Erika Slezak Celebrates 40 Years on One Life to Live
Feb 28, 2011 12:17 PM ET
by Michael Logan
Erika Slezak
Now this is a superstar. Erika Slezak,
winner of an unprecedented six best actress Emmys as Victoria Lord
(Gordon Riley Burke Riley Buchanan Buchanan Carpenter Davidson Banks!)
on One Life to Live, will celebrate her 40th anniversary with the soap on March 17. (The show airs an hour-long homage to this grandest of grande dames April 26.) TV Guide Magazine sat down for a chat with Slezak about all things Viki — the men, the magic, the memories.
TV Guide Magazine: What emotions wash over you when you contemplate this milestone?
Slezak: It's kind of weird, really. Before OLTL, I
had never been on television. They said, "We're giving you a job for
two years." That turned into four, then six, then 10, but how did we
reach 40? It's kind of scary to think I've been in one place so long. [Laughs] But at the same time it's awesome!
TV Guide Magazine: You've never seemed driven to prove yourself outside of soaps. How come?
Slezak: Because OLTL
still writes for me — every couple of years I get an amazing story —
and they still pay me every Friday. It's tough for women in this
business. Once you get those lines on your face it's like, "See ya.
You're too old." But you can transcend that in daytime. I was never the
ingénue or the juvenile. I was never movie-star beautiful. Oh, you
could put makeup on me and pass me off, but I was never what people
were looking for in those days — they weren't looking for actresses,
they were looking for pretty people — but in a crazy way that turned
out to be the best thing possible. This job has allowed me to have it
all. My most important thing in life is being a mother and a wife.
Thanks to ABC, I was home every night. I cooked dinner. We did
homework. I never missed the important days at school, the plays, the
Christmas concerts. We did it all.
TV Guide Magazine: You are part of a thrilling show business
clan. Your grandfather, Leo Slezak, was a great opera tenor. Your
father, Walter Slezak, was a beloved character actor and a Tony winner.
Was it a given you'd go into the biz?
Slezak:
Not at all! When I told my father I wanted to be an actress he sat me
down for an hour or two and tried to scare the s--t out of me. "It's
brutal! You won't work! People will tell you you're too short or too
thin or too this or too that!" [Laughs] Well, nobody ever
told me I was too thin! During World War II, my father worked in
Hollywood under contract to RKO and was cast as a lot of Nazis [Alfred
Hitchcock's Lifeboat, Jean Renoir's This Land is Mine].
But then, as soon as the war was over, they dropped him because he had
played Nazis — which he did at their request! And he didn't work again
for almost five years. So his advice to me was always, "Save your
money!"
TV Guide Magazine: Prior to OLTL you were a theater actress, trained in England. Any qualms about taking soap work?
Slezak: The most I ever made in repertory theater was $175 a week, so no! [Laughs] [OLTL] was willing to pay me more money than I'd ever made before and that's all I
needed to know. Nobody ever said, "Don't do it." Though in later years
I'd come across a bit of an attitude. I'd run into Ed Limato, was a
very famous agent at ICM when I was starting out, and he'd say, "You
still on that stupid soap?" I ran into Tommy Lee Jones a few years
after he'd left OLTL and it was the same sort of thing. "You still on
that show?" Tommy went off and had a wonderful career, but that doesn't
happen to everybody. People still put daytime down, but most of them
can't do it. They're used to doing film where you shoot maybe a couple
of pages a day. My father became very proud of what I was doing. He
even made a guest appearance on OLTL for three days or so,
and when he left he said, "I never want to do that again! That's the
hardest work I've ever done in my life!" For him, it was panic time
from the moment he got there to the moment he finished. [Laughs] I said, "Welcome to daytime!"
TV Guide Magazine: Why has Viki stood the test of time?
Slezak: I credit [OLTL creator] Agnes Nixon.
She developed an extremely unique character who is very bright and
nonjudgmental yet deeply flawed because of her multiple personalities.
Viki can be an aristocrat or a streetwalker. [Laughs] How do you top that?
TV Guide Magazine: Despite Viki's nine
marriages, we don't think of her as an emotional fruitcake — like we
do, say, with Erika Kane — or that Viki is disastrously unlucky in
love. If, anything she's been a sensational partner.
Slezak:
She's been very lucky in love, I think because she always marries for
love. Well, except when she married Steve Burke. But other than that,
she always goes into marriage with the very best of intentions. And
with very real intentions. She's truly loved her men. Also,
don't forget her marriage tally is high because a bunch of her husbands
have died — Joe [Lee Patterson], Sloan [Roy Thinnes], Ben [Mark
Derwin]. The only one she divorced over and over was Clint [Clint
Ritchie].
TV Guide Magazine: Most stars in daytime would be blessed to
be part of one supercouple during their careers. You've done it several
times.
Slezak: I've been fortunate in
that they've given me partners who were willing to share. Not every
actor is unselfish. A lot of them are very selfish indeed and it's
always all about them. Fortunately, I've never had that kind
of guy. Even Clint, who wasn't necessarily the best actor in the world,
was so wonderfully natural and pure and touching that we made a great
pair. They used to call us The Cowboy and the Lady. I'm not saying
Clint was a bad actor. He was a real-life cowboy. He wasn't used to
acting, and television. But we found something that worked. Viki
brought out a sweetness in him.
