Claire Labine
Claire Labine | |
---|---|
Born | Claire Vaughn Wood (1934-06-28)June 28, 1934 Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. |
Died | November 11, 2016(2016-11-11) (aged 82) Somers, Connecticut, U.S. |
Education | University of Kentucky (BA) Columbia University (MFA) |
Occupation(s) | Screenwriter, producer |
Years active | 1971–2001 |
Spouse | Roland Labine (divorced) |
Children | 3, including Matthew and Eleanor |
Claire Vaughn Labine (née Wood; June 28, 1934 – November 11, 2016) was an American soap opera writer and producer.[1][2]
Career
1990s
In 1993, Labine returned to daytime as head writer of ABC's General Hospital. She brought the show much critical acclaim, and won her seventh Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing for her work on the show. She chose to depart the show in early 1996. During this time, she created a proposed General Hospital spin-off, Heart and Soul, about two families, one black, one white, both show business families. The black family was three generations of jazz musicians. Next door was a theatrical family. The show was not picked up by ABC or NBC; Wendy Riche's competing Port Charles was ABC's choice instead.
Labine co-wrote, with Judith Pinsker, the 1995 New York Times bestseller General Hospital tie-in novel Robin's Diary, based in the AIDS storyline between characters Stone Cates and Robin Scorpio.[3]
In 1996, Labine was offered the head writer role at As the World Turns but turned it down because she and her son Matthew Labine were trying to get HEART & SOUL [aka Union Place] on the air. "I had to turn it down because we were in the middle of that development. I said to Procter & Gamble, 'I am gratified by this offer, but if I have any chance at all...' I didn't think there was much chance but I thought it was worth a go to do our own show. And they were very lovely about it."
In late 1996, she was made head writer of ABC's One Life to Live because she had a year and a half left on her contract with ABC. She remained with the show until early 1998.
2000s
Most recently, Labine had a short stint at CBS' Guiding Light. She was head writer of the show from 2000 through 2001. Labine shared the reins of GL with her children, Matthew Labine and Eleanor Labine. Rumors abounded throughout Labine's tenure at GL that she, executive producer Paul Rauch, and executive in charge of production Mary Alice Dwyer-Dobbin had frequent arguments about the show's direction.
At one point, it was announced in the soap press that the Labines were departing, only to have the announcement recanted a week later.[4] P&G did eventually replace the Labines the following year with writers Lloyd Gold and Christopher Dunn.
In November 2009, Labine gave WeLoveSoaps.net an exclusive interview during which she discussed her struggles with ABC during Ryan's Hope, her enjoyment of writing General Hospital, and her less enjoyable experiences on One Life to Live and Guiding Light. She discussed details about her aborted project, Union Place, and insights into her illustrious career.[5]
Death
Labine died on November 11, 2016, at her home in Somers, Connecticut, at the age of 82. No cause of death was disclosed.[2]
Positions held
- Script writer: 1966-1967
Where the Heart Is
- Co-head writer: 1971–1973
- Script writer: 1970–1971
- Co-head writer 1973–1975
- Co-Creator
- Executive Producer: July 1975 – June 1982
- Head writer: July 1975 – June 1982, January 1983 – November 1983, February 1987 – January 1989
- Head writer: October 11, 1993 – March 1, 1996
- Head writer: December 1996 – April 1998
- Head writer: August 2000 – July 2001
Awards
Daytime Emmy
9 Wins
- (1995; Outstanding Writing; General Hospital)
- (1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983 & 1984, Outstanding Writing, Ryan's Hope)
- (1977, 1979 Outstanding Drama Series, Ryan's Hope)
12 nominations
- (1978, 1981 & 1982, Outstanding Drama Series, Ryan's Hope)
National Academy Of New York Arts And Sciences Silver Circle Recipient
- 2000
Writers Guild of America
Wins
- 1995, General Hospital
- 1994, General Hospital
- 1980-1983, 1986–1989, Ryan's Hope
Nominations
- 2001, Guiding Light
- 1996, General Hospital
- 1979, Ryan's Hope
Other
- Honored with Evelyn F. Burkey Award by the Writers Guild of America on February 19, 2005. The award was presented to her by friend and former Ryan's Hope star Kate Mulgrew.
