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Soap opera
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====Traditional grammar of daytime serials==== Modern American daytime soap operas largely stay true to the original soap opera format. The duration and format of storylines and the visual grammar employed by American daytime serials set them apart from soap operas in other countries and from evening soap operas. Stylistically, British and Australian soap operas, which are usually produced for early evening timeslots, fall somewhere in between American daytime and evening soap operas. Similar to American daytime soap operas, British and Australian serials are shot on videotape, and the cast and storylines are rotated across the week's episodes so that each cast member will appear in some but not all episodes. British and Australian soap operas move through storylines at a faster rate than daytime serials, making them closer to American evening soap operas in this regard. American daytime soap operas feature stylistic elements that set them apart from other shows: * A construct unique to American daytime serials is the format where the action will cut between various conversations, returning to each at the precise moment it was left. This is the most significant distinction between American daytime soap operas and other forms of American television drama, which generally allow for narrative time to pass, off-screen, between the scenes depicted.<ref name=Bowles-121/> On occasion, a character or characters involved a conversation earlier in that act may appear in a different setting later in the same act. * In American daytime soap operas, scenes often end with a [[pregnant pause]] and a close-up on the character. There will be no dialogue for several seconds, while the music builds before cutting to a commercial or a new scene. This kind of segue is referred to in the industry as a "tag". * The traditional [[three-point lighting]] set-up routinely used in [[filmmaking]] and [[television production]] is also used on daytime soap operas, sometimes with accentuated [[back lighting]] to lift actors out of the background. This is useful in programs like soap operas, which are shot on videotape in small interior sets. The backlight is frequently more subtle on filmed productions shot on location and in larger sets. * Domestic interiors are often furnished with stained wood wall panels and furniture, and items of brown leather furniture. This is to give a sumptuous and luxurious look suggesting the wealth of the characters. Daytime serials often foreground other sumptuous elements of set decoration; presenting a "mid-shot of characters viewed through a frame of lavish floral displays, glittering crystal decanters or gleaming antique furniture".<ref name=Bowles-119/> * Few American daytime soap operas routinely feature location or exterior-shot footage (''Guiding Light'' began shooting many of its scenes outdoors in its final two seasons). Often an outdoor locale is recreated in the studio, although in recent years, ''The Bold and the Beautiful'' and ''General Hospital'' have taped certain exterior scenes within the grounds of their main soundstages. Australian and British daily soap operas invariably feature a certain amount of exterior-shot footage in every episode. This is usually shot in the same location and often on a purpose-built set, with new exterior locations for particular events. * The visual quality of a soap opera is usually lower than prime time American television drama series due to the lower budgets and quicker production times. This is also because soap operas are recorded on videotape using a [[multi-camera setup]], unlike prime time productions that are usually shot on film and frequently use the [[Single-camera setup|single-camera]] shooting style. Because of the lower resolution of video images, and also because of the emotional situations portrayed in soap operas, daytime serials make heavy use of [[close-up]] shots. Programs in the United States did not make the full conversion to [[high-definition television|high-definition broadcasting]] until September 2011, when ''The Bold and the Beautiful'' became the last soap to convert to the format; ''One Life to Live'' was an exception to this, as it continued to be produced and broadcast in [[Standard-definition television|standard definition]] β albeit in the [[16:9]] [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] β until the end of its run on ABC in January 2012. ''[[Beyond the Gates (TV series)|Beyond the Gates]]'', being the first daytime soap opera to debut in the modern high-definition era, broadcast in HD from its premiere in February 2025. * Soap operas have idiosyncratic [[Blocking (stage)|blocking]] techniques. In one common situation, a romantically involved couple starts a conversation face to face, then one character will turn 180Β° and face away from the other character while the conversation continues. This allows both characters to appear together in a single shot, and with both of them facing the audience. This is unrealistic in real life and is not frequently seen in film or on television outside American daytime serials, but it is an accepted soap opera convention, sometimes referred to as a "two shot West".<ref name=mittell>{{cite book|last=Mittell|first=Jason|title=Television and American Culture|year=2009|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=New York|pages=191β192}}</ref> * Because of the escapist tone of the genre and due to the large number of cast members employed by each program (usually totaling around 30 to 35 actors for hour-long soaps, and 15 to 25 for those lasting a half hour), daytime soap operas have traditionally listed all contract cast members (as well as recurring and guest actors) during the [[closing credits]], instead of the [[Opening credits|opening title sequence]]. Until the 1990s, these series listed only a few of the principal actors at the end of the episode in certain episodes airing on Monday through Thursdays. Because of the aforementioned reasons, an extended credit sequence featuring a complete list of the show's cast members, listed alongside the characters they portray, typically airs at least once per week (usually on the Friday show; although since the 2000s, most soap operas, with ''General Hospital'' as one of the few exceptions, have randomized the day the cast list is shown). ''The Young and the Restