My father wrote the theme song! The original theme song was just on piano and organ and he would play both, live, every show. Later on, he arranged it for a full assortment of instruments as you hear here.
Your dad was very creative, for sure. Imagine going in and playing it live when they just could have taped it and played it that way every day. I am not sure how the rules of broadcasting worked in those days. This particular arrangement is the richest one by far.....still holds up today. BTW, this soap's opening in the late 50s had the scariest lead-in of any "daytime serial" for a little kid to view, as others have mentioned.
I met your father in August 1974 while I had a summer job at CBS. He gave me a copy of the handwritten sheet music to the opening theme and to the closing theme (but it was missing two bridges that he played in the long version). Do you have a copy of the sheet music for the long version the way he was playing it in 1974? He had a huge stack of unstapled old scripts on one of the tables in the music room. When I asked him about it, he said that he would bring the pages home to his son who liked to draw on the backs of the pages! Regards from NYC!!!
Paul B Taubman That's awesome! I actually interviewed Donald May and he spoke very fondly of the theme to "Edge of Night." It's amazing God bless your father.
That is awesome Paul! I have written quite a few film and television scores before. Your father's theme song was gorgeous! Thanks so much for providing this information.
Paul B Taubman much respect for your father! I want to learn those intro piano chords! I’ve been trying to find out who wrote the intro. Where could I possibly find those chords and full song? Please help, I must play the song, I must!
I remember my mom watching this when I was a little kid, I miss those days so much. Miss you momma... Damn I miss you momma! I miss her so much. She raised me.
When I was about six years old, my grandmother had cataract surgery. She begged me to watch this with her and tell her what was happening. I was very bad at it, and the intro scared me silly. Glad to see it again after so much time
pre kindergarten, 1964 - 1967, it use to scare me, then when i was a senior in high school one of my friends got me back into watching it, she loved the show and i started to watch it again, or we would call each other and tell what happened if one of us missed the show____i was in college when it went off the air in 1984, i was really bummed out
As a kid I used to run home from school to watch The Edge of Night! Paul Taubman's stark, dramatic piano chords as the 'edge of night' moved across the skyline of Monticello let viewers know this was not your typical daytime drama!
The music, The drama, The announcer; these all made The Edge of Night scary to me as a youngster when I wasn't in school and watching it with my Mother.
Wow! SO MANY MEMORIES!!! I only know this because of all the times I stayed home from school because I was sick. I couldn't help but hear this and other soap operas because my mother would watch them one after another. After they were over, she would watch Merv Griffin. The is such a potpourri of memories for me. Even the announcer talking about tuning in on Monday made me remember that this was a Friday, and that meant cartoons tomorrow (Saturday) and a day off from school.
You are a jewel for uploading this! I'd forgotten that stern intonation: "The Edge.... of Night" though I don't know how since I practically grew up listening to it--my grandmother LOVED this soap. Thanks again!
I used to watch, back in the mid 70's. The Adam and Nicole Drake/ Brandy storyline was quite engaging. Dixie Carter, of Designing women, played Brandy. Ann Flood, who played Nancy Carr was the longest player in the cast.Her name appeared first in the closing credits. Donald May's name appears last( Adam) Would've been appropriate if his name appeared first
This was probably the best soap opera on television in the 70s. I loved the music and remember Dixie Carter as Brandy Henderson. Thank you for posting this.
when I was very little and my baby sitter put this on, I thought it was a death sentence by boredom. thank goodness my mom put a laundry shoot in the bathroom and we'd all slide down it into the laundry
I used to mimic the opening theme music from this show on my grandmothers old upright piano when I was little. Just couldn't get it right. Haven't heard this theme since back then. memories.
I remember this quite clearly from the summer of 1974 when I was waiting for "The Price Is Right" and always liked the ending theme. Thanks for sharing!
@Christopher Hagee I don't know who this announcer was. He did not quite have the style of the two main Edge of Night announcers Harry Cramer 1956 - 72 and the voice you are thinking of Hal Simms from 1972 - 77. Both were great but Hal Simms' version (Theeeee Edgggeeee OF NIGHT!!!!) was one I enjoyed!
Gorgeous visuals of Cincinatti! Now of course, in the original color opening/closings the logo zoomed out more slowly, which made it even more spooky, to me. It's amazing how you were able to capture the variations of the logo, I mentioned in my previous comment. The closing logo is larger, less crinkled and less slanted than the opening logo.
in california edge of night was on from 3pm - 330pm in the late 1970's - early 1980's, i graduated high school in 1980, my house was a 5 min bike ride from the school, so i had to hurry to get home by 3pm to watch it, i got really into the show my senior year and into my college years and my parents bought a VCR i would record on the days i worked or had college classes__until it went off the air, it was like losing old friends when the show ended in 1984, i remember being really sad for about 6 months.
Best 15 seconds of TV intros I can remember.I played piano as a child and picked up this unique chord structure and progression,and played it over and over,also trying (but not succeeding) to duplicate the announcer’s speech.
