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Soap Opera#REDIRECT Soap_opera Soap opera[[Image:DaysofOurLives1976.jpg|right|thumb|265px|The first Time magazine cover devoted to soap operas: Dated January 12, 1976, Bill Hayes and Susan Seaforth Hayes of ''Days of Our Lives'' are featured with the headline "Soap Operas: Sex and suffering in the afternoon".]] A soap opera is an ongoing, episodic work of fiction, usually broadcast on television or radio and most recently on Mobile soap opera. This genre of TV and radio entertainment has been in existence long enough for audiences to recognize them simply by the term soap. What differentiates a soap from other television drama programs is their open-ended nature. Plots run concurrently, and lead into further developments: there is rarely a need to "wrap things up", although soaps that run in series for only part of the year tend to bring things to a dramatic cliffhanger. ==Development of the "soap opera"== The soap opera form first developed on US radio in the 1920s, and expanded into television starting in the 1940s, and is normally shown during the daytime, hence the alternative name, daytime serial. The first concerted effort to air continuing drama occurred in 1946 on the DuMont Television Network television series ''Faraway Hill''. Soap operas, in their present format, were introduced to television in 1949. Two long-running soaps, ''Search for Tomorrow'' and ''Love of Life'', first started broadcasts in 1951. The term "soap opera" originated from the fact that when these serial dramas were aired on daytime radio, the commercials aired during the shows were largely aimed at homemaker. Many of the products sold during these commercials were laundry and cleaning items. This specific type of radio drama came to be associated with these particular commercials, and this gave rise to the term "soap opera" — a melodramatic story that aired commercials for soap products. Though soap operas are still sponsored by companies such as Procter & Gamble, the diverse demographic groups that soap operas attract have caused other advertisements for such things as acne medication and birth control, appealing to a much younger audience. ==Soap opera characteristics== ===Plots and storylines=== Most soaps follow the lives of a group of characters who live or work in a particular place. The storylines follow the day-to-day lives of these characters, who seem similar to ordinary people on the street — except that soap opera characters are usually more handsome, beautiful, seductive, and richer than the typical person watching the TV show. Soap operas take everyday, ordinary lives and exaggerate them to a degree where they are still plausible, yet are more dramatic. Romances, secret relationships, extra-marital affairs, and genuine love has been the basis for the vast majority of soap operas. The most memorable soap opera characters, and the most compelling and popular storylines, have usually involved a romance between two characters, of the sort often presented in paperback romance novels. Soap opera storylines weave intricate, convoluted, sometimes confusing tales of characters who have affairs, meet mysterious strangers and fall in love, are swept off their feet by dashing (yet treacherous) lovers, sneak behind their lovers' backs, and engage in other forms of adultery that keep their audiences returning to find out who is sleeping with whom, who has betrayed whom, who is having a baby, who is related to each other, and so on. Remarkable (sometimes unbelievable) coincidences are used to enhance the drama in most soap operas. For example, if a young woman in a soap secretly has a single sexual encounter with her boyfriend back in high school, this forbidden affair will certainly come back to haunt her several years later...usually at the very moment that it would cause the most harm (such as on the day of her wedding). Previously-unknown (and often evil) twins regularly emerge, and unexpected calamities disrupt weddings with unusual frequency. Much like comic books—another popular form of linear storytelling—a character's death is not guaranteed to be permanent without an on-camera corpse, and sometimes not even then. A good example of a death that seemed to be permanent was Dr. Taylor Forrester on ''The Bold and the Beautiful'', who had flatlined on-camera and even had a funeral. When actress Hunter Tylo returned to the show in 2005, the "flatlining" was explained away with the revelation that Taylor had actually gone into a coma. ==="Soap music"=== In addition, the musical soundtrack used for a soap opera uses a style that instantly identifies it as belonging to soap operas. Soaps aired during the golden age of radio usually used organ (music)s to produce most of their music (because they were cheaper than full-blown orchestras). The organists from the