Information about Ryan's Hope
- ''This page is about the television program. For the rock band of the same name see Ryan's Hope.
| Ryan's Hope | |
|---|---|
| Created by | Claire Labine, Paul Avila Mayer |
| Starring | Helen Gallagher Bernard Barrow Michael Levin Ron Hale Nancy Addison Altman John Gabriel Malcolm Groome Louise Shaffer, et al |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 3515 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 30 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | ABC |
| Original run | July 7, 1975 – January 13, 1989 |
| External links | |
| IMDb profile | |
Ryan's Hope was a soap opera which aired for fourteen years on ABC, from July 7, 1975 to January 13, 1989. It was created, owned, and originally written by Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, who had previously written Where the Heart Is and Love of Life. The show aired a total of 3515 30-minute episodes.
Creative Zenith
- See also: List of Ryan's Hope characters
Labine and Mayer also served as the executive producers of the show at this point, with George Lefferts as the producer. Lefferts would soon be replaced by Robert Costello, who remained with the show until 1978. After Costello, the role was occupied by Ellen Barrett (1978-1982) and Felicia Minei Behr (1982-1988).
The original cast consisted of Nancy Addison Altman, Bernard Barrow, Faith Catlin, Justin Deas, Michael Fairman, John Gabriel, Helen Gallagher, Malcolm Groome, Rosalinda Guerra, Ron Hale, Michael Hawkins, Earl Hindman, Ilene Kristen, Frank Latimore, Michael Levin, Kate Mulgrew, Hannibal Penney, Jr., and Diana van der Vlis.
As the seventies progressed, numerous actors and actresses appeared in various roles. One of the most noteworthy was Louise Shaffer (1977-1984) as the conniving Rae Woodard. Two others included Sarah Felder as Siobhan Ryan Novak and Richard Munez as Joe Novak.
Recasts
By the end of the seventies, many characters had been recast. This practice continued into the eighties and somewhat hindered the show at times when the recast did not work out. After Michael Hawkins left the role of Frank Ryan in 1976, subsequent replacements included Andrew Robinson (1976-1978), Daniel Hugh-Kelly (1978-1981), Geoffrey Pierson (1983-1985), and John Sanderford (1985-1989). Mary Ryan Fenelli was played by Mary Carney (1978), Kathleen Tyan Tolan (1978-1979), and Nicolette Goulet (1979) after Kate Mulgrew departed in 1978. Mulgrew asked the show to kill Mary off when she left, but they refused; several years later, due to unpopular recasts, Mary was killed off, and Mulgrew made brief appearances as Mary's spirit in 1983, 1986 and 1989. Malcolm Groome chose to leave the role of Pat Ryan in 1978 and was replaced with John Blazo (1978-1979), Robert Finoccoli (1979), and Patrick James Clarke (1982-1983); Groome returned to the role in 1983 and remained with the show until 1988. Sarah Felder left the role of Siobhan in 1980 and was replaced with Ann Gillespie (1981-1982), Marg Helgenberger (1982-1986), Carrell Myers (1986-1987), and Barbara Blackburn (1988-1989).Other characters not related to the Ryans were also recast. After Ilene Kristen left in January 1979, the role of Delia Reid was played by Robyn Millan (1979), Randall Edwards (1979-1982), and Robin Mattson (1984); Kristen returned to the show in the role from 1982-1983 (when she was fired due to weight gain) and 1986-1989. After Faith Catlin was dropped from the show as Faith Coleridge in May 1976, she was replaced with Nancy Barrett (1976), Catherine Hicks (1976-1978), and Karen Morris-Gowdy (1978-1983). Joe Novak was also portrayed by Roscoe Born (1981-1983, 1988), Michael Hennessy (1983-1984), and Walt Willey (1986-1987).
Deceased cast members
| Actor | Character | Year of Death | Show Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wesley Addy | Bill Woodard | 1996 | 1977-1978 |
| Nancy Addison Altman | Jillian Coleridge | 2002 | 1975-1989 |
| David Bailey | Teddy Malcolm | 2004 | 1988-1989 |
| Bernard Barrow | Johnny Ryan | 1993 | 1975-1989 |
| Nell Carter | Ethel Green | 2003 | 1978-1979 |
| Earl Hindman | Bob Reid | 2003 | 1975-1989 |
| Frank Latimore | Ed Coleridge | 1998 | 1975-1976 |
| Irving Allen Lee | Evan Cooper | 1992 | 1986-1989 |
| Kenneth McMillan | Charlie Ferris | 1989 | 1975-1976 |
| Anne Revere | Marguerite Beaulac #2 | 1990 | 1977 |
| Sylvia Sidney | Sister Mary Joel | 1999 | 1975-1976 |
| Gale Sondergaard | Marguerite Beaulac #1 | 1985 | 1976 |
| Diana van der Vlis | Nell Beaulac Sherry Rowan | 2001 | 1975-1976 1988-1989 |
"A Clone of General Hospital"
Several things happened during the late seventies and early eighties to hasten the demise of the series. In 1979, Labine and Mayer were forced to sell the show to ABC due to skyrocketing production costs. ABC soon pushed for more action-adventure storylines, like the ones on their hit serial General Hospital. One of these included a gorilla who kidnapped Delia Reid Ryan Coleridge. Another included a search for a lost Egyptian queen. These were not the type of plots the show had previously been known for.At the beginning of 1982, ABC fired Labine and Mayer and replaced them with Mary Munisteri. During Munisteri's tenure as headwriter, the focus began to move to the newly-arrived wealthy Kirkland clan, which was headed by Hollis Kirkland III (Peter Haskell). It soon turned out that he was the father of Rae Woodard's daughter, Kimberly Harris (Kelli Maroney). As more and more Kirklands began to show up (including Christine Jones as Hollis' wife Catsy and Mary Page Keller and Ariane Munker as his daughter Amanda), less attention was paid to the Ryans and Coleridges. Various cast members at this time dubbed the show Kirkland's Hope.
Due to falling ratings, Labine and Mayer were asked back at the beginning of 1983. Ratings rose steadily with their return; however, it was not enough. By the end of 1983, they were replaced with General Hospital scribe Pat Falken Smith. Smith, along with executive producer Joseph Hardy, once again shifted the focus from the Ryans. Numerous fan favorites, including Ilene Kristen, Louise Shaffer, Karen Morris-Gowdy were either fired or left of their own accord during Smith's and Hardy's reign. The focus of the series was now centered on Greenberg's Deli, with Cali Timmins' Maggie Shelby and Scott Holmes' Dave Greenberg becoming two prominent characters.
In 1985, Smith was replaced with Millee Taggert and Tom King. The show began to go back to its roots during this time. However, the show, which had been airing at 12:30 p.m./11:30 a.m. since 1977, had just been moved to the Noon/11 time slot. Ratings sank to previously unheard-of levels, which led to the 1989 cancellation.
The Final Years
With ratings going further and further south and many ABC affiliates dropping the show altogether, ABC asked Claire Labine to return as headwriter, with her daughter, Eleanor Labine, as co-headwriter. The Labines revitalized the show. A year after Labine's return, executive producer Joseph Hardy was replaced with Felicia Minei Behr.During the eighties, there were numerous cast changes. Some of the more notable ones included the additions of Yasmine Bleeth, Grant Show, Daniel Pilon, Gerit Quealy, Tichina Arnold, Gloria DeHaven, Jason Adams, Christopher Durham, soap opera legend Rosemary Prinz, and Catherine Larson.
However, the end was already in sight; ABC announced its cancellation of the series in fall 1988. The last episode (#3515) concluded with Helen Gallagher's Maeve singing "Danny Boy," like in many previous Ryan celebrations. For the final episodes, numerous cast members who had been on the show in previous years returned.
Scheduling/Ratings History
When RH premiered on July 7, 1975, ABC scheduled it at 1:00 p.m./12 Noon Central, a timeslot previously occupied by All My Children (pushing that soap to the 12:30 p.m./11:30 a.m. slot). After the show's audience grew, it swapped places with All My Children on January 3, 1977.At first, the show experienced low ratings and was ranked dead last among all the soaps during its first season; this was quite customary during that era and did not affect ABC's attitude toward the show, since no other daytime serials were starting up at the time of RH's debut. By 1976-77, ABC's patience paid off with the show's ratings finally rising, and it was now in the middle of the daytime ratings pack, in 8th place, above even fellow ABC serial General Hospital. It would continue to have steady ratings until 1982, although it never quite managed to surmount CBS' long-established Search for Tomorrow, despite the beginnings of that show's eventual decline and death; RH would only do slightly better when SFT moved to NBC in March 1982.
Despite the tenacious cult following the soap enjoyed throughout its 13 1/2-year-run, RH never became a big ratings hit, peaking at 7th place during the 1981-82 season. The main culprit for the problem was CBS' Young and the Restless, which expanded to a full hour in February 1980. From 1982 onwards, the show suffered a ratings decline, falling from 7th and 6.9 in 1981-82 to 9th and 5.6 in 1982-83 and 10th place and 5.0 in 1983-84.
