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soap opera
(redirected from Soap-opera)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.

soap opera

Broadcast 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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Soap operas: NBC never had a significant foothold on the soap-opera market; the still-popular ``Days of Our Lives,'' which debuted in 1965, is the network's only serial to go the distance.
The situation is even worse m the race for the most critical soap-opera demographic, women aged 18 to 49.
He does not rebuff Dana Coles, the somewhat overripe soap-opera diva, who is the peg on which Carl is able to hang a production of Jake's play.
 
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