8th Daytime Emmy Awards - Outstanding Supporting Actor in A Daytime Drama Series

Outstanding Supporting Actor in A Daytime Drama Series

  • Matthew Cowles (Billy Clyde Tuggle, All My Children)
  • William Mooney (Paul Martin, All My Children)
  • Justin Deas (Tom Hughes, As the World Turns)
  • Richard Backus (Barry Ryan, Ryan's Hope)
  • Larry Haines (Stu Bergman, Search for Tomorrow)

Read more about this topic:  8th Daytime Emmy Awards

Famous quotes containing the words outstanding, supporting, actor, daytime, drama and/or series:

    Both Socrates and Jesus were outstanding teachers; both of them urged and practiced great simplicity of life; both were regarded as traitors to the religion of their community; neither of them wrote anything; both of them were executed; and both have become the subject of traditions that are difficult or impossible to harmonize.
    Jaroslav Pelikan (b. 1932)

    There would be no supporting life were we to feel quite as poignantly for others as we do for ourselves.
    Samuel Richardson (1689–1761)

    An actor rides in a bus or railroad train; he sees a movement and applies it to a new role. A woman in agony of spirit might turn her head just so; a man in deep humiliation probably would wring his hands in such a way. From straws like these, drawn from completely different sources, the fabric of a character may be built. The whole garment in which the actor hides himself is made of small externals of observation fitted to his conception of a role.
    Eleanor Robson Belmont (1878–1979)

    This was your place of birth, this daytime palace,
    This miracle of glass....
    Philip Larkin (1922–1986)

    Life’s so ordinary that literature has to deal with the exceptional. Exceptional talent, power, social position, wealth.... Drama begins where there’s freedom of choice. And freedom of choice begins when social or psychological conditions are exceptional. That’s why the inhabitants of imaginative literature have always been recruited from the pages of Who’s Who.
    Aldous Huxley (1894–1963)

    The woman’s world ... is shown as a series of limited spaces, with the woman struggling to get free of them. The struggle is what the film is about; what is struggled against is the limited space itself. Consequently, to make its point, the film has to deny itself and suggest it was the struggle that was wrong, not the space.
    Jeanine Basinger (b. 1936)