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| first_aired = ] ] (]) <br> ] ] (]) <br> September 1993 (]) <br> ] ] (]) <br> ] ] (]) | | first_aired = ] ] (]) <br> ] ] (]) <br> September 1993 (]) <br> ] ] (]) <br> ] ] (]) | ||
| run_time = 60 minutes (30 minutes from 1965 to 1975) | | run_time = 60 minutes (30 minutes from 1965 to 1975) | ||
| num_episodes = 10, |
| num_episodes = 10,528<br>(as of ] ]) | ||
| list_episodes = | | list_episodes = | ||
| imdb_id = 0058796 | | imdb_id = 0058796 |
Revision as of 05:43, 18 March 2007
Days of Our Lives | |
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File:Days2004logo.jpgOpening Title Screen | |
Created by | Ted Corday, Betty Corday, Irna Phillips |
No. of episodes | 10,528 (as of March 16 2007) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Ken Corday, Stephen Wyman |
Original release | |
Network | NBC, SOAPnet |
Release | November 8 1965 (US) July 29 1991 (France) September 1993 (Germany) August 11 2003 (Finland) June 14 2004 (Hungary) |
Days of our Lives (Days or DOOL) is an American soap opera. It debuted on November 8 1965, and can still be viewed weekdays on NBC. Originally, the show revolved solely around the Horton family, and has since expanded to tell the stories of other families, such as the Brady, DiMera, Kiriakis, Black, Lockhart and Johnson clans. The series is set in the fictional town of Salem.
Storylines
Daytime television soap operas in the United States | |
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Current |
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1940s debuts |
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1950s debuts |
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1960s debuts |
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1970s debuts |
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1980s debuts |
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1990s debuts |
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2000s debuts |
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Web series |
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Upcoming | Beyond the Gates (2025) |
1960s through the 2000s
For detailed information on historical storylines, see List of Days of our Lives storylines
Recent history
In recent months, the show's producers have begun to focus more on the past, as they've shifted focus back onto Jack and Jennifer as well as restocking the Horton family tree by way of SORAS. Abby was rapidly aged to a teenager. Abby (Ashley Benson)'s best friend Chelsea Benson (Mandy Musgrave, then Rachel Melvin), lost her parents in a car accident and was taken in by Patrick and Billie. She was later revealed to be Bo and Billie's presumed-dead daughter, Georgia Brady.
Death of Zack Brady
Chelsea was a key figure in a major plot line that opened as she accidentally killed Bo and Hope's little boy Zack while playing with her cell phone behind the wheel of Bo's SUV. Matters grew even worse when Hope found out that Bo had not only lied to cover up what Chelsea did (when Billie insisted on taking the fall, Bo let her), he also had just that night signed a new temporary driver's license to Chelsea, then handed her the keys to his truck. He believed that he was actually responsible for Zack's death, and Hope agreed, throwing him out of their house.
In an attempt to protect herself, Chelsea did everything she could to drive a wedge between Bo and Hope and push her father closer to Billie, all in the hopes that Bo would defend Chelsea at her impending trial. Her scheming drove Hope into the arms of Patrick Lockhart and Bo temporarily back to Billie. The trial hinged on a critical piece of damning evidence: video footage from a convenience store surveillance camera of Chelsea behind the wheel of the SUV. When this footage went missing, Chelsea was let off with a paltry sentence of community service. Hope was furious and filed for divorce from Bo, whom she believed stole the evidence to protect his daughter.
Shawn, Belle, Phillip, and Mimi
In the meantime, Kate Roberts and Victor Kiriakis discovered baby Claire's true paternity: Shawn-Douglas Brady was her father. Neither Belle nor Shawn remembered having sex during a traumatic barn fire. This was revealed soon after an organ transplant which saved Claire's life. Phillip was, mysteriously, not a match, but her godfather Shawn was, as was the late Zack Brady. Bo and Hope tearfully allowed Zack's organs to be donated, and it saved Claire's life. Soon, the truth of Claire's paternity spread to Mimi's mother Bonnie, and then to Mimi. About to be married to Shawn, Mimi swore she would tell her husband-to-be the truth but never mustered the courage, too afraid of losing him to his first love, Belle.
For months, the truth was hidden until Belle and Mimi agreed at the same time to undergo IVF to conceive babies. A mysterious figure wearing a black leather glove ensured that Belle's egg would be fertilized with Shawn's sperm, and Mimi's with Phillip's. Later, another switch in the lab tipped off a nurse, and soon the truth of the switched sperm was out to everyone, but not before Belle was impregnated with her egg and a surrogate carried Mimi's.
