Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]



Hello, soap fans -- and welcome to Daytime Royalty!

For those unfamiliar, we are an uncensored community for fans and lovers of the daytime genre. We have a no-holds-barred atmosphere in regards to the shows, writers, actors etc. but we do not allow member suffering succotash in any form.

You're currently viewing our forum as a guest. This means you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use. If you join our community, you'll be able to access member-only sections, and use many member-only features such as customizing your profile, sending personal messages, and voting in polls. Registration is simple, fast, and completely free.

Join our community!

If you're already a member, please log in to your account to access all of our features.

Username:   Password:
Add Reply
GL:Ellen Wheeler Interview; LA Times
Topic Started: Jun 17 2008, 03:54 PM (1,185 Views)
oakdalelover


From the L.A.Times

Click Here!

Quote:
 

Soap opera veteran follows a new script
Director Ellen Wheeler, a former daytime actor herself, rewrites the rules in an attempt to rebuild viewership.
By Meg James, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 15, 2008
Ellen Wheeler knows a thing or two about reinvention and survival.

In the 1980s, the Emmy-winning actress portrayed twins Marley and Vicky Love Hudson on the soap opera "Another World." She moved to "All My Children" as one of the first characters on TV with AIDS. In the late 1990s, she reprised her role as Marley Hudson on "Another World." Because she didn't resemble her on-camera twin, the writers decided that Wheeler's Marley would be crushed in a car wreck and then, while recovering, burned and disfigured in a horrible hospital fire.

Wheeler is still blazing soap opera trails.

Now working behind the camera, the 46-year-old executive producer of "Guiding Light" early this year ditched the format used since the 1950s to produce soaps: three large pedestal cameras to shoot scenes in a handful of studio sets. As part of her gutsy gambit, "Guiding Light" crews now use hand-held digital cameras to rove the three dozen small sets constructed within the hulking CBS Broadcast Center in Manhattan and outdoors in nearby Peapack, N.J.

Wheeler is trying to create a more modern look to attract younger viewers -- and keep the show alive.

"This is all about making sure that soap operas stay vital," Wheeler says, sitting in a wooden pew in her sparse New York office, which has been converted into a set. "We just couldn't sit quietly and let ourselves slide away into the night."

As the world turns, so do the soaps. They're struggling. Audiences are shrinking, and getting gray. There is more competition for viewers' attention, including the Internet, a myriad of TV channels and everyday chores.

MTV's docu-soap "The Hills," network hits like ABC's "Desperate Housewives" and even such real-life dramas as Britney Spears' escapades contain themes that soap writers have long used to hook viewers.

Daytime mainstays "Another World" and "Santa Barbara" have been canceled, and in August final credits are set to roll for "Passions."

"Guiding Light" itself has seen brighter days, especially considering its history. It holds the record as the longest running television drama. Owned by Procter & Gamble, it was created for radio in 1937 to help sell the company's soap -- giving the genre its name. It moved to CBS television in 1952 and has been there ever since.

Recently, production budgets have been cut and beloved characters have departed. A decade ago "Guiding Light" averaged 4.8 million viewers five days a week, according to Nielsen Media Research. But during the TV season that ended last month, it was tied for sixth place among soap operas, averaging 2.6 million viewers. The median age of its audience is nearly 55.

"It's been difficult for them, and they are sort of damned if they do, damned if they don't," says Linda Marshall-Smith, chief executive of Soapdom, a website based in Santa Monica. "They have a base of loyal fans who have watched the show 35, 40, 50 years. But if they don't try to attract younger viewers, the show will die."

In addition to more of a reality-show look, the switch to digital equipment allows producers to edit episodes on their laptop computers for quick turn-around. Recaps of episodes are posted online. "It's very much like making a movie on speed," Wheeler says.

The show's eight large sets have been dismantled, carved into 30 standing sets. On another floor, producers' and writers' offices now double as a doctor's exam room, a nail salon, a church (hence the pews in Wheeler's office) and a seedy motel room.

