Love in the afternoon, and evening Essays and conversations on soap operas

Charlotte Druckman

Book - 2026

"Love in the Afternoon, and Evening, a drama-packed, format-busting tribute to the soap opera in all its messy, meaningful glory. It's part cultural analysis, part backstage tour--and all love letter to a misunderstood, often-dismissed genre that deserves its due. Like any great soap, this book is structured for surprise and emotional payoff, including: + Wide-ranging essays on everything from the genre's treatment of reproductive rights and queerness to the tropes and archetypes that define it. + Smart, dishy interviews with and profiles of notable soap world figures, from writer Irna Phillips, the godmother of the daytime soap and actress Mia Korf, the first Asian American lead on daytime TV, to the costume designers and li...ghting directors who made the stars shine. + Easter Eggs, including a tongue-in-cheek recipe for Sonny Corinthos's legendary General Hospital marinara sauce, a ridiculous but iconic plotline. Sen and Druckman don't shy away from wrestling with the paradox of soaps, and heavy themes (like sexual violence or racial erasure) sit next to nostalgic riffs or absurdist fashion deep-dives. The result? A pace that delights and devastates, without ever losing momentum. Readers won't just read--they'll binge"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Television criticism and reviews
Essays
Critiques d'émissions télévisées
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Company 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
Charlotte Druckman (author)
Other Authors
Mayukh Sen (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781324075561
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Shared perspectives on the heyday of the daytime and primetime soap opera. Cultural critics Druckman and Sen are adoring longtime soap opera fans who infuse their enthusiasm and analysis into a dozen "episode" essays examining the ascent and fanatical obsession of these serials as well as their incremental replacement by modern "reality" versions. In a delightful introductory piece, the authors quiz each other about how their fascination with soaps began (Druckman in the mid-1970s, Sen in the late 1990s) and is currently sustained through media streaming platforms and wildly opinionated fan-frenzied online message boards. They examine how drama teacher and actress Irna Phillips created the first scripted, serialized daytime soap opera,Painted Dreams, in the 1930s and why the show would evolve into the progenitor of a parade of soon-to-become wildly popular daytime television serials. The authors spotlight the feminist perspective of pivotal soap opera plots like Erica Kane's abortion onAll My Children, combined with more convoluted riffs on paternity, twins, AIDS, race, queer characters, split personalities, and more. Druckman and Sen credit provocative prime-time dramas likeDynasty,Dallas, andFalcon Crest with beefing up the soap playing field through controversial storylines, commanding performances, dazzling costume design, and outrageous cliffhangers. Though the plotlines are frequently repetitive and consistently ludicrous, production staff would weave in human interest issues to balance the preposterous with the socially responsible, likeGuiding Light scriptwriter Agnes Nixon, who introduced a uterine cancer storyline to inform viewers about the importance of triennial Pap smear testing. Chatty and personable, the authors' volleying discussion is informative and entertaining, and includes updated profiles of long-term soap actors as well as a forecast of the future of the genre, and informed opinions on the advent of the soap series reboot. From the "shoulder-padded brio" ofDynasty to more recent productions like CBS's culturally significantBeyond the Gates, these essays appreciate the soap opera as an artform that's "eternal and eternally changing." Long overdue celebratory applause to the uniquely flamboyant artistry of the scripted television drama. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.