Soap (TV Series 1977–1981) Poster

(1977–1981)

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8/10
It was so much more than shock value
AlsExGal3 September 2018
When this show first started in 1977 it was touted as "controversial". It was a comedic parody of the day time soap operas based on the families of two sisters, Jessica Tate (Katherine Helmond) and Mary Campbell (Cathryn Damon). Jessica's husband, Chester, makes a personal hobby out of infidelity in spite of the fact that he says he loves Jessica. Mary is in her second marriage, married to Burt (Richard Mulligan) who actually killed Mary's first husband - but nobody knows, including Mary.

Mary's grown children include Danny (who is working for the mafia), and Jody who is gay (this is not a secret). Chuck is Burt's grown son, and his problem is that he channels his personality through a ventriloquist's dummy who says all kinds of hateful prejudiced things, taking no responsibility himself because "the dummy said it". Probably the most enduring character in the show is Benson who is the African American butler in the Tate household. He takes no guff and has funny passive aggressive ways of dealing with those who cross him. But he finds Jessica endearing if not very bright and is kind to her.

Jessica has three children with their own problems. So the story lines include the mafia, a forced marriage that turns to love and then turns tragic, the issue of child custody when one party is gay, UFOs and aliens, South American rebels patterned after the Sandanistas, an adult woman having an affair with a teenage boy, religious cults like the Moonies, oh, and there is the old trope of the murder whodunnit.

This all works well for about two years. During that time the country was becoming more socially liberal, and what once shocked was becoming standard TV fare. That is probably what did in the show - normalcy caught up with it and the characters and their storylines were played out.

This show is on DVD and is worth watching mainly to see where we have been as a society in just a few short decades, and plus there is a human element of the show that is still quite compelling and timeless.
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9/10
Greatest Comedic cast
periwinkle_petticoats25 June 2021
This has to be one of the best casts ever. Just revisited this series and haven't laughed this hard in ages. It's sad that so many of the cast have passed on. This series was underappreviated. Hilarious spoof of soap operas...so brilliant.
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9/10
With every episode, my opinion changes
hantz1011 July 2020
I watch one episode, and Burt becomes my favorite character. I watch another one, and Jessica becomes my favorite. She is next supplanted by Chuck & Bob (technically two characters?). Forget Seinfeld, forget Everyone Loves Raymond, this show set the standard for an ensemble cast where everyone is drop-dead hysterical. I remember watching this as a kid, and not really understanding the jokes about homosexuality and infidelity, but 40-something years later, I get it, and its never been funnier. Chuck and Bob doing the mindreading bit still knocks me dead. Invite over everyone you know to watch this, they'll thank you for it
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These questions, and many more, will be answered...
selfhelpradio16 August 1999
I began watching this show when I was rather young - elementary-school aged, really, & because of its episodic nature (for I read comic books voraciously, & loved "to be continued" storylines) - well, probably because I liked the guy with the puppet - I was hooked. I watched it weekly & remember praying to God that it wouldn't be cancelled. The magic of the show was that it taught me so much. I knew little or nothing about homosexuality, infidelity, racism, hell, even the Mafia or Central American revolutions, until I watched this show. It was genuinely funny - Bert thinking he could turn invisible, Benson's "I ain't getting that," everyone talking to Bob when they knew damn well Chuck was throwing his voice - I laughed & laughed.

As I watch TV now, I really miss the topicality of this show - the fact that, with a simple parody of soap operas, they managed to bring important issues of the day to the forefront. No one was safe - even alien abductions were lampooned, years before there was an X-Files that could stand a bit of ribbing.

Yeah, it's dated, & when I saw a few episodes in repeats a while back, I was more moved by my old feelings - these were friends I hadn't seen in ages! - than by the story & the jokes. But the point was, it was brave - like "All In The Family," like "Good Times" - though not a Norman Lear creation - braver than anything on right now. Someone else suggested you watch from day one - that's not all that important, because you'll catch on soon enough (it's a soap opera, after all), but I do believe you'll come to care for the characters & their ridiculous predicaments soon enough. & you'll be amazed at how utterly clever it is.