Remember the bar on The Edge Of Night. It was downstairs in a basement. There were large playing cards on the walls. Underworld types used to hang out there.
Rabbit, Excellent work on all 3 titles! Sure did bring back a lot of memories. This recording of the Edge closing has the least announcements and commercial plugs that I have ever heard on line. Take a bow!! Wonderful job!!!!
GREG MAY of Orlando, FL says: "We were on our way to a famuily reunion in Cincinnati and I was sitting in the back seat yacking about EON with my Aunt Rose from Winchester, Ky. Suddenly, we came over a hill on I-75 approaching Ciincinnati and I yelled, "Look! It's The Edge of Night!"
Dan Curtis *truly* was ahead of his time as far as knowing that DS needed to be archived. As a result, pretty much the whole series has been available for reruns and home video. Only a precious few other soaps can say their entire runs were saved.
@@brookehanley3659 From Wikipedia (Lost Television Broadcast - Soap Operas): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_television_broadcast#Soap_operas "ABC's One Life to Live and All My Children were originally owned by their creator, Agnes Nixon, who chose to archive all episodes. However, early episodes of AMC were only saved as black-and-white kinescopes despite being produced and telecast in color. ABC purchased the shows in late 1974; different sources report that Nixon's archive was either lost in a fire or erased. A few black-and-white kinescopes of both series' early years exist, as well as a few color episodes. ABC began full archiving of these soaps at Nixon's insistence when they expanded from 30 minutes to an hour-AMC in 1977, and OLTL in 1978. Most 1963-1970 episodes of ABC's General Hospital survive because the series was then owned by Selmur Productions. Few episodes from 1970 to 1977 were saved. Ryan's Hope premiered in 1975, several years before ABC began saving all of its daytime programming, but exists in its entirety as it was originally owned by Labine-Mayer Productions." "Agnes Nixon initially produced her series One Life to Live and All My Children through her own production company, Creative Horizons, Inc., and kept a complete archive of monochrome kinescopes until ABC bought the shows from her in 1975. When the network decided to expand All My Children from 30 minutes to a full hour in the late 1970s, Nixon agreed on the condition that the network would begin saving the episodes. ABC complied, and full hour broadcasts began on April 25, 1977. However, different sources indicate that a warehouse fire destroyed the vast majority of the early-1970s kinescopes, or that erasures of the episodes continued. As a result, a few early episodes from these early years survive."
I remember as a child back in 1975, I was watching a Cincinnati Reds on TV game and they showed the Cincinnati skyline. I remember telling my mother there were the buildings from The Edge of Night. She said it sure is. At the time Edge was on CBS and the Reds game was televised on NBC.
the best opening was with CBS announcer Harry Kramer. what I love about this video is the ID. "channel 2 New York" that's the way IDs were and WE LIKED IT LIKE THAT. I am sick of the constant promos telling me how great the station is. NO ONE CARES
From the show's start in 1956 until about 1980, Cincinnati's skyline stood in for the show's locale of Monticello. In 1980, the Cincinnati skyline was switched for the much larger Los Angeles skyline (which was ironic, given this was a New York based show) and then the skyline was finally phased out for the last years of the show.
I used to watch this and The Guiding Light, Search for Tomorrow and in the early 70s there was this one nobody remembers now called The Best of Everything.
When, as a young boy, I heard this theme, I always knew something " nasty" was going to happen!! Lol. I particularly liked the first modern version ( circa 1981) the best. The montage featured Forest Compton ( R I P ), Ann Flood, Joel Crothers ( RIP ), Jayne Bentzen, Terry Davis, and Tony Craig. It was awesome!
CBS was pitched a new nighttime series called "Perry Mason," but decided it was too involved. So the show was split in two -- the murder mysteries went on to the be Raymond Burr classic, and the soap aspect was rolled into this daytime soap, "The Edge of Night," which also was heavy on the courtroom drama. Watched this beginning in the '60s with Grandma while she did the ironing in the front room. I was hooked.
Not quite. It was always going to be a soap, but weeks before it was to start CBS insisted on giving him a girlfriend. Erle Gardner (Perry Mason's creator) cancelled the deal, and the showrunners created this. That is why John Larkin (Perry for the previous 8 years on radio) was cast as the lead.
I guess im much older than everyone who commented about the edge of night but i remember this show from the sixties n in my country the philippines. It wud come on in the afternoon after lunch when i was returning to school. I cud come home gor lunch. I nvr watched it but heard the opening as i was leaving the house i guess my parents watched it and also thought it was a scary show.
It would have been great to see a few more us daytime soaps on tv in the uk. Would have loved to have seen this show. We only had Santa Barbara, Sunset Beach and The Bold And The Beautiful. Sunset was huge here. We got days of our lives for a while, that wasn't popular! I've since found out that both The Edge Of Night and Search For Tomorrow and Ryans Hope have been shown on tv here in the uk.
