These are articles & interviews from different soap websites from 2006: Scorpio rises again on soap opera By JUNE NAYLOR special to the star-telegram While my college pals were swooning over some swaggering Aussie who starred in a movie called Mad Max, I had my own Down-Under crush going on, and I fed it at 2 o'clock every afternoon in front of the TV. His name was Tristan Rogers, and he played Robert Scorpio, former World Security Bureau agent from Australia, and the reigning hunk of General Hospital. In the early 1980s, my heart beat to the rhythms of Scorpio's stormy romance with Holly, the Englishwoman who had been pledged to Luke Spencer, Scorpio's best friend. Luke had been lost in an avalanche so Scorpio married a pregnant Holly to keep her from being deported - oh, never mind. just know it was a great love triangle with lots of longing and angst. He had other romances, including one with a reporter named Jackie Templeton (played by Demi Moore) and an absurd marriage to Anna, his best friend and ex-wife, with whom -- it turns out -- he had fathered a daughter named Robin. Over the years, I'd tape GH during the day and watch it after work, but my interest waned as Scorpio's story lines got too stupid. Or maybe I got a life. Eventually he went missing in an explosion at sea, I was sad to hear, leaving behind his cute little girl. Then two weeks ago, 14 years after Scorpio's demise, I was tickled to see him on the cover of a soap opera magazine in the grocery checkout line! He's not dead! He's coming back to Port Charles! and -- can you believe it? -- so is Holly (played by Emma Samms)! His return is timed to coincide with February sweeps, as is Holly's, although she's coming nearly a month later. He'll have a lot to answer for, and word is that he'll get caught up in the "major health crisis" that has beset Port Charles. First, of course, he has to reconnect with Robin, who is now a doctor and HIV-positive. I had the chance to speak on the phone with Tristan Rogers, the adorable Aussie who will reprise Scorpio with Friday's episode. Impossibly, he is now 59, but just hearing that voice caused my heart to thump so loudly I was afraid he could hear it all the way from his home in Southern California. After our chat, it occurred to me: My friends don't feel this way anymore about that Mad Max guy. I guess it's because soap opera heroes never let you down the way movie stars will. Here's how our conversation went: Q: How exciting you're coming back to GH. You know you will thrill billions of women everywhere (me, shamelessly gushing). A: Thank you. It is exciting. (Ever dignified, ignoring the gushing.) Q: So, if Scorpio died in a boat explosion 14 years ago, how can he return? A: Nobody saw the explosion. Q: But doesn't that make explaining his long absence a challenge? A: It's not a sentimental resolution, and it will be met with mixed feelings. He's had a rather interesting 14 years away that won't sit well with the audience. Q: Will he be accepted again? A: He is what he is. A lot of people will like it, but some won't. Q: How has Scorpio changed? A: He's older, he's more beaten up. He's still smart-mouthed, but a little more abrasive. Q: But there was a real sweetness to Scorpio. What's happened to that? A: It will be submerged for a while. He has to resolve some issues first. Q: How can a character like this be rewoven into the show? A: He was kept active in the story line and his shadow looms over the city, but he has to be reintroduced. There's a whole generation or two that doesn't know who he is. But he's unlike any other character they know. The main thing will be to reestablish some relationships, like the one with Luke. Q: What happens with Scorpio and Holly? A: I know nothing about Holly coming back. We've just shot nine episodes so far. Q: The word is that Scorpio will only be back for six weeks. Any chance that could be extended? A: We'll have to move further into the story and see the reaction. The audience has more control than they realize, and they should use it. If the audience doesn't like something they should make their feelings felt. They can write letters and they can hit that on-off switch on the TV. Q: What's the best story line Scorpio has had? A: When Anna first came onto the show, the back story was a lot of fun. And the San Antonio treasure hunt story line was good, too. Q: What was the worst? A: The marriage of Scorpio and Anna was really inappropriate. Their relationship was totally unique for daytime television. They cared about each other and wanted the best for each other and were good friends. Then suddenly, they're falling in love? It was ridiculous. Q: So why was Scorpio written out of the show? A: It was time for me to check out of the Hospital, and it was my decision. I never looked back. Q: Then why did you, Tristan, decide to come back and why now? A: The timing for this was absolutely appropriate. I'd