TV GUIDE August 1, 1987
Love! Pain! Outrage!
A Guide To The Hottest Triangles
on Daytime Soaps
Photo By Bernard Boudreu
Article By Elaine Warren
On Days of our Lives all eyes are on Kayla, Patch and Jack. Kayla (Mary Beth
Evans), a registered nurse, and Patch (Stephen Nichols), a troubled man with
a difficult childhood he can't seem to put behind him, care deeply for each
other. But Patch, blinded in one eye, just can't accept the reality that
Kayla loves him, and keeps shoving her away. Jack meanwhile, the suave well-to-do
son of a senator, has come to town and is hot for Kayla.
Until recently what added to the tension was the audience's painful awareness
that Kayla and Patch couldn't manage to consummate their relationship. Every
time they tried, something intervened. A while ago, for instance, Patch
was unzipping Kayla's dress when someone knocked on the door and ,
delivering secret documents that revealed that Patch was once hired to
do surveillance on Kayla. Kayla got angry and wouldn't have anything to do
with him for several weeks. Another time they were together when the
building they were in exploded and collapsed on top of them, trapping
them in the rubble for three days. Unfortunately, Kayla became unconscious.
Finally last month, Kayla and Patch's (as well as the audience's) fondest
hopes were realized, when the script called for a torrid love scene on the
roof of Kayla's apartment building.
What makes some "traingular" couple, like Kayla and Patch, hotter than others?
There are all kinds of elaborate theories and strategies concerning how to
make a television romance sizzle, but it all begins with that ineffable
concept that applies to real life couples as well: chemistry. When
starting out with any triangle, first the writers must establish a primary
couple who simply, unequivocally, have the right chemistry together.
"A year ago we tried Evans and Nichols out as a couple, and the chemistry
between them immediately was picked up by the audience," says Al Rabin
(supervising executive producer, NBC's Days of our Lives).
It helps even further to heighten the tension between the amorous couple,
and as everyone over the age of 13 knows, nothing creates sexual tension
better than resistance. Thus, a good writer will always throw plenty of
roadblocks in the couple's path. In the case of Kayla and Patch, the
major obstacle is their differing backgrounds. He is a man from the
wrong side of the tracks, a hired thug, and she is a nurse from a nice family.
Her family was violently opposed to their union, but the couple prevailed.
It's as if the romance developed a life of it's own.
"We gave it nine months", says Rabin. "We just kept nurturing it. And now
the audience very much wants them to be together. So the first problem,
establishing them as a couple, was solved.
And once you reach that plateau, it's time to introduce the other part of
the triangle." In this case, Jack (played by Joseph Adams-pictured; he has
since been replaced by James Acheson), an old boyfriend of Kayla's,
who happens to have Hodgkin's disease. Kayla became his nurse, and Jack fell
in love with her. "We will play this story out for another four months,"
says Rabin "and then we'll see what happens."
And that soap fans, could be just about anything.
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