With this new connection between them, Belle and Shawn wrestled with their true feelings for each other, and Belle hoped she could somehow reconcile with Shawn. Both marriages would fall apart when the truth of Claire's paternity was revealed (thanks to Chelsea anonymously giving them the paternity results) and then confirmed when Mimi admitted the truth. Shawn immediately left Mimi for keeping the truth from him and filed for custody of Claire; Phillip vowed to hold his family and marriage together. Rocked from this new stress between them all, Belle would lose her (and Shawn's) baby. Ultimately, she blamed Phillip; he had reluctantly agreed to a procedure that saved her life by aborting the baby, but he went against her wishes. Belle moved out of their apartment, and a crushed Phillip left town, realizing she would certainly try to get back together with Shawn. However, Shawn had agreed with Phillip that Belle's life had to be saved, and after seeing how well he cared for Claire, he gave up his pursuit of custody. Belle was crushed by this news, thinking Shawn no longer wanted her or Claire.
Shawn was dating a former hooker named Willow and worked for EJ Wells for a short period of time, and Belle was trying to figure out if Shawn could truly fit to be a father for Claire. Meanwhile, Mimi had to find work at Chez Rouge. She and Phillip gave up their rights to the baby their surrogate was carrying, but Mimi's mother Bonnie was trying to broker a deal so she can keep the baby. Because the baby is technically a Kiriakis heir, the opportunistic Bonnie sees dollar signs in the future and she has even gone as far as to steal money from her elder son Patrick to pay the surrogate to keep the baby. Also, Philip had gone missing.
Currently, Shawn and Belle are trying to work things out and Mimi is pursuing a relationship with Maxwell Brady. This happened after the two went to Georgia to search for Philip and wound up getting imprisoned together in a church basement (they would later be found and rescued by Abby Deveraux).Phillip tries to take Claire forever but Shawn and Belle "kiddnap" her and run away to Canada. They are now stranded on an uncharted island. Phillip believes Claire, Shawn, and Belle dead, but Bo believes otherwise.
Sami, Carrie, Lucas, and Austin (and E.J.)
In 2005, Carrie Brady and Austin Reed both returned to Salem with their own companies in the hopes of finding financial success, and quickly rediscovered their feelings for each other. Jealous of her sister, Sami hid the fact that Carrie was CEO of High Style, the company Austin was preparing to acquire via a hostile takeover. Carrie discovered it was Austin who stole her company and was furious, ending up in the arms of Lucas. Sami took the opportunity to move in on Austin and they became a couple.
Neither coupling seemed entirely stable as Austin tried to win Carrie back and she seemed torn between the two half brothers. Sami was paranoid she would lose Austin, so she blackmailed Lexie Carver, ordering her to ensure Carrie would not choose Austin; otherwise, Sami would reveal the truth of Lexie's infidelity with Tek Kramer to her husband Abe. Lexie complied. Carrie was one of her patients, so Lexie made up a story, telling her that she and Austin could never conceive a baby without a high chance it would have serious birth defects. This revelation crushed Carrie's hopes that she and Austin could have a family together. She shunned Austin, never telling him why. When she soon found out she was pregnant with Lucas' baby, she married him as quickly as possible.
A new character, British race car driver E.J. Wells (played by ex-All My Children star James Scott), arrived in Salem and moved into the same building as the two couples. The handsome and charming E.J. immediately sparked up a friendship with Sami and found himself involved with both couples' lives. It was then that the aforementioned "gloved one" would begin to play a part in the lives of Sami, Carrie, Lucas, Austin, and Lexie (though it is not known yet whether it is the same person from the Shawn/Belle/Phillip/Mimi storyline).
Sami began to receive cryptic notes from the "gloved one", stating that she would lose everyone she cared about if she didn't cooperate. The notes continued through to her wedding day, when another note stated that if she married Austin, her lies would be told. She stood up Austin at the altar, later telling him she knew he really loved Carrie and that he should be with her instead. It was then that E.J. decided to make a romantic play for Sami.
Things only became more complicated when Carrie discovered she was never actually pregnant, the result of a false positive test. Carrie only married Lucas because she thought she was pregnant with his baby, but without this real tie to him, she found herself back in the arms of Austin. Lucas walked in on Carrie and Austin making love and he left her in disgust. Carrie and Austin began making plans to leave Salem together just as another note arrived at Sami's apartment: this one revealed all and was read by Lucas, Carrie, and Austin. They were shocked by how low Sami could go. Sami's son Will, already disappointed with her for leaving Austin at the altar, moved out with Lucas. Carrie and Austin quickly got married by a Justice of the Peace and left for Switzerland.
