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词条 Agnes Nixon
释义

  1. Career

     Early years  One Life to Live  All My Children   Loving/The City   On-screen appearances 

  2. Personal life and death

  3. Head writer tenures

  4. Executive producer tenures

  5. Awards and recognition

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2013}}{{Infobox person
| image = Agnes Nixon 2010 Daytime Emmy Awards 1.jpg
| caption = Nixon at the 2010 Daytime Emmy Awards
| name = Agnes Nixon
| birth_name = Agnes Eckhardt
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1922|12|10}}
| birth_place = Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
| death_date = {{nowrap|{{Death date and age|2016|09|28|1922|12|10}}}}
| death_place =Haverford, Pennsylvania, U.S.
| occupation = Actress, writer, producer
| years_active= 1948–2012
| spouse = {{marriage|Robert Henry Adolphus Nixon|April 6, 1951|November 22, 1996|end=d.}}
| children = 4 (including Robert Nixon)
| website = {{official website|http://www.agnesnixon.com}}
}}Agnes Nixon (née Eckhardt; December 10, 1922 – September 28, 2016) was an American television writer and producer. She is best known as the creator of the soap operas One Life to Live, All My Children, and Loving.[1]

Nixon's work as producer and writer introduced a number of new storylines to American daytime television – the first health-related storyline, the first storyline related to the Vietnam War, the first on-screen lesbian kiss and the first on-screen abortion.[2][3][4] She won five Writers' Guild of America Awards, five Daytime Emmy Awards, and in 2010 received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.[1] Nixon was often referred to as the "Queen" of the modern American soap opera.[2][3]

Career

Early years

Nixon was born Agnes Eckhardt on December 10, 1922,[4][5] in Chicago, Illinois,[6] the daughter of Agnes Patricia (née Dalton) and Harry Joseph Eckhardt.[7] She attended Northwestern University, where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. She began her career in soaps working for Irna Phillips. Under her tutelage, Nixon was a writer on Woman in White and As the World Turns, and was head writer for Search for Tomorrow, Guiding Light, and Another World.[2]

During her time on Guiding Light, Nixon is believed to have written the first health-related storyline on a daytime soap opera.[8] A friend of Nixon's had died from cervical cancer, and Nixon wanted to do something to educate women about getting a pap smear. She wrote it into Guiding Light by having the lead character, Bert Bauer, experience a cancer scare. The storyline aired in 1962. In 2002, she was the inaugural recipient of the Pioneer for Health Award from Sentinel for Health for her work on the episode.[8]

One Life to Live

By the mid-1960s, Nixon had created a blueprint for what would become All My Children. ABC executives passed on the program, due to contractual issues with sponsor Lever Brothers, who sponsored a program that All My Children would replace in its time slot. Consequently, they asked her to create a show that would reflect a more "contemporary" tone; that creation was One Life to Live. Nixon, "tired of the restraints imposed by the WASPy, non-controversial nature of daytime drama", presented the network with a startlingly original premise and cast of characters. Although the show was built along the classic soap formula of a rich family (the Lords) and a poor family (the Woleks), One Life to Live emphasized the ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the people of Llanview, Pennsylvania, a fictional Main Line suburb of Philadelphia."[9]

Premiering in 1968, One Life to Live reflected changing social structures and attitudes. The first few years of the show were rich in issue stories and characters including a Jewish character (Dave Siegel), an Irish American family (the Rileys), and some of the first African American leading roles in soap operas with Sadie Gray (Lillian Hayman), Carla Gray (Ellen Holly) and Ed Hall (Al Freeman Jr.). Carla's story, for example, had her develop from a character who was passing as white to one who embodied black pride, with white and black lovers along the way, to antagonize racists.[10] One Life to Live has been called "the most peculiarly American of soap operas: the first serial to present a vast array of ethnic types, broad comic situations, a constant emphasis on social issues, and strong male characters."[11]

All My Children

With the success of One Life to Live, Nixon was given the greenlight for All My Children, which began as a half-hour soap opera in 1970. The show was successful from its beginning, combining its study of social clashes with acting talent including Ruth Warrick (Phoebe Tyler) and Rosemary Prinz (Amy Tyler). Nixon helmed the writing team for over a decade, until 1983,[12] and again introduced many social issues into storylines, including the Vietnam War, the anti-war movement, homosexuality, the AIDS epidemic, and American television's first onscreen abortion.[13][14][15]