A move to Noon/11 on October 8, 1984 only enabled Y&R to bear down harder, while NBC's Super Password held down the fort for game show fans. With the change in timeslot (Loving took over the slot previously occupied by RH), ratings would fall even further, and Ryan's Hope spent its last five years on, or near, the bottom of the ratings chart. Y&R's persistence brought about RH's end on January 13, 1989, a very long run when its mediocre ratings are taken into account.
Ryan's Hope at the Emmys
Ryan's Hope won sixteen Daytime Emmy Awards.- 1976: Helen Gallagher, Outstanding Actress (Maeve Ryan)
- 1977: Outstanding Drama Series
- 1977: Helen Gallagher, Outstanding Actress (Maeve Ryan)
- 1977: Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, Outstanding Writing
- 1977: Lela Swift, Outstanding Individual Director
- 1978: Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, Outstanding Writing
- 1979: Outstanding Drama Series
- 1979: Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, Outstanding Writing
- 1979: Jerry Evans and Lela Swift, Outstanding Direction
- 1980: Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, Outstanding Writing
- 1980: Jerry Evans and Lela Swift, Outstanding Direction
- 1981: Sy Tomashoff, Outstanding Set Design
- 1983: Louise Shaffer, Outstanding Supporting Actress (Rae Woodard)
- 1983: Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, Outstanding Writing
- 1984: Claire Labine and Paul Avila Mayer, Outstanding Writing
- 1987: Outstanding Lighting
- 1988: Helen Gallagher, Outstanding Lead Actress (Maeve Ryan)
Writers and Producers
| Years | Head writer(s) |
|---|---|
| 1975 – 1982 | Claire Labine & Paul Avila Mayer |
| 1982 | Claire Labine |
| 1982 – 1983 | Mary Ryan Munisteri |
| 1983 | Claire Labine & Paul Avila Mayer |
| 1983 – 1985 | Pat Falken Smith |
| 1985 – 1987 | Tom King & Millee Taggart |
| 1987 – 1988 | Claire Labine & Eleanor Labine |
| 1988 – 1989 | Claire Labine & Matthew Labine |
| Years | Executive Producers |
|---|---|
| 1975 – 1982 | Claire Labine & Paul Avila Mayer |
| 1983 – 1988 | Joseph Hardy |
| 1988 – 1989 | Felicia Minei Behr |
| Years | Producers |
|---|---|
| 1975 | George Lefferts |
| 1975 – 1978 | Robert Costello |
| 1978 – 1983 | Ellen Barrett |
| 1983 – 1988 | Felicia Minei Behr |
| 1988 – 1989 | Nancy Horwich |
Before They Were Stars
Many primetime stars got their start on Ryan's Hope, including Tichina Arnold (Everybody Hates Chris), Catherine Hicks (7th Heaven), Yasmine Bleeth (Baywatch), Grant Show (Melrose Place), Nell Carter (Gimme a Break), Corbin Bernsen (L.A. Law), Marg Helgenberger (), Christian Slater (numerous films), Dominic Chianese (The Sopranos) and Kate Mulgrew ().Daytime Stars on RH
Numerous actors and actresses from Ryan's Hope can still be seen in daytime. They include Ilene Kristen (One Life to Live), Ron Hale (General Hospital), Justin Deas (Guiding Light), Walt Willey (All My Children), Maureen Garrett (Guiding Light), Tracey Ross (Passions), Judith Chapman (The Young and the Restless), and Alexandra Neil (One Life to Live).In America and Overseas
Reruns of Ryan's Hope has aired on SOAPnet since the channel's inception in January 2000. While reruns were originally abundant (airing daily in one-hour installments every six hours starting at noon, with two marathons of the week's episodes on weekends), by 2005 the show was only aired one hour per weekdays, and for a brief time, one hour a week. Currently, reruns are broadcast daily at 5 am EST. Ryans Hope has also run on RTÉ 2 in Ireland and has previously aired in Australia.On January 3, 1994, a soap opera, Onderweg naar morgen (which literally means On the way to tomorrow), debuted on Dutch television; the Dutch writers based their show on story bibles originally written by Labine and Mayer.
External links
- Memory Book: Ryan's Hope site
- Ryan's Bar Online
- SOAPnet RH Page
- Ryan's Hope: The Beginning
- Ryan's Hope at All Movie Guide
- All Soap Scoop - Ryan's Hope Cast List
Ryan's Hope is a three piece punk rock band from Joliet, Illinois. The band formed in 2000 as a five piece hardcore outfit dubbed Bound. When that band fell apart, bassist Nick Mclenighan and guitarists Terry Morrow and Greg Alltop reformed as a more melodic rock band.