radio serials moved over to television, and were heard on some serials as late as the 1970s. Like the storylines themselves, soap opera soundtracks were overblown and melodramatic. An instantly recognizable characteristic of a soap (one that has been spoofed and imitated many times) consists of a scene where a lovely woman tells her husband or boyfriend that she no longer loves him, for she has been seeing someone else...and at that moment, a single, blaring organ chord resonates on the soundtrack, emphasizing this dramatic moment. Organ music has been abandoned on the serials for thirty years now and pre-recorded music has largely taken its place. For most of the 1970s and continuing through the latter part of the 1990s, full orchestras performed the underscore. Today, however, soap music performances have, in a sense, come full circle from keyboard to keyboard as it is almost entirely done by synthesizers, thereby avoiding the high cost of using orchestras. ==Soaps in the United States== The American soap opera ''The Guiding Light'' started as a radio drama in January 1937 and subsequently transferred to television. With the exception of several years in the late 1940s when Irna Phillips was in dispute with Procter & Gamble, ''The Guiding Light'' has been heard or seen every weekday since it started, making it the longest story ever told. Other American soaps that have been telecast for more than thirty years (and are still in rotation) include ''As the World Turns'', ''General Hospital'', ''Days of Our Lives'', ''One Life to Live'', ''All My Children'', and ''The Young and the Restless''. Due to the shows' longevities, it is not uncommon for multiple actors to play a single character over the span of many years. It is also not uncommon for a single actor to play several characters on other shows over the years. Actors such as Robin Mattson and Michael Sabatino have played no less than six soap roles. In the USA, the shows purely known in the vernacular as soap operas are broadcast during daytime. In the beginning, the serials were broadcast as fifteen-minute installments each weekday. In 1956, the first half-hour soaps debuted, and all of the soaps broadcast half-hour episodes by the end of the 1960s. When the soap opera hit a fever pitch in the 1970s, popular demand had the shows, one by one, expanded to an hour in length (one show, ''Another World (TV series)'', even expanded to ninety minutes for a short time). More than half of the serials (and all of the hour-long serials on the air today) expanded to the new time format by 1980. Today, eight out of the nine American serials air sixty-minute episodes each weekday. The United States soap opera ''Port Charles'' used the practice of running 13-week "story arcs", in which the main events of the arc are played out and wrapped up over the 13 weeks, although some storylines did continue over more than one arc. ===The Golden Age of American television=== [[Image:marystuartsearchfortomorrow.jpg|right|thumb|Joanne, the heroine of ''Search for Tomorrow'', in the 1970s.]] Many soaps, in the beginning of television, found their niches in telling stories in certain environments. ''The Doctors'' and ''General Hospital'', in the beginning, told stories almost exclusively from inside the confines of a hospital. ''As the World Turns'' dealt heavily with Chris Hughes's law practice and the travails of his wife Nancy who, when she tired of being "the loyal housewife" in the 1970s, became one of the first older women on the serials to become a working woman. ''The Guiding Light'' dealt with Bert Bauer (Charita Bauer) and her endless marital troubles. When her status moved to that of the caring mother and town matriarch, her children's marital troubles were then put on display. ''Search for Tomorrow'' told the story, for the most part, through the eyes of one woman only: the heroine, Joanne (Mary Stuart (actress)). Even when stories revolved around other characters, she was almost always a main fixture in their storylines. ''Days of Our Lives'' first told the stories of Dr. Tom Horton and his steadfast wife Alice. In later years, the show branched out and told the stories of their five children. ===American soaps: for the evening, too=== Prime time serials were just as popular as those in daytime. The first real prime time soap opera was ''Peyton Place (TV series)'' (1964-1969), based in part on the original 1957 Peyton Place (film) (which was itself taken from the 1956 Peyton Place (novel)). The structure of the series (its episodic plots and running story arcs) would set the mold for the prime time serials of the 1980s when the format reached its pinnacle. The most successful prime time serials of the 1980s included ''Dallas (TV series)'', ''Dynasty (television)'', and ''Knots Landing''. The primetime soaps of the 1990's focus on younger people such