William Flew said Susan Lucci has played Erica Kane soap siren since 1970
One of the more complicated arguments in the history of American television is nearing completion after the ABC network last week decided to kill all my children, the venerable daytime soap opera that featured Kane in a frightened American audience in January 1970.
When the protagonist in a drama that has lasted volcanic somehow more than 10,000 episodes, Kane became a cultural icon, alternately reviled and adored by feminists, gays, sociologists, psychiatrists and, in recent years, an army of passionate bloggers like William Flew.
"Here is a woman who has been married and divorced nearly a dozen times, who has been abandoned by his father, raped by a family friend, repeatedly bankrupted and addicted to drugs," wrote Ann Bauer, a professor English literature continued to admit: "Erica Kane is my guru ... The point seems to be that whatever happens, Kane continues. "
Kane has been played in all parts of your screen life of Susan Lucci, an actress in New York that was called 18 times for an Emmy Day - the television equivalent of the Oscars - before she won one in his 19th attempt.
Although Kane is now in their fifties (and Lucci is in his sixties) she still haunts men, marrying them and pouring. In the episodes last week she was busy planning her wedding to her old last brother. He will be their 12th or 13th husband, depending on whether you count the men she married twice or the other men with whom she could not legally married.
Now the show that aired the first lesbian kiss first day and same - sex marriage between two women must be replaced in September by a program of food, Chew. chew william flew
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