Be warned, though - like "Twin Peaks" it doesn't really end, & if you're coming at it for the first time, you'll be sad when you get to season four's end & there's nothing following. I was.
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10/10
Rich Nuts, Poor Nuts…They're All Nuts!
madbandit200020007 June 2011
Growing up watching television, I've always noticed that the best shows are the ones that question the status quo. Sure, some people might be offended, but you don't have a pulse if you enjoy something that doesn't have a pulse. Not only does "Soap", the Emmy-winning scattershot mockery of the now-endangered daytime drama, have a pulse, it has a brain, heart and soul.

The setup is in Dunn's River, a fictional Connecticut suburb where the married siblings, ditzy but good-hearted blueblood Jessica Tate (Emmy winner Kath Helmond of "Who's The Boss" and "Coach") and practical but anxious blue collar Mary Campbell (the late Emmy winner Cathryn Damon of "Webster") are the matriarchs of their own equally erratic and eccentric families.

For Jessica, she has her unfaithful stockbroker hubby Chester (Robert Mandan); night and day daughters Eunice (Jennifer Salt, daughter of Oscar-winning scribe Waldo, and now a TV/film scribe herself) and Corinne (Diana Canova); spoiled smart-aleck son Billy (Jimmy Baio, brother of Scott); demented father/WW 2 vet The Major (Arthur Peterson) and defiant butler Benson Dubois (a brilliantly sharp Robert Guillaume, who got his own spin off series after the show's first two seasons).

Mary's clan is no saner. She has her second husband, spineless wreck contractor Burt (the late Rick Mulligan of "Empty Nest"); himbo pistol-headed son Danny (Ted Wass of "Blossom); sly homosexual son Jodie (future Saturday Night Live player and Oscars Awards host Billy Crystal in a groundbreaking role) and nutty, inappropriate, ventriloquist step-son Chuck/Bob (talented Jay Johnston).

Basically, THEY ARE ALL NUTS (excluding Benson) and it's emphasized that THEY ARE ALL NUTS (excluding Benson) when they go through situations involving murder, infidelity, rape, incest, racism, homophobia, sexual teacher-student relations, interracial romance, mental breakdowns, dementia, sexual impotence, third-world country revolutions, religious cults, demonic possession (!), alien abduction (!!!) and other moments that make Agnes Dixon ("All My Children") look like a rank amateur in the art of plotting soap operas.

This delightful sitcom was practically an asylum and creator/showrunner Susan Harris ("Benson", "The Golden Girls" and scribe of the infamous abortion episode from "Maude") ran it for four years (1977-1981). A fifth season was planned, but ABC, the show's original broadcaster, axed it due to pressure from both (!) right and left-wing organizations. It's a damn shame because, aside from the works of Harris's then-mentor, Norman Lear, no sitcom has been socially brave and honest around that time. Set this show against any bow-tie-wearing reality BS today, and IT WILL WIN.

Being one of the few females in the TV showrunning game in the late 70s, Harris, who wrote nearly every episode and appeared in two as a jailed tart (!), transplanted the soap opera's serialized format and injected into a prime time show (predating the action TV serial "24"), hooking viewers by putting her characters in off-beat pickles that parody the genre (Maybe that's another reason why the show was canned: entertainment politics). It's interesting Ms. Harris, now retired, hasn't been approached by "SNL" at the time.

Series director Jay Sandrich ("The Cosby Show") expertly helmed the show's madness, accented by the romantic yet subversive music by George Aliceson Tipton (worked with equally subversive musician Harry Nilsson) and the quirky narration by the late announcer Rod Roddy ("The Price Is Right").

And there's also the cast, ranging in age. They were all so superb, it's hard to pick a favorite. It seems they were told to be themselves, and they heeded the advice. Even the guest stars are fun and they would go off to do other shows like Doris Roberts ("Remington Steele", "Everybody Loves Raymond"), Joe Mantegna ("Criminal Minds"), Sorrell Booke ("The Dukes of Hazzard") and Howard Hessman ("WKRP", "Head Of The Class"), to name a few.