Not all viewers have been happy with the results.

"You're killing this show!! We as fans need the older sets and the history that went along with them," wrote one viewer on CBS' website. "I want the old show back and I don't think I am alone in this."

Wheeler acknowledges that there have been glitches. At first the camera action was jerky and the audio quality uneven. The changes were rolled out in February, and Wheeler says many of the early technical difficulties have been fixed.

"It has been challenging to attempt something so big and so public," she says. "It was almost like we were putting on a play, but we never had a chance to have a rehearsal."

Wheeler has been performing for most of her life.

The oldest of seven children, her parents owned a small community theater in San Bernardino when she was young. "That's all I knew," she said. "I thought all families had rehearsals at night."

When she was 9, her family moved to Utah. After high school, she returned to Los Angeles to launch her career. She lived in a small theater in Glendale and sold tickets when she wasn't acting or waiting tables.

She got her big break in 1984 on "Another World" and still loves the genre.

"Soap operas are fascinating. People have to be so skilled at their jobs," she says. "The talent is immense for people to be able to turn out the amount of product that they do."

She isn't worried that the soap bubble will pop.

"Soap operas have had to weather a lot of changes over the decades, and they will continue to," she says. "People will accept change as long as you give them good story lines. We are just happy to be part of figuring out how we fit into this new media environment."
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
juniorz1
Member Avatar
The Royal Stoner

Love the Another World/Santa Barbara comment. I wish both were still around today.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Matt
Member Avatar
Classic Soap Fan

Lord, can you imagine NBC is both AW & SB were still on today along with a 4th 30 minute soap? They'd actually have a decent line up and I bet it would help all 4 soaps ratings.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
OneBadKitty
Member Avatar


*Looks around for MarlandRulez*

What, no comments about how demented Ellen Wheeler is?
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Mason


I would have commented sooner, but there are only so many ways I can say that Ellen Wheeler is a dumbass.
Online Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
DanielRand


"People will accept change as long as you give them good story lines. "

Ellen Wheeler is right about that. But I think she parts company with the majority of the audience when it comes to defining a "good storyline". GL doesn't have any to speak of right now...come to think of it, I'm not sure the show has had any clearly defined storylines AT ALL since the new production method kicked in.

The show needs a writer who can write to the new format. How about hiring ONE good head writer from the outside? The current script writers do a decent job on the day-to-day dialogue and have been around long enough to inform a new guy/girl about the intricacies of GL history. This really isn't rocket science...so it must be that Wheeler is going to the mat for her buddy David Kreizman by not making a true change. Instead she's appointing new head chefs for a very small kitchen. That's not a recipe for success at a time when the restaurant's hurting for business.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Ilovethesoaps


I'am glad that she is so postive, now if she could just move out the way and allow someone else to do the show and she could just be in the "cheering section!" that would make me feel a whole lot better!
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
kserox10


Wheeler should go back to acting.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
PhoenixRising05
Member Avatar


GL is a mess.

I agree. Wheeler should go back to acting and let someone else take a crack at saving GL. I would say she could go back to directing too but her work on GL tends to make me think she should stay away from that as well.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
oakdalelover


I had high hopes that she would make a great Executive Producer.
She acted on Another World,directed on ATWT (where she did a great job),and was a producer and director of GL before becoming the Executive Producer.
Certainly she knew the ins and outs of working on a Procter and Gamble soap!
I hope P&G doesn't do what it has done in the past: swap EP's.
I think Chris Goutman is burned out at ATWT and could make a good EP for GL.
I don't want Wheeler doing her magic at ATWT.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
ZetaBoards - Free Forum Hosting
Create your own social network with a free forum.
Learn More · Sign-up for Free
« Previous Topic · Y&R & B&B: News, Spoilers & Discussion · Next Topic »
Add Reply