m (→1970s) |
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====Lee Baldwin==== |
====Lee Baldwin==== |
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− | In 1970, Brooke came to live with [[Lee Baldwin|Lee]] and Meg Baldwin after her marriage to Noel broke up. Meg then was diagnosed with breast cancer and had to undergo a radical mastectomy. Meg became increasingly jealous of Brooke and had a nervous breakdown. Lee was then forced to institutionalize her. |
+ | In 1970, Brooke came to live with [[Lee Baldwin|Lee]] and Meg Baldwin after her marriage to Noel Clinton broke up. Meg then was diagnosed with breast cancer and had to undergo a radical mastectomy. Meg became increasingly jealous of Brooke and had a nervous breakdown. Lee was then forced to institutionalize her. |
After Meg was released from the institution, she suffered from a severe case of hypertension. Dr. [[Lesley Webber|Lesley Williams]] was assigned to Meg's case. Meg became increasingly jealous of Lesley and paranoid that she was after her husband. One day, Meg lashed out at Lee and died of a stroke. |
After Meg was released from the institution, she suffered from a severe case of hypertension. Dr. [[Lesley Webber|Lesley Williams]] was assigned to Meg's case. Meg became increasingly jealous of Lesley and paranoid that she was after her husband. One day, Meg lashed out at Lee and died of a stroke. |
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Line 95: | Line 95: | ||
Adoption agent Caroline Chandler came to town and got reacquainted with her old friend Lee. They began dating and then married. |
Adoption agent Caroline Chandler came to town and got reacquainted with her old friend Lee. They began dating and then married. |
||
− | ====The |
+ | ====The Brewer-Taylor triangle==== |
After recovering from the plane crash in Venezuela, [[Phil Brewer]] sneaked back into town under the alias Harold Williamson, believing he was still wanted for the murder of Polly Prentice. He took a job as a dishwasher at a restaurant and started a relationship with [[Diana Taylor|Diana Maynard]]. He still longed for [[Jessie Brewer|Jessie]], but knew he couldn't be with her. |
After recovering from the plane crash in Venezuela, [[Phil Brewer]] sneaked back into town under the alias Harold Williamson, believing he was still wanted for the murder of Polly Prentice. He took a job as a dishwasher at a restaurant and started a relationship with [[Diana Taylor|Diana Maynard]]. He still longed for [[Jessie Brewer|Jessie]], but knew he couldn't be with her. |
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Line 119: | Line 119: | ||
In 1974, Howie quit his job and left town, leaving Jane relieved. He returned only once when his infant daughter Joanne died. Jane then fell for Dr. Henry Pinkham, whose wife Sharon had left. The couple decided they needed a fresh start, so they both transferred to Mercy Hospital. |
In 1974, Howie quit his job and left town, leaving Jane relieved. He returned only once when his infant daughter Joanne died. Jane then fell for Dr. Henry Pinkham, whose wife Sharon had left. The couple decided they needed a fresh start, so they both transferred to Mercy Hospital. |
||
− | ==== |
+ | ====The Laura Vining saga==== |
Dr. [[Lesley Webber|Lesley Williams]]' first patient at [[General Hospital (location)|General Hospital]] was Mrs. Florence Grey. Florence revealed her marital woes to psychiatrist Dr. Peter Taylor. She told him how her husband Gordon Grey was a professor and had had an affair years before with a student, who had gotten pregnant. She said that a baby girl was born and died soon after. Peter informed Lesley of this, not thinking anything of it, and Lesley knew that she was the student Florence spoke of. Lesley, couldn't stop thinking about her daughter. |
Dr. [[Lesley Webber|Lesley Williams]]' first patient at [[General Hospital (location)|General Hospital]] was Mrs. Florence Grey. Florence revealed her marital woes to psychiatrist Dr. Peter Taylor. She told him how her husband Gordon Grey was a professor and had had an affair years before with a student, who had gotten pregnant. She said that a baby girl was born and died soon after. Peter informed Lesley of this, not thinking anything of it, and Lesley knew that she was the student Florence spoke of. Lesley, couldn't stop thinking about her daughter. |
||
Line 127: | Line 127: | ||