TV Guide Magazine: Let's talk about the downside of 40 years — the deaths and the losses, most especially the loss of Clint Ritchie and Phil Carey [Asa].
Slezak: To
this day I'm still shocked that Phil and Clint died within the same
week. How bizarre that was! It's especially hard knowing Clint is gone.
Phil had been sick with lung cancer for a couple of years. We knew that
he probably wouldn't be with us long. And he knew it, too. I mean, he
smoked a hundred cigarettes a day at least. But Clint? That was out of the blue. Bucky died! When I heard the news it seemed so surreal. Whaat?
How could it be? And Lee Patterson! I so loved working with Lee. He's
gone, too. We had so much fun together. It's hard to think of them all
being gone. I really miss Phil. As big as Asa's presence was on screen,
Phil's presence was even bigger in the studio. Trust me, when Phil
Carey was in the building, you knew it. [Laughs] And it was wonderful!
TV Guide Magazine: How have you coped with the changes in daytime? The audience erosion? The budget cuts?
Slezak: It's very sad to realize there are only six soaps left and that OLTL is
the only one remaining in New York. When I joined, there must have been
20 soaps on the air! I guess it's the times, the economy. The budget
cuts are necessary for us to stay afloat but I do see that they are
making certain cuts — how do I say this? — that are not necessarily
productive, especially when they make our crew double up and triple up
on things. Quality is lost when one cameraman is trying to run two
cameras at the same time, and it doesn't necessarily save time. It may
save money but it doesn't save time. [OLTL executive producer]
Frank Valentini is very good at working with what he's got and he keeps
the morale up. He always makes a point of showing his appreciation.
That's the good thing about our show. We keep going as a team. Sure,
there are always one or two who prefer to remain outsiders, but for the
most part we are a team.
TV Guide Magazine: How have you handled the incessant cancellation rumors?
Slezak: When OLTL moved studios, people were saying, "We're being canceled." When they moved All My Children
to L.A. it was the same thing. "They're being canceled." But why would
ABC spend all that money to move both shows and then drop them? You
have to be reasonable about it. There is still a big and viable and
devoted audience for our show. But if we get canceled, we get canceled.
What can you do? I've had 40 years — that's 38 more than I thought I
was going to have. I can't complain. And I did what my father said. [Laughs] I saved my money!
TV Guide Magazine: Robin Strasser [Dorian] told me she was kinda freaked when she heard Kim Zimmer was returning to OLTL
as Echo — understandable given Zimmer's über-persona and rep for scene
stealing. But Strasser said you calmed her down, assuring her that
Zimmer's return was a very good thing. That gave me some real insight
into you.
Slezak: Kim coming back to the
show was a freakin' brilliant opportunity. Robin was indeed concerned.
She came to me and said, "Erika, I just don't know about this." But I
told her this could only be good for our characters and the
show. Bringing back Echo delved into our history and brought up all
that old animosity. It's just fabulous! And Kim is such a joy.
TV Guide Magazine: So you're not prone to feeling threatened?
Slezak: People
in this business are so worried about being supplanted. But I just
can't think about that. I just focus on holding my own.
TV Guide Magazine: So what's the scoop on your special homage episode?
Slezak: I haven't seen the script yet but I think it's going to include a lot of me. [Laughs]
No flashbacks or anything. I think they're going to dredge up a lot of
what's going on in Viki's life right now and how she's dealing with it.
When Frank said, "We're writing a show for you," I was so touched I
started to cry. It's so sweet. But I was kind of hoping it would all go
by unnoticed.
TV Guide Magazine: Seriously? How could your 40th go ignored?
Slezak: I
came to this show without a fuss — I crept in rather quietly — and when
I leave I want to go out that way, too. I don't like fuss. It's a
little embarrassing. But I think it's just so darling that they want to
do this special show for me, and I am deeply honored. I only have one
concern.
TV Guide Magazine: What would that be?
Slezak: That I do it justice.
5 posters
Erika Slezak Celebrates 40 Years on One Life to Live
Chris- Chamber Admin.
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Tony Marino- …is a Global Moderator.
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Great Article, thanks Chris. ES is the main reason I still watch OLTL.
Chris- Chamber Admin.
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You're welcome Tony. Glad to hear that they are planning an all-Viki episode, but I hope they do show some flashbacks. It being Sleazak's fortieth anniversary, and all.
Tony Marino- …is a Global Moderator.
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Yeah seeing flashbacks makes it more fun to watch and see how Viki has evolved over the years!
allison13- …is an Up 'N Comer.
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Very nice article.Thank you for posting it,Chris.ES has always been a class act and she's right.I hope the show does her justice for this milestone.
TSJFan4Ever- …is a Chamber Royal.
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What a great interview! Thanks for posting. I had no idea Vicki had been married 9 times - wow!
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Great article! I look forward to the Viki episode and I think there will likely be at least a few old clips shown. Whenever they do a ES anniversary tribute they show flashbacks.
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