Doctoring up sets
Paul Saitowitz
Will Luke end up with Skye? Will Laura find out? ... da, da, da-da
... and what’s up with Sonny Corinthos? Ah, “General Hospital.”
In its 41-year run on the small screen -- the second-longest
tenure on the tube -- the interesting, bizarre and oft-ridiculous
characters that inhabit the medical building in Port Charles, N.Y.,
have weaved their way into the zeitgeist of American pop culture.
The glitz and glamour you see on TV might be what you remember,
but behind all the adultery, back stabbing and other entertaining
character flaws is a hard-working, Emmy-winning directing crew --
five directors, six associate directors and two stage managers. One
of those hard-working stage managers -- 7 a.m. until at least 10 p.m.
four days a week -- is two-time Emmy winner Kathy Ladd.
Ladd, a Costa Mesa resident, has been working the daily grind of
the series -- about 250 shows a year -- for the last seven years. She
started on the show part time in 1992, and before that she had stints
on several game shows and an ill-fated late-night program.
“I was working on ‘Into the Night’ with Rick Dees, and I was lucky
that when that show ended a contact from ‘General Hospital’ told me
that they could use me,” she said.
Unlike most shows, soap operas offer no hiatus, so the only way to
get time off is to shoot more than one show in a day.
“I really love what I am doing and I feel fortunate to be at this
point in my career,” Ladd said from the set of the show. “It’s a lot
of work, but the people I work with are so great and it makes it
worthwhile.”
Her journey to work begins on Sunday evenings, when she leaves her
husband and Eastside abode to haul her way up the Golden State
Freeway to a small room she rents in a house in Los Feliz.
“Working such long hours and getting out so late made it pretty
much impossible to make the commute from Orange County,” she said.
From there she goes through a script -- already broken down shot
for shot by the director -- for the next day of shooting. Sometimes
she will get scripts a few days in advance, but those are usually
subject to change.
“It’s basically like my homework,” she said. “It takes me about an
hour and a half and I have to know everything from the blocking for
the actors to the order of the shots.”
That “everything” also encompasses making sure every set is
perfect and ready to go, all the costumes are right, every camera and
light is set up just as the director wants it and any other
intangible thing that could go wrong does not go wrong.
For Ladd, winning an Emmy for her efforts was “stupefying,” but
not validation.
“When I heard ‘General Hospital’ called I just let out a loud
scream ... I was so excited,” she said. “But even in the years we
don’t win or we aren’t nominated, we are still working just as hard
and doing just as good of a job.”
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