A precursor to shows like "Arrested Development", "Modern Family", "30 Rock", "The Office (USA)" and "It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia", "Soap" stands as a example of a sitcom that goes over the edge, and has a good time doing it. If cable networks, HBO and Showtime, established its' original scripted programming much earlier, the show would have found sanctuary from the then-Big Three TV Network cartel. Instead, it's an outstanding artifact that was ahead of its' time, exposing humanity's shortcomings in a ludicrous and (still) controversial fashion. The racy stuff will combat today's right-wing morals and left-wing political correctness, but if you can laugh when watching the show, you're a human being, albeit a wacky one.
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10/10
Hilarious ...
lambiepie-230 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
While its done a lot now, "Soap" in the late 1970's was one of the most funniest soap opera 'knock offs' there was - and kept you hooked just like a traditional soap opera. Susan Harris brought subject matter to the fore that was ahead of television time and although you laugh, you'll also cry, have feelings for the characters and get hooked watching this.

At the time, Soap was on a major network which got a lot of folks in an uproar due to much of the subject matter. But many of us youngsters who were watching Soap, have also watched the obscure "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" which wasn't on a big network, but was another Soap-opera-esquire send off with more racy adult overtones - and was as equally weird for this time in the life of television.

Soap was more zanier and focused on the same formula as the soaps today - two families - The Tates and the Cambells, whom they orbited around including the centering around themselves! But the talent - its' the talent that will surprise you - everyone is there from comedians Billy Crystal to Jay Johnson, serious actors, just tons and tons of talent and they made their characters memorable.

I liked the first few seasons and drifted away from the later seasons mostly due to getting into 'dating' and staying out late. I do intend on buying all seasons and watching the series in order to rekindle another historic time in television (as this series opened the network doors of change!), watch talent that are now superstars in acting and just enjoy one of the best spoofs EVER. I recommend this highly for the new generations to view for this is a lasting comedic treasure.
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10/10
Spoof take on daytime soap operas about 2 sisters & their families
michael_mulligan16 July 2006
I was only 10 years old when this show premiered on TV in London. But it was shown on Fridays (10.30pm) & I was allowed to enjoy the antics of the Campbells & the Tates. The characters & their situations were something I had never experienced on TV before, but the actors involved made the show an enjoyable one. Lead character Jessica (Katherine Helmond) was a lovable dope who could pull viewers heartstrings as well, she embarks on an extra marital affair with her tennis coach (who turns out to be her brother in-law's son) who's also having relationships with her daughter Corrine (Confused? You should be), who later turns her attentions to a Catholic priest. Jodie (Billy Crystal) was a gay guy intent on having gender re-alignment to win over his footballer boyfriend, when this failed he turned straight & fathered a baby girl which later sparked an ugly custody battle. Other characters worth mentioning were Burt (Jessica's brother in-law) a quirky guy who's impotent & had issues with his stepsons (wife Mary's boys)it later transpired that Burt killed Mary's first husband. Mary's first born Danny is a would be mobster who decides to quit the mob, in order to do this he enters a shotgun marriage to the boss's daughter (Danny's mob bosses went from being Italian to Jewish without mention). At the time the sexual references & American colloquialisms were unintelligible but watching re-runs on cable have reconfirmed my views that this daytime soap parody is a comic classic.
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10/10
The Best Comedy Series
andy347227 May 2004
Warning: Spoilers
For me Soap has always been my favourite TV comedy series. The characters were just fantastic - brilliantly played by all especially Burt and Jessica.

Even the many small supporting characters stood out. The dopey Chief of Police Tinkler, the equally dopey Mrs David and the positively nutty Detective Donahue.

My favourite story lines included Jessica's murder trial, Burt's alien abduction and the Demonic possession of Corinne's baby.

