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"Young and Restless" redirects here. For the hip-hop duo famous in the early 1990s, see Young and Restless (band).
| The Young and the Restless |
|
| Network |
CBS, SOAPnet |
| Creator(s) |
William J. Bell
Lee Philip Bell |
| Executive Producer(s) |
Lynn Marie Latham |
| Head Writer |
Lynn Marie Latham
|
| Senior cast member(s) |
Jeanne Cooper |
| Distributor |
Sony Pictures Television |
| Running time |
60 minutes (30 minutes from 1973 to 1980) |
| Premiere date |
March 26, 1973 |
| Alternate titles |
The Innocent Years (working title)
Les Feux de l'Amour (France)
Ατίθασα Νιάτα (or Untamedly Nja'ta) (Greece)
Febbre d'amore (Italy)
Tunteita ja tuoksuja (Finland)
Zar mlodosci (Poland)
Tânar ?i nelini?tit (Romania)
Yalan Rüzgarı (Turkey) |
| [{{{official_website}}} The Young and the Restless Official Website] |
| IMDb profile |
| TV.com summary |
The Young and the Restless (commonly abbreviated to Y&R) is an American soap opera that takes place in Genoa City, Wisconsin (named after a vacation spot that series creators William J. Bell and Lee Phillip Bell visited annually). It first debuted on the CBS television network on March 26, 1973, replacing Where the Heart Is and Love is a Many Splendored Thing. Y&R has aired over eight thousand episodes.
Since late 1988, the show has been the highest-rated serial in the daytime ratings. The Young and the Restless has seen the ratings decline steadily since it first ranked #1. From 1988 to 2006, the show lost a significant share of its audience, from eight million viewers to about six million. It should also be noted that all soaps have seen a similar decline in ratings.
On April 24, 2006, same-day episodes of Y&R began running on SOAPnet, the 24-hour cable network dedicated to soaps. This makes Y&R the first CBS soap to broadcast on the network.
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Contents
- 1 Production and writing
- 1.1 Production
- 1.2 Writing
- 2 History
- 3 Crossovers
- 4 The theme song
- 5 Title sequence
- 6 Cast
- 6.1 Current cast members
- 6.2 Recurring cast members
- 6.3 Coming and going cast members
- 6.4 Deceased cast members
- 6.5 Before they were stars
- 6.6 Notable celebrities who have had regular roles
- 6.7 Notable celebrities who have appeared on the show
- 7 Ratings
- 8 Schedule
- 9 Awards
- 9.1 Daytime Emmy Awards
- 9.1.1 Show
- 9.1.2 Individuals
- 10 International
- 11 See also
- 12 External links
|
Production and writing
The show's healthy ratings are often attributed in part to the tight-knit writing and production staff. For the most part, the writers and producers of the show have stayed unchanged since the 1980s, with the only high-profile departure being William J. Bell himself, who retired from writing the program in 1998 after 25 years. (Bell stayed closely involved with the series, serving as executive producer and story consultant until a few years prior to his death in 2005.)
Production
The show was groundbreaking for daytime serials in its lush production values. When the show first aired, its glamourous sets, wardrobe and hairstyles were a huge contrast to existing soap operas, which often set the action in a simple living room or kitchen set, where characters would discuss their world over a cup of coffee.
The Young and the Restless was the first and so far the only daytime soap opera to be broadcast in high-definition. Moving to HDTV broadcasts was a natural progression for the show, known for its visual nature.
Writing
The writing staff features primarily long-term, fan favorite characters. These characters, in many cases, have been played by the same actor since their introduction, allowing viewers to invest not only in character but actor, as well. Even actors that took over long term roles from their original portrayers have managed to carve their own niche in the roles (notably Melody Thomas Scott, Jess Walton, Peter Bergman, and Judith Chapman).
After the show's initial success with the Brooks and Foster families in the 1970s and 1980s, Bell made a successful segue and introduced the Abbotts as a new core family, as well as bringing Victor Newman to the forefront. The show found a new niche in the stories surrounding the Newman Enterprises and Jabot Cosmetics conglomerates, and focused on the problems in the relationships stemming from the business deals and love lives of its principal members. The show was twice nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for best written daytime serial and won it twice, in 2003 and 2006.