I did Brandy Henderson was the name. She became Adam Drake's love interest, after his 1st wife, Nicole, was presumed dead. The storyline was quite engaging, to say the very least. Mauve Mc Guire( Nicole) later appeared in Dove soap commercials
From what I can tell, based on the plug for "The Price is Right" and the use of the orchestral theme (as opposed to the organ theme), this is from no earlier than April 1974 (when the orchestral theme debuted) and no later than August 1975 (when The Price is Right moved back to a morning timeslot)
My Mother and Grandmother watched this show constantly. I remember a few scenes from 70 or 71, when some Millionaires Son had disguised himself with a Bread and Fake Name
Wow! You've gotta luv that creenkly, rather spooky Edge logo. There were actually several variations of the same logo, even within the same opening or closing. Some were larger; some were smaller; some were brighter or darker tones of yellow. The lettering was sometimes more slanted; other times, more straight up and down. Nonetheless, it always went very well with the visuals. It would be interesting to know how many title cards they had back then, and who created the original logo.
Looks just like the old Cincinnati skyline look and the "time-delay" look showing the daytime skyline segueing into night! Edge had this in 1967(after which it had the diagonal band of darkness moving across the screen from the start in April 1956 to Septemeber 1967)
@RabbitEarsRedux - Thanks for your great comments, I appreciate it. And glad to hear you like the WNBC/JFK piece I made. Kennedy was our Congressman and Senator; my mother met him way back then. She had the shows you recreated on a lot and I remember the opening themes to them. Great job on the repros!
@Ward Roberts. By the time this episode aired, Hal Simms was the regular announcer. This announcer was not revealed, but he was subbing for Hal Simms that day. Yet, I do agree with you, a Harry Kramer intro here would have been VERY appropriate.
I remember this series as a kid in the mid/late 60s. Even at a young age, I thought the title of the series was interesting and enjoyed the theme song and watching the closing credits as the skyline got darker.
@RabbitEarsRedux This was EXCELLENT work! Excellently recreated, and very true to the original! :) Only one thing, but not a major thing. You had a slight misspelling. The actress who played Phoebe Smith was named Johanna Leister. And a fun fact about her, she teaches at HB school in New York City!
Either or, this was absolutely WELL done! Although you did have a spelling error of one of the actresses names. Phoebe Smith Jamison was played by Johanna Leister. But what is one case of a spelling error, when the whole thing was FANTASTIC? :)
jetvette66 I can relate. I have spoken with several friends and persons over the years for who certain television audio and video have been frightening to them as children. For myself, I used to be spooked by two things especially--the Civil Defense (CD)/Emergency Broadcast System (EBS) tests; preceded by CONELRAD and replaced by Emergency Alert System (EAS), and news bulletins that interrupted regular programming. In fact, I still get a creepy feeling whenever an EAS test or news bulletin interrupts regular programming. I was also mildly spooked by those announcements preceding program preemptions, in which the announcer would say "(Program title) will not be seen this evening, so we may bring you the following special program. (Program title) will return next week at its usual time." I can't explain why those announcements frightened me--they just did. That is why these things are called "irrational fears." It may also have had something to do with the surprise element of all those program interruptions (even though I came to expect such when watching a TV special, as opposed to an EBS test or news bulletin, which were truly unexpected), plus the fact I was usally alone when watching television, and often it was nighttime or darker in the room (I also had a fear of the dark as a child). I knew a childhood schoolmate who was afraid of "Mister Clean" in the commercials for the Procter & Gamble household cleanser. It would be interesting if others reading this could post some of their irrational fears regarding television, of things they remember on TV that especially spooked them (as children, and even a bit as adults).
+gymnastix I could sleep alone in the dark and started school without crying or fears. But the Perry Mason theme when I was 3 or 4 scared the hell out of me. I had to leave the room.
@@gymnastix W-ell, I liked this version of The Edge Of Night closing a lot better than the original from back in the day... there's just something about a cluster of buildings joined together at sunrise/sunset that makes the image look SO SPOOKY when there aren't any lights turned on in any of those buildings. I guess it started way back in 1st grade. "Edge" was big on ABC at the time, and I'd watch it with my grandmother around the time before cartoons came on right after EON. Well, when I saw the opening for EON, what gave me the creeps was when that eerie last note would play, as the title rose up from behind the Los Angeles skyline, and the gathering darkness all around that skyline, that did it for me. Even now as an adult I have kind of an uneasy feeling about skylines at night. I know that's kind of strange-okay, VERY strange. But there's just some things that make a lasting impression on us as children....
I was a stoner pothead in the 1970s at the University of Cincinnati. As I was casually watching the little BW TV set in the dorm room, I saw the The Edge of Night intro video sequence of downtown Cincinnati. I’m thinking “whoa, dude, they took away half of the buildings”! I was tricked…that video sequence was from the 1960s, the newer buildings were not built!!
@RabbitEarsRedux Did you know that Edge had a band of darkness going from right to left in the 1956-1967 opening and closing sequences of Cincinnati and the announcer was Harry Kramer(later replaced by Hal Simms in 1972)?