All My Children was a half-hour show for the first seven years of its run, and virtually no recordings of those episodes survive; ABC erased the tapes of those early episodes so the reels could be reused. When ABC went to Nixon and said that they wanted her to expand the show to an hour in 1975, she resisted due to her own creative/quality concerns but later agreed under the condition that the tapes of the show would be archived and preserved by the network. Episodes began to be saved in 1976, and All My Children expanded to an hour on April 25, 1977.[16]

In 1992, ABC executives decided that All My Children needed new blood and promoted a Nixon protégé, Megan McTavish, to the position of head writer. Nixon continued to be involved with the show, but wanted to take a step back from the grueling day-to-day task of being a head writer. McTavish made some important changes by re-writing major storylines and was dismissed in early 1995. Lorraine Broderick returned as head writer, working alongside Nixon to return the show to its socially relevant, character-driven roots. Broderick and Nixon went on to accept three consecutive Daytime Emmy awards for Outstanding Writing Team. Still, in late 1997, ABC abruptly decided to bring back McTavish. This move led to Nixon's electing to step back from her story consulting role.[16]

In early 1999, McTavish was dismissed for the second time and Nixon was again asked to take over the headwriting reins at All My Children. Nixon again wove social issues into the show, by having a major character "come out". In 2000, Erica's daughter, Bianca Montgomery (Eden Riegel), returned to Pine Valley and came out as a lesbian to her mother and to all of Pine Valley. [17] This storyline led to All My Children{{'}}s winning a casting Artios award, a GLAAD Media Award,[18] and a nomination for a Daytime Emmy for Best Drama Series.

Loving/The City

In 1983, Nixon began another series called Loving,[19] which she co-created with Douglas Marland.[1] The half-hour program debuted on ABC in June of that year and was set in the fictional town of Corinth, Pennsylvania. Loving struggled to gain a foothold in a crowded daytime schedule and ended its run in 1995. Nixon was given co-creator credit for Loving's continuation series, The City.[19] The show was cancelled in 1997 due to low ratings.

On-screen appearances

Nixon appeared in her shows on a number of occasions. In both All My Children and One Life to Live she played the character Agnes Eckhardt. She also played the characters Aggie on All My Children and Agnes Dixon on One Life to Live.[1]

Personal life and death

She was married to Robert Henry Adolphus Nixon from April 6, 1951, until his death in 1996, and had four children. Nixon died in Haverford, Pennsylvania, on September 28, 2016, at age 93.[1][5] The New York Times reported the cause of death to be "pneumonia resulting from Parkinson's disease".[20]

Nixon's memoirs, published in 2017, was titled "My Life to Live: How I Became the Queen of Soaps When Men ruled the Airwaves" ({{ISBN|978-0-451-49823-6}}).[21]

Head writer tenures

{{S-start}}{{Succession box | before=none | title=Head writer of Search for Tomorrow
(with Irving Vendig)| years=September 3, 1951–1956 | after=Charles Gussman}}{{Succession box | before=Irna Phillips | title=Head writer of Guiding Light | years=1958–1966 | after=David Lesan
Julian Funt}}{{Succession box | before=James Lipton | title=Head writer of Another World | years=November 1965 — February 1969 | after=Robert Cenedella}}{{Succession box | before=none | title=Head writer of One Life to Live
(with Paul Roberts: July 1968 — July 1972)
(with Don Wallace: July 1968 — July 1972)
(with Gordon Russell: August 1972 — September 1973) | years=July 15, 1968 — September 1973 | after=Gordon Russell}}{{Succession box | before=none | title=Head writer of All My Children
(with Wisner Washam: 1981 — 1982) | years=January 5, 1970 — 1982 | after=Wisner Washam}}{{Succession box | before=Douglas Marland | title=Head writer of Loving | years=June 1985 — October 1987 | after=Ralph Ellis}}{{Succession box | before=Margaret DePriest | title=Head writer of All My Children | years=November 1989 — May 1992 | after=Megan McTavish}}{{Succession box | before=Millee Taggart | title=Head writer of Loving | years=Fall 1993 — Fall 1994 | after=Addie Walsh
Laurie McCarthy}}{{Succession box | before=Megan McTavish | title=Interim Head writer of All My Children | years=April — June 1995| after=Lorraine Broderick}}{{Succession box | before=Megan McTavish | title=Head writer of All My Children
(with Elizabeth Page: May — November 1999)
(with Jean Passanante: June 1999 — January 2001) | years=May 1999 – January 2001 | after=Jean Passanante}}{{S-end}}