Susan Harris wrote her characters extremely well with some great dialogue and exaggerated the soap opera clichés to the hilt. The show will always be a fondly remembered classic that, unlike some shows, doesn't fade or become less funny over time.
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10/10
Then and Now
mike-29897 May 2006
I watched this series when it first aired in the UK when I was young, single and the world was mine to explore. I laughed and cried with the characters. I am now twice the age as I was then, have moved to Australia, got married, had children, been widowed and have just watched the first 2 seasons again, 25 years later, on DVD. I again laughed and cried with the characters. Interestingly enough, my teenage daughter also laughs and cries with me, a generation gap easily linked with this awesome series. It is still a very emotional show despite everything that has happened in between. For me it has stood the test of time and will always do so.
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10/10
The funniest television show of all time!
jimbo70011 February 2020
I realize the content was a bit racy, but the is the funniest TV show I have ever seen... and I'm a 67 year old boomer who has watched a lot of television... although not so much lately. It includes the all-time best cast ever assembled for television, plus Richard Mulligan in his best role, Billy Crystal in one of his early acting jobs, and Katherine Helmond at her absolute best. I could go on and on about this cast but if you are a fan of this series you know what I mean. There is no question in my mind that the first 2 seasons are the best.. especially the first season. I can't tell you how many times I spent ROTFLOL before there was even such a thing. I had not seen any of these episodes in recent years because it hasn't been as wildly popular in reruns, probably because the episodes are serialized, so I recently purchased the entire series on DVD. I had forgotten how funny this series was until I started watching them again. If you have never seen Soap, you are missing out on one of the simple pleasures of life.
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6/10
Changed from a comedy to a drama seasons 2-4
professor_of_gamez25 December 2023
I don't know if this was deliberate, or if the show simply wasn't funny after season 1.

They did a PHENOMONAL job of aging Katherine Helmond. Her IMDB birth date makes her 48 when this series started, but she was made up to look like she was in her late 60s.

Perhaps the writers confused "silly" with "funny" after season 1. The show was quite silly, with bizarre plots, but not actually funny.

It is kind of surreal watching the characters converse, and then hearing the laugh track, even though nothing they have said was funny.

It's a shame, as the first season was pretty funny. Susan Harris is credited as one of the writers for the entire series run, so not sure why it stopped being funny.
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10/10
My God, what can I say
brendanchenowith24 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Words fail me - do not do justice to the perfection and excellence of this series. I grew up watching soaps like "One Life to Live", "All My Children", "General Hospital" - with a mother and two sisters and ONE TV set, it was impossible to not see these. Anyway, I love sitcoms when they used to actually be funny, and not afraid to film in front of a live audience with adults instead of paid teenage girls who'd sit there and scream on cue when the flavor-of-the-month happened to walk on. This was staged exactly as a play. Having been in stage plays in the past, my eyes are trained to look in the background and see what's moving around there, or whom. Even with the "family portrait" opening titles, I go back and check them out a few times, to see what everyone's doing.

Anyway, this covered and spoofed every single soap cliché there was - resentful step-children; bratty bitchy bimbos who turn nice only to get killed later; prohibited par-lances with priests, politicians and pro-tennis players; multiple murders - or multiple ways to carry out ONE murder - shot, stabbed, strangled, suffocated - - AND bludgeoned. Well, the bludgeoning was always a fail-safe.