Laura's parents Barbara and Jason Vining were curious as to what Lesley wanted with their daughter. When the truth that Lesley was her biological mother came out, they vowed to not let Laura go. A custody battle ensued. The judge gave temporary custody to Lesley, so that Laura could chose with whom she wanted to reside. |
Laura's parents Barbara and Jason Vining were curious as to what Lesley wanted with their daughter. When the truth that Lesley was her biological mother came out, they vowed to not let Laura go. A custody battle ensued. The judge gave temporary custody to Lesley, so that Laura could chose with whom she wanted to reside. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Laura had a hard time choosing between the Vinings and the Faulkners. She did not know which family she wanted to live with. Laura started suffering from high fevers and convulsions from being under such great emotional pain. Lesley decided to drop the custody battle and return Laura to the Vinings to avoid further emotional pain. Lesley remained obsessed with her daughter though. Laura suffered another attack, and Barbara asked Lesley to remain in Laura's life. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Cameron was very jealous of the time Lesley spent with Laura instead of him. When Laura decided to spend the summer of 1976 with them, he declared that it was time to get her out of their lives for good. Cameron paid Margaret Clifford, another former nurse at the clinic where Laura was born, $10,000 to tell Lesley that Doris Roach had lied and that Laura is not actually her daughter. Lesley decided to go to Barbara and tell her what she was told, but when she got there, the house was deserted. Lesley then found a check for $25,000 from Cameron to Barbara. Cam realized that his plan was exposed and exploded. He brutally raped her, then kidnapped her. In the car, Lesley grabbed the steering wheel, causing it to crash, killing Cameron. |
||
+ | |||
+ | ====The Webbers==== |
||
+ | In March of 1976, Terri Arnett came to town after the death of her father Dr. Lars Webber and his wife Helen. Terri's younger brothers were Drs. [[Rick Webber|Rick]] and [[Jeff Webber]]. Their father, Lars, was an old friend of Dr. [[Steve Hardy]]. Rick volunteered to a six-month medical stint in Africa, where he was reported dead after a small plane crashed. Jeff and his wife [[Monica Quartermaine|Monica]] both graduated from medical school and got jobs at [[General Hospital (location)|General Hospital]]. Monica had previously been engaged to Rick, but moved on to his younger brother Jeff after hearing of Rick's death. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Jeff feared that everyone at the hospital compared him to his late brother, Rick. Jeff began making errors at the hospital and Steve Hardy accused him of being hung up on the ghost of his dead brother. Rick, however, was not actually dead. He was being held against his will in Africa. When his prison was hit in a bombing raid, he was set free. Jeff had mixed emotions when he found out his brother was coming home. He was worried that he would come back for Monica, which was in deed Rick's plan. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Upon Rick's return, a complicated love triangle ensued between Monica and the brothers. One night, Monica and Rick proclaimed their love for each other. They knew they couldn't act on their love though since Monica was married to Jeff, and they tried to stay away from each other. Rick confided in Dr. Mark Dante, who advised him to get a new girl in order to get over Monica. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Mark, meanwhile, was in a love triangle with Rick and Jeff's sister Terri. He couldn't act on his feelings for Terri because he already had a wife, Mary-Ellen, in an asylum back in Boston. Mark then brought Mary-Ellen to town and put her in a sanitarium outside of town. When Mary-Ellen found out about her husband's passion for Terri, she vowed to keep them apart. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Monica and Jeff's marriage was in shambles. Monica wanted to divorce, but couldn't without Jeff's consent. So, she refused to sleep with him. Then the scheming Heather Grant set her sights on Jeff. She went out of her way to be near him. Heather found a letter from Rick to Monica and arranged for Jeff to find it. Jeff got suspicious of Rick and Monica's relationship and started using a variety of pills to sleep, stay awake, and numb pain. Jeff finally confronted Monica with the letter and grabbed her. Monica ran off to Rick's and tore her dress, telling him Jeff did it to her. The two then made love. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Rick had moved into an apartment in the same building as [[Lesley Webber|Lesley Faulkner]] and the two had become close friends. Lesley found out she was pregnant with her late-husband Cameron's baby from the night he raped her. Lesley was falling in love with Rick, and when Monica found out that Lesley was pregnant, she assumed it was Rick's, until Terri set her straight. Fearing Lesley was moving in on Rick, Monica confronted her. She told Lesley to stay away from Rick, that they were having an affair. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Heather, meanwhile, had decided to seduce Jeff and get pregnant with his child. She wanted to give him what he wanted, sex and marriage, since his marriage to Monica was ending. Heather arranged for Jeff to find out that Monica had spent the night at Rick's, hoping he'd turn to her, especially since she had found out she was pregnant with his child. He didn't, however. He instead disappeared. He was found at a bar, drunk, despondent, and high on amphetamines. Jeff spent the night in the back there, and when Mark Dante came to get him the next day, a gunshot was heard. Jeff was found in the back with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head. |
||
===1980s=== |
===1980s=== |
Revision as of 00:40, 20 September 2011
General Hospital was created by Frank and Doris Hursley. The first episode aired April 1, 1963 on ABC.
Original cast
Character | Portrayer |
---|---|
Cynthia Allison | Carolyn Craig |
Lee Baldwin | Ross Elliott |
Dorothy Bradley | Susan Seaforth Hayes |
Nurse Jessie Brewer | Emily McLaughlin |
Dr. Phil Brewer | Roy Thinnes |
Angie Costello | Jana Taylor |
Mike Costello | Ralph Manza |
Fred Fleming | Simon Scott |
Janet Fleming | Ruth Phillips |
Dr. Steve Hardy | John Beradino |
Roy Lansing | Robert Clarke |
Dr. Steven Lansing | Matthew S Infante |
Decades at a glance
1960s
Steve and Audrey Hardy
The early years of General Hospital revolved around the seventh floor of a hospital, the internal medicine department, in an unnamed mid-sized city in the Eastern US. Dr. Steve Hardy was the Chief of Internal Medicine and the main character of the show. Dr. Hardy spent what seemed like all his time at the hospital--his days, his nights, and even his weekends--seeing patients and completing paperwork. Because of all the time and attention he gave his work, his fiance Peggy Mercer left him for writer Roy Lansing in the fall of 1963.
Audrey March arrived in town February of 1964. She came to visit her much older sister Nurse Lucille March, who was the senior nurse on the seventh floor, but decided to stay when she met Steve. They soon began to date. Steve and Audrey became engaged, then briefly broke up, but got back together when Steve helped Audrey recover from lymphoma. Steve and Audrey were then married in 1965.
Audrey was worried when she failed to get pregnant after two years of trying, so she secretly had herself artificially inseminated. When Steve found out, he felt betrayed and moved out. Steve later came around though, but when Audrey miscarried, she was devastated and filed for divorce. She then left town and went to Vietnam.
Audrey returned after six months and got a job as a pediatrics nurse at the hospital. Steve, however, had moved on with hospital volunteer Denise Wilton. Audrey, trying to prove she was over Steve, married Dr. Tom Baldwin. She was still in love with Steve though and couldn't bring herself to consummate the marriage. Tom raped her, and when she found she was pregnant, Audrey sued Tom for divorce and left town again.
Jessie and Phil Brewer
Steve was good friends with Nurse Jessie Brewer, who was having problems in the love area herself. She and her husband Dr. Phil Brewer, who was seven years younger than she, had been drifting apart, partly due to his affair with the younger Cynthia Allison, who was engaged to Dr. Ken Martin. Phil finally confessed to his affair with Cynthia, and Jessie filed for divorce. The couple though came back together when Jessie found out she was pregnant, then broke up again when she miscarried the baby on July 24, 1964.