This has all left Sami was nobody to turn to... except for E.J. Wells. As fate would have it, he has been revealed to the viewer as the "gloved one", but nobody in Salem - except for his accomplice Patrick Lockhart - knew the truth, or his "true identity." While they were in Talladega to promote Mythic, Sami overheard E.J. talking to one of Stefano DiMera's henchmen, telling him that he didn't care what Stefano said and that he had to finish things in Salem before he left. As part of a police set-up, Sami arranged to meet E.J. by a boathouse but instead John was there waiting for him. E.J. anticipated this and surprised him, gun in hand and with Tek looking on from outside, they argued until John tried to get the gun away from E.J. and he ended up getting shot instead. That same night, Sami and Lucas had made love in an abdandoned cabin. However, a large beam had collapsed and fallen on Lucas's leg. Sami flagged down a passing motorist to ask for help but was horrified to discover it was EJ fleeing the scene of John's shooting. EJ pulled a gun on Sami and forced her to help him evade a police road block. Sami begged him to help her save Lucas's life. He gave her an ultimatum: have sex with him or Lucas would die. After raping Sami, EJ kept his word and removed the beam from an unconscious Lucas's legs.
It turned out he went to Mexico City to hide out. After Patch complained that he wanted something to do, like a job with the police department, Bo agreed to send him to Mexico City where he found E.J. pretty quickly. He gave E.J. the warrant for his arrest and E.J. told him he wasn't leaving the country. They got into a fight and after the people in the bar beat Patch up and threw him out E.J. realized that his wallet and mobile phone were stolen. Not much later, he came back to Salem and went to Roman to plead his innocence, and he was immediately arrested. As both Lexie and Tek had vanished mysteriously, they had no solid evidence with which to hold E.J. and so they had to let him go.
Patch and Kayla, Jack and Jennifer reunited
At some nearby hospice, the terminally ill Jack Deveraux discovered his long-dead brother Steve "Patch" Johnson was, in fact, alive. Jack urged his amnesiac brother to return to Salem to reunite with his wife Kayla and daughter Stephanie. Steve agreed to go meet these people that he didn't know under the stipulation that Jack would go with him.
Dr. Kayla Brady Johnson returned to Salem, still grieving her late husband after all these years, just in time for Jennifer's wedding to Frankie Brady. Jack interrupted the ceremony, shocking everyone in attendance including his wife Jennifer and daughter Abby. Outside the church, Kayla fainted at the sight of her long-lost husband Steve, and she soon hoped to discover their love together. Unfortunately, he admitted not knowing her, but she vowed to help him remember. Steve found himself pressured by the new responsibilities of being a husband and father and went back to Cincinnati. He would return to Salem to try again with Kayla, but ended up starting a relationship with Billie Reed. Eventually, Kayla took Steve on a short trip away from Salem to a hotel they stayed at years before. During their stay, Steve suffered sudden flashbacks and regained all of his memory with Kayla.
Meanwhile, thanks to help from Frankie, Jack was cured of his illness thanks to an experimental drug treatment. He felt very awkward stepping in between Frankie and Jennifer, but Abby was very hopeful her parents would get back together. Soon, Jack and Jennifer became embroiled in the mystery of the murder of Officer Eve Michaels, a crooked cop at the Salem PD. And just as abruptly as they got back together, both Jack and Jennifer were soon gone to London. This left Frankie pretty much alone, and he soon returned to Washington, D.C.
Current storylines
- E.J. Wells orders Sami to get a paterity test to see if the baby Sami is carrying his. Sami freaks out and later runs into Celeste at St. Lukes. Celeste tells Sami the only way to stop E.J. is to KILL HIM!
- Shawn and Belle manage to jump off a cruise with baby Claire so she could be free of Philip. Shawn and Belle also share a kiss, which Belle isn't to happy about, the couple is growing closer. Unfourtunatly Belle discovers that Claire has a blood infection.
- Stefano DiMera is still alive. He was living in a hospital room in Italy, found by John and Marlena, until he was transported back to America. It was later revealed that he needed a kidney transplant. The kidney was taken from John Black, who is in a coma. Steve Johnson stole him from the hospital, Kayla eventually removed the kidney from him. But it has been reported in Soap Opera Digest® that Stefano's condition is getting much worse.