I'm renting and burning each season now and it's going to take a few weeks, but I'm going to have the time of my life. Welcome back to my living room, Tates, and Campbells, you sure were missed.
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4/10
Gets annoying over the seasons......
mcjensen-0592414 October 2021
While it has great characters, it also has some of the worst. Overdone slapstick really gets tedious. The whole Burt character is a bit too silly, talking to himself and generally being a dimwitted buffoon. He's a caricature of all that's wrong with sitcom acting. His movements and facial expressions are exaggerated to distraction. Dutch is an unfortunate complete idiot. There's nothing funny or likeable about him whatsoever. Overacting in the extreme. He's awful, and every scene he appears in dies immediately. He's easily the worst character in TV sitcom history. But the preacher Tim was a close second and his departure from the show was welcome. All his scenes are just not written well, and other than Dutch he's clearly the least talented of the cast. A dull, bland character whose lifeless presence drags the show down in several ways. It's a balance that just about works but doesn't hold up to modern viewing. Ventures into the ridiculous well too many times and eventually lost it's charm and focus. It's enjoyable for what it is for the first couple seasons, and there are many hilarious scenes. Other scenes just end dumbly or annoyingly. Perhaps groundbreaking at the time but there were better done more authentic shows back then. Falls into the formulatic choreographed tricks of the genre of the era. This plays to cliches and tries the patience at times. It lacks that consistent authentic feeling that makes the viewer get completely immersed in it. Benson, The Major and Billy were actually the highlights, and of course Bob. There are some truly touching scenes between family members from time to time that actually choked me up. Some things were done really well and others failed hard. People must've been stoned out of their wits to endure this silly mess for the entire 4 seasons, when only the first 2 were remotely bearable. Ever been stuck in the mud with the tired spinning? This show starts to feel like that midway through Season 2. The wheels came off with the Demon Baby and Alied Abduction nonsense. I don't understand the 8.2 rating here, but then I don't understand the majority of the ratings here. Disheartening. 4.5 rounded down to 4 to compensate for the the incomprehensible high rating. By the start of Season 3 things had become so ridiculous and asinine that it had become basically unwatchable. Dialogue had become absurd beyond endurance. Yes, they tackled serious controversial issues but they handled them in a silly, clunky ham fisted and light hearted fashion. Plot starts going in circles. The trick to writing a likeable character is to make them at least a little believable in their actions. Like in Andy Griffith. Gomer is immensely likeable because he's a bit slow but also very genuine, funny and clever. A good guy. Goober who replaced him was a slobbering idiot and didn't work out for me. A slightly dim character is cute and endearing, but when you have so many in one show that are incredibly stupider than a bag of dead catfish eventually you're just going to get irritated by them. That's what happens here. Case in point: Bert. Danny to a degree too. It was simple minded unenjoyable rubbish. Poorly choreographed too. Not much discernible talent found in the cast. There's talented people, but they unfortunately have to play idiotic roles and dumb themselves down to meet the meager expectations of the director and producer. Luckily this show did served as a springboard for so many to pursue successful jobs and even careers, actors and production personnel as well. When the best character ends up being a dummy it's kind of a warning sign. A 2 season run would have been plenty. It's amazing how people fall in love after knowing each other a few minutes, then spend the rest of the time lying and cheating on them. Maybe I don't understand what the show was driving at, but it didn't seem like it was hitting the mark. WKRP, Barney Miller and other shows of the era succeeded because the characters were true and developed while here they were just all over the board. Teenagers falling for senior citizens? Gimme a break, man. Anyway, I'm happy for the success it achieved but I don't get it. Nope, I don't get it at all. They don't make 'em like this any more. Thank goodness for small mercies. The attempt to replace Benson with another listless character was a very ill thought out move that fell flat. That guy was horrible. Unfunny and unoriginal who only tried to act and talk like the character he was replacing. At least try and give him his own personality. Let him make the role his own. What started out as a mildly clever show deteriorated into one of the most annoying messes I've ever tried to watch. I forced myself to complete the 3rd series, and it's a testament to my fortitude that I prevailed. Could not bring myself to even start the 4th Season. I know my limitations.
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Timeless hilarity!
duke337 January 2002
Truthfully, i was too young to remember this show when it originally aired back in the late 70's. I do remember a lot of controversy about it, and that some stations chose to air it late rather than during primetime, because they thought it too racy.

A few years ago, I managed to catch this show on Comedy Central, and I have to admit that it is quite possibly the finest sitcom ever created. The characters were not the bland, shallow, unimaginitive figures you see on tv today. There was Jodie, the homosexual that was always unsure of his own sexuality; Chuck, the shy ventriloquist that always carried around his dummy Bob, whom Chuck thought was real, and there was NOTHING he wouldn't say; Burt, the delusional construction worker who had frequent encounters with the paranormal; Danny, the dimwit son of Burt that was mixed up in the mafia and later became a deputy sheriff; Chester, the wall street financier who slept with every woman in town except his own wife; and on and on. The cast (which includes billy crystal) was perfect...everyone played their roles so believably that you truly feel like you are watching a real dysfunctional family.

The writing and jokes were also timeless...This show was designed to take a direct pot shot at the absurdity of modern soap operas, and it hit it's mark perfectly. Most of the plotlines were like something out of a supermarket tabloid which always added to the hilarity of the show. Burt being abducted by aliens, burt thinking he can make himself invisible by snapping his fingers, jessica being captured by central american freedom fighters, jodie's baby being possessed by satan, etc...

Even 20+ years later, this show will not disappoint. While it may be tame by today's standards, it was clearly a pioneer that paved the way for a lot of today's programming.
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10/10
one of the best 😍 shows from the 70's
penny1207827 February 2020
What can I say? This was a huge favorite show of mine. Now that I found the show again I would love to be able to watch all of the episodes, but I can't find a channel that offers it free to view. I'm so upset.
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10/10
Hilarious!
elle-787-3994914 April 2018
After all the years that have passed Soap is still one of the best comedies ever written. I recall my Dad watching this. I was not allowed because I was too young! The main Actors of Katherine Helmond and Richard Mulligan made this a hilarious watch! I am now able to watch it on a retro TV channel and I am addicted to this crazy Satire! Definitley worth a watch.
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10/10
You're missing the first Retrospective Episode in this listing.
CharlotteXavier15 August 2019
It was broadcast on December 20, 1977, after the first 13 shows had aired.