Phil then raped Jessie, and he left town. Jessie then found out she was pregnant, and lawyer and addiction counselor Lee Baldwin, who had long loved Jessie, offered to marry her. They planned to marry the day that Jessie and Phil's divorce was finalized. Plans changed, however, when Nurse Lucille March told Phil that Jessie was pregnant and he came back to town. She vowed to go through with the marriage to Lee, but on the day before their wedding, Jessie went into labor, and she was still legally married to Phil.
Their daughter Nancy was born with a heart condition, and she died on July 27, 1966. Their divorce finally went through, and Phil moved to San Francisco.
After divorcing Phil, Jessie dated obstetrician Dr. John Prentice and married him. John was very ill and dying. His twenty-year-old daughter Polly Prentice resented John rewriting his will to give Jessie everything. Days later, John was dead. Jessie was put on trial, along with Dr. Tom Baldwin, with whom Polly had revealed Jessie had had an affair, for the murder of John Prentice. Jessie and Tom were found guilty, but Phil returned to town, pledging to prove Jessie innocent. Tom got Polly to confess to her father's murder, and Jessie and Tom were set free.
Thinking Phil had changed, Jessie remarried him. She was wrong though, and Phil started having an affair with Polly. Phil and Polly were in a car accident and Polly miscarried a baby she claimed was Phil's. Charges were brought against Phil, and he fled town. Months later, in November of 1969, Phil was presumed dead when a "P. Brewer" was listed among the dead in an airplane crash in South America.
Psychiatrist Dr. Peter Taylor came to town and took a liking to Jessie, and they eventually married. Phil, however, was not actually dead.
Angie Costello and Eddie Weeks
Steve Hardy's first patient at General Hospital was teenager Angie Costello, who had been in a bad car accident when her boyfriend Eddie Weeks had decided to drive drunk. Angie's face was badly disfigured and it took surgeons hours to repair the damage. Angie was despondent and contemplated suicide. Steve and nurse Jessie Brewer, however, talked her out of it. Angie was then called to testify against Eddie in his drunk driving trial. She admitted on the stand that he had had a few beers before getting behind the wheel, and that helped the prosecution get a guilty ruling. Eddie was sentenced to probation and the young couple broke up.
Angie, however, found out she was pregnant and Jessie calmed and comforted her. Angie gave her son up for adoption to Janet Fleming. Then, two years later, Angie and Eddie started dating again and decided they wanted their son back. When Janet wouldn't give the baby back, the teenagers kidnapped him. When they were caught, Lee Baldwin defended them, and they were sentenced to probation, and they had to give the baby back to Janet.
Lee and Meg Baldwin
In the summer of 1966, a widowed nurse named Meg Bentley came to town with her young son Scotty and her seventeen-year-old stepdaughter Brooke. Lee Baldwin liked Meg and they became great friends, but Meg became engaged to Dr. Noel Clinton. Noel, however, shocked Meg when he left her for Brooke the day before their wedding. Meg then turned to Lee and they began to date. Late in 1966, Meg and Lee married, and Lee adopted Scotty.
Meg, however, started getting paranoid that Lee was having an affair with her nursing school friend Iris Fairchild, who was working for Lee as his secretary. Lee and Meg briefly separated, but got back together after Lee donated his kidney to save Scotty's life.
1970s
Audrey Hardy Baldwin
In February of 1971, Audrey Hardy Baldwin returned to Port Charles, without the baby she was pregnant with when she left town two years earlier. She claimed her baby was stillborn. Audrey, who was still legally married to Tom Baldwin, was not telling the truth however. In actuality, her baby, whom she called Stevie, was living across town with Peggy Nelson.
Audrey thought that if Tom knew the baby was alive, that he would never give them up and contest the divorce. Audrey planned to tell Steve that Peggy's child was a foster child and, after divorcing Tom, she would marry Steve and they would adopt him. Peggy, however, found out about the plan and started blackmailing Audrey. If Audrey didn't pay Peggy $500 a month, Peggy would reveal the truth about Stevie.