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Claire Labine is an American soap opera writer. She received Writers Guild of America, East's Evelyn F. Burkey Award for contributions that have brought honor and dignity to writers everywhere.
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Helen Gallagher
Born July 19 1926
New York, New York, U.S.
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Born July 19 1926
New York, New York, U.S.
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Bernard Barrow
Born November 30 1927
New York, New York
Died July 4 1993 (aged 67)
New York, New York
Other name(s) Bernard E.
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Born November 30 1927
New York, New York
Died July 4 1993 (aged 67)
New York, New York
Other name(s) Bernard E.
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Ron Hale is an American actor best known for his role as Dr. Roger Coleridge on the ABC soap opera Ryan's Hope (1975-1989) and currently plays the recurring role of Mike Corbin, the father of mobster Sonny Corinthos on the ABC soap opera General Hospital.
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Nancy Addison
Birth name Nancy Addison Altman
Born March 21 1948
New York, New York
Died May 18 2002 (aged 54) (cancer)
New York, New York
Resting place
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Birth name Nancy Addison Altman
Born March 21 1948
New York, New York
Died May 18 2002 (aged 54) (cancer)
New York, New York
Resting place
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- For the NBA executive of the same name, see John Gabriel.
John Gabriel (born 25 May 1931 in Niagara Falls, New York) is an American actor who is best known for his role as Seneca Beaulac in Ryan's Hope (1975-1985, 1988-1989).
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Louise Shaffer (born 5 July 1942) is an American actress, script writer, and author.
Shaffer was born in Woodbridge, Connecticut, where she showed an interest in acting early on in her life.
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Shaffer was born in Woodbridge, Connecticut, where she showed an interest in acting early on in her life.
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Motto
"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
Type Broadcast radio network and
television network
Country United States
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7th July, July 7th, and 7/7 (pronounced "Seven-seven") have been widely used in the Western media as a shorthand for the 7 July 2005 bombings on London's transport system.
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January 13 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
It is still celebrated as New Year's Eve by those on the Julian calendar (Old New Year).
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It is still celebrated as New Year's Eve by those on the Julian calendar (Old New Year).
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soap opera is an ongoing, episodic work of fiction, usually broadcast on television or radio. Programs described as soap operas have existed as an entertainment long enough for audiences to recognize them simply by the term soap.
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American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
Type Broadcast radio network and
television network
Country United States
Availability
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Type Broadcast radio network and
television network
Country United States
Availability
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7th July, July 7th, and 7/7 (pronounced "Seven-seven") have been widely used in the Western media as a shorthand for the 7 July 2005 bombings on London's transport system.
..... Click the link for more information.
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1940s 1950s 1960s - 1970s - 1980s 1990s 2000s
1972 1973 1974 - 1975 - 1976 1977 1978
Year 1975 (MCMLXXV
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January 13 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
It is still celebrated as New Year's Eve by those on the Julian calendar (Old New Year).
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It is still celebrated as New Year's Eve by those on the Julian calendar (Old New Year).
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1986 1987 1988 - 1989 - 1990 1991 1992
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Claire Labine is an American soap opera writer. She received Writers Guild of America, East's Evelyn F. Burkey Award for contributions that have brought honor and dignity to writers everywhere.
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Where the Heart Is was a soap opera which aired on the CBS television network from September 8, 1969 to March 23, 1973.
Set in the fictional town of Northcross, Connecticut, the show revolved around the Hathaway family and their romantic intrigues.
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Set in the fictional town of Northcross, Connecticut, the show revolved around the Hathaway family and their romantic intrigues.
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Love of Life was an American soap opera which was aired on CBS from September 24, 1951 to February 1, 1980.
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Production
Love of Life was taped at several studios in New York City, but primarily at the CBS Production Center on West 57th Street and CBS's..... Click the link for more information.
: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
This is an incomplete list. Please add to this list if you are aware of an omission.
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B
- Dr.
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Bernard Barrow
Born November 30 1927
New York, New York
Died July 4 1993 (aged 67)
New York, New York
Other name(s) Bernard E.
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Born November 30 1927
New York, New York
Died July 4 1993 (aged 67)
New York, New York
Other name(s) Bernard E.
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Helen Gallagher
Born July 19 1926
New York, New York, U.S.
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Born July 19 1926
New York, New York, U.S.
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George Lefferts is a writer, producer and director of television dramas, motion pictures, documentaries and plays. He was an former columnist for The New York Observer.
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
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1975 1976 1977 - 1978 - 1979 1980 1981
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Background
Ellen Barrett is a fitness instructor originally from Yonkers, New York. The youngest of three children, she grew up playing competitive tennis and became interested in aerobics after taking her first class at age 12...... Click the link for more information.
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