- E.J. Wells has been revealed to the audience as the "gloved one" and his paid accomplice is Patrick Lockhart. He was later revealed to be "Elvis Jr." (EJ), whose parents are Stefano DiMera and Susan Banks. This would explain why he has been plotting against the Brady family. His evil plan has recently been revealed, in that he plans to kill three Bradys, in addition to making a Brady pregnant. Just recently he attempted to kill John and while trying to flee the crime scene he came across Sami who begged him for his help to get a fallen beam off of Lucas. EJ refused to save Lucas unless Sami had sex with him. After raping Sami, EJ kept his end of the bargain and lifted the beam off of Lucas.
- John, Roman, and Bo used phone records to find a link between Patrick and E.J., making them prime suspects in the Eve Michaels murder.
- Patrick paid off Hope's doctor to tell Hope that her baby is his, not Bo Brady's. However, he came clean with Hope when the baby was born. Patrick also turned himself in concerning his link to E.J. Wells.
- Belle is living at the penthouse with Marlena and John, who recently remarried in Italy. They went to Italy to find Stefano DiMera. They went to his tomb and discovered his coffin was empty. They then tracked DiMera himself down. DiMera was in an oxygen tent under private medical care. He revealed to John and Marlena that EJ was his son. He then dared to John to kill him, but John decided to just leave instead.
- Shawn was living with Willow, a former prostitute, but he recently patched things up with Belle. When Shawn told Willow he wanted to get back with Belle full-time and that Willow needed to move out, Willow took the news poorly. Taking advantage of Shawn's forgetting to get the apartment key from her, she came back in and set the place on fire. She tried claiming it was an accident for about five seconds before admitting to Shawn that she lit the place up. She was quickly arrested for arson.
- Victor has patched things up with Belle in order to spend time with Claire. However, his real reason for this was so Claire could spend time with Philip, who secretly returned to Salem. It appears as though Philip has undergone surgery and/or is recovering from serious injuries. Victor has contracted a doctor to give Philip an experimental face transplant. Most recently, Kate discovered Philip was back and Belle has become suspicious of Victor, refusing to let him see Claire alone. Recently Victor and Phillip have been granted temporary custody of Claire by a Salem court. Mimi went to talk to Phillip about his decision to seek custody and discovered he was planning on taking Claire out of the country. After receiving the news Shawn and Belle with the help of Max and Mimi came up with a plan to take Claire from Phillip. The plan worked and Shawn and Belle are currently on their way to Canada trying to escape.
- Steve and Kayla were poisoned with a nerve toxin at Salem Hospital. Steve pretended to regain his memory to try and help Kayla recover. It worked, and now Stephanie is convinced they will all be a happy family again. However, Steve was interested in pursuing things with Billie. Kayla brought Steve to a hotel they stayed at years ago, and Steve suddenly regained his memory of his days with Kayla. To Billie's dismay, Steve informed her that he wants to be with Kayla. Billie took the news very badly.
- Nick Fallon - the son of Jessica Fallon, the daughter Marie Horton gave up for adoption - is introduced. Nick, a nerdy med student, helped save Kayla at the hospital. He has taken quite an interest in Chelsea, going so far as to create a fake online persona named "LonelySplicer" and romancing Chelsea online. Most recently, he slept with Billie after consoling her about Steve.
- Mimi got a job working at Max's garage, and he has continually helped her out, becoming a good friend. Things between Max and Mimi look like they could become romantic at any time. While trying to find Phillip, Mimi and Max were kidnapped by Victor's goons and tied up in what appeared to be the basement of a church outside of town. The sexual tension between them increased dramatically. While they were stuck in the basement, they came across a skeleton which was dressed in a Civil War uniform, but was actually a recent murder victim. Chelsea confronted Abby about her feelings toward Max, which culminated in Abby tearfully admitting that she is in love with Max, but he only sees her as "a little kid."
- Bonnie Lockhart is trying to get back the Lockhart/Kiriakis baby being carried by the surrogate that Mimi and Philip gave up their rights to. The surrogate keeps extorting money out of Bonnie. Hints are also play to her knowing who the murder victim skeleton is. It is soon revealed that the skeleton belongs to Bonnie's late husband.
- John is currently suffering severe brain damage after having been shot by E.J.
- Abe ended his marriage to Lexie when he found she lied about witnessing E.J shoot John. He found out she was covering for Tek and he kicks her.
- Devastated about losing her husband, Lexie runs into Tek. He tries to convince the two should run away together but Lexie doesn't want to hear it, after a long argument they meet in a car crash and both are feared dead.
- Now that Lexie and Tek are out of the picture E.J returns to Salem and has been dropped of all charges.
- Sami finds out she is pregnant. Is the father Lucas or E.J?