been approached like clockwork over the years but never paid much attention to it. But when it came up this time, just before Christmas, my manager said 'They seem to be serious this time.' I was ready to do it, and then it moved at the speed of light. Q: Have you missed Scorpio? A: I can't say that I truly missed him, but 12 years is a big chunk of your life, so he did occupy a lot of my time. Q: Was it hard for you to call him up again, and to go back to Port Charles? A: You'd be surprised how easy it is to slip back into it. At first it took some getting used to the system again, but after the fourth day, I felt like I had him again. Q: Do they make you feel welcome, and aren't there some old friends in the cast? A: Oh yeah, there are some old friends there. It's totally comfortable to be back. Of course, with all these young kids on the show, I look like this relic, but I'm trying not to think about that too much. Q: What have you, Tristan, been doing in the meantime? A: I've been involved with plenty of things that have nothing to do with show business, like a motor racing series. I've also been producing music shows, like one coming up soon at the Kodak Theatre with Dionne Warwick . I'm also working on producing several television projects and Internet projects, like streaming, that kind of thing, which I think is the future of entertainment.
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Tristan on Northwest Afternoon: (post from Soapzone) Cindy Reinhart on Northwest Afternoon got Tristan Rogers on the phone and he said the following: He has been busy producing projects in front and behind the camera the last 15yrs as well as being a father. He is only returning for six weeks and they have not yet asked him to stay longer so he did not want to speculate if they might down the road. He sounded a little jaded by show business. He said that Robert is secretly following Luke because of something he has with him. Then he gets caught "sleuthing around" (his words...so cute) and has to explain his 14yr absence. He will be involved with Robin and Luke .... no mention of Mac. Cindy R. also said she will make a cameo on the show in a scene with Tony and Tristan.
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From SOD/SOW website Feb 9, 2006: GH Interviews Tristan Rogers: Unscripted After 14 years away from Port Charles, GENERAL HOSPITAL's Tristan Rogers (Robert) is ready to get back in the daytime game — and, with the help of old pal Anthony Geary (Luke), go a little bit off the script. Barely a few days into his on-screen return — but weeks into production — the veteran admits, "So far, yes, I've done quite a bit of intensive ad-libbing. "It's not that I actually add anything," Rogers is quick to assure. "I don't change the meaning, but I change the way that it might be said to a way that Robert might say something. "Sometimes he says something with an edge,” continues Rogers. “It's something that I tend to do automatically; it's something that takes over in my head and I do it.” Not only does Rogers share a brain with Robert, he also shares ideas with partner-in-ad-libbing-crime Geary. "Tony will say, 'What do you want to do here?' and I'll say, 'Well, we started out on this path so let's stay on this path.' Just like in classic capers like the Ice Princess, 'We make it happen.'" Although viewers haven't truly gotten to see Robert and Luke at their bantering best, Rogers promises, "There's some stuff coming up where we have a chance to mess with things a bit. "I'll always look for the entertainment value in a scene," says the actor. "I'm not trying to get across a message. I want to entertain people." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From ABC Soaps Email : Feb 17, 2006: Re-Introducing... Emma Samms (Holly Scorpio, GH) She made her debut as Holly Sutton on GH in 1982. Holly was originally involved with Luke but married Robert and fell in love with him when Luke was presumed dead. She co-founded the Starlight Children's Foundation as a tribute to her brother. She made waves on Dynasty when she became Fallon Carrington number two. She was born and raised in England where she also works as a screenwriter. She recently starred in the show, Doctors for the BBC. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Entertainment Weekly Feb 2006: In the issue with Steve Carell on the cover, in the TV what to Watch Section: After 13 years, Emma Samms returns to Port Charles as Holly Scorpio. She's just in time for GH's 11,000th episode (which means ABC's longest running drama has had nearly 43 years of love triangles, baby mysteries, and the occasional hospital visit.) Samms so loved getting back to her "con-artist roots," working with Luke Spencer (Anthony Geary) and visiting veteran Robert Scorpio (Tristan Rogers), that she threatens to "come back, cause some trouble, and leave again." Don't tease us, lady. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Interview with Dallas TV station Feb 17, 2006: (this was a videoclip interview, transcript typed up be me!) Gary Coghill: well in the 1980s, ABC’s General Hospital was among the most popular shows on television, day or night. That largely in part to the Spencers & the Scorpios. They ruled Port Charles, fans couldn’t get enough. This month Robert Scorpio is making his return and we’re excited to talk to actor Tristan Rodgers this morning on satellite about, well, we can’t say a new role, it’s a new role but the same character. Good morning Tristan, it’s nice to see you on the satellite today TR: pleasure to be here GC: alright, lets’ talk about this role a little bit. What’s it like a little bit, take me back, whats’ it like to walk back on the set again and actually play the character again? TR: uh, a bit traumatic the first day GC: In what way? TR: Um, it was the same, but it was different. Uh you know, The studio was the same, but um there was a difference, a different feel. GC: Is there a comfortable feel to it or not a comfortable feel? TR: Well it took about 48 hrs, I was back in the zone again, but it did take like 40 hrs, 48 hrs… GC: You know there are a lot of actors returning. Is it starting to feel like old times, or am I reading into this? TR: Um, there’s a method to what they’re doing, I think it’s uh, um a reevaluation of what we did back in the 80s and seeing whether some of that can work now. GC: Your wife Holly has also returned in her part. How did ABC pull all this off? TR: Its amazing, it was kept quiet, right up until the last minute, and then it just kinda happened… GC: Before we talk about your new stuff, I wanna go back to GH back in the 80s. It was the #1 show and on the covers of magazines. I was hooked all summer when I was unemployed. Can you take me back on how that felt back then and was it like breathing, were you aware of how popular the show was, did people leave you alone? TR: You were very aware, I mean, you were aware that you were, you know a phenemon, it was a revolutionary approach to soap, and it stayed that way for a long time, but we also crashed & burnt pretty quick, I mean after 81 it was over, took a long time, it tapered right off but there was a, how can I put it, a whole string of things that made the show popular, not many people realize that. And when that string was broken it kind of all started a fragment. GC: Do you think it happened because of writing, or conflict on set, what happened? TR: Well I think the most noticeable thing that happened was Genie Francis leaving and then what you didn’t notice is that there was a whole string of production people behind the scenes who also left to go off & pursue with other networks, and when that chain was broken it fell apart. GC: Now let’s talk about Robert this time, what’s his reason for returning, what do they say, where has he been? TR: Uh this is a tough one, basically they realize that you can’t justify 15 years of disappearance, so they haven’t tried. And you know, he went off & he did what he did. And basically he’s saying live with it, so a lot of people aren’t going to be too happy with that. GC: Now, Tristan can you reveal whether this is a long stay or not? TR: I’ve been asked to return although today is my last filming day in this storyline, I have been asked to come back, so they’re probably trying to work something out in terms of what’s going to bring me back. GC: Let me play producer; I say to you today ‘why don’t you stay on for a year what would you say to that?’ TR: They’ve already said that, it’s already been asked. GC: And your answer? TR: I said yeah let’s do it. It’s been very comfortable here. I’ve had a wonderful time, reassociating myself with a lot of people I used to work with, a lot of the new people. It’s been great. GC: Now one thing about this storyline, anything you can tell us in this storyline about your character? TR: Uh, what can I say without giving anything away. GC: Nothing really TR: He saves the day! GC: He saves the day… TR: That’s about as far as I can go GC: One last question. As an actor, is this a good time for you? Is this a time where doing the show fills you up, makes you happy as an actor? TR: Oh absolutely, um I mean alot of those rumors about all the adlibbing were true and remain true today, so you’ll see some stuff with myself & Tony that is us. It’s just like a total return to that era, the 80s era GC: Well a lot of fans out there, not only watching this & anticipating, but enjoying you in the moment, thank you very much! TR: Thank you very much for your time. GC: You can catch TR on GH at weekdays at 2pm right here on ch 8 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Soapnet.com March 2006: Taken from: http://soapnet.go.com/behindthescenes/starinterviews/columns/2006/interview_EmmaSamms.html Re-Introducing...Emma Samms (Holly Sutton Scorpio, GH) Kat: Meanwhile, can I start by saying that you look fantastic! I wish everyone could see right now how beautiful you look. Emma: Thank you, thank you so much. Kat: How has it been being back on the GH set so far? Emma: It's spectacular to be back. You should see me having reunions with some crew members who were here when I started twenty-five years ago. It feels like coming home. Everyone has been so nice and so welcoming. Even Tristan [Rogers, Robert]. (laughs) Kat: Have you seen him [Tristan] in the years since you've been away? Emma: No. I could never seem to catch hold of him so I haven't seen him for a very long time. I've talked to Tony [Geary, Luke] a little bit, though. Kat: What made you want to come back? Emma: They asked! They asked and I couldn't think of anything I'd rather do. I spend my time now pretty much entirely raising my kids who are seven and nine. We live in England. I did a bit of work for the BBC and I did a movie with Wesley Snipes last year. I did a miniseries for Hallmark. But I only do the short jobs that won't take me away from my kids for too long. Which is sometimes a bit tricky but I love the job of looking after my children. So, this was the ideal job for me because it's short and it's with people whom I know and love. Kat: How do you think Holly has changed in all these years? Emma: She's definitely changed and has gone through some life-changing experiences. You're going to see a different side of her. Kat: Have you ever thought of returning to daytime full time? Emma: Not whilst I'm raising my kids because that wouldn't be compatible to my life. It's a big job and a big responsibility to work in daytime. But an even bigger job is taking care of the children and to have those two things pulling at each other would be unfair to both. Kat: That makes complete sense. What's your fondest memory from your time on GH? Emma: There are so many. We really did some fun location things where we went to San Antonio, Texas, we went to Victoria in British Columbia. But I'd say the fondest memory is the routine of it all. Coming to the same place every day, being in the same dressing room, knowing who you're working with, hanging out with all the lovely people behind the camera as well as those in front of the camera, just the feeling of belonging to such a lovely, lovely, group of people. Kat: Did the memories come flooding back the moment you walked onto the stage? Emma: Absolutely. But in a way, they never left. It's a big part of my life that I did this show. And I'm not allowed to forget it because every time I come back to the states as many people recognize me as Holly as they do from my time playing Fallon on Dynasty. Kat: Is it the same sort of fan base for the shows? Emma: Yes and no. GH is specific to the United States whereas Dynasty has been seen around the world so it has a broader fan base. But in the states, it's definitely more, "Holly, Holly!" I brought my kids here in August and they were shocked how many people were calling me Holly. They were like, why are people calling you that? Kat: They don't know about the show? Emma: I had to tell them all about it. But they were more impressed that we didn't have to wait in any lines. They liked that a lot. (laughs) Kat: This is a wonderful thing that you've been able to come back even for a short time and I know the fans are excited. Emma: Really? Do you think so? Kat: They love Holly. Everyone has been talking about the return to the good old days of GH. Emma: To me the ideal thing would be if they brought me back every now and again. So, I'm hoping they'll consider that. But for now, I'm here long enough to cause some trouble for Robert and Luke and that will definitely be fun. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Catch-up with Tristan Rogers (Robert Scorpio, GH) Taken from: http://soapnet.go.com/behindthescenes/starinterviews/columns/2006/interview_TristanRogers_page2.html I attended the taping of General Hospital's 10,000th episode which is in and of itself a landmark event but what made it even more special was seeing the fabulous, charming and intelligent Tristan Rogers. And no, he didn't pay me to say that. Spend five minutes with the man and you'll see what I mean! Kat: You look great. I saw Emma (Samms, Holly) earlier and she looks fantastic as well. Do you guys have some secret to being gone for years and coming back fabulous? Tristan: Well, thank you. It's all eating right, getting exercise, having a few martinis a day. Kat: I think it's the martinis! How is it being back? Exciting? Scary? Tristan: It was a bit traumatic for the first week. Not so much from an unfamiliarity in the surroundings but from the way business is done now. Kat: Because it's changed so much? Tristan: Oh, it's changed tremendously. The show is put together in a different way. There's more work done in less time. Kat: Was it overwhelming? Tristan: No. I still knew the format