@RabbitEarsRedux But somehow, some way, we still managed to get in an awful lot of "TV time" in our childhood and adolescence. No video games, Internet or cell phones then. TV was as good and high-tech as it got. As "Archie" & "Edith" used to sing, "Those were the days!"
@Sheri451 Edge used the Cincinnati skyline (where the actual city in this video is) for "Monticello" until the logo/theme change in 1980, then L.A.'s skyline was used till the last logo/theme change.
@RabbitEarsRedux There was never usually any question of ABC or NBC daytimes when my mom watched. Only later (when a second b&w set entered our home) did my sister & I begin watching "Dark Shadows," then "The Best Of Everything" one summer of its brief run. But by then our mom had died, and we had our first color set.
Same. I bet alot them were on the edge of their seat, watching this soap opera. I wonder how popular this show would've been if it aired at night, in prime time---on CBS.
@RabbitEarsRedux There are videos aplenty of "EON," some with many more sponsor plugs, and even a few of mid-show "bumper" spots. I think the Friday outros were always of greater length, because they ran the full credits crawls. Would you ever consider including re-dos of the mid-show v.o. spots?
GREG MAY of Orlando, FL says: "Does anyone remember the ONLY time EON was broadcast without commercials? It was during the early 70's of the Whitney storyline when the murderous Keith Whitney pushed his uncle off the top of the abandoned lighthouse on the Whitney's summer estate. The entire half-hour showed Keith coming across the lake in a motorboat then climbing the spiral stairway of the tower. The only reason P&G and CBS agreed was because EON was #1 in the daytime ratings."
@RabbitEarsRedux After supper, summers typically involved kickball, then after-dark marathon hide & seek games, with a good cross-section of older & younger kids. Inevitably someone would hide in her/his house, which was, supposedly, against the rules, and usually ended the game.
My father wrote the theme song! The original theme song was just on piano and organ and he would play both, live, every show. Later on, he arranged it for a full assortment of instruments as you hear here.
Your dad was very creative, for sure. Imagine going in and playing it live when they just could have taped it and played it that way every day. I am not sure how the rules of broadcasting worked in those days. This particular arrangement is the richest one by far.....still holds up today.
BTW, this soap's opening in the late 50s had the scariest lead-in of any "daytime serial" for a little kid to view, as others have mentioned.
I met your father in August 1974 while I had a summer job at CBS. He gave me a copy of the handwritten sheet music to the opening theme and to the closing theme (but it was missing two bridges that he played in the long version). Do you have a copy of the sheet music for the long version the way he was playing it in 1974? He had a huge stack of unstapled old scripts on one of the tables in the music room. When I asked him about it, he said that he would bring the pages home to his son who liked to draw on the backs of the pages!
Regards from NYC!!!
Paul B Taubman That's awesome! I actually interviewed Donald May and he spoke very fondly of the theme to "Edge of Night." It's amazing God bless your father.
That is awesome Paul! I have written quite a few film and television scores before. Your father's theme song was gorgeous! Thanks so much for providing this information.
Paul B Taubman much respect for your father! I want to learn those intro piano chords! I’ve been trying to find out who wrote the intro. Where could I possibly find those chords and full song? Please help, I must play the song, I must!
I remember my mom watching this when I was a little kid, I miss those days so much. Miss you momma... Damn I miss you momma! I miss her so much. She raised me.
Echoed sentiment.
That theme song can be used for my story
When I was about six years old, my grandmother had cataract surgery. She begged me to watch this with her and tell her what was happening. I was very bad at it, and the intro scared me silly. Glad to see it again after so much time
I never, ever, ever watched this soap, but how could you hate the title and the announcer's pronounciation, The EDGE of Night. Truly classic TV.
+senorkaboom True! And the theme was to die for. Excellent orchestration.
pre kindergarten, 1964 - 1967, it use to scare me, then when i was a senior in high school one of my friends got me back into watching it, she loved the show and i started to watch it again, or we would call each other and tell what happened if one of us missed the show____i was in college when it went off the air in 1984, i was really bummed out
Memorable opening for sure.
The title is appropriate for the state of the world, 'these days '
@@TheBob3759 That, alone, is probably what kept viewers on the edge of their seat
As a kid I used to run home from school to watch The Edge of Night! Paul Taubman's stark, dramatic piano chords as the 'edge of night' moved across the skyline of Monticello let viewers know this was not your typical daytime drama!
How old are you now?
Definitely not.
Greatness Never Gets Old...You Dad Left Memories (and I'm 65 Years Old) that will forever be engrained in my soul!
The music, The drama, The announcer; these all made The Edge of Night scary to me as a youngster when I wasn't in school and watching it with my Mother.
I went through other shows feeling the same way.
SAME HERE..!
@@jawoody9745Dark shadows?
Wow! SO MANY MEMORIES!!!
I only know this because of all the times I stayed home from school because I was sick. I couldn't help but hear this and other soap operas because my mother would watch them one after another. After they were over, she would watch Merv Griffin.