- Sami is awarded by the Salem Police for being a good Samaritan. Kate is however convinced that Sami could not have lifted that beams and plans to expose her for the liar she is.
- Nick and Chelsea grow closer.
- Abby quits here job at Max's garage to go to Salem University with Chelsea in the spring semester.
- Philip and Willow are currently hunting down Shawn and Belle. But with Willow being pregnant Philip has plans for the baby. Use it as bait to get Claire back.
- E.J offers Lucas a job in order to get close to Sami.
- Steve has memories of being tormented. And figure that Benjy and the DiMeras are behind it.
Ratings and scheduling history
Not long after its introduction in 1965, Days of our Lives became a successful part of NBC's attempt to dethrone daytime powerhouse CBS. By 1973 the show, pitted against CBS' Guiding Light and ABC's Newlywed Game at 2 p.m. Eastern/1 p.m Central, had matched the first-place ratings of As The World Turns and sister NBC serial Another World. NBC capitalized on this success with the decision to expand to one hour on April 21 1975. This expansion had followed the lead of AW, which became TV's first-ever hourlong soap on January 6, three and a half months earlier. Further, Days' new starting time of 1:30/12:30 finally solved a scheduling problem that began in 1968 when NBC lost the game Let's Make a Deal to ABC, and in its wake, eight different shows were placed into the slot, with only one, Three on a Match, lasting more than nine months.
However, this first golden period for NBC daytime proved to be short-lived, as Days' ratings began to decline in 1977. Much of the decline was due to ABC's expansion of its popular soap "All My Children" to a full hour, the last half of which overlapped with the first half of Days. By January 1979, the network, in a mode of desparation more than anything else, decided to jump headlong against AMC and moved the show ahead to the same 1 p.m./12 Noon time slot. In exchange to its affiliates for taking away the old half-hour access slot at 1/Noon, NBC gave them the 4 p.m./3 slot, which many (if not most) stations had been preempting for years anyway. By 1986, ABC and CBS followed suit, under the intense pressure of lucrative (and cheap) syndicated programming offered to affiliates.
By the early 1980s, Days had displaced Another World as NBC's highest-rated soap. However, the entire NBC soap lineup was in ratings trouble. In fact, by 1982, all of its shows were rated above only one ABC soap (The Edge of Night) and below all four CBS soaps. The "supercouple" era of the 1980s, however, helped bring about a ratings revival, and the 1983-1984 season saw "Days" experience a surge in ratings. It held onto its strong numbers for most of the 80s, only to decline again by 1990, eventually falling back into eighth place. In the mid-1990s, however, the show experienced a resurgence in popularity and the show reached number two in the ratings, where it remained for several years before experiencing another ratings decline beginning in 1999, the year that Days became NBC's longest-running daytime program (upon the cancellation of AW). Throughout the 2000s, Days and all the other remaining network daytime serials have witnessed a steady erosion of viewers, mainly due to vastly altered viewing habits induced by cable networks and alternative genres such as reality and talk shows on minor network affiliates.
With the impending cancellation of Passions in September 2007, Days will become NBC's last remaining traditional daytime program (excepting the Today Show, which will receive a fourth weekday hour in exchange for the forementioned cancellation) on its mid-day schedule. On January 17 2007, NBC Universal Television president Jeff Zucker remarked that "Days of Our Lives" would most likely not "continue past 2009."
DOOL Primetime Specials (Nielsen Media)
- Fri, January 10 1992 (8 p.m.) 14.8 million viewers (#64 out of 92 shows)
- Fri, February 26 1993 (8 p.m.) 10.6 million viewers (#72 out of 87 shows)
- Fr, February 4 1994 (8 p.m.) 10.2 million viewers (#78 out of 94 shows)
- Fri, July 8 1994 (9 and 10 p.m.) 8.5 and 8.2 million viewers (#64 out of 91 shows/#68 out of 91 shows)
Theme song and opening title sequences
Opening titles
1965 - 1972 |
Almost completely unchanged since the show's debut in 1965, the titles show an hourglass, as sand slowly trickles to the bottom against the backdrop of a partly cloudy blue sky. In 1966, the focus moved from the entire hourglass to the bottom, with the sand trickling away as the theme played. This version used a decidedly darker tint of blue than the subsequent versions. |
File:Dayscorday72.jpg 1972 - 1985 |
In 1972, the current title lettering was introduced, a condensed version of the Times New Roman typeface in yellow coloring (before then, the show's title was in generic caps). The title card would also say "Copyright 1972 by Corday Productions, Inc." While the copyright was only for the title sequence, viewers would become confused in later years, as the 1972 copyright notice stayed on the title sequence until 1985. |
File:Daysofourliveslogo.jpg 1985 - 1993 |
No huge difference came in 1985's titles revision, save for the removal of the copyright notice of said titles. |
File:Days2004logo.jpg 1993 - present |
In 1993, a computerized version of the visual was made, with completely redone sound effects and rearranged music. In this version the hourglass, now slowly spinning clockwise, starts focus at the bottom-half, overlooking the dawn. As the sun rises, the focus is zoomed out, and the audience sees the entire hourglass and the show's title "flourishes" on to the screen as the music flourishes. While the entire hourglass is revealed, the clouds in the sky change formations. The current version of this theme is about 30 seconds in length, however the full version lasts around 3½ minutes.
