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Loving is an American television soap opera that ran on ABC from June 26, 1983, to November 10, 1995, for a total of 3,169 episodes. [1] The serial, set in the fictional town of Corinth, Pennsylvania, was co-created by Agnes Nixon and former actor Douglas Marland.
This is a list of actors who appeared on the American soap opera Loving. Cast. Actor Role(s) Duration Wesley Addy: Cabot Alden: 1983–91, 1994–95 Nancy Addison:
In 1984, Rowand was cast as Kate Rescott on the ABC soap opera Loving. [4] The character was a widow and the matriarch of a large family, including daughter Ava Rescott (Lisa Peluso). Kate owned a pie shop and converted her home into a boarding house. She eventually found love with Louie Slavinsky (Bernard Barrow). [16]
Laura Alice Wright (née Sisk; born September 11, 1970) [1] is an American actress. She is best known for playing the roles of Allison "Ally" Rescott on Loving (1991 to 1995) and The City (1995 to 1997), Cassie Layne Winslow on Guiding Light (1997 to 2005) and Carly Corinthos (Spencer) on General Hospital (2005 to present).
On May 8, 2008, she took over the role of Lily Walsh on the CBS soap As the World Turns and remained until the series' cancellation on September 17, 2010. In 1996, Beck was cast in the second season of the CBS primetime soap Central Park West as Jordan Tate. [5] In 2000, she was a series regular on the comedy TV series Tucker. [6]
Jessica Collins (born Jessica Lynn Capogna; April 1, 1971) [1] is an American actress. She is best known for portraying Dinah Lee Mayberry on the ABC soap opera Loving (1991–1994) and Avery Bailey Clark on the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless (2011–2015), for which she won a Daytime Emmy.
Her first notable role was Jocelyn Roberts Brown on the ABC daytime soap opera Loving in 1995. LoCicero stayed with the series when it was spun off as The City, and remained until its cancellation in 1997. [2] She next appeared in small roles in the films The Family Man (2000) and Rush Hour 2 (2001).
The following is a list of television Nielsen ratings and rankings for American daytime soap operas from 1950 to the present, as compiled by Nielsen Media Research. [1] The numbers provided represent the percentage of TV households in the United States watching that particular show in a year. [1]