The is such a potpourri of memories for me. Even the announcer talking about tuning in on Monday made me remember that this was a Friday, and that meant cartoons tomorrow (Saturday) and a day off from school.
Undoubtedly the best theme music I've ever heard for any serial! So good to hear it again
Love that piano
Agree
You are a jewel for uploading this! I'd forgotten that stern intonation: "The Edge.... of Night" though I don't know how since I practically grew up listening to it--my grandmother LOVED this soap. Thanks again!
He was a terrific writer!! "The Edge of Night" was one of my favorite daytime dramas!
I used to watch, back in the mid 70's.
The Adam and Nicole Drake/ Brandy storyline was quite engaging.
Dixie Carter, of Designing women, played Brandy.
Ann Flood, who played Nancy Carr was the longest player in the cast.Her name appeared first in the closing credits. Donald May's name appears last( Adam)
Would've been appropriate if his name appeared first
This was probably the best soap opera on television in the 70s. I loved the music and remember Dixie Carter as Brandy Henderson. Thank you for posting this.
I remember the late Ms. Carter as Julia Sugarbaker on DESIGNING WOMEN.
when I was very little and my baby sitter put this on, I thought it was a death sentence by boredom.
thank goodness my mom put a laundry shoot in the bathroom and we'd all slide down it into the laundry
I used to mimic the opening theme music from this show on my grandmothers old upright piano when I was little. Just couldn't get it right. Haven't heard this theme since back then. memories.
Vue U Nice Harrier.
I wonder if Bono ever saw the EDGE of NIGHT
OMG, I had completely forgotten all about this soap. Thank you for posting this.
Stunning recreations -- especially THE SECRET STORM. Can hardly wait for more!
The titles alone make interesting book titles, and movie titles
Oh Secret Storm with Christina Crawford, my grandmother never missed an episode of that....
I notice this while I was watching WKRP in Cincinnati
I remember this quite clearly from the summer of 1974 when I was waiting for "The Price Is Right" and always liked the ending theme. Thanks for sharing!
I used to watch this soap back in the day
Same
Wow! My mother used to watch all these soap operas when I was a kid in the 1960s... thanks for sharing!!!
I'm sure the same thing happened in the 1970's and 1980's
I liked how the announcer said The E-D-G-E Of Night.
@Christopher Hagee I don't know who this announcer was. He did not quite have the style of the two main Edge of Night announcers Harry Cramer 1956 - 72 and the voice you are thinking of Hal Simms from 1972 - 77. Both were great but Hal Simms' version (Theeeee Edgggeeee OF NIGHT!!!!) was one I enjoyed!
Gorgeous visuals of Cincinatti! Now of course, in the original color opening/closings the logo zoomed out more slowly, which made it even more spooky, to me. It's amazing how you were able to capture the variations of the logo, I mentioned in my previous comment. The closing logo is larger, less crinkled and less slanted than the opening logo.
in california edge of night was on from 3pm - 330pm in the late 1970's - early 1980's, i graduated high school in 1980, my house was a 5 min bike ride from the school, so i had to hurry to get home by 3pm to watch it, i got really into the show my senior year and into my college years and my parents bought a VCR i would record on the days i worked or had college classes__until it went off the air, it was like losing old friends when the show ended in 1984, i remember being really sad for about 6 months.
Best 15 seconds of TV intros I can remember.I played piano as a child and picked up this unique chord structure and progression,and played it over and over,also trying (but not succeeding) to duplicate the announcer’s speech.
Remember the bar on The Edge Of Night.
It was downstairs in a basement.
There were large playing cards on the walls.
Underworld types used to hang out there.
Rabbit,
Excellent work on all 3 titles! Sure did bring back a lot of memories. This recording of the Edge closing has the least announcements and commercial plugs that I have ever heard on line. Take a bow!! Wonderful job!!!!
GREG MAY of Orlando, FL says: "We were on our way to a famuily reunion in Cincinnati and I was sitting in the back seat yacking about EON with my Aunt Rose from Winchester, Ky. Suddenly, we came over a hill on I-75 approaching Ciincinnati and I yelled, "Look! It's The Edge of Night!"
Dan Curtis *truly* was ahead of his time as far as knowing that DS needed to be archived. As a result, pretty much the whole series has been available for reruns and home video. Only a precious few other soaps can say their entire runs were saved.
A shame Curtis didn't save his workprints of House and Night of Dark Shadows.
I believe the ‘ABC’ soaps were not saved.
@@brookehanley3659 Every episode of ABC's Dark Shadows is available.
@@kevinpyne5808 I read that a copy of episode 1219 was missing and had to be recreated, otherwise all the DS episodes were intact.
@@brookehanley3659 From Wikipedia (Lost Television Broadcast - Soap Operas): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_television_broadcast#Soap_operas
"ABC's One Life to Live and All My Children were originally owned by their creator, Agnes Nixon, who chose to archive all episodes. However, early episodes of AMC were only saved as black-and-white kinescopes despite being produced and telecast in color. ABC purchased the shows in late 1974; different sources report that Nixon's archive was either lost in a fire or erased. A few black-and-white kinescopes of both series' early years exist, as well as a few color episodes. ABC began full archiving of these soaps at Nixon's insistence when they expanded from 30 minutes to an hour-AMC in 1977, and OLTL in 1978.
