| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
The show was controversial for its time, as it included one of the first regular gay characters depicted in a prime-time network television series in the United States. (Soap is commonly mistaken for the first series to include a sustained gay character, but at least one other series, 1972's The Corner Bar, preceded it.) This character, Jodie Dallas, was played by actor Billy Crystal. Many stations refused to air the series because of a gay character.
The show started each week with a shot of two women chatting over lunch. The announcer, Rod Roddy, would intone, "This is the story of two sisters: Jessica Tate and Mary Campbell". The Tate family was very wealthy. In the very first opening sequence, the announcer said that the Tates lived in a neighborhood known as "rich". Jessica liked life but if she could change anything about hers, she would set it all to music. The Tates employed a sarcastic butler, Benson, played by Robert Guillaume (the character of Benson was spun off into his own series, BensonBenson was an American television series which aired from 1979 to 1986 on ABC. The character of butler Benson DuBois, played by Robert Guillaume, had originally appeared on the soap opera parody Soap''. In the show, Benson had been hired to be the butler, in 1979.) Jessica and her husband, Chester, were hardly models of fidelity, as their various love affairs resulted in several family mishaps, including the murder of Mary's stepson, Peter ( Robert UrichRobert Urich ( December 19, 1946 April 16, 2002) was an Emmy-winning actor, best known for playing a private investigator on the television series Spenser: For Hire''. In 1996 Urich announced that he had been diagnosed with a rare form of cancer that atta), in the early days of the show. Even though everyone told Jessica about Chester's affairs, she did not believe it until she saw it with her own two eyes: one afternoon, while out to lunch with her sister Mary, she spotted Chester necking with his secretary. Heartbroken, she sobbed in her sister's arms. While Soap was a sitcom at its core, the show, at times, had many dramatic scenes that were performed like a real soap opera.
Mary's family, the Campbells, were more middle-class. Mary also liked life but the announcer intoned that "life wasn't so crazy about her." The Campbells had the problem that Mary's son Danny Dallas was a junior gangster in training. Danny was told to kill his stepfather Burt when it was revealed that Danny's father did not commit suicide, but instead was killed by Burt out of his love for Mary.
Other plot lines involved Jessica's daughter's love affair with a priest (another controversial subject which caused many stations to refuse to air the show); Mary's stepson Chuck, a ventriloquistVentriloquism is an act of deception in which a person (ventriloquist) manipulates his or her voice so that it appears that the voice is coming from someone or more often, something else. The most familiar type of ventriloquist today is a nightclub perfor whose alter ego was his dummy Bob, who voiced all of the negative comments that Chuck was too repressed to say; Jessica's love affair with a Latin American revolutionary; and Mary's husband Burt being replaced by an alien look-alike.
After a brief description of the convoluted storyline, the opening sequence would conclude with the line, "Confused? You won't be . . ."