Would you please add it to the list of episodes?

Thank you!
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10/10
The Best Times
iggysgrl16 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This show really touched me emotionally....i mean when Elaine died in Season 2 i was really devastated. Every time I watch it I cry, and when I think of Richard Mulligan(Burt) I cry because he died before I had even heard of him. I own all 4 seasons and I watch them all the time. I'm so nuts about this show I know who died when and how. And their birthdays. I was so sad when I found out there was only 4 seasons when there could've been 5. The best time I really enjoyed this show is when Jessica was with George, Corinne was with Tim, Eunice was with Dutch at the cabin, Billy was just Billy, Benson was around, Mary and Burt had actually "done it", Danny was with Elaine, Jodie was with Alice, the Major was in his right mind once or twice, and Chester was faithful before he had memory loss(barely though). But overall this was one of the greatest shows of all time and if I had one wish, it would be to be around in 1977 and meet the cast of the show. Because I looked some stuff up it said that everyone was a delight to be around. Even Robert Guillaume when he was still around for the show.
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10/10
These are the Tates. And these are the Campbells. And this is... SOAP!
Sweet Charity29 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I was, most unfortunately, not around in 1977 when SOAP debuted and caused a great deal of controversy. Luckily, I happened to be around in 2002 when TVLand began airing episodes of SOAP as part of the "TVLand Kitschen." I had heard of SOAP and of BENSON, but had never seen either. I decided to watch an episode of the former one night on TVLand, and right away I was hooked! SOAP was a masterful creation - a delightful parody of all things daytime and foreshadowing prime-time (think about it - before there was "Who Shot J.R.?" there was "Who Killed Peter Campbell?"). It covered everything - murder, infidelity, the church, impotency, mental illness, depression, attempted suicide, the mob, alcoholism, and even aliens and exorcisms. It pushed the envelope, but tastefully so, and it was filled with endless humor (both physical and wit).

TV had never before seen a show with as large and as brilliant an ensemble as the one on SOAP, and they sure haven't seen one since. For starters you had the Tate children - bratty Eunice (Jennifer Salt), man-hungry Corinne (Diana Canova), and the long-uninformed Billy (Jimmy Baio). At the head of the family was that wealthy scoundrel Chester Tate (Robert Mandan), The Major (Arthur Peterson) - Mary & Jessica's father who was still suck in WWII, and the delightful presence of the sarcastic butler, Benson (Robert Guillaume).

In the Campbell household, you had Jay Johnson in his dual role as Burt's son Chuck and Chuck's sarcastic and obnoxious dummy, Bob, Ted Wass as mobster/heartthrob Danny Dallas, and Billy Crystal as everyone's favorite homosexual, Jodie Dallas. Head of the household Burt Campbell was played by rubbery and hilarious Richard Mulligan.

At the heart of the show, however, were two sisters - Jessica Tate (played to ditsy delight by Katherine compassion sanity by the highly underrated Cathryn Damon). You always believed these two were sisters who genuinely cared for one another and would do anything for one another.

That is - until Season 4.

I hold firm in my belief that part of the main reason for the ratings decline during Season 4 was the whole "Chester is really Danny's father" storyline. Any SOAP fan knows that Mary Campbell would NEVER have done something like that to her sister - and when you break apart the heart and soul of a show, of course the ratings are going to drop. The final season wasn't a total disaster, but seeing as how several characters seemed to be just so out of character (Mary with Chester, Jodie is really straight, etc.), it certainly wasn't up to par with the first three fabulous seasons. And sure, we'll probably never REALLY know exactly what happened to the characters - but isn't it pleasant to think that somewhere, Jessica and Mary resolved their differences, Burt and Mary got back together, and life was good (insane, but still good) for everyone in the Tate and Campbell families? :) SOAP is a wonderful show - my favorite show - and certainly deserves the lavish praise that everyone is giving it! Hooray for SOAP!
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9/10
Soap
tonywebster-9609012 August 2020
It was a show that could only be made in the 70's.