Most 1963-1970 episodes of ABC's General Hospital survive because the series was then owned by Selmur Productions. Few episodes from 1970 to 1977 were saved. Ryan's Hope premiered in 1975, several years before ABC began saving all of its daytime programming, but exists in its entirety as it was originally owned by Labine-Mayer Productions."
"Agnes Nixon initially produced her series One Life to Live and All My Children through her own production company, Creative Horizons, Inc., and kept a complete archive of monochrome kinescopes until ABC bought the shows from her in 1975. When the network decided to expand All My Children from 30 minutes to a full hour in the late 1970s, Nixon agreed on the condition that the network would begin saving the episodes. ABC complied, and full hour broadcasts began on April 25, 1977. However, different sources indicate that a warehouse fire destroyed the vast majority of the early-1970s kinescopes, or that erasures of the episodes continued. As a result, a few early episodes from these early years survive."
I was a toddler and I remember this scaring the crap out of me
The title, as well as the music, is appropriate for the times we're in
Some eerie feelings when I hear that tune
Imagine kids hearing that before a night out ,on Halloween
Sounds of my childhood I always remember that background music my mother was hooked on that soap opera I wish they would bring it back
Yep.
I remember coming home from school every day just to watch this and Search For Tomorrow.
What about Secret storm
@@dennismclaurin1487 that one, too. Those were soaps!
WOW!
Now that's a terrific job with the recreation!Right down to the CBS eye!
I remember he used to say This is Hal Simms inviting you to join us each week day for THE EDGE OF NIGHT
@RER Amazing! Great job! Thanks for posting. It's so vivid. It's like going back in time..
I watched this with my mom. Good show back then.
Same
This was phenomenal! Thank you so much for this wonderful memory!
I remember as a child back in 1975, I was watching a Cincinnati Reds on TV game and they showed the Cincinnati skyline. I remember telling my mother there were the buildings from The Edge of Night. She said it sure is. At the time Edge was on CBS and the Reds game was televised on NBC.
Proctor and Gamble (the sole sponser of this show) is headquarted in cincinnati.
@@jamesklatt Yes. Little did I know at the time.
One of them Best Soap Opera Theme Songs.
Dramatic and Orchestral
the best opening was with CBS announcer Harry Kramer. what I love about this video is the ID. "channel 2 New York" that's the way IDs were and WE LIKED IT LIKE THAT. I am sick of the constant promos telling me how great the station is. NO ONE CARES
This is a classic! Memories forever!
Loved The Edge of Night and its theme music.
Wonderful. It brought tears to my eyes
Wow, that brought back memories of my childhood.
It sure did.
The theme scared me at first when I was small I soon got used to it as I aged
+Debra Banks The Perry Mason theme scared me younger.
Hello Brooke, The CBS eye scared me when I was younger
+Debra Banks as did the Grandfather clock on "Captain Kangaroo".
+Debra Banks as did the Grandfather clock on "Captain Kangaroo".
Debra Banks
Haha
Seen at 2:30pm followed by The 30 min. Price is Right at 3pm Match Game 74 at 3:30 and Tattletales at 4pm
Thanks for sharing that
After school everyday when I was little…..
Thanks, for sharing that, Douglas
From the show's start in 1956 until about 1980, Cincinnati's skyline stood in for the show's locale of Monticello. In 1980, the Cincinnati skyline was switched for the much larger Los Angeles skyline (which was ironic, given this was a New York based show) and then the skyline was finally phased out for the last years of the show.
I used to watch this and The Guiding Light, Search for Tomorrow and in the early 70s there was this one nobody remembers now called The Best of Everything.
Awesome work, RabbitEarsRedux! Very well done!
When, as a young boy, I heard this theme, I always knew something " nasty" was going to happen!! Lol. I particularly liked the first modern version ( circa 1981) the best. The montage featured Forest Compton ( R I P ), Ann Flood, Joel Crothers ( RIP ), Jayne Bentzen, Terry Davis, and Tony Craig. It was awesome!
These are nasty times the world is in ,'these days '
1:33 - "Stay tuned for _The Price Is Right,_ which follows on most of these CBS stations."
CBS was pitched a new nighttime series called "Perry Mason," but decided it was too involved. So the show was split in two -- the murder mysteries went on to the be Raymond Burr classic, and the soap aspect was rolled into this daytime soap, "The Edge of Night," which also was heavy on the courtroom drama. Watched this beginning in the '60s with Grandma while she did the ironing in the front room. I was hooked.
Not quite. It was always going to be a soap, but weeks before it was to start CBS insisted on giving him a girlfriend. Erle Gardner (Perry Mason's creator) cancelled the deal, and the showrunners created this.