as ''Beverly Hills 90210'', ''Melrose Place'' and ''Dawson's Creek''. In the late 90's and early 00's, cable is where a lot of the new primetime soaps could be found, like ''Sex and The City'' and ''Queer As Folk''. Currently, the primetime soap seems to be making a comeback with ''The O.C.'' and ''Desperate Housewives''. Housewives is the first primetime soap since the 1985-1986 season to been in the top ten for the overall season. Certain other shows also started to have soap opera themes. that followed such as ''Hill Street Blues'', ''St. Elsewhere'', ''ER (television)'', and ''The West Wing (television)'', ''Friends'' and ''Cheers'' that did not officially fit the category of prime time serials. The soap opera's distinctive open plot structure and complex continuity was eventually adopted in major American prime time television programs. The first significant one was ''Hill Street Blues'' produced by Steven Bochco which featured many elements borrowed by soap operas such as an ensemble cast, multi-episode storylines and extensive character development over the course of the series. The success of this series soon gave rise to a variety of other serious drama and science fiction series which took much the same elements to structure their own storylines. ===Characteristics of American soaps today=== While U.S. soaps stay true to the original soap opera ideal to a large extent, many storyline and filming techniques set them apart from soap operas in other countries. More recently, two American soap operas (''Passions'' and ''Days of Our Lives'') currently involve some supernatural or science fiction element in one of their ongoing storylines. This can include an alien character, or a vampire character (most infamously seen on ''Port Charles''). Often, these characters are isolated in only one of the ongoing storyline "threads", which can seemingly allow a fan to ignore them if they do not like that element, a form of krypto-revisionism. [[Image:Marthabyrne.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Martha Byrne from ''As the World Turns'', exhibiting the effects of back lighting on one's hair.]] American soap operas since the 1980s have shared many common visual elements that set them apart dramatically from other shows: *Overhead spotlighting, or back lighting is often placed directly over the heads of all the actors in the forground, causing an unnatural shadowing of their features along with a highlighting of their hair. Back lighting was always a standard technique of film and television lighting; and while it was, for the most part, abandoned in the mid-to-late-eighties due to its somewhat unnatural look, it persists in soap operas *The rooms in a house often use deep stained wood wall panels and furniture, along with many elements of brown leather furniture. This creates an overall "brown" look which is very noticeable, and is supposed to be associated with the wealth of the characters portrayed. *The video quality of a soap opera is usually lower than comparable prime time television shows of the time, due to the lower budgets and quicker production times involved. This is due to the fact that the shows are recorded on videotape and not on film like primetime productions. ===Current American daytime television schedule=== The daytime serials in America air five days a week, Monday through Friday. Local affiliates have the right to air the serials whenever they wish, but this is how the networks schedule them. All times are Eastern local time* ''(subtract one hour for all other time zones)''. : *''Guiding Light'' airs at 10 a.m. in some markets in the East, while some local CBS affiliates do not air it at all. : *In some markets, ''Days of our Lives'' and ''Passions'' air on NBC affiliates with a one-hour difference either earlier or later (this stemmed from a 1990s agreement that many affiliates switch the timeslots of ''Days of Our Lives'' and ''Another World'', which previously occupied the slot ''Passions'' now holds). : *The scheduling of other soaps is at the discretion of your local station, so check your local listings for exact times in your area.
Soap operaSee other meanings of words starting from letter: SSB | SC | SD | SE | SF | SG | SH | SI | SJ | SK | SL | SM | SN | SO | SP | SR | SS | ST | SU | SW | SX | SY | SZ |Words begining with Soap_opera: Soap_Opera Soap_opera Soap_opera Soap_Opera:_the_inside_story_of_Procter_&_Gamble Soap_operas Soap_operas Soap_opera_actors Soap_opera_characters Soap_opera_character_stubs Soap_Opera_Digest Soap_Opera_Digest Soap_Opera_Digest_Award Soap_Opera_Digest_Awards Soap_Opera_Digest_Award_winners Soap_Opera_Magazine Soap_opera_producers Soap_Opera_Rapid_Aging_Syndrome Soap_Opera_Update Soap_Opera_Update_Award Soap_Opera_Update_Awards Soap_Opera_Weekly Soap_opera_writers |
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