In late February 2006, Lynn Marie Latham was named the show's head writer, while Kay Alden and John F. Smith now serve as co-head writers. There is a misconception that Alden and Smith serve as head writers in name only. According to interviews all three admit to sharing the responsibilities. This behind-the-scenes shake up has been well-received by critics, fans and the actors of the show, allowing for a quicker pace and a reintroduction of character history and interaction that became almost secondary under Smith and Alden. Moreover, this shakeup eliminated the post of Smith as executive producer. Smith was last credited for the position as executive producer in early May 2006. In late August 2006, Latham was announced as the new Executive Producer (in addition to her writing role) by CBS Daytime Vice President Barbara Bloom.
The show had been known in the industry for its close-knit writing team that never changed; however, with Latham's ascension to head writer, it was rumored some writers that had been with the show since the 1980s—Jim Houghton and Trent Jones—were dismissed. That was, luckily, not true. Jim Houghton, former actor on Knots Landing is still an occasional dialogue writer (from September 1, he writes for The Bold and the Beautiful, too) and Trent Jones, five-times Daytime Emmy winner and close advisor of William J. Bell, continues as breakdown writer. New writers were hired: Scott Hamner (Knots Landing, Falcon Crest, Dynasty, Port Charles), Paula Cwikly (ex-top scribe for Days of Our Lives), and Josh Griffith (Sunset Beach co-creator and One Life to Live co-head writer). Sally Sussmann-Morina (ex-top scribe for Generations and Days of our Lives) also returned, both to the writing and story consultant positions she had enjoyed in the 1980s.
More behind-the-scenes shakeups continued into September 2006 when Latham released former head writer John F. Smith from his role has Co-Head Writer. It is rumoured that Alden will also be released from the show. Former Latham colleague Josh Griffiths will be brought on as Co-Executive Producer along with Latham.
History
The Young and the Restless stood out from other soaps on the air for its darkness. Soap operas at the time tended to be comparatively brightly-lit in tone. The Young and the Restless lighted primarily the actors, and not the background settings, so as to focus the attention of the viewer on the emotions of the actors. In its early years, The Young and the Restless centered upon the Foster and Brooks families. William and Elizabeth Foster had three children: Snapper, Greg, and Jill. Stuart and Jennifer Brooks had four daughters: Leslie, Chris, Peggy, and Lauralee (nicknamed Lorie and played by Jaime Lyn Bauer; her father would turn out to be Elizabeth Foster's brother, Bruce Henderson). At the core of the show was a class struggle: the Brooks family was rich while the Fosters were poor. The young cast was derided by some soap fans, who mocked the show by calling it "The Young and the Chestless". Leslie and Lorie fought over first Brad Eliot and then Lance Prentiss, a triangle stretched into four when Lance's sea captain brother Lucas arrived.
One of Y&R's first and longest-lasting storylines involved the rivalry between Katherine Chancellor (Jeanne Cooper) and Jill Foster (Jess Walton). In 1973 Jill (then played by Brenda Dickson) went to work as Kay's manicurist & paid companion to help her struggling family pay the bills. Kay was a boozy matron trapped in a loveless marriage to Phillip Chancellor (Donnelly Rhodes). Jill and Phillip fell in love but when Phillip was returning from obtaining a divorce in the Dominican Republic, Katherine picked him up at the airport, and in an attempt to kill both Phillip and herself, drove the car off a cliff. On his deathbed, he married Jill and bequeathed her and their child Phillip III his fortune, but Kay successfully contested his decision. An embittered Jill became a vixen and the two ladies fought over beautician Derek Thurston. Jill then married tycoon John Abbott (Jerry Douglas) while Kay went through groundbreaking stories about alcoholism and facelifts. Years later Jill, after her two marriages to John were over and her son Phillip was dead from a car crash, went back to court and the judge declared she owned half of the Chancellor mansion. Jill and Kay fought over the new arrangement as well as Jill's son Billy dating Kay's granddaughter Mackenzie. In 2003 Jill discovered that Katherine was her birth mother, and told Billy and Mac moments before they consummated their relationship. In 2004 Jill's birth father Arthur Hendricks (David Hedison) briefly visited, and mother and daughter fought over him while Kay again battled her drinking problem.