That is why John Larkin (Perry for the previous 8 years on radio) was cast as the lead.
I guess im much older than everyone who commented about the edge of night but i remember this show from the sixties n in my country the philippines. It wud come on in the afternoon after lunch when i was returning to school. I cud come home gor lunch. I nvr watched it but heard the opening as i was leaving the house i guess my parents watched it and also thought it was a scary show.
I guess the music n title made me think that it was scary show too. Vickydemeo from the philippines
Geez...this theme song takes me back to childhood..though the show was in B&W when my mom watched it.
It would have been great to see a few more us daytime soaps on tv in the uk. Would have loved to have seen this show. We only had Santa Barbara, Sunset Beach and The Bold And The Beautiful. Sunset was huge here. We got days of our lives for a while, that wasn't popular!
I've since found out that both The Edge Of Night and Search For Tomorrow and Ryans Hope have been shown on tv here in the uk.
The credits read Dixie Carter! Wow! I never knew that she played in soap operas.
I did
Brandy Henderson was the name.
She became Adam Drake's love interest, after his 1st wife, Nicole, was presumed dead. The storyline was quite engaging, to say the very least.
Mauve Mc Guire( Nicole) later appeared in Dove soap commercials
From what I can tell, based on the plug for "The Price is Right" and the use of the orchestral theme (as opposed to the organ theme), this is from no earlier than April 1974 (when the orchestral theme debuted) and no later than August 1975 (when The Price is Right moved back to a morning timeslot)
Why do I remember this!??! I had to have watched it in the 90s or something because I was very very young in the late 80’s
I remember my mom watching this 1971+ It was on at 430p, if I remember correctly.....I was just a lite girl. Wow. Thanks for the flashback:)
I remember seeing previews and sometime closing credits when I was a kid in the late 70s and early 80s.
Impeccable job down to the fonts! Great attention to details. I hope you do the 70s version ATWT or Another World
My Mother and Grandmother watched this show constantly. I remember a few scenes from 70 or 71, when some Millionaires Son had disguised himself with a Bread and Fake Name
Watching this with mom. Good Times!
Good Times was a big hit,back then;
Alot of comedic, ghetto drama
I remember Joel Crothers from Dark Shadows.
Hard to forget a face
And the curly hair
The Edge of Night took place in Cincinnati?
No. It took place in the fictional town of Monticello.
So did a lot of Cin
( I mean Sin)
Wow! You've gotta luv that creenkly, rather spooky Edge logo. There were actually several variations of the same logo, even within the same opening or closing. Some were larger; some were smaller; some were brighter or darker tones of yellow. The lettering was sometimes more slanted; other times, more straight up and down. Nonetheless, it always went very well with the visuals.
It would be interesting to know how many title cards they had back then, and who created the original logo.
Looks just like the old Cincinnati skyline look and the "time-delay" look showing the daytime skyline segueing into night! Edge had this in 1967(after which it had the diagonal band of darkness moving across the screen from the start in April 1956 to Septemeber 1967)
The Eeddgge..of Night! Aah, childhood memories,
Oh, yes!
Hey, Cincinnati!
Best soap opera theme, ever. I used to try and play it on piano. Original, unlike Young and Restless.
@RabbitEarsRedux - Thanks for your great comments, I appreciate it. And glad to hear you like the WNBC/JFK piece I made. Kennedy was our Congressman and Senator; my mother met him way back then. She had the shows you recreated on a lot and I remember the opening themes to them. Great job on the repros!
@Ward Roberts. By the time this episode aired, Hal Simms was the regular announcer. This announcer was not revealed, but he was subbing for Hal Simms that day. Yet, I do agree with you, a Harry Kramer intro here would have been VERY appropriate.
I remember this series as a kid in the mid/late 60s. Even at a young age, I thought the title of the series was interesting and enjoyed the theme song and watching the closing credits as the skyline got darker.
I noticed that too in how the announcer says EDGE. Very interesting and good voice
@RabbitEarsRedux This was EXCELLENT work! Excellently recreated, and very true to the original! :) Only one thing, but not a major thing. You had a slight misspelling. The actress who played Phoebe Smith was named Johanna Leister. And a fun fact about her, she teaches at HB school in New York City!
Either or, this was absolutely WELL done! Although you did have a spelling error of one of the actresses names. Phoebe Smith Jamison was played by Johanna Leister. But what is one case of a spelling error, when the whole thing was FANTASTIC? :)
Edge of Night was the last live soap before going to videotape when it moved from CBS to ABC in 1975.
This is CBS!
As an 8 yr old I was scared when that announcer would speak while watching this at my grandparent's house.
jetvette66 I can relate. I have spoken with several friends and persons over the years for who certain television audio and video have been frightening to them as children.
For myself, I used to be spooked by two things especially--the Civil Defense (CD)/Emergency Broadcast System (EBS) tests; preceded by CONELRAD and replaced by Emergency Alert System (EAS), and news bulletins that interrupted regular programming. In fact, I still get a creepy feeling whenever an EAS test or news bulletin interrupts regular programming.