A shortened version of this open debuted in 1995 as the show's time period was shortened due to coverage of O.J. Simpson trial (and later for the Martha Stewart trial in 2004). It is still used from time to time when episodes run over the allotted time, most recently during the February 2007 sweeps period. Because of numerous preemptions due to Simpson trial, NBC aired episodes of Days in primetime. The 1993 opening of Days is the longest used opening among current soap operas, most of which have changed their opening sequences more frequently than Days. What's unusual about Days and NBC's other soap Passions (whose opening has been used since it premiered in 1999) is that they are the only soaps whose current sequences were created in the 1990s. They, like Passions are the only American soaps not to feature their main cast members in the opening sequence. |
A portion of the opening is also used as a mid-show break bumper, starting after the hourglass has zoomed out and title has appeared with Macdonald Carey announcing "We will return with the second half of Days of our Lives in just a moment," something he has said since the show expanded to one hour in 1975.
From its debut in 1965 until March of 1966, announcer Ed Prentiss spoke the words now made famous by Macdonald Carey. Since April 1966, the late Macdonald Carey has intoned the legendary epigram "Like sands through the hourglass, so are the days of our lives." From 1966 to 1994, he would also say, "This is Macdonald Carey, and these are the days of our lives." After Carey's passing, the decision was made to remove the second part of the opening, out of respect for Carey and his family.
Opening music
Template:Sound sample box align right Template:Multi-listen start Template:Multi-listen item Template:Multi-listen end Template:Sample box end
The theme that regularly accompanies each sequence was composed by Charles Albertine, Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart.
In the summer of 2004, the show's theme song was changed to give the tune a more majestic feel. As this coincided with the height (or depths) of the Salem Serial Killer storyline, many viewers speculated that the change in theme was signaling a profound change in the nature of the show (and perhaps a clue to the outcome of the plot itself). Both versions (the 1993 theme and the new theme) were alternated by every other day, but was scrapped after only being used in eight episodes with the 1993 theme the only one used since; the 1993 theme tune was reinstated with no comment from Days publicists.
Days in other media
Friends
The series was satirized on the hit sitcom Friends when one of the principals, Joey Tribbiani (played by Matt LeBlanc), got a job as Dr. Drake Ramoray on the show. All storylines shown on Friends (with guest shots by actual Days of our Lives stars) were fictional and did not represent what was really going on in the soap opera itself. Joey's fictional stint on the show ended when he angered its writers and his character was killed after falling down an elevator shaft. Later, his character was brought back to life in a further spoof on the show (no fewer than thirty-six characters have been "brought back" from the dead on Days). Joey was brought back as a man with a brain transplant. His new brain was from the character Jessica Lockhart, played by Susan Sarandon. Lockhart died from a horseback riding injury. The Lockharts are also the last names of Bonnie, Mimi and Patrick on Days, but the Jessica character is not a relation to any of the three. Alison Sweeney who plays Samantha Brady appeared on Friends as "Jessica Ashley" who stars with Joey on Days. In another episode has Joey in a scene with Kristian Alfonso as Hope Brady; she, along with Roark Critchlow's Mike Horton, are the only characters on the real Days to be on Friends. In the spinoff sitcom Joey, Joey was nominated for "best death scene" in which he was stabbed while performing surgery.
The connection between Days of our Lives and Friends is attributed to the fact that John Aniston (Victor Kiriakis) is the real-life father of Jennifer Aniston (Rachel Green).
Other Media
In the movie Nine to Five, when the evil Mr. Hart (Dabney Coleman) is being held prisoner in his house, there is a quick shot of him holding the TV remote and watching the opening credits of Days of Our Lives.
