This storyline was in many ways
similar to the plot of
The Poseidon Adventure.
The tsunami storyline proved so popular that two weeks' worth of
episodes were compiled and turned into an hour-long show that was
included on NBC's lineup for one night in August 1998. The show
took a
supernatural turn for a while
with some cursed jewels, stolen from a religious icon, that turned
those who'd touched them into shriveled mummies. The story
culminated on
Christmas Eve with the
return of the jewels to the Madonna just in time to prevent the
deaths of several key characters.
The show also featured two murder mysteries in its run. The first
was the murder of Annie's father Del Douglas (by Cole's mother,
Elaine
Stevens. Del had kidnapped Cole as a baby and convinced Elaine
the child was dead). The second murder mystery involved the death
of seductress
Francesca
Vargas, whom just about everyone in town wanted dead. The
surprise twist in the Who Shot Francesca storyline was that the
killer was main character
Gregory
Richards.
Cancellation
The show was cancelled just before the third anniversary of its
original air date. Most of the main characters were given happy
endings. Ben and Meg and Michael and Vanessa married in a double
wedding. Casey and Sara got engaged, Cole and Caitlin were happy in
their marriage, and Olivia was happily raising her children alone.
Maria gave Ben a divorce so he could marry Meg and met a new man,
Ross English. Maria also adopted Benjy, the little boy she had
regarded as her own, and she and Ben planned to raise him together.
The 'baddies' all got their just desserts. Derek was accidentally
shot and killed by Ben, his accomplice Tess went to jail, as did
Gregory Richards. Tim Truman, who though not a villain spent most
of the three years causing problems for Ben and Meg, was murdered
by Derek. Virginia remained languishing in a mental hospital, while
reformed bad girl Annie also got a happy ending, finding love with
relatively new character Jude.
In a twist
ending, Meg appeared to wake up in Kansas
and realize
that the entire three years in Sunset Beach had been a dream - and
the characters from the show were actually her friends and family
in Kansas (an obvious reference to The Wizard of Oz).
However, at the last minute, Meg woke up in Sunset Beach and was in
bed with Ben, the day after their wedding. Probably the dream was
poking fun at how many writers use the sloppy ending of, "It was
all a dream" to bring a story to a close, as was done in stories
such as
Alice in
Wonderland.
The show
gained a cult following in the UK
, doing
especially well in the ratings for Channel 5, with some universities holding
Sunset Beach parties where students would go dressed as their
favorite character. Channel 5 tried to save the show when
its cancellation was announced, offering partially to fund it and
trying to get other networks involved, as had happened previously
with Baywatch, however NBC was not interested. Channel 5 did buy
NBC's other soap opera,
Days of Our Lives, to air in
Sunset Beach's place, even running promos during Sunset
Beach's final week, but the show failed to catch on and 5 dropped
Days approximately a year later.
International Broadcasting
In South Africa Sunset Beach originally aired on SABC 3 for it's entire run from 1999 - 2001. Currently e.tv is rebroadcasting the entire series. It started airing again in mid 2008.
References and casting
Satire and pop culture references
Sunset Beach remains highly popular in many countries years after
its cancellation. It frequently referenced other television shows:
many episodes featured characters fantasizing about their lives and
dreams in sequences that show the cast dressed as
Charlie's Angels or performing the
opening from
Friends.
Fantasies involving the character
Annie Douglas Richards included take
offs of
The Leeza Gibbons Show,
The Jerry Springer
Show (titled "Murderer of the Day"), guest starring the
talk show hosts. Annie fantasized about being a
superhero, had a play of the movie
The Wizard of Oz, a play
on
Wheel of
Fortune, she even had her own imaginary soap opera titled
The Search for Dignity. Plus, the character of Annie was
usually the one to deliver funny quotes.
What made
Sunset Beach truly innovative was its satirizing
of itself and the soap opera genre. Advice was sometimes given to
characters by the show's dog and on one occasion, by God himself.
One of the show's lighthearted traits would be to incorporate
pop-up trivia occasionally, taking a
cue from the
VH1 show. A few of the characters
were also known for
breaking
the fourth wall, most notably
Bette Katzenkazrahi and
Vanessa Hart, who were involved in a one-day
special episode where they both had a dream of resolving the
complicated storylines of
Sunset Beach.
DVD
| DVD Name |
Year |
Region 2 (German) |
Additional features |
| Box 1 |
1997 |
June 25, 2008 |
None |
Stunt casting guest appearances
The show went in for stunt casting guest appearances -
Jerry Springer played
talk show host Jerry Feller,
Marla Maples played
socialite Barbara Birch, Judge Wapner played
himself - and featured a ripped from the headline story about a
Washington intern, Meg's sister
Sara
Cummings (
Shawn Batten), who'd had
an affair with a married politician. Her affair was exposed by her
supposed friend - Melinda Fall, a take off on
Linda Tripp. Sara went on to develop a
relationship with local lifeguard Casey Mitchum, and their
relationship and her sibling rivalry with her sister (who at one
point started an affair with Casey) made up the bulk of Sara's
storylines, although she was also famous for her TV show-inspired
fantasy sequences, which included spoofs of the opening titles for
Friends and
The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
Other notable guest appearances include
Finola Hughes as Cole's ex-fiancée Helena,
Christopher Darden as Les Gordon,
John O'Hurley as the host of
Wheel
of Misfortune,
Kim Alexis as a hotel
maid,
Jack Wagner as a thief
named Jacques Dumont, and
Barbara
Mandrell as Casey's ill mother Alex Mitchum.
External links
References
- " Emmy Awards" NBC, URL last accessed
2008-06-16
- "[1]" DE, URL last accessed 2008-06-16
- Levin comment
- Nielsen Ratings,
Info on Nielsen Ratings
- Terror Island, Welcome to Terror
Island
- Shockwave, Shockwave Storyline
- Final Episode Recap
- Annie's fantasy world, The fantasies of
Annie Douglas
- Annie's quotes, Annie
Douglas quotes
- Spike's profile
- God speaks to Antonio