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soap opera |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
soap operaBroadcast serial drama, characterized by a permanent cast of actors, a continuing story, tangled interpersonal situations, and a melodramatic or sentimental style. Its name derived from the soap and detergent manufacturers who originally often sponsored such programs on radio. Soap operas began in the early 1930s as 15-minute radio episodes and continued on television from the early 1950s as 30-minute and later hour-long episodes. Usually broadcast during the day and aimed at housewives, they initially focused on middle-class family life, but by the 1970s their content had expanded to include a wider variety of characters and situations and a greater degree of sexual explicitness. In the 1980s similar series began to be aired in prime-time evening hours (e.g., Dallas and Dynasty). See also Carlton E. Morse; Irna Phillips. |
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| Though El-Mohandes performed in dozens of films, as well as television soap operas, his true passion was theater, and much of the money he earned through his film career was used to finance stage productions. Get up to speed on queer culture with The Q Guides to Broadway, Soap Operas, and The Golden Girls from our partners at Alyson Books. Penders has been a show runner, writer and story consultant for such soap operas as ``Days of Our Lives'' and ``General Hospital. |
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