Although Lorie Brooks was initially little more than the bad girl who tormented pure sister Leslie, she became a lead in her own right as she battled her sister over custody of Leslie's son Brooks, and battled her psychotic mother-in-law Vanessa (who even killed herself just to frame Lorie for the crime). Lorie acted and reacted based on her neuroses and was as much a child as a woman, naughty as well as sympathetic, a template for many future Y&R female leads. Most of the Brooks and Foster families had been recast again and again by the early 1980s, and when Bell decided to expand Y&R to an hour in 1980, many lead actors said they could not sustain themselves on an hour show. Bell told himself he would wait for one more major departure before making big changes. When Jaime Lyn Bauer quit in 1982 due to exhaustion, Bell took the opportunity to write out all of the Brooks and Fosters, save Jill. Gradually, the focus shifted from the Brooks and Foster families to the Williams, Newman and Abbott families and around their respective companies, Newman Enterprises and Jabot Cosmetics. Most members of the Williams family have been phased out, but the other two families remain. Y&R is one of the few shows in the history of daytime to eliminate their original core families and benefit from the result.
Around the same time Bell phased out the originals, Eric Braeden arrived as the sinister tycoon Victor Newman who was so menacing to his wife Julia (Meg Bennett) that he locked her boyfriend Michael Scott in a bomb shelter constructed in the basement and forced him to watch Victor and Julia's bedroom via closed-circuit camera. Bell saw something in Braeden's performance and since the show had few strong male characters, elevated him to star status. Soon after, Victor went to a strip club and met brash yet innocent Nikki Reed. Nikki had gone through a number of second-tier stories (killing her rapist dad, getting a sexually transmitted disease from Paul Williams, joining a cult) but as played by Melody Thomas was a naughty anti-heroine in the Lorie Brooks mold. She married Victor in a lavish 1984 wedding and their love-hate relationship suffered many divorces, affairs and remarriages involving everyone from Abbotts to blind Kansas farm women to gynecologists. After over a decade apart, they reunited in 1998 and have basically been together since.
The
Y&R mid-program bumper, coinciding with the 2004 CBS daytime advertising campaign,
The Look That's Got You Hooked. The eyes in this picture are those of Sharon Case.
The Young and the Restless is also one of the few soaps to have successfully integrated a number of African American actors into its cast. In the mid-1980s Y&R created a storyline which revolved around a young black man being made up in whiteface to bring down a mafia kingpin, but the characters were written out within a few years. The introduction of the Winters family and the Barber sisters in the early 1990s interacted fairly well with the established characters when given the dialogue and the situations to do so. The new characters were created after Generations earned critical acclaim for casting an entire African American family from the show's inception. Established hits like The Young and the Restless were criticized as the show had a low number of minorities (the Barber sisters, for example, were tied to one of the two black characters on the show at the time: the Abbott maid, Mamie Johnson, played by Marguerite Ray, then Veronica Redd. The other character, Nathan Hastings, was married off to Barber sister Olivia (Tonya Lee Williams) before dying in a hit and run in 1996).
Critics of Y&R continued to deride the show even after its integration, noting that, most of the time, the core black characters largely interacted with themselves only. In the case of Winters siblings Neil (Kristoff St. John) and Malcolm (Shemar Moore), and Barber sisters Olivia and Drucilla (Victoria Rowell), they were shown to usually just swap each other's partners when a "shake-up" was needed in the romantic scheme of the story, leading to a seemingly neverending love quadrangle between the four characters that gained the nickname "Four Square" from fans and critics alike. Later actions have proven that this choice was due to the supposition that it was ostensibly "too controversial" to have an interracial pairing. Indeed, a pairing in the late 1990s between Neil Winters and Victoria Newman was axed by CBS executives, who were rumored to have received many angry phone calls and letters by viewers in the South. In 2004, a love affair between web designer Phyllis Abbott (Michelle Stafford) and chemist Damon Porter (Keith Hamilton Cobb) was prominently featured, despite concerns that the interracial pairing would be scrapped just like the one that was written before.
Unlike other soaps in the 1980s or 1990s, Y&R avoided preachy social issues. When they did touch on such issues as abortion or the homeless crisis or AIDS, it was only as a plot device with a few facts and statistics thrown in for effect. For instance, when Ashley Abbott (Eileen Davidson) aborted Victor's child in the 1980s, any viewers or scholars who may have looked for a serious story on the pros and cons of abortion would have been disappointed. Ashley only aborted her baby because her lover Victor's wife, Nikki, was then-terminally ill, and Ashley did not want to cause her pain. After learning of her abortion, Victor ripped her to shreds, causing a devastated Ashley to lose her mind and wind up in an insane asylum (in true soap fashion, she married her psychiatrist).
One social issue which was too hot for the Y&R audience of the mid-'70s was homosexuality. In the mid-'70s, lonely society matron Kay Chancellor befriended an overweight, unhappy housewife named Joann Curtis. Kay moved Joann into her home and helped her get a better self-image. Soon, Kay's son Brock wondered about all the time the ladies were spending together, as Kay planned a special vacation to Hawaii for herself and Joann. The ratings dropped and outraged fan letters poured in. Bell quickly dropped the relationship, wrote out Joann, and the show stabilized.