but it took me about three days to get back into the zone and then I was fine. And now I can really understand where we're going. I couldn't at first. Kat: Well, it was still all so nebulous in terms of story. Tristan: And Port Charles is sort of a darker place now, too. They aren't a happy bunch of people in town. Kat: Things have definitely changed with all the mob involvement. How do you think Robert has changed in the years since we thought he was dead and found out he wasn't? I'm still waiting for a good explanation of that, by the way. Tristan: Well. (laughing) He's now a deadbeat dad, which is fine, I can deal with that. Robert certainly isn't the paragon of virtue that he was. They're bringing out other sides of him which the audience may wiggle their brows over and think, what is that all about? The one thing I think that is very important to get across to the audience is that just because myself, and Emma, and Rick, and whomever else they bring back from that era of the 80s, that this is not heralding a return to those days. I think it would be a false signal for people to be told that. The show is what the show is and we have been integrated given our backgrounds and all the character that is behind these relics from the 80s but it's not a return to those values. But I'm kind of getting the feeling from the emails and a lot of the brouhaha that's starting to form out there now, that a large body of people are thinking that's going to happen. Kat: I think they are feeling that and it's only natural. I think the minute people heard the old guard was returning that they were excited about it. For a lot of people, those days were when the show had reached its zenith. Tristan: I don't think you can go back, though. It's not even a good idea to go back. So the show has evolved to this point now and how we're assimilated into it really comes down to how we play out the situations that the writers give us. There's no question that they're going to be different. Kat: That is more interesting, though. Having been gone for so long you have the opportunity to come in and be whomever you want. There's a whole group of the audience who doesn't know who you are at all. Tristan: That's true. And he is different. That will be a good thing. I'm hoping that the public, in their rush to embrace what was, don't get disappointed when they discover what is. Kat: I don't think they will. I think they're rolling with it. Tristan: I think that a significant window of opportunity is going to open in the show and I'm just hoping that they make use of that window. Because when it slams shut again I don't think it's going to open that easily. Kat: What's your fondest memory from back then? Tristan: I think the very early times when I first started because 1981 was such a hotbed of creativity. Gloria [Monty, GH's former executive producer] allowed a select little group -of which I was one - to reinterpret things and allowed us to run free with the story. It was that craziness and nuttiness back then that really contributed to making the show the phenomenon that it turned into. You look back at it and you think, well that was very undisciplined. You took the script and it was just a general idea of what should happen. A lot of people say that's extremely unprofessional in terms of the way actors respond to the show. I counter by saying, talk to all the writers who got Emmys during that period and see whether they agree with you. But all of that aside, it was just a different time. It was charged with energy and creativity and the ratings surged up every week. There was a party all the time. And then within a very short period of time, it was over. Kat: Like all the best parties. Tristan: We crashed and burned pretty quick. Nobody ever sat down and did a post-mortem on that to say, what happened? Why did it all disappear? I figured it out a few years ago but it took a while. And I could never have done it if I'd still been on the show. I was too close to it. Kat: What was it? Tristan: It was a really complex situation. It wasn't one thing; it was many things. At the end of '81, after the marriage, everything started to splinter. They were going to put the marriage off but it just would have postponed the inevitable. And what happened after that was Genie Francis (ex-Laura) left and Tony (Geary, Luke) made noises about going somewhere else and then the most significant part of it was that a large percentage of the production team went to pursue other things and other channels. The chain was broken and it was broken at many levels. To understand the significance of that, you've got to look at how the show was originally put together. Gloria had gathered a bunch of people who had an uncanny ability to interpret her whimsical ways – and they were whimsical. She didn't talk with her mouth sometimes. It was more—(he makes wild gestures) This hand language. So, if you couldn't