The Doctors (1963 TV series)
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The Doctors | |
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![]() The title card used from 1980 to 1982. |
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Genre | soap opera |
Creator(s) | Orvin Tovrov |
Starring | James Pritchett Elizabeth Hubbard Ann Williams David O'Brien |
Country of origin | ![]() |
No. of episodes | 5280 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC |
Original run | April 1, 1963 – December 31, 1982 |
The Doctors was a soap opera which aired on NBC from April 1, 1963 to December 31, 1982. There were 5280 episodes produced, with the 5000th episode airing in November 1981. The series was set in Hope Memorial Hospital in the fictional "Madison", located somewhere in New England.
Originally, The Doctors was not supposed to be a conventional soap opera. It first aired in 1963 for a trial run as an anthology series with self-contained episodes about medical emergencies. When the show was brought back in 1964, the show adopted a serial form of storytelling. For most of the series, storylines revolved around Chief of Staff Matthew Powers (played by James Pritchett).
The Doctors was considered to be more risqué in storyline choices than its rival, General Hospital (which premiered on the same day). While the doctors on General Hospital worked in harmony with one another for the most part and in some cases were intimate friends, the physicians on The Doctors were much more cutthroat.
For example, Dr. Powers was put on trial for murder, was forced to rescind his Chief of Staff position, and became very depressed. Another doctor took over Powers's spot and immediately schemed to remove his allies, such as Dr. Althea Davis, from positions of influence in the hospital. In another storyline, one doctor's nurse found out that he killed his rival and made it look like suicide. When he discovered that she knew the truth, he tormented her every day at work until she committed suicide herself, allowing him to get away with the murder.
In 1972 and 1974, the serial received a Daytime Emmy for Best Drama. In the years following, announcer Mel Brandt would inform the audience at the beginning of each episode: And now, The Doctors: The (Emmy-award winning) program dedicated to the brotherhood of healing.
For most of its run, The Doctors was sponsored by the Colgate-Palmolive company through its Channelex division; in 1980, NBC took over production in-house.
Recently, SFM Entertainment reached an agreement with Colgate-Palmolive and the Hallmark Channel, by which SFM would assume syndication rights to the show.
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[edit] Ratings/Scheduling History
The Doctors became very popular in the late 1960s when it was featured in advertisements for NBC's 90-minute soap bloc. The Doctors flourished when it was placed in the timslot of 2:30 p.m. Eastern/1:30 Central, in between Days of Our Lives and Another World, two highly rated shows. It spent nearly 16 years there, an extraordinary feat for daytime shows of its day, especially when it is considered that among its victims in the ratings were long-running favorites such as CBS' House Party with Art Linkletter and, later, ABC's Dating Game. Broadcasting's longest-running soap, CBS' The Guiding Light, went up against it more than once as well.
From the late 1960s to the mid-1970s, The Doctors was among the higher-rated soaps of the day. In 1973-74 the show peaked at fourth place, behind CBS' As The World Turns and fellow NBC soaps Days and AW.
However, after 1975, the show's popularity went into terminal decline: eighth place in 1975-76 and 11th place from 1976 through 1980, before falling to the bottom of the pack by 1982. This can be traced in part to ABC's expansion of One Life to Live in 1976 and CBS' promotion of Guiding Light to an hour in length in late 1977. However, its own network, NBC, inflated the adjacent AW to 90 minutes in March 1979, bumping The Doctors ahead to 2 p.m./1 Central, alienating some longtime followers. A year and a half later, in August 1980, Procter and Gamble spun off Texas from AW, requiring The Doctors to move again, this time to 12:30 p.m./11:30 a.m. Central. As if facing the youth-oriented Ryan's Hope on ABC and the stalwart Search for Tomorrow on CBS were not enough, in March 1982, NBC essentially left the show out to pasture at 12 Noon/11 Central, where daytime's most popular game, Family Feud, ran on ABC, and where CBS stations in the Central Time Zone ran the first half of The Young and the Restless. Not surprisingly, The Doctors fell into the single digits in the Nielsens, and NBC had no choice but to end a show that fell a mere three months shy of its 20th anniversary.
[edit] Core characters
The five core characters during the series' run were:
- James Pritchett as Dr. Matt Powers
- Ann Williams, Bethel Leslie, and Lydia Bruce as Dr. Maggie Powers
- David O'Brien as Dr. Steve Aldrich
- Carolee Campbell, and later Jada Rowland, as Carolee Simpson Allison Aldrich
- Elizabeth Hubbard (replaced briefly by Virginia Vestoff, 1969-1970) as Dr. Althea Davis
[edit] Additional well-known actors
Several well-known actors and actresses had roles on The Doctors throughout its long run:
- Armand Assante as Dr. Mike Powers
- Alec Baldwin as Billy Allison Aldrich
- Julia Duffy as Penny Davis
- Jonathan Frakes as Tom Carroll
- Gil Gerard as Dr. Alan Stewart
- Kathryn Harrold as Nola Dancy Aldrich (original actress in the part)
- Anna Stuart as Toni Ferra Powers
- Kathleen Turner as Nola Dancy Aldrich
- Ian Ziering as Erich Aldrich
- Kim Zimmer as Nola Dancy Aldrich (replacing Kathleen Turner)