A relatively controversial fixture on the show for several decades was Bell's daughter, Lauralee. Lauralee debuted in 1983 in a bit part as photographer Joe Blair's teenage cousin Cricket (a.k.a. Christine). As Lauralee grew up, Christine became more and more prominent, to the point where 1988 storylines had 4 different men madly in love with her. Longtime fan favorite Terry Lester (Jack Abbott) left the show in 1989 and blamed her partly, claiming that the excessive airtime given to Cricket drowned out the other performers. Christine married rock star Danny (Michael Damian) then private investigator Paul Williams (Doug Davidson), became an attorney and asked people to refer to her as "Chris", but remained a somewhat saccharine central heroine. At one point in 1996 the show hinted at a romance between Christine and the much older Victor Newman—negative viewer reaction killed the story. Later Christine became involved with Michael Baldwin (Christian LeBlanc), who had stalked her years earlier. This led to a controversial storyline where Paul, angry at his ex-wife's new love, raped Christine. Many fans could not believe heroic Paul would ever do such a thing, and were upset by scenes which said that the two had simply had "rough sex" that Christine could not admit she wanted. Christine and Paul reunited but eventually split for good. By 2003 or so, Lauralee Bell's marriage and children, as well as a successful clothing store, diminished her onscreen airtime and paved the way for other characters. In early 2005 she announced her move from contract to recurring status.
While heavy recasting is considered to have doomed some series such as Ryan's Hope and Love is a Many Splendored Thing, many would agree that Y&R's casting choices were some of the best in the genre. Most important characters were played by the same actor for decades; if they left the show, the characters left with them. When leads were recast, the replacements were often popular and remade the character in their own image, such as Peter Bergman's Jack Abbott, Susan Walters' Diane Jenkins or Jess Walton's Jill Foster Abbott.
When Y&R did make the occasional casting blunder, such as the brief 1997 replacement for Heather Tom's Victoria Newman, Sarah Aldrich, the mistake was quickly rectified when Tom returned to the show (when Tom left the show again in 2005, the show cast former All My Children star Amelia Heinle to play Victoria). The recent recast of Mackenzie Browning from Ashley Bashioum to Rachel Kimsey, met a so-so reception from fans, yet ratings stayed flat. Kimsey was recently released from her contract and the role will not be recast in the near future. In 2004 Joan Van Ark joined the cast as Gloria Fisher, Michael Baldwin's hardscrabble mother, remaining until early 2005. She was replaced by Judith Chapman, and fans quickly accepted Chapman in the role of her more high profile predecessor. The role of Colleen Carlton, who had been played by Lyndsy Fonseca for several years (and was enrolled in a popular teenage romance with heartthrob J.T., played by Thad Luckinbill) was recast in 2006 with Adrianne Leon (ex-Brook Lyn, General Hospital); this recast also generated mixed reviews.
- See also: List of soap opera recasts
Along with every other daytime soap, Y&R has suffered audience erosion, with particularly noticeable losses from 2001 to the present day. The show, in response to the bleeding, took some power away from longtime backstage brass like Edward Scott and Kay Alden, instead relying on head writer John F. Smith and later (in 2006) head writer/executive producer Lynn Marie Latham. Another highly publicized move was the rehiring of Shemar Moore (Malcolm Winters) for a limited run. Moore was extremely popular with African-American viewers, and the show lost a healthy chunk of that demographic upon his 2002 departure. Although fans were happy to see him return, Malcolm's new storyline garnered mixed reviews at best, and the ratings barely nudged. In another high-profile storyline, Nick and Sharon's young daughter Cassie (Camryn Grimes), beloved by fans, was killed off. In spite of rave reviews from the soap press, the ratings remained consistent. In August 2006, the show killed off 25-year veteran Jerry Douglas (who had played patriarch John Abbott). These episodes nudged Y&R to some of its highest ratings in some time.
Since July 2006, a new storyline involving Brad Carlton and his true identity as George Kaplan has been playing out. Fans are reported to have mixed emotions over the introduction of Nazis to the storyline.
Crossovers
In 2005, Michael Baldwin (Christian LeBlanc) crossed over to As the World Turns to argue part of a custody case involving Jack Snyder and Julia Larrabee.