Executive producer tenures

{{S-start}}{{Succession box | before=none | title=Executive producer of All My Children
(with Bud Kloss: 1970 – 1978)
(with Jorn Winther: 1978 – 1982) | years= January 5, 1970 – 1982 | after=Jacqueline Babbin}}{{S-end}}

Awards and recognition

  • In 1973 she was nominated for a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Program Achievement in Daytime Drama for One Life to Live[22][23]
  • In 1977 Nixon won Outstanding Achievement in the World of Daytime Drama at the Soapy Awards.[36]
  • She received the Trustees Award for Continued Excellence from the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in 1981.[24]
  • In 1985, Nixon won a Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series for All My Children.[36]
  • In 1988, 1996, 1997 and 1998, Nixon's All My Children writing team won Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team at the Daytime Emmys.[1][36] The team was nominated for the award on a further 12 occasions (1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2010 and 2012).[25]
  • In 1992, she was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame.[26]
  • In 1994, she was inducted into the Soap Opera Hall of Fame; she was the first female writer to be inducted into this hall.[27]
  • In 1996, Nixon won the Editor's Choice Award at the Soap Opera Digest Awards.[25]
  • Nixon won Writers Guild of America Awards for Best Written Daytime Serial in 1997,1999, 2001, 2002 and 2004.[28] She was also nominated for the award on a further seven occasions.[25]
  • Nixon received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences during the ceremonies of the 37th annual Daytime Emmy Awards in June 2010.[29]