- Connecticut College Gold Medal 1995 Inherit The Earth Award for General Hospital story line on environmental racism, a ground-breaking plot for daytime about a trash incinerator about to be located in a low income area featured icon Laura Webber in fight for social justice .
- Labine served the Writers Guild of America, East, as vice president for three terms, and is a recipient of the Richard Jablow Award for devoted service to the Guild.
- She has been given Lifetime Achievement Awards by the New York Chapter of National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and Soap Opera Digest.
Headwriter tenure
Preceded by | Where the Heart Is (with Paul Avila Mayer) mid 1970 – March 1973 | Succeeded by Show Ended |
Preceded by | Love of Life (with Paul Avila Mayer) March 1973 – July 1975 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by None | Ryan's Hope (with Paul Avila Mayer) July 1975 – July 1982 | Succeeded by Mary Ryan Munisteri |
Preceded by | Ryan's Hope (with Paul Avila Mayer) January 1983 – December 1983 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by Tom King & Millee Taggart | Ryan's Hope (with Matthew Labine & Eleanor Labine) February 1987 – January 1989 | Succeeded by Show Ended |
Preceded by Bill Levinson | General Hospital (with Matthew Labine: November 3, 1995 – March 1, 1996) October 11, 1993 – March 1, 1996 | Succeeded by Robert Guza Jr. Karen Harris |
Preceded by | One Life to Live (with Matthew Labine) June 1997 – March 29, 1998 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Guiding Light August 7, 2000 – July 2001 | Succeeded by |
References
- ^ Finke, Nikki (March 15, 2006). "New Epidemic: Pellicano Amnesia". Deadline.com. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
- ^ a b Claire Labine, Scriptwriter of Several Soap Operas, Dies at 82, nytimes.com, November 15, 2016.
- ^ Labine, Claire; Judith Pinsker (November 1995). Robin's Diary. ABC Daytime Press. p. 180. ISBN 0-8019-8775-X. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
- ^ "GL does a recount: The Labines win". soapcentral.com.
- ^ "WLS Interview Archive: Claire Labine". We Love Soaps. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
- v
- t
- e
- Fred Coe (1978)
- Barbara Schultz (1979)
- Walter Cronkite (1980)
- Elmer Lower (1981)
- Herman Brodkin (1982)
- Alan Wagner (1983)
- Leonard Wasser (1984)
- Jerome B. Lurie (1985)
- Athol Fugard & Lloyd Richards (1986)
- Edwin Newman (1987)
- Andy Rooney, Local 1101 & District 1 of the Communications Workers of America (1988)
- Horton Foote (1989)
- Art Buchwald (1990)
- George Schaefer (1991)
- Jacqueline Babbin (1992)
- Arthur Miller (1993)
- Joan Ganz Cooney (1994)
- Dennis Potter (1995)
- Ken Saro-Wiwa (1996)
- Sidney Lumet (1997)
- Judy Crichton (1998)
- David Brown (1999)
- Václav Havel (2000)
- Tom Fontana (2001)
- Colin Callender (2002)
- Martin Scorsese (2003)
- John McCain (2004)
- Claire Labine (2005)
- Museum of Television and Radio (2006)
- Joan Didion (2007)
- Walter Bernstein (2008)
- Committee to Protect Journalists (2009)
- Edward Albee (2010)
- Archive of American Television (2011)
- Not presented (2012)
- Not presented (2013)
- James Schamus (2014)
- Norman Lear (2015)
- Al Franken (2016)
- Not presented (2017)
- Not presented (2018)
- Franklin Leonard (2019)
- Not presented (2020)
- Not presented (2021)
- Dick Cavett (2022)
- Not presented (2023)