In 2005, The Bold and the Beautiful's Eric Forrester (John McCook) crossed over to The Young and the Restless twice. Once to warn Michael Baldwin about the dangerous Sheila Carter, and a second time to attend the wedding of Michael and Lauren Fenmore.
In 2005, Katherine Chancellor (Jeanne Cooper) crossed over to The Bold and the Beautiful to meet with Massimo Marone and Stephanie Forrester about the ownership of the fashion design house Forrester Creations.
In 2003, Lauren Fenmore's mother, Joanna Manning (played by Susan Seaforth Hayes from Days of our Lives), appeared on The Bold and the Beautiful. She also reappeared on Y&R in December 2005 to attend her daughter's wedding to Michael Baldwin.
In 2000–01, Dr. Tim Reid, who was Phyllis Summers' therapist, moved to Los Angeles on The Bold and the Beautiful, and helped Morgan DeWitt.
In 1997, cast members Melody Thomas Scott, Peter Bergman, Joshua Morrow and Shemar Moore, along with B&B's Hunter Tylo, appeared as themselves on the CBS sitcom The Nanny
In 1995, Lauren Fenmore (Tracey Bregman) crossed over to The Bold and the Beautiful, where she stayed until 1999, and briefly returned to the show in summer 2002. She had appeared on the show several times prior to her becoming an actual cast member, mostly due to Sheila's crossover in 1992.
In 1993, Brad Carlton (Don Diamont) crossed over to The Bold and the Beautiful to confront Sheila Carter about the photos of his tryst with Lauren.
In 1992, Sheila Carter (Kimberlin Brown) made Y&R history by becoming the first major character to cross over to The Bold and the Beautiful. Sheila appeared on Y&R from 1990-1992, and again in 2005-2006. She was on B&B from 1992-1998, with shorter-lived stints in 2002 and 2003.
Several cast members appeared from the Y&R set in Doug Heffernan's dream on King Of Queens.
The theme song
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Main article: Nadia's Theme
The theme song, "Nadia's Theme", is probably the best-known theme song in daytime television, and has become iconic; save for a three-year stint in the early 2000s, the melody has remained unchanged. The melody, written by Barry De Vorzon and Perry Botkin, Jr., originated as a piece of incidental music for the 1971 theatrical film Bless the Beasts and the Children called "Cotton's Dream". Botkin later adapted this piece of music as the theme to The Young and the Restless. It would later be used as accompanying music during gymnast Nadia Comaneci's floor exercises at the 1976 Summer Olympics, and given the alternate title "Nadia's Theme".
It was sampled in Mary J. Blige's song "No More Drama". In the tune, Blige's persona describes herself as "young and restless".
Title sequence
The Young and the Restless logo, seen from 1984 to 1999.
The opening title sequence has also become well-known. For many years, since the show's debut, the opening showcased the characters, drawn by an artist, on a white background. Starting in 1984, the sequence ended with an interlocking Y and R painted on the white canvas in a sweeping brush motion. The logo (and in the earlier years, the drawings) were done by artist Sandy Dvore. The drawings were replaced with live-action shots of the characters in formal or semi-formal wear, still on a white background, in 1988.
Beginning in 1999, in an unprecedented move for a main title sequence of a daytime soap opera, the names of the principal cast members (for that day's particular episode) were mentioned (whereas previously the main title only showed the cast members' faces). For the most part, the mentality of the soap opera producers in general is to keep a certain image of a soap opera character or actor constant in order to keep good publicity, and thus the real names of the actors, shown next to their pictures, were long discouraged, as it interfered with the "escapist" tone of the genre. This did not deter the show's producers and in early 2003 the opening credits were given a complete makeover, now featuring black-and-white footage from the series with the actors' names in lower case in red at either the top or bottom of the screen. In 2004, Y&R's sister show The Bold and the Beautiful began airing the performers' names on the opening credits, the only soap besides Y&R to do so.
In 2003, when the show introduced the current sequence, execs stated that the new format meant it would be quick and easy to update the cast as it changed. However, despite several cast changes, the opening credits have only been updated twice (last updated in 2004) in three years. In June 2006, for the first time in well over two years, Y&R updated the opening credits.
