Two Faces of Steve
Mirror, Mirror on the wall who's the finest Steve of all?
Soap Opera Update 6/13/88
by Brenda Marshall and Allison J. Waldman
Every morning when Stephen Nichols faces himself in the mirror, ready to
brush his teeth or shave or
wipe the sleep from his eyes, staring back at him are two people, Stephen
Nichols, the intense, highly
professional actor, loving husband, devoted father and quietly spiritual
man; and Steven Earl Johnson,
Nichols' daytime alter-ego, the sometimes scruffy, always complex, undeniably
compelling anti-hero
he has created on NBC's top rated soap, "Days of our Lives." Stephen Nichols
is an actor with a problem
- the kind of problem most performers wait their entire careers to face.
Through his skill, perseverance
and spunk-plus the positive, supportive, and equally important contributions
of the Days production and
writing staff- Nichols has brought to life a character so dynamic, so engaging,
and so persuasively real,
that people often regard him as the part he plays.
It is the same kind of adulation and success that Henry Winkler faced when
he was the 'Fonz', the same
sense of identification that Lucille Ball encounters when fans tell her they
love Lucy, that is, they love her,
Lucille Ball, whom they don't know at all, but in actuality they really are
loving the black and white icon
she gave life to in hundreds of episodes of "I Love Lucy"-Lucy Ricardo. So,
Stephen Nichols has a nice
problem. And he knows it. "What I've always wanted to do as an actor," confesses
the green eyed actor,
thoughtfully, "is be able to play some type of role that would give people
inspiration and hope."
Stephen smiles, his eyes twinkling brightly, as he recalls building the character
of Steve/Patch. "I sort of
created a whole back story for the guy. Because he went around threatening
people with knives and lurking
around and watching, and the guy's got to have a reason for doing all this.He's
a person. And that all came
from my theater training-that discipline of really finding out who the character
is and playing it."
That theater background Stephen speaks of with pride was developed late in
his life. Born in Cincinnati,
Stephen Nichols early life parallels Steve Johnson's in some ways. Nichols
never knew his father. Until he
was eight, he lived with his grandparents and in foster homes. When his mother
remarried, he and his sister
Penny, went to live with their mother and step father in Dayton, Ohio. "Then
they had a child who is my
half brother, who is now living in Los Angeles. His name is Zack and we've
always been very close."
Stephen's interest in acting lay dormant through his years at Meadowdale
High School. "There was no
theater department. I was sort of withdrawn and wasn't sure what I wanted
to do. And I was depressed
a lot of the time. In retrospect, I think it was basically disillusionment
of life."
The winding path that led Nichols to becoming an actor is as fascinating
as the man himself. Before Stephen
Nichols could become the successful artist and man he is today, he first
had to ddefine who Stephen Nichols
was. He did that through a development of the spiritual side. It began when
he learned transcendental
meditation. Then a friend, living in Los Angeles, told him about the Self
Realization Fellowship and sent him a
copy of his inspirational tome, "Autobiography of a Yogi" by Paramahansa
Yogananda, founder of SRF. In
1971, so moved by this spiritual self awakening, Nichols went to LA and visited
the Fellowship temple. It
changed his life. "When I walked through that archway, I felt like I was
lifted off the ground,and for two
weeks I was actually floating. I knew this was the end of my depression."
It was also a settling factor in his life. A short time later, while attending
Los Angeles City College, Stephen
began taking acting courses at a friend's suggestion. I said, 'why not-I'm
not doing anything else.' " During
class one day, performing a scene from the Tennessee Williams classic, A
Streetcar Named Desire, Nichols
experienced another epiphany, nearly as intense-sounding as his spiritual
awakening. "I felt such an exhilarating
feeling of an exchange between myself and the audience, it just clicked.
It was at that moment that I realized
I was doing exactly what I should do..."
After acting in local theatre productions, doing bit parts on nighttime
television, a few roles in low budget
features, and day player work on Days of our Lives, Nichols was offerred
the role of Patch. At the time of the
offer, Stephen was about to begin filming "Witchboard" and he nearly missed
the chance to play Patch. "I really
didn't think I was coming back to Days of our Lives, but when the movie was
over, they called and signed me
for two years."
Thus began the creation of Steven Earl Johnson. "I played him vulnerable..."
Nichols reveals, drawing you into
his memories of that time. "When he was alone you could see how he felt about
his friend Bo and the jealousy
of Bo having this nice wife, and here he is a one-eyed bum who doesn't have
anything. They picked up on it
and started writing a story around it. And I've got a whole family now-I've
got a mother, and sister, and brother
and best friend from the orphanage. That's how they do it," he grins.
It would seem then that the Days staff is rather responsive to their actors. Stephen agrees.