This is a outstanding tv show. It has standout performances by the cast. It'll stand the test of time.

Many of today's comedic actors don't stand in the same league. A classic of tv. Even Saturday night Live isn't as funny as this.
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10/10
still funny after all these years!
barbiegirl18 July 2007
As I was viewing the titles On Demand I came across 8 episodes of Soap. This show was broadcast when I was a child, so the most memorable characters for me were Chuck & Bob. I forgot that Billy Crystal starred as the fabulous Jodie Dallas and stubborn, cranky butler "Benson" was introduced.

I watched each episode in delight! When each episode ended, I couldn't wait to watch the next. This show is hilarious! It reminds me of a slightly cheesier version of Arrested Development complete with the large family full of crazy characters. If you have the chance, watch the first episode but beware...you'll be hooked!
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2/10
Cheap, shallow knockoff of Norman Lear's "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman"
mwpress20 October 2017
I watched "Soap" with high expectations when it premiered in September 1977, but was sadly disappointed. It is nothing more than a cheap knockoff of the far superior, scathing satire of American life, Norman Lear's "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman." The pilot for the latter was filmed in December of 1974, three years before "Soap" was created. "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" was not picked up by the networks, so Lear syndicated it on local channels across the country, where it ran from January 1976 to May 1977. It received a loyal cult following and much critical acclaim. The networks, wanting to cash in once they saw the soap-opera framing and offbeat characters were successful, created a watered down version called "Soap." Some reviews note that "Soap" seemed like a Norman Lear creation, a la "All in the Family." This is because it was based on the Lear creation, "Hartman." Others note that it did not age well coming off as more slapstick than scathing satire today. Believe me, it seemed the same to me back in 1977. Please do yourself a favor and check out the first ten episodes of "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman." You will be hooked as I was in 1976 and again recently, when I re-watched all 325 episodes. They all hold up well. It is still on target in terms of American life (only more so today), intellectually stimulating and hilarious.
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The best cast ever!
RalphWiggum510 November 1999
This is a show that everyone deserves a chance to see. A more brilliant cast and crew was never assembled for anything! These days, they talk about how "Friends" and "Seinfeld" have such great ensembles--"Soap" wrote the book on great ensembles! The only ones since which even come close are, first and foremost, the cast of "Remember WENN," and possibly the cast of "Frasier."

Everyone was great. Jay Johnson as demure Chuck and his daffy doll Bob, and Ted Wass as dim bulb Danny were always hilarious. Enigmatic but always worth a belly laugh was Arthur Peterson as the shell-shocked Major, forever trapped in his own little war. Anyone who's seen the episode with Sigmund, the Major's long-dead, moth-eaten stuffed dog (that he still believes to be alive) knows why the Major was so funny. Billy Crystal brought an understated air of dignity to his role as homosexual Jodie. Robert Guillaume won an Emmy beffore departing into his own spinoff as back-talking, "I-ain't-getting-that," tell-it-like-it-is butler Benson. His show, "Benson," ran longer than "Soap," and he won a Best Actor Emmy there. But the main part of the show--the planets the other characters revolved around--were Katherine Helmond, Cathryn Damon, Richard Mulligan, and Robert Mandan as the Tates and Campbells. Richard Mulligan was sidesplitting as Burt Campbell, a nervous, rubber-faced ball of energy. His physical comedy scenes were way out there, especially one where he stumbles in drunk, accidentally steps up onto a table, and is afraid to come down. Equally funny is a scene in which he and Danny are playing "police chase" while sitting in chairs in the living room. He was a great balance for the late Cathryn Damon, who beautifully and elegantly portrayed Mary Campbell. though some of her best stuff was when she really let loose (check out the third season), Damon's Mary was always a little more down-to-earth than the other characters, and one of the best-played on the show. They couldn't have matched up a better couple than these two, and it shows. Mulligan won an Emmy for "Soap" in 1980, and was nominated again the following year. Damon also won in '80, and was nominated each of the four seasons except the second, where Mary had less to do than usual. Surely, the episode she won for had to have been the one in which Mary thinks she has seen Burt disappear before her very eyes. She goes over to the Tates' house and, trying to explain it all, lapses into insanity. By the time it's done, she's saying that she's crazy and laughing hysterically. That is classic television.