Cast
U.S. daytime soap operas
currently on the air: |
| All My Children |
| As the World Turns |
| The Bold and the Beautiful |
| Days of our Lives |
| General Hospital |
| Guiding Light |
| One Life to Live |
| Passions |
| The Young and the Restless |
| Edit this box |
Current cast members
- Peter Bergman as Jack Abbott (#2) (1989-)
- Eric Braeden as Victor Newman (1980-)
- Bryton as Devon Hamilton (2004-)
- Sharon Case as Sharon Newman (1994-2003; 2003-)
- Judith Chapman as Gloria Abbott (#2) (2005-)
- Jeanne Cooper as Katherine Chancellor (1973-)
- Doug Davidson as Paul Williams (1978-)
- Eileen Davidson as Ashley Abbott (#1) (1982-1989; 1999-)
- Don Diamont as Brad Carlton (1985-1996; 1998-)
- Michael Graziadei as Daniel Romalotti (2004-)
- Amelia Heinle as Victoria Newman Carlton (#3) (2005-)
- Christian LeBlanc as Michael Baldwin (1991-1993; 1997-)
- Adrianne Leon as Colleen Carlton (#2) (2006-)
- Kate Linder as Esther Valentine (1982-)
- Thad Luckinbill as J.T. Hellstrom (2002-; recurring previously)
- Joshua Morrow as Nicholas Newman (1994-)
- Eyal Podell as Adrian Korbel (2006-)
- Lorna Raver as Rebecca Kaplan (2006-)
- Greg Rikaart as Kevin Fisher (2003-)
- Victoria Rowell as Drucilla Winters (1990-1998; 2000; 2002-)
- Melody Thomas Scott as Nikki Newman (#2) (1979-)
- Scott Seymour as Billy Abbott (#3) (2006-)
- Davetta Sherwood as Lily Winters Romalotti (#2) (2006)
- Kristoff St. John as Neil Winters (1991-)
- Michelle Stafford as Phyllis Summers Abbott (#1) (1994-1997; 2000-)
- Jess Walton as Jill Foster Abbott (#3) (1987-)
Recurring cast members
- Hunter Allan as Noah Newman
- Lauralee Bell as Christine Blair
- Tracey E. Bregman as Lauren Fenmore Baldwin
- Darcy Rose Byrnes as Abby Carlton
- Anita Finlay as Dr. Nora Thompson
- Karen Hensel as Doris Collins
- Beth Maitland as Traci Abbott Connelly
- Emily O'Brien as Jana Hawkes
- Anthony Pena as Miguel Rodriguez
- Ted Shackleford as Will Bardwell
- Asia Ray Smith as Sierra Hoffman
- Patty Weaver as Gina Roma
Coming and going cast members
- Davetta Sherwood as Lily Winters Romalotti (#2) (Exits October 2006)
- Christel Khalil as Lily Winters Romalotti (#1) (Returns October 2006)
- Tammy Lauren as Det. Maggie Sullivan (Debuts October 30th; recurring)
Deceased cast members
- Karl Bruck played Maestro Ernesto Faustche (died 1987)
- Candice Daly played Veronica Martin Landers (#2) (died 2004)
- Elizabeth Harrower played Charlotte Ramsey (died 2003)
- Terry Lester played Jack Abbott (#1) (died 2003)
- Brock Peters played Frank Lewis (died 2005)
- Michelle Thomas played Callie Rogers (#1) (died 1998)
Before they were stars
- Eddie Cibrian played Matt Clark (#1) (1994–1996)
- Vivica A. Fox played Stephanie Simmons (1995)
- Cam Gigandet played Daniel Romalotti (temporary; 2004)
- David Hasselhoff played Snapper Foster (#1) (1975–1982)
- Eva Longoria played Isabella Brana Williams (2001–2003)
- Shemar Moore played Malcolm Winters (1994–2002; 2004–2005)
- Monica Potter played Sharon Collins (temporary; 1994)
- Tom Selleck played Jed Andrews (1974–1975)
- Paul Walker played Brandon Collins (1993)
Notable celebrities who have had regular roles
- Joan Van Ark played Gloria Abbott (#1) (2004–2005)
Notable celebrities who have appeared on the show
- A1, a British boy band, appeared at the prom in 2002.
- Chris Botti played at Michael and Lauren's wedding 2005.
- Wayne Brady and his 'real life' mother visited with Paul and Mary Williams on Mother's Day 2003.
- Peter Cincotti appeared in 2003 to surprise Christine.
- Robert Clary (of Hogan's Heroes fame) was part of the series original regular cast members when the show premiered.
- Colby Donaldson (of Survivor: The Australian Outback) flirted in 2004 with Brittany before noticing her scar at the opening of the Rec Center.
- Josh Gracin, former American Idol contestant, appeared as a cowboy in June 2006.