"Yeah, they're pretty much open. They trust the actors. They know they don't
have anything without their
creativity. The ideas that they write have to be fleshed out and it takes
a good actor to kind of create
something on his own. That's how a lot of characters on our show were started."
In fact, many bits of business
in the development of Patch were not of the writer's designs, but came from
Nichols himself-like playing the
harmonica. "I brought a couple of harps with me to Miami when we did the
Miami locations two-and-a-half
years ago. I had a scene on the beach with Savannah and I had the harp in
my pocket and I said to Al Rabin,
'Look I have this harmonica and I play it and I think it would be right for
the character.' So I snuck up behind
her and played a couple of riffs and she jumped and they really liked it
so they put that into Patch."
Interestingly, Nichols is now facing an even greater challenge in the role
of Steve/Patch than in those early days
of the part. "They don't know how to write this guy," he says fervently.
"it was a lot easier when he was always
angry and confused and hurt. Now he is supposedly like every other man in
love, and that's not Patch! I mean
Patch has never had a lasting relationship with a woman. He doesn't deal
too well with relationships in a love
situation..."
So how does Patch evolve-what is the process that brings this complicated
character to life every afternoon
on our tv screens. Through a lot of hard work and dedication it would seem.
"Al Rabin and Shelly Curtis, the producers, watch the dress rehearsal, then
we sit down together and work
out what we can cut from the script, what we can change, and what new colors
we can bring into it to make
it Patch," explains Nichols proudly. "Also the relationship of Patch and
Kayla is very new..it's not just all of
a sudden we're living in bliss, you know. So we try to play against what
is written. They're writing him as if
he's a guy who understands the psychology behind all that stuff, and he doesn't.
He's a guy who doesn't
understand it, so we have to add all that ourselves. Even the writers admit
that it's very difficult. But I do
want to say we're all working together to achieve some reality to these
characters. We're in a transition
period."
Considering the blood, sweat and tears that obviously goes into this creative
process, perhaps the most
crucial relationship for an actor like Nichols would be with his on screen
love interest. The two actors would
have to have a special understanding of one another as performers to make
their on screen romance work so
well. Stephen Nichols and Mary Beth Evans, who plays Kayla on Days (sort
of a Guinevere to Nichols'
Lancelot), share that kind of relationship. "She's my best friend there,
at work, and I'm her best friend. So
we have to be careful of that, because what she and I have personally outside
of the cameras is not what
the characters have."
Stephen admits that the out of body incident, experienced by Patch on the
show, gave the character a new
outlook on life and on his future with Kayla. In these segments, Patch lapsed
into a coma during an operation
and his life hung in the balance. His entity rose out of his body and he
saw himself lying on the operating table,
near death. Then another figure appeared before him-a dead ringer for Steve
Johnson, but without the eyepatch,
the self deprecating humor, and the negative feelings about himself. The
alter-ego, called Steven, was the Steve
Johnson of Patch's fantasies--the whole, self assured, and confident man
he longs to be. "He showed me what
the future could bring. He totally believes that he has had this experience,
so this is somewhat of a turning point
for him. He does have hope for the future which he never had before, and
this colors everything he does."
Stephen Nichols also has high hopes for a brighter future, especially based
on his very satisfying and loving present.
He has been together with actress Lisa Nichols for seven years, and married
for almost four.
To Nichols, home and family are vitally important. "My children and my family
are number one in my life. Work
is pretty much secondary, but when I do work, it is everything when I am
doing it. " Stephen Nichols has his life
in perspective-rather than being driven by ambition, he is the driver in
his life. "I believe whatever comes my way
in life is what should be...I believe I'm protected and guided in this life
and I don't have to control situations and
people. I don't have any five year plan like a lot of actors..."
"My goal as an actor is just to keep working. I don't care what medium it's
in really. I do want to do high quality
films."
But Stephen Nichols is also acutely aware of his unique position in daytime
television. He is a man in possession
of a character that has captured the imagination of millions of viewers,
and Nichols does not take the responsibility
of the characterization lightly. "Let's face it, when you do daytime tv,
a lot of it comes out very silly and unrealistic.
But we do have our crystal clear moments of inspiration...I get a lot of
letters from people who seek advice and
help from me, and that's why I'd like to give them this kind of message,"
Nichols states frankly.
In Steve Johnson, audiences have found a character to embrace, and in Stephen
Nichols, an actor to admire.
The mirror reveals two Steves...the actor and the character. Both seemingly
equal to the task of finding their way
to the truth, the essential truth that we're all in this world together.
Stephen Nichols' green eyes stare purposefully
into some point beyond the horizon as he says softly, "The message I'd like
to give is that I believe we're not alone
and that there's help for everyone..." He turns and smiles and you know he
means it.
For both Stephen Nichols and Steven Johnson.
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