While actors young enough to be her grandchildren come and go on television,
soap opera veteran Helen Wagner has earned a place in the Guinness World Records
by playing one role for 50 years.
![Actress Helen Wagner (R) who portrays the character Nancy Hughes on the daytime drama series 'As The World Turns' is shown with actor Don MacLaughlin who portrays Chris Hughes on the show in this March 20, 1956 publicity photograph. Wagner, 87, has earned a place in the Guinness Book of World Records by playing one role for 50 years. [Reuters]](xin_3203033106304782371011.jpg) Actress Helen Wagner (R) who portrays the
character Nancy Hughes on the daytime drama series 'As The World Turns' is
shown with actor Don MacLaughlin who portrays Chris Hughes on the show in
this March 20, 1956 publicity photograph. Wagner, 87, has earned a place
in the Guinness Book of World Records by playing one role for 50 years.
[Reuters] |
The 87-year-old actress says the
secret to her longevity as matriarch Nancy Hughes on the CBS daytime drama "As
the World Turns" is simple.
"They kept offering me a contract, so I kept doing it. And they kept writing
things for me, so I kept saying them," Wagner recounted in a recent interview.
"I didn't think about leaving or not leaving."
Years after James Arness of "Gunsmoke" and Kelsey Grammer of "Frasier"
retired from their respective record-tying 20-year roles in prime time, Wagner
still reigns supreme as the longest-running character on any TV show played by a
single actor.
She has portrayed the kindly but plain-spoken Nancy Hughes since "As the
World Turns" debuted on April 2, 1956, and even uttered the show's very first
line of dialogue (spoken to her TV husband): "Good morning dear, what would you
like for breakfast?"
As the sole original cast member on the series, Wagner and her alter ego have
witnessed more than their share of tragedy and star-crossed romance, sibling
rivalries, marital infidelity and treachery. Nancy has grieved the deaths of her
beloved TV daughter and first husband, remarried and endured the gradual fading
of her second spouse due to Alzheimer' disease.
HISTORIC BROADCAST
Spanning the tenures of 10 U.S. presidents dating back to Dwight Eisenhower,
Wagner's stint on "As the World Turns" also includes a unique real-life
historical footnote.
It was a scene with co-star Santos Ortega (Grandpa Hughes) that was
interrupted by the first CBS News bulletins reporting the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. The cast, which performed live
in those days, initially continued on with the show, unaware of the tragedy
unfolding in Dallas or that their program was being cut short.
"When Santos and I got off the set, having finished our scene, we came to the
door, and Charlie Paul, who was playing the organ, said, 'JFK was shot.' And
that's the first we had heard of it."