On an episode of Sanford and Son, Fred Sanford complains about his television bill and not being able to watch Days of Our Lives if the bill isn't paid. Then, Fred goes into a rampage about the current storyline, in the early seventies it was Mickey Horton's saga, and what he might miss if he doesn't get to watch the show.
In the movie Drop Dead Gorgeous Iris Clark (Mindy Sterling) taped over Gladys Leeman's (Kirstie Alley) beauty pageant tape with the opening credits of Days of Our Lives.
In the movie Legally Blonde, in Elle Woods' (Reese Witherspoon) college application video, she proves her ability to recall information "at the drop of a hat" by relating a Days of our Lives storyline in which heroine Hope Brady is brainwashed by "the evil Stefano," which roughly corresponds to the timeframe in which the movie was filmed.
The Food Network show Behind the Bash, hosted by Giada De Laurentiis (who also hosts her shows Everyday Italian and Giada's Weekend Getaways) celebrates an episode behind the 40th Anniversary party for Days of our Lives
On the teen drama Beverly Hills, 90210, the kids ponder their lives to being similar to Days of our Lives and The Young and the Restless.
In Episode 102 of the comedy show Scrubs, Dr. Perry Cox is watching Days of our Lives in the hospital staff room.
In the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind, while Richard Dreyfuss is creating the Devil's Tower in his home, Days of our Lives is on the television, featuring Susan Seaforth Hayes and Bill Hayes as their roles of Julie Williams and Doug Williams just prior to the news report.
Cast
Daytime television soap operas in the United States | |
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1940s debuts |
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1950s debuts |
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1960s debuts |
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1970s debuts |
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1980s debuts |
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1990s debuts |
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2000s debuts |
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Web series |
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Upcoming | Beyond the Gates (2025) |
Current cast members
Recurring cast members
Actor | Character |
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John Aniston | Victor Kiriakis |
Tanya Boyd | Celeste Perrault |
Kavi Faquir | Theodore Carver |
Christopher Gerse | Will Roberts |
Bill Hayes | Doug Williams |
James Lancaster | Father Timothy Jansen |
Frank Mentier | Jed Stark |
Susan Seaforth Hayes | Julie Williams |
Comings and Goings
Actor | Character | Status |
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Matthew Ashford | Jack Deveraux | Temp. Returns April 2nd |
Judi Evans | Adrienne Johnson Kiriakis | Returns May 1st |
Deceased cast members
Actor | Character | Date of Death |
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Brenda Benet | Lee DuMonde | April 7 1982 |
Charla Doherty | Julie Olson (original cast member) | May 29 1988 |
Ed Prentiss | John Martin / Dr. Ralph Dunbar / Alex Marshall | March 19 1992 |
Joy Garrett | Jo Johnson | February 15 1993 |
Macdonald Carey | Dr. Tom Horton Sr. (original cast member) | March 21 1994 |
Patricia Huston | Addie Horton | September 25 1995 |
Christopher Stone | Bill Horton | October 20 1995 |
Madlyn Rhue | Daphne DiMera | December 16, 2003 |
Richard Biggs | Dr. Marcus Hunter | May 22 2004 |
Paul Carr | Bill Horton (original cast member) | February 17 2006 |
Terry O'Sullivan | Richard Hunter | September 14 2006 |
Darlene Conley | Edith Baker | January 14, 2007 |
Lanna Saunders | Marie Horton | March 10, 2007 |
Executive producing and head writing team
Days of our Lives executive producers
- November 8 1965 - July 1966: Ted Corday
- July 1966-1977: Mrs. Ted Corday
- 1977-1979: Mrs. Ted Corday & H. Wesley Kenney
- 1979-1985: Mrs. Ted Corday & Al Rabin
- 1985 - Mid November 1987: Mrs. Ted Corday, Ken Corday & Al Rabin (Co-EP)
- Mid November 1987 - June 14 1992: Ken Corday & A. Rabin (Co-EP)
- June 15 1992 - 2000: K. Corday
- 2001 - March 28 2002: K. Corday & Tom Langan (Co-EP)
- March 29 2002 - Present: Ken Corday & Stephen Wyman (Co-EP)
Days of our Lives head writers
- November 8 1965 - December 1966: Peggy Phillips & Kenneth Rosen
- January 1966 - June 1966: Peggy Phillips
- June 1966 - March 1975: William J. Bell
- April 1975 - April 1977: Pat Falken Smith
- May 1977 - February 1979: Ann Marcus
- March 1979 - March 1980: Elizabeth Harrower