- Wayne Gretzky appeared as Wayne on Nov 12, 1981.[[1]
- Il Divo appeared in 2005 to surprise Nikki.
- Jewel appeared on May 31, 2006 to sing at a benefit in memory of Cassie Newman.
- Brian Jordan of the Atlanta Braves appeared as himself on the show on 2 or 3 different occasions.
- George Kennedy appeared as Victor's father in 2003.
- B. B. King appeared in 2001.
- Darlene Koldenhoven appeared and sang while Nikki walked down the aisle in 2002.
- Kenny Lattimore and Chante Moore appeared in December 2003 as special guests at Neil and Dru's wedding.
- Reichen Lehmkuhl of The Amazing Race, has played Katherine Chancellor's bartender.
- Tara Lipinski, Olympic Gold medalist, playing Megan Dennison's friend Marnie in 1999.
- Jerri Manthey of Survivor: The Australian Outback discussed a Jabot promotional contract with Jill.
- Lionel Richie appeared in 2001 at a club visited by Sean Bridges and Jill.
- Smokey Robinson appeared in 2004 to give J.T. advice about the music business.
- Jesse Ventura appeared as himself in 2001.
- Luke Walton appeared as himself in 2006, played a pick-up game of basketball with Neil Winters.
- Lee Philip Bell appeared as herself on the September 11, 2006 episode.
Ratings
As of 2006, Y&R has managed 900 consecutive weeks in the #1 spot and 18 consecutive years.
When introduced during the 1972–73 season the show was bottom of the ratings, but rose rapidly: 9th by 1974–75 and 3rd by 1975–76. It remained a strong and increasingly important part of CBS' daytime lineup and by 1988 had dethroned long-time leader General Hospital as #1 rated soap, a position it has held ever since.
In the years since 1988, daytime soaps and network TV generally has seen an erosion in viewership, which has been felt more acutely by soaps since 1995 and even more since 2001.
Highest Rated Week In Daytime History (Week Of November 16, 1981) (Household Ratings)
- General Hospital- 16.0 (3-4pm) ABC
- All My Children- 10.2 (1-2pm) ABC
- One Life To Live- 10.2 (2-3pm) ABC
- Guiding Light- 7.9 (3-4pm) CBS
- The Young And The Restless- 7.3 (1-2pm) CBS
- Ryan's Hope- 7.0 (4-4:30pm) ABC
- As The World Turns- 6.9 (2-3pm) CBS
- Search For Tomorrow- 6.3 (12:30-1pm) CBS
- The Edge Of Night- 5.0 (12:30-1pm) ABC
- Days Of Our Lives- 4.8 (1-2pm) NBC
- Another World- 4.0 (2-3pm) NBC
- The Doctors- 1.8 NBC
- Texas- 1.7 (3-4pm) NBC
Random Week: Week Of May 30- June 3, 1988 (Household Ratings) YR- 7.2; AMC- 7.0; OLTL- 6.9; GH- 6.7; DAYS- 6.4; ATWT- 6.2; The Price Is Right 2- 6.1; GL- 5.7; BB- 5.1; The Price Is Right 1- 4.7; AW- 4.7; Santa Barbara- 4.0; Loving- 3.7; Ryan's Hope- 2.1
1995 Ratings (Millions of Viewers)
- The Young And The Restless- 7.155
- All My Children- 5.891
- General Hospital- 5.343
- The Bold And The Beautiful- 5.247
- One Life To Live- 5.152
- Days Of Our Lives- 5.056
- As The World Turns- 4.865
- Guiding Light- 4.198
- Another World (*about 3.9)
- Loving (*about 3)
- The City (*about 2.9)
Schedule
YR Broadcast History:
March 1973 - February 1980: Noon-12:30pm
February 1980 - June 1982: 1-2pm
June 1982 - Present: 12:30-1:30pm
A few CBS affiliates show Y&R at 4 PM local time and have found it to be a viable lead-in to their 5 PM local newscasts. These include KMOV St. Louis, WAFB Baton Rouge, WLKY Louisville, and WRAL Raleigh/Durham.
Y&R airs at 12:30 PM Eastern/11:30 AM Central, the original timeslot for CBS affiliates. But this actually occurs in affiliates and CBS-owned stations in the Eastern Time Zone. Most air it at 11 AM in the Central, Mountain and Pacific as a follow-in to their newscasts at 12 Noon. But only these three CBS-owned stations in these three time zones follow the actual 11:30 AM airtime: KCBS Los Angeles, WBBM Chicago and KTVT Dallas-Fort Worth.