I was also mildly spooked by those announcements preceding program preemptions, in which the announcer would say "(Program title) will not be seen this evening, so we may bring you the following special program. (Program title) will return next week at its usual time." I can't explain why those announcements frightened me--they just did. That is why these things are called "irrational fears." It may also have had something to do with the surprise element of all those program interruptions (even though I came to expect such when watching a TV special, as opposed to an EBS test or news bulletin, which were truly unexpected), plus the fact I was usally alone when watching television, and often it was nighttime or darker in the room (I also had a fear of the dark as a child).
I knew a childhood schoolmate who was afraid of "Mister Clean" in the commercials for the Procter & Gamble household cleanser.
It would be interesting if others reading this could post some of their irrational fears regarding television, of things they remember on TV that especially spooked them (as children, and even a bit as adults).
+gymnastix I could sleep alone in the dark and started school without crying or fears. But the Perry Mason theme when I was 3 or 4 scared the hell out of me. I had to leave the room.
+gymnastix Me too!!!!
That & Perry Mason!!
@@gymnastix W-ell, I liked this version of The Edge Of Night closing a lot better than the original from back in the day... there's just something about a cluster of buildings joined together at sunrise/sunset that makes the image look SO SPOOKY when there aren't any lights turned on in any of those buildings. I guess it started way back in 1st grade. "Edge" was big on ABC at the time, and I'd watch it with my grandmother around the time before cartoons came on right after EON.
Well, when I saw the opening for EON, what gave me the creeps was when that eerie last note would play, as the title rose up from behind the Los Angeles skyline, and the gathering darkness all around that skyline, that did it for me. Even now as an adult I have kind of an uneasy feeling about skylines at night. I know that's kind of strange-okay, VERY strange. But there's just some things that make a lasting impression on us as children....
I was a stoner pothead in the 1970s at the University of Cincinnati. As I was casually watching the little BW TV set in the dorm room, I saw the The Edge of Night intro video sequence of downtown Cincinnati. I’m thinking “whoa, dude, they took away half of the buildings”!
I was tricked…that video sequence was from the 1960s, the newer buildings were not built!!
@RabbitEarsRedux Did you know that Edge had a band of darkness going from right to left in the 1956-1967 opening and closing sequences of Cincinnati and the announcer was Harry Kramer(later replaced by Hal Simms in 1972)?
Dixie Carter was on The Edge of Night???? My babysitter watched this soap opera😂
This soap was the heart of Dixie.
She played Brandy Henderson; Adam Drake's new love interest, after the mysterious disappearance of his wife, Nicole
How Nice!!! I love it!
0:10 In front Gil's Steak and Stein on East 6th Street in NYC, now closed.
@RabbitEarsRedux But somehow, some way, we still managed to get in an awful lot of "TV time" in our childhood and adolescence. No video games, Internet or cell phones then. TV was as good and high-tech as it got.
As "Archie" & "Edith" used to sing, "Those were the days!"
This theme song used to scare the hell out of me when I was young and my grandmother watched it.
Very cool reproductions, about the best I've seen, of any type..
@Sheri451 Edge used the Cincinnati skyline (where the actual city in this video is) for "Monticello" until the logo/theme change in 1980, then L.A.'s skyline was used till the last logo/theme change.
If I recall this was one of the last soaps of the day airing in the late afternoon/early evening.
@RabbitEarsRedux There was never usually any question of ABC or NBC daytimes when my mom watched. Only later (when a second b&w set entered our home) did my sister & I begin watching "Dark Shadows," then "The Best Of Everything" one summer of its brief run. But by then our mom had died, and we had our first color set.
My mother used to watch this.
Same. I bet alot them were on the edge of their seat, watching this soap opera. I wonder how popular this show would've been if it aired at night, in prime time---on CBS.
@RabbitEarsRedux There are videos aplenty of "EON," some with many more sponsor plugs, and even a few of mid-show "bumper" spots. I think the Friday outros were always of greater length, because they ran the full credits crawls.
Would you ever consider including re-dos of the mid-show v.o. spots?
Digging this HARD!
Always wondered why he didn't play organ and piano for other soaps.
Seems like Charles Paul did most of them
Is that Cincinnati Ohio ?
GREG MAY of Orlando, FL says: "Does anyone remember the ONLY time EON was broadcast without commercials? It was during the early 70's of the Whitney storyline when the murderous Keith Whitney pushed his uncle off the top of the abandoned lighthouse on the Whitney's summer estate. The entire half-hour showed Keith coming across the lake in a motorboat then climbing the spiral stairway of the tower. The only reason P&G and CBS agreed was because EON was #1 in the daytime ratings."
VG job. This looks like you could have done the DI on Baselight 8, did you?
@RabbitEarsRedux After supper, summers typically involved kickball, then after-dark marathon hide & seek games, with a good cross-section of older & younger kids. Inevitably someone would hide in her/his house, which was, supposedly, against the rules, and usually ended the game.
This is CBS