SOAP OPERA DIGEST
18 Novembre 1986
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Tristan Rogers left GENERAL HOSPITAL in December 1985 he told our interviewer, Andrea Payne, "leaving to be perfectly honest with you, scares the hell out of me." Could he parlay his fame as Robert Scorpio into a career in prime time television or in the movies? Or did he find, like his GH costar Sharon Wyaff (Tiffany Hill), who recently returned to the show when her phone did not ring, that soop popularity didn't mean squat when it came to the media major leagues? Tristan Rogers is back on GENERAL HOSPITAL for a twelve-week run as Robert Scorpio. Was he scared to death by the void of unemploy ment most actors face? And why did his love affair with Emma Somms (ex-Holly, now Fallon, THE COLBYS) deteriorate? In this candid interview, Tristan tells all. DC: Are you excited with what's going on with the show right now? TR:You know more about the show than I do. I haven't seen it since I left. DC: Why did you decide to return to GENERAL HOSPITAL? TR: I've got a lot of projects coming up at the first of the year and my agent suggested that a brief stint back on GENERAL HOSPITAL (ed. note: 12 weeks) might be the best and quickest way for me to get my act together. He's right. You get so much dumped on you that you've got to sink or swim. DC: But wasn't the whole point of leaving the show originally to take advantage of all the other offers that had come your way? TR: I had a lot of offers after I left the show, but I elected to keep myself off the market until I found what I wanted. Unfortunately, I didn't find it this year. I did do the season opener of HOTEL which was a lot of fun. DC: Is this another unfortunate case of a daytime star who hasn't been able to make the transition to prime time or features? TR: I know there are going to be a few people out there who'll be dying to misinterpret the fact that I'm going back to GH. My lack of work outside of GH has nothing to do with the fact that I'm a soap star or that soap stars don't cross over. There was plenty of work to be done. The problem was in finding a piece of work that would enhance my career and give me a step up. EveryEvery thing else would have been a step down or step sideways and I wanted to avoid that. DC: When the right project comes along, what will it be? TR: I know I'm going to be cast in an image similar to that of Scorpio and that's all right because I can live with that - for a while. The problem is that I had the opportunity of doing a multidimensional character on GH but that opportunity is much harder to find on prime time because there are so many car chases and gun fights that there's not much room for an actor to be an actor. In fact, I've sat down and started working on some ideas of my own where I can get back to acting. I don't want to do a show where I have a machine or everything's special effects. DC: Did the pressures of the show contribute to your divorce from your wife, Barbara? TR: I'll make one comment on my divorce and it's that it would be very easy for me to blame Hollywood for the downfall of my marriage but I won't do that. Work was possibly a factor, but it wasn't the factor. There were other personal aspects that came into play. DC: Are the two of you still friends? TR: Unfortunately, Barbara and I don't see each other all that often. DC: You developed quite a reputation as a ladies' man. TR: I moved around a bit. Yes, I was out playing the field for quite a while. Then I got bored with it. It's not my way. I'm not a person who needs to have a different date every night. That's not where I'm at. I'm interested in having one person who I can get to know and who can get to know me (a long pause and a big smile). And then tolerate me. DC: If you believe what you read, one would surmise that, for a time, that person was Emma Samms. What happened? TR: It was never Tristan and Emma. It was always Holly and Robert. People couldn't differentiate that we were two different people apart from the characters. We would go to the most obscure restaurant, drive for an hour and a half to get there, three cars parked in front of the place, two-thirds deserted, go to the nearest dark comer and. . .sure enough! They'd find you. In the end, we just couldn't go out anywhere. But what really tore the whole thing asunder was that we didn't have anything in common, except GENERAL HOSPITAL. And once you took the show away, there wasn't anything left. It's like having a shipboard romance. While you're on the water, it's great. But the minute that boat docks, it's bye, bye baby. DC: Are you seeing someone now? TR: Yes. For four months. She doesn't live in town. She's not in show business. And she isn't impressed with the whole idea of "Robert Scorpio" in the slightest. Although I think she was a bit taken aback when she saw the reaction fans can have to me. We were in New York recently and she got a firsthand example of what it's like to be with someone who gets recognized. At first she wasn't sure if she wanted to become involved in that kind of thing, but I think she's rationalized the situation to the point of, "If he's an actor and that's his job, then that's his job." She's adapting to it pretty well. DC: During your time away from the show, what is the one thing you've missed the most? TR: The camaraderie. I've got a lot of friends in front of and behind the cameras. My big thing is to talk to the cameramen, hang out in the prop room. Get down with the people. (A concluding smile.) Not people like me but, you know, real people. |