On the night of September 24, 1971, Audrey came home with Stevie and a gun. She was agitated and panicking. She put the gun in the water tank of the toilet. Across town, Peggy was lying dead from a gunshot wound. The truth about Stevie came out and all the evidence pointed to Audrey being the murderer. Audrey, however, adamantly told Steve that she was innocent, and he believed her. In the end, Peggy's ex-husband Arnold Nelson was revealed as the true murderer.
Seeing as the truth was out, Audrey had to go back to her marriage with Tom. Stevie was renamed Tommy, and Tom eventually kidnapped Tommy and fled to Mexico. Months later, a nanny, Florence Andrews, brought Tommy back to Audrey, saying Tom had died. After Tommy came home, he fell ill and needed open-heart surgery. Dr. Jim Hobart saved young Tommy's life. Audrey was so grateful that she started dating Jim, and later married him.
Lee Baldwin
In 1970, Brooke came to live with Lee and Meg Baldwin after her marriage to Noel Clinton broke up. Meg then was diagnosed with breast cancer and had to undergo a radical mastectomy. Meg became increasingly jealous of Brooke and had a nervous breakdown. Lee was then forced to institutionalize her.
After Meg was released from the institution, she suffered from a severe case of hypertension. Dr. Lesley Williams was assigned to Meg's case. Meg became increasingly jealous of Lesley and paranoid that she was after her husband. One day, Meg lashed out at Lee and died of a stroke.
Adoption agent Caroline Chandler came to town and got reacquainted with her old friend Lee. They began dating and then married.
The Brewer-Taylor triangle
After recovering from the plane crash in Venezuela, Phil Brewer sneaked back into town under the alias Harold Williamson, believing he was still wanted for the murder of Polly Prentice. He took a job as a dishwasher at a restaurant and started a relationship with Diana Maynard. He still longed for Jessie, but knew he couldn't be with her.
Diana found out Phil's true identity, but chose to keep it a secret, as well as not telling Phil that the charges against him had been dropped. Phil, though found out the truth on his own when he searched through old newspapers at the library. He was then angry at Diana for keeping this information from him.
Phil went to see Jessie, but when he saw her with her new husband Peter Taylor, he sped off, only to crash his car. He lay in his hospital bed, covered with bandages. After delicate brain surgery, his bandages were removed, and Jessie saw and recognized him. While Phil was in the hospital, Diana found out she was pregnant with his child.
Jessie, however, went back to Phil, and Diana and Peter turned to each other. Phil found out the baby was his, and left Jessie, wanting to be with Diana. Diana, however, loved Peter and soon married him and then gave birth to Phil's son, whom she named Tracy Taylor. Diana hated Phil so much that when Tracy came down with pneumonia, she refused to take him to the hospital, knowing she'd run into Phil. Because of this, Tracy died.
Phil became increasingly obsessed with Diana, and one night, he raped her. Diana, however, kept it a secret from Peter, fearing repercussions. Diana then found out she was pregnant again, with Phil's baby. She gave birth to Martha Taylor, and Phil left for Africa. When the secret came out, Peter rejected Diana, feeling betrayed, and Diana filed for divorce.
In Africa, Phil still longed for Diana. He got nurse Augusta McLeod, nurse Jane Dawson's cousin, to help him. Augusta seduced Peter, and Diana struck up a relationship with Dr. Joel Stratton. The couple was heading to divorce, but at the last minute, reconciled. Due to the reconciliation, Augusta told Phil he needed to return to town. Augusta needed Phil's help to break them up because she was pregnant with Peter's child.
When Phil arrived, in front of the seventh floor nurses' station, he told Peter that Augusta was pregnant with his child. Phil threatened to tell Diana, and Peter knocked down Phil and loudly shouted for him to stay away from Diana or he would kill Phil. Later that night, December 6, 1974, Phil was found dead. There were many suspects, but Jessie Brewer was charged with the murder. Before Jessie went to trial, Diana confessed to the murder and produced the murder weapon, a blood-stained geode. Diana was finally exonerated when Jim Hobart remembered seeing August McLeod with Phil that night.