In Canada, those who subscribe to Bell Express Vu or any other satellite TV provider can watch Y&R at (all times are EASTERN) 11am (NTV), 12:30pm (CBS), 2pm (CBS/CH), 4:30pm (Global), 5:30pm (Global), 6pm (Global). There's been talk of airing Y&R repeats at 12:05 am on Global TV stations.
Awards
Daytime Emmy Awards
Show
- 2006 "Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team"
- 2004 "Outstanding Drama Series"
- 1997 "Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team" TIED with All My Children
- 1993 "Outstanding Drama Series"
- 1986 "Outstanding Drama Series"
- 1985 "Outstanding Drama Series"
- 1983 "Outstanding Drama Series"
- 1975 "Outstanding Drama Series"
Individuals
- 2005 "Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series" Christian LeBlanc (Michael Baldwin)
- 2005 "Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series" Greg Rikaart (Kevin Fisher)
- 2005 "Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series" David Lago (Raul Guittierez)
- 2004 "Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series" Michelle Stafford (Phyllis Summers Abbott)
- 2002 "Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series" Peter Bergman (Jack Abbott)
- 2000 "Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series" Shemar Moore (Malcolm Winters)
- 2000 "Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series" David Tom (Billy Abbott)
- 2000 "Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series" Camryn Grimes (Cassie Newman)
- 1999 "Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series" Sharon Case (Sharon Collins Newman)
- 1999 "Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series" Heather Tom (Victoria Newman)
- 1998 "Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series" Eric Braeden (Victor Newman)
- 1997 "Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series" Jess Walton (Jill Foster Abbott)
- 1997 "Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series" Michelle Stafford (Phyllis Summers Romalotti)
- 1993 "Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series" Heather Tom (Victoria Newman McNeil)
- 1992 "Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series" Peter Bergman (Jack Abbott)
- 1992 "Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series" Kristoff St. John (Neil Winters)
- 1992 "Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series" Tricia Cast (Nina Webster Kimble)
- 1991 "Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series" Peter Bergman (Jack Abbott)
- 1991 "Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series" Jess Walton (Jill Foster Abbott)
- 1985 "Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series" Beth Maitland (Traci Abbott)
- 1985 "Outstanding Ingenue in a Drama Series" Tracey E. Bregman (Lauren Fenmore)
International
- In Canada, Y&R airs on the Global Television Network one day before the American version airs. It also airs on CHEK TV at the same time as CBS but is not one day ahead. Times vary by market and often do not match CBS's airtimes, a rare exception to the Canadian preference for simultaneous substitutions. Most Global stations instead use Y&R as a late-afternoon lead-in for local news (between 4-6pm local time)
- In the French-speaking province of Quebec, a dubbed version airs on TVA almost ten years after initial airing.
- In Australia, Y&R airs on the Nine Network at 2pm. Episodes are seven-and-a-half months behind those airing in the US.
- In Italy, the show airs in the morning on Rete 4, using the italian title "Febbre d'amore".
- In France, the show screens on TF1 as "Les Feux de l'amour" (Fires of Love) at 2pm (dubbed in french).
- In Belgium, the show airs on RTBF-La Une as "Les Feux de l'amour" at noon (dubbed in french).
- In New Zealand, Y&R airs on TV ONE. Episodes are four years behind the US.
- In South Africa, the show airs on e.tv at 5pm. Episodes are one year behind the US.
- In Greece, the show airs on ET1 (National TV) at 4pm. Episodes are four years behind the US.
- In Slovenia, the show airs on Kanal A as Mladi in nemirni.
See also
- Current characters of The Young and the Restless
- List of cast members of The Young and the Restless
- List of The Young and the Restless characters
- Longtime characters of Y&R
- Victor and Nikki Newman
External links
- Official website
- Y&R at CBS
- The Genoa City News
- Young and the Restless Discussion Group
- Toni's Y&R Spoiler Site
- The Young and the Restless - Soap Opera Digest Weekly
- http://tvmegasite.net/day/Y&R/ The TV MegaSite's Y&R Site
- The Young and the Restless @dayscafe.com
- Soapdom.com's Young and the Restless site
- GoldDerby Forums: Daytime Emmys: YR
- Yahoo Groups: YR
- Soaps.com The Young And The Restless Site
Categories: Soap operas | CBS network shows | 1970s TV shows in the United States | 1980s TV shows in the United States | 1990s TV shows in the United States | 2000s TV shows in the United States | Television series by Sony Pictures Television | Television shows set in Wisconsin