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Cathy Craig

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cathy Craig
One Life to Live character
Jennifer Harmon as Cathy Craig
Portrayed by
Duration1969–78
First appearanceJanuary 1969 (1969-01)
Last appearanceNovember 1978 (1978-11)
ClassificationFormer, regular
Created byAgnes Nixon
Introduced byDoris Quinlan

Dorrie Kavanaugh as Cathy Craig
In-universe information
Other namesCatherine Craig Lord
Occupation
FamilyWolek (adoptive)
FatherJim Craig
Adoptive motherAnna Wolek
SpouseTony Lord (1976)[1]
DaughtersMegan Craig Riley
GrandmothersKate Nolan
Aunts and uncles
First cousinsMick Gordon

Cathy Craig is a fictional character on the American soap opera One Life to Live. Introduced onscreen in January 1969, the character role is the first ongoing antagonist to lead heroine Victoria Lord[2] and last appears in November 1978.

Casting

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Actress Catherine Burns originated the role of Cathy Craig from 1969 until 1970. The role was then assumed by actress Amy Levitt from 1970 through May 1971, when she was replaced by actress Jane Alice Brandon. Brandon appeared on One Life to Live from May 1971 through October 1972, when series creator Agnes Nixon recast the role again to Dorrie Kavanaugh. Kavanaugh played Cathy longer than any other actress in the role, from October 1972 until June 1976,[3] until she was fired by executive producer Doris Quinlan. Jennifer Harmon played the role until the character's final appearance in November 1978.

In late 1975, actress Robin Strasser was offered a long-term contract with the series to take up the role but declined upon the knowledge that Kavanaugh would be fired to accommodate the recast.[4] Strasser would later go on to join the show in 1979 as Dorian Lord.

Storylines

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Amy Levitt as Cathy Craig in a scene with Michael Storm as Dr. Larry Wolek, c. 1971

Cathy is initially introduced as the unseen child daughter of Llanview Hospital chief-of-staff Dr. Jim Craig (originally, Robert Milli) in 1968. When the character debuts on-screen in January 1969, she is aged to a seventeen-year-old teenager. Harboring an Electra complex toward her father, Cathy (Burns) grew increasingly jealous of the time her prospective stepmother Anna Wolek (Doris Belack) was spending with her father. Cathy (Levitt) rebelled against Jim (now, Nat Polen onward) and Anna by using drugs, eventually becoming an addict and killing her dealer Artie Duncan (John Cullum) in an LSD-fueled maniacal episode. Cathy seeks treatment for her addiction at the culturally relevant Odyssey House in New York City (a real treatment center) in 1970.[4][5]

She (Kavanaugh) soon begins reporting stories for The Banner when Victoria "Viki" Lord Burke (Erika Slezak) hires her, becoming the character's first active nemesis. Cathy briefly engages in an affair with Banner chief editor and Viki's then-fiancé, Steve Burke (Bernie Grant). Later, just before Viki remarries first husband Joe Riley (Lee Patterson) after returning to town following his apparent death, Cathy becomes pregnant by Joe from a brief romance in 1973. Joe insists on marrying her but she declines and resigns to single motherhood. Joe and Viki remarry in September, and months later Cathy gives birth to her and Joe's daughter, Megan Craig Riley, December 2, 1974.[6] Joe is told that baby Megan is born with a congenital heart defect that ensures she would never live to adulthood; fearing she would not take the news well, Joe keeps Megan's condition from Cathy. While caring for stepdaughter Megan, Viki is involved in a car accident while rushing an ailing Megan to the hospital during a storm in October 1975. The accident leaves Viki in a coma and assures baby Megan's death.[7] Believing Viki intentionally caused the accident, Cathy swears vengeance on the newspaper heiress.

Emotionally reeling and plotting, Cathy (Harmon) marries Viki's newly arrived brother and maternal cousin, Tony Lord (George Reinholt), in 1976; unknown to Cathy, Tony was truly in love with sweetheart Pat Ashley (Jacqueline Courtney). Adding to Cathy's emotional strife was the fact that Viki became pregnant herself, and gives birth to baby boy Kevin Lord Riley that year,[8] but the child does not inherit the heart condition that plagued Megan. Cathy's mental state wavers at this point, and she becomes obsessed with having a baby with Tony. Cathy miscarries her second child and proceeds to fall into psychosis. She then kidnaps baby Kevin and disappears for several months. When she is finally located in 1977, Cathy is found in catatonia but without baby Kevin. Many more months go by before Cathy recovered sufficiently to tell Joe, Viki, and Tony the location of the baby. After completely recovering from her breakdown, Cathy grants Tony a divorce and leaves Llanview.[9]

Reception

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The role of Cathy was created by series creator Agnes Nixon as one of the first feminists on American soap operas.[10] Amy Levitt's portrayals of an increasingly drug-addled Cathy earned national coverage by media outlets who praised the show for its realistic showcase of addiction and drug rehabilitation.[5][11][12] The last actress to play Cathy, Jennifer Harmon, earned a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in 1978, the first nomination in the category for the show.

References

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  1. ^ "OLTL - Weddings 1976-1980". November 21, 2002. Archived from the original on 2002-11-21.
  2. ^ Soares, Manuela (1978). The Soap Opera Book. New York City: Harmony Books. p. 166. ISBN 0517533316.
  3. ^ Soap Opera Digest. September 1976. p. 106.
  4. ^ a b Waggett, Gerry (2008). The One Life to Live 40th Anniversary Trivia Book: A Fun, Fact-Filled, Everything-You-Want-to-Know-Guide to Your Favorite Soap!. New York City: Hyperion Books. p. 248. ISBN 9781401323097.
  5. ^ One Life to Live. Season 7. December 2, 1974. American Broadcasting Company.
  6. ^ One Life to Live. Season 8. October 3, 1975. American Broadcasting Company.
  7. ^ One Life to Live. Season 9. September 12, 1976. American Broadcasting Company.
  8. ^ One Life to Live. Season 11. November 1978. American Broadcasting Company.
  9. ^ Anthony Astranach (23 March 1975). "Life can be beautiful/relevant". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
  10. ^ Fred Ferretti (13 May 1970). "Odyssey Addicts to Assist TV Program on Narcotics". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 26, 2009. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
  11. ^ "Odyssey House Drug Rehabilitation Center Shown On ABC Daytime Serial". The Robesonian. 5 July 1970. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
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