August confessed and went to prison, where she had her baby, who was placed in a foster home.
The Dawsons
Nurse Jane Dawson was married to Howie Dawson, who often would cheat on her and gamble away their money on horse races, but Jane always forgave him because she loved him so much. Howie didn't want children, so without his wife's knowledge, he underwent a vasectomy. This caused Jane to nearly divorce him, but she forgave him when he told her it would never happen again and he had it reversed.
The Dawsons then had a daughter, named Joanne. Howie, however, continued his old ways. When he played around with Brook Clinton, Jane finally had had enough. She told him she wanted a whole marriage none at all. Howie decided to leave Brooke. He took her out to one last dinner, but after he dropped her home, she was murdered by her other boyfriend and ex-boss Burt Douglas. Howie was the main suspect in the murder case, but was exonerated when he recalled seeing Burt at that night.
In 1974, Howie quit his job and left town, leaving Jane relieved. He returned only once when his infant daughter Joanne died. Jane then fell for Dr. Henry Pinkham, whose wife Sharon had left. The couple decided they needed a fresh start, so they both transferred to Mercy Hospital.
The Laura Vining saga
Dr. Lesley Williams' first patient at General Hospital was Mrs. Florence Grey. Florence revealed her marital woes to psychiatrist Dr. Peter Taylor. She told him how her husband Gordon Grey was a professor and had had an affair years before with a student, who had gotten pregnant. She said that a baby girl was born and died soon after. Peter informed Lesley of this, not thinking anything of it, and Lesley knew that she was the student Florence spoke of. Lesley, couldn't stop thinking about her daughter.
Lesley started dating millionaire Cameron Faulkner. The couple got married and a patient named Doris Roach told Lesley that she had been a nurse where she had given birth to her daughter. She said that the baby did not die like Lesley thought. Instead, Lesley's father had paid her to switch the baby with the body of a dead baby at the clinic.
With this new information, Lesley was determined to find her child. Cameron hired Mac McLaughlin to find the child. He found twelve-year-old Laura Vining living with her parents and younger sister Amy Vining just a few miles away. Lesley went to a candy store where she saw Laura. She then struck up a friendship with Laura, buying her lunch and presents.
Laura's parents Barbara and Jason Vining were curious as to what Lesley wanted with their daughter. When the truth that Lesley was her biological mother came out, they vowed to not let Laura go. A custody battle ensued. The judge gave temporary custody to Lesley, so that Laura could chose with whom she wanted to reside.
Laura had a hard time choosing between the Vinings and the Faulkners. She did not know which family she wanted to live with. Laura started suffering from high fevers and convulsions from being under such great emotional pain. Lesley decided to drop the custody battle and return Laura to the Vinings to avoid further emotional pain. Lesley remained obsessed with her daughter though. Laura suffered another attack, and Barbara asked Lesley to remain in Laura's life.
Cameron was very jealous of the time Lesley spent with Laura instead of him. When Laura decided to spend the summer of 1976 with them, he declared that it was time to get her out of their lives for good. Cameron paid Margaret Clifford, another former nurse at the clinic where Laura was born, $10,000 to tell Lesley that Doris Roach had lied and that Laura is not actually her daughter. Lesley decided to go to Barbara and tell her what she was told, but when she got there, the house was deserted. Lesley then found a check for $25,000 from Cameron to Barbara. Cam realized that his plan was exposed and exploded. He brutally raped her, then kidnapped her. In the car, Lesley grabbed the steering wheel, causing it to crash, killing Cameron.
The Webbers
In March of 1976, Terri Arnett came to town after the death of her father Dr. Lars Webber and his wife Helen. Terri's younger brothers were Drs. Rick and Jeff Webber. Their father, Lars, was an old friend of Dr. Steve Hardy. Rick volunteered to a six-month medical stint in Africa, where he was reported dead after a small plane crashed. Jeff and his wife Monica both graduated from medical school and got jobs at General Hospital. Monica had previously been engaged to Rick, but moved on to his younger brother Jeff after hearing of Rick's death.