References

1. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/25/us/agnes-nixon-fast-facts/index.html|title=Agnes Nixon Fast Facts - CNN.com|last=Library|first=C. N. N.|website=CNN|access-date=2016-10-01}}
2. ^{{cite web|title=NIXON, AGNES: U.S. Writer-Producer|publisher=museum.tv|accessdate=August 16, 2007|url=http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/N/htmlN/nixonagnes/nixonagnes.htm| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070713081129/http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/N/htmlN/nixonagnes/nixonagnes.htm|archivedate=July 13, 2007|deadurl=no}}
3. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.ew.com/article/2016/09/28/all-my-children-creator-agnes-nixon-dead|title=Agnes Nixon, Creator of 'All My Children, Dies at 88|access-date=2016-09-28}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/catalog/inu-ead-nua-archon-1544|title=Agnes Nixon Papers, 1941–2013|publisher=}}
5. ^Agnes Nixon Obituary
6. ^Archive of American Television/{{YouTube|AES7lBl1eyY|Official page – Agnes Nixon – Archive Interview, Part 1 of 5}}
7. ^Profile, filmreference.com; accessed August 27, 2015.
8. ^{{Cite web|url=https://hollywoodhealthandsociety.org/events/third-annual-sentinel-health-award-daytime-drama-2002|title=Third Annual Sentinel for Health Award for Daytime Drama (2002) {{!}} Hollywood Health & Society|website=hollywoodhealthandsociety.org|access-date=2016-10-01}}
9. ^{{cite book |authorlink=Christopher Schemering |last=Schemering |first=Christopher |title=The Soap Opera Encyclopedia |date=September 1985 |pages=158–159 |isbn=0-345-32459-5}}
10. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.thewrap.com/agnes-nixon-all-my-children-creator-dies-at-88/|title=Agnes Nixon, 'All My Children' Creator, Dies at 88|date=September 28, 2016|language=en-US|access-date=2016-10-01}}
11. ^The Soap Opera Encyclopedia, pg. 158.
12. ^{{official website|http://www.agnesnixon.com}}
13. ^{{cite web|first=Jennifer|last=Lenhart|title=The Last Taboo|publisher=Soap Opera Digest|accessdate=July 4, 2007|url=http://www.soapoperadigest.com/features/special/lasttaboo|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071226102140/http://www.soapoperadigest.com/features/special/lasttaboo|archivedate=December 26, 2007}}
14. ^Gary Warner, All My Children: The Complete Family Scrapbook; {{ISBN|1-881649-45-8}}.
15. ^Simon, p. 148.
16. ^Nixon profile, museum.tv; accessed August 27, 2015.
17. ^{{cite news|first=Karman |last=Kregloe |url=http://www.afterelton.com/archive/elton/TV/2006/3/soaps3.html |title=Soaps Come Clean About Gay Teens (page 3) |publisher=AfterElton.com |date=March 23, 2006 |accessdate=August 9, 2007 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070611155124/http://www.afterelton.com/archive/elton/TV/2006/3/soaps3.html |archivedate=June 11, 2007 }}
18. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.soapcentral.com/amc/news/2001/0302-gayawards.php|title=AMC's Bianca Storyline Applauded|publisher=SoapCentral|accessdate=October 4, 2007|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071105041711/http://www.soapcentral.com/amc/news/2001/0302-gayawards.php|archivedate= November 5, 2007|deadurl=no}}
19. ^{{Cite web|url=http://tvline.com/2016/09/28/agnes-nixon-dead-all-my-children-creator-one-life-to-live-soaps-died/|title=Agnes Nixon, Creator of All My Children and One Life to Live, Dead at 88|last=Roots|first=Kimberly|last2=Roots|first2=Kimberly|date=September 28, 2016|website=TVLine|access-date=2016-09-29}}
20. ^{{cite web|title=Agnes Nixon, Who Infused Her Soap Operas with Social Relevance, Dies at 93|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/29/arts/television/agnes-nixon-who-injected-social-ills-into-soap-operas-dies-at-93.html|date=September 28, 2016|author-last=McFadden|author-first=Robert D.|website=NYTimes.com|access-date=October 2, 2016}}
21. ^Philadelphia Inquirer
22. ^Primetime Emmy nomination, emmys.com; accessed August 27, 2015.
23. ^{{emmytvlegends name|agnes-nixon}}
24. ^{{Cite web|url=http://emmyonline.com/trusteesaward|title=The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences|website=emmyonline.com|access-date=2016-09-29}}
25. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0633202/awards|title=Agnes Nixon|website=IMDb|access-date=2016-10-01}}
26. ^{{Cite web|url=http://emmytvlegends.org/television-academy-hall-of-fame|title=Television Academy Hall of Fame {{!}} Archive of American Television|website=emmytvlegends.org|access-date=2016-09-29}}
27. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/25/us/agnes-nixon-fast-facts/index.html|title=Agnes Nixon Fast Facts - CNN.com|last=Library|first=C. N. N.|website=CNN|access-date=2016-09-29}}
28. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/people/2016/09/28/all-my-children-creator-agnes-nixon-dies-at-93/91244066/|title='All My Children' creator Agnes Nixon dies at 93|access-date=2016-09-29}}
29. ^Roger Newcomb. NOMINATIONS: 37th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards, welovesoaps.net, May 12, 2010; retrieved 2010-05-12.

External links

  • Agnes Nixon Confirms David Canary's Departure From AMC
  • Nixon profile
  • {{emmytvlegends name|agnes-nixon}}
{{s-start}}{{succession box | before = Regis Philbin | title = Recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Daytime Emmy Awards | years = 2010 | after = Alex Trebek
Pat Sajak}}{{s-end}}{{Guiding Light}}{{OLTL}}{{All My Children}}{{1992 Television Hall of Fame}}{{Daytime Emmy Award Lifetime Achievement}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Nixon, Agnes}}

14 : 1922 births|2016 deaths|All My Children|American soap opera writers|American television writers|American people of Irish descent|Daytime Emmy Award winners|Northwestern University School of Communication alumni|One Life to Live|Women television writers|Women soap opera writers|People from Chicago|Deaths from Parkinson's disease|Screenwriters from Illinois

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