get that, you didn't last long around here. But the planets kind of lined up and this really savvy group of people would interpret these things, get them on paper and into production and hand them to the actors. And the actors would go, oh yeah, I get this and away we'd go. On the side of the actors, we were much more personality driven back then. Every actor had his own personality that was allowed to shine through. We had Rick (Springfield, Noah), we had Doug Sheehan (ex-Joe), we had Sam Behrens (ex-Jake), a whole bunch of fantastic women. The show had class and lots and lots of style. All that started to dissipate at the end of '81 and never really came back. If you look at the show after that, they started to put it together in a different way because I don't think anyone understood the way Gloria did things. I'm sure today if you asked her what story structure she employed back then she'd say, 'I don't know.' Kat: While waving her hands. Tristan: Indeed. There was a unique formula to it that nobody in daytime could copy. They tried to. They figured that General Hospital was all about Luke and Laura so they all got in their Luke and Laura-esque couples and put them in similar storylines but it didn't work. They couldn't even come close to our ratings. But it was a lot more than that – it was what was going on in the production offices. It was unlike anyone else because it had a signature to it. Nobody could understand then and everybody has forgotten it now. Kat: I obviously wasn't working back then so I don't take the notice that I do now but I remember enough to know that it is a very different show today. I don't know that all changes are for the better. Tristan: Well, GH back in the early 80s was revolutionary. Now, it's become evolutionary. It's kind of lined up behind what everyone else is doing and I think that's sad. Kat: Definitely. Did you keep in touch with people while you were gone? Tristan: Not really. When I left, I left body and soul. Kat: And what did you do? I mean, I know some of the acting things you did but what did you do that mattered to you as much? Tristan: A show I put together on motor racing that I moved around the country and researched for a year and a half on the road. I figured it all out, got the money for it and the resources. I managed to attract Larry Gelbart (writer/developer of M*A*S*H) and then we sold it to Showtime, which wasn't our goal. Then I moved to Canada for a year and that was my first experience behind the scenes as a production person. It was an interesting time and it was my baptism by fire. Kat: So, you kept things interesting. Tristan: I certainly tried. But it is good to be back here and I'm thankful for the experience. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ GENERAL HOSPITAL Interview Soap Opera Weekly Online Link: http://soapoperadigest.com/features/gh/interviews/sammsmixedbag/ Emma Samms' Mixed Medical Bag Creative jack-of-all-trades Emma Samms reveals that while GENERAL HOSPITAL's Holly is out for now, a little doctoring is always in. By Robert Schork Soap Opera Weekly: One of the projects you've done in England is a series called DOCTORS. How does that compare to GH? Is it more of an ER-type show? Emma Samms: It's not based around a hospital, it's based on the general practice of doctors. It was the closest I've come to doing GENERAL HOSPITAL since [I left] — in as much as that the routine was fairly punishing and it's an ongoing drama. I really enjoyed doing that. Obviously to work for the BBC is a huge privilege, and the standard of work that they put out is almost always very, very good. Weekly: Many people do not know that you are also a screenwriter. Have you written anything with a medical slant? Samms: No, not really. There was one slight thread I did in one storyline of one script, but basically I haven't set any in a medical genre because there's so many of those around. I've tried to find a more unique genre setting than that. Weekly: You also do quite a bit of voice-over work now. Is it liberating, since you can just show up and you don't have to worry about how you look? Samms: It's very liberating. Any kind of hang-ups that you have as an actor — which, of course, we all have many — just disperse. You know you have nobody really watching, so you can just be free. Weekly: Is it true that you once worked as an emergency medical technician in Los Angeles? Samms: I didn't actually work as one, but I trained as one and I got the qualifications. Oh, I loved it. I thought it was absolutely fascinating — and I've used it. You're just so thankful that you've got that training. It should be a high school requirement, because it's not that complicated and yet you can save lives with it. I found it absolutely fascinating. Of course, it gives you such respect for the people who do it day in, day out. Back to the 2006 Emma/Tristan Page 1
Back to the 2006 Emma/Tristan Page 2