Jeff feared that everyone at the hospital compared him to his late brother, Rick. Jeff began making errors at the hospital and Steve Hardy accused him of being hung up on the ghost of his dead brother. Rick, however, was not actually dead. He was being held against his will in Africa. When his prison was hit in a bombing raid, he was set free. Jeff had mixed emotions when he found out his brother was coming home. He was worried that he would come back for Monica, which was in deed Rick's plan.
Upon Rick's return, a complicated love triangle ensued between Monica and the brothers. One night, Monica and Rick proclaimed their love for each other. They knew they couldn't act on their love though since Monica was married to Jeff, and they tried to stay away from each other. Rick confided in Dr. Mark Dante, who advised him to get a new girl in order to get over Monica.
Mark, meanwhile, was in a love triangle with Rick and Jeff's sister Terri. He couldn't act on his feelings for Terri because he already had a wife, Mary-Ellen, in an asylum back in Boston. Mark then brought Mary-Ellen to town and put her in a sanitarium outside of town. When Mary-Ellen found out about her husband's passion for Terri, she vowed to keep them apart.
Monica and Jeff's marriage was in shambles. Monica wanted to divorce, but couldn't without Jeff's consent. So, she refused to sleep with him. Then the scheming Heather Grant set her sights on Jeff. She went out of her way to be near him. Heather found a letter from Rick to Monica and arranged for Jeff to find it. Jeff got suspicious of Rick and Monica's relationship and started using a variety of pills to sleep, stay awake, and numb pain. Jeff finally confronted Monica with the letter and grabbed her. Monica ran off to Rick's and tore her dress, telling him Jeff did it to her. The two then made love.
Rick had moved into an apartment in the same building as Lesley Faulkner and the two had become close friends. Lesley found out she was pregnant with her late-husband Cameron's baby from the night he raped her. Lesley was falling in love with Rick, and when Monica found out that Lesley was pregnant, she assumed it was Rick's, until Terri set her straight. Fearing Lesley was moving in on Rick, Monica confronted her. She told Lesley to stay away from Rick, that they were having an affair.
Heather, meanwhile, had decided to seduce Jeff and get pregnant with his child. She wanted to give him what he wanted, sex and marriage, since his marriage to Monica was ending. Heather arranged for Jeff to find out that Monica had spent the night at Rick's, hoping he'd turn to her, especially since she had found out she was pregnant with his child. He didn't, however. He instead disappeared. He was found at a bar, drunk, despondent, and high on amphetamines. Jeff spent the night in the back there, and when Mark Dante came to get him the next day, a gunshot was heard. Jeff was found in the back with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head.
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
Opening credits gallery
Stills
Videos
300px|thumb|left|Apr 1, 1963 - Nov 21, 1963300px|thumb|right|Nov 26, 1963 - Apr 11, 1975 (it was filmed in color starting Oct 1967 with a blue background)
300px|thumb|left|Apr 14, 1975 - Mar 31, 1993300px|thumb|right|Apr 1, 1993 - Aug 27, 2004
300px|thumb|left|Aug 30, 2004 - Feb 22, 2010300px|thumb|right|Feb 23, 2010 - present
See also
- General Hospital characters
- Children of General Hospital
- Actors and actresses of General Hospital
- Episodes of General Hospital
- Events in General Hospital history
- Families of General Hospital
- Locations in and around Port Charles, New York
- Supercouples of General Hosptial
- Spinoffs of General Hospital
External links
- The History of a Soap Opera: General Hospital
- History Highlights @ SoapZone.com
- History of General Hospital @ Wikipedia
- General Hospital History @ About.com
References
- Warner, Gary. (1995). General hospital: The complete scrapbook. General Publishing Group: Los Angeles.