- March 1980 - April 1980: Ruth Brooks Flippen
- April 1980 - October 1980: Nina Laemmle
- October 1980 - October 1981: Gary Tomlin & Michelle Poteet Lisanti
- October 1981 - April 1982: Pat Falken Smith
- May 1982 - September 1984: Margaret DePriest & Sheri Anderson
- October 1984 - November 1986: Sheri Anderson, Thom Racina & Leah Laiman
- November 1986 - March 28 1989: Leah Laiman
- March 29 1989 - January 19 1990: Anne Howard Bailey
- January 22 1990 - June 14 1991: Richard J. Allen & Anne Schoettle
- June 17 1991 - January 30 1992: Gene Palumbo
- January 31 1992 - June 11 1992: Richard J. Allen & Beth Milstein
- June 12 1992 - July 9 1992: Sheri Anderson
- July 10 1992 - August 6 1992: Sheri Anderson & Gene Palumbo
- August 7 1992 - December 18 1992: Sheri Anderson
- December 21 1992 - May 7 1993: Sheri Anderson & James E. Reilly
- May 10 1993 - November 28 1997: James E. Reilly
- December 1 1997 - October 14 1999: Sally Sussman Morina
- October 15 1999 - November 10 1999: Lorraine Broderick (Quit)
- November 11 1999 - March 28 2002: Tom Langan (Fired)
- March 29 2002 - March 6 2003: Peter Brash (Demoted) & Paula Cwikly (Fired)
- March 7 2003 - August 8 2003: Dena Higley (Fired)
- August 11 2003 - August 18 2003: James E. Reilly & Dena Higley (Co-HW)
- August 19 2003 - October 4 2006: James E. Reilly (Fired)
- October 5 2006 - present: Hogan Sheffer & Meg Kelly (Co-HW)
Awards
- Daytime Emmy for "Outstanding Daytime Drama" in 1978.
- Writer's Guild of America award for "Best Daytime Serial" in 2000.
Trivia
- At 92 years old, Frances Reid holds the record as the oldest personality on television (she ranks ahead of As the World Turns star Helen Wagner and Mike Wallace, who tie for second).
- Ashley Benson (Abigail Deveraux) is two years younger and Rachel Melvin (Chelsea Brady), two years older than either of their characters. In Benson's case, this is unusual in the fact that her character is approximately 19 years of age while Benson (born in December 1989) has not yet reached 18 years of age. Effectively, the two actresses have a five-year difference in age.
- Kyle Brandt (ex-Philip Kiriakis) prior to joining Days in 2002, was a cast member on MTV's The Real World.
- Despite the fact that the Friends character Joey Tribbiani (played by Matt LeBlanc) played the character of Dr. Drake Ramoray (not an actual Days of our Lives character) on a semi-fictionalized version of Days of our Lives on the series, this causes some discrepancy as Days is filmed at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, California (the series itself is produced by Sony Pictures Television), more than 3000 miles cross country from New York City (where Friends was set). In truth, the only NBC soap that existed during Friends ' ten-year run that was filmed in New York was Another World (like Procter & Gamble's other soaps, P&G produced AW, As the World Turns and Guiding Light) which aired alongside Days until its cancellation in 1999.
- In 1991 Deidre Hall was lured back to Days of our Lives with the promise that she could serve as executive producer of a Days spin-off called "Manhatten Lives". Initial hopes were to begin airing in 1994 if Another World wasn't renewed. In the end Another World was renewed and the spin-off never came to be.
- Mary Jackson was the original Alice Horton in the unaired pilot. The role was then assumed by Frances Reid.
- Frances Reid and John Aniston appeared on a 2004 episode of American Dreams as a couple at Jack Pryor's TV store. John's character's name was John Victor (reference to his character of Victor) and Frances's character was named Alice. In the show, Frances watches herself on an early episode of Days with Macdonald Carey. This particular episode took place around February 1965, when Days was just 9 months from premiering. Alison Sweeney and Farah Fath also appeared on that same episode.
See also
External links
- NBC.com Site
- DOOL: Sony Site
- Days Cafe
- Days of our Lives at IMDb
- Soap Opera Fan: DOOL
- Beth's DOOL Page
- Days of our Lives @ soapcentral.com
- Prevuze satire and day ahead recaps
- Indulge in Days
- Video Clips
- Days Stars' Greenville Softball Photographs
- Search engine about Days of our Lives
- Articles with unsourced statements from January 2007
- 1965 television program debuts
- NBC network shows
- 1960s American television series
- 1970s American television series
- 1980s American television series
- 1990s American television series
- 2000s American television series
- Television series by Sony Pictures Television
- Soap operas
- Days of our Lives