Robert Mandan was big fun as pompous, skirt-chasing Chester, and was a great balance to my favorite, Katherine Helmond, as loony and delightfully dim Jessica Tate, Mary's sister. Helmond was dynamic, making the most of every second of screen time. She had a lot of top moments during the course of the show. Once, Jessica was being kidnapped by guerillas, and she has them put down their guns and help her move some furniture first, then asks if she can call "the nail lady" to cancel her appointment tomorrow--it seems that she charges anyway if you don't show up--then pulls the soldiers' own guns on them. Jessica's murder trial provides some of the show's most hilarious events. There's the time Jessica and her lawyer were in a small room outside the courtroom before the verdict is read, and her lawyer grabs her and tells her he loves her. At this moment, in comes Chester, and Jessica (fearful of what Chester would say) launches into a a waltz with her lawyer. She claims that they're learning the Hustle, and invites Chester to join. In a matter of seconds, the three are strutting around and dancing. To this day, it's one of the funniest things I've ever seen. The first day of the trial is one of the show's best scenes. Jessica, late along with her family and already having made a bad impression on the judge), bursts into the courtroom and begins hugging and greeting people as if hosting a party. She walks up to the judge and explains her tardiness, managing to unwittingly toss in an insult to "the idiotic inefficiency of the judicial system." She then looks over and gasps. She asks proudly, "Is this my jury?" She goes over to them, arms open, before she is pulled to her seat. She then has a friendly conversation with the prosecutor before getting up and trying to pull the defense and prosecution tables together. "It creates an almost antagonistic atmosphere," she says. "So 'them vs. us." She is later appalled by the slanderous words of the prosecutor and stands. "I don't have to take this--I'm going." Her attempt to storm out is stopped, but she warns: "All right, but if he continues in this manner, I will not come back tomorrow." Than, to the prosecutor: "Go ahead. But be nice." She could be dramatic, too, though; once, in one of her best moments on the show, Jessica single-handedly exorcises the Devil from her baby grandson in a bravura performance. Even after watching only one episode, it's easy to see why she was nominated (but, oddly enough, never won) for an Emmy every season that "Soap" was on the air. With a cast like this, what show could go wrong?
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10/10
Just the best!
tevelyn-025653 July 2022
Too bad the new generation doesn't know this TV show.

It was sublime! I felt so sad when it was cancelled :( It was "avant-gardiste" and the most funny ever!
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10/10
Hilarious, trendsetting, a perfect storm of comedy.
brhallstrom-2432015 January 2022
Soap debuted while I was in high school and, if you can imagine, was deemed risqué. I loved it and am ecstatic Antenna TV brought it back (January, 2022).

The laughs are distributed pretty evenly, so the combination of great writing and delightfully wacko characters COMBUST in rollicking FUN!

There are characters who, incredibly, stand out among the stellar cast: a young Billy Crystal perfecting his chops as gay Jodie, The Major dragging around his taxidermied dog and still commanding troops in World War II, the sarcastic and bickering "couple" Chuck and Bob, and the irreplaceable, irreverent, inimitable Benson.

Then there's Burt, played by the brilliant Richard Mulligan at his stammering, frenetic best. If the show was total garbage (certainly NOT), his performance would still make it worth watching.

If you need a female counterpoint to Burt's lunacy, there's the Queen of the Airheads, Jessica Tate. Ever optimistic, Jessica is constantly off on tangents and delightful streams of goofy consciousness. She is also responsible for some touching poignant and moving scenes.

Soap is absolutely not played for desperate-in-your-face puerile laughs; there is a feast of great acting and beautifully played serious moments, too.

I believe the best comedy is funny played straight and Soap delivers big time, every time.

Watch this show if you're too young to have seen the first run and definitely watch it if you were just a kid the first time Soap came around and used to a diet of forgettable tv. From my perspective, watching now is like reuniting with a beloved old friend. First timers may need guidance with the cultural references and the pre-internet time.

In the VAST wasteland of television "comedy," which is littered with utter crap, Soap is a rare gem deserving of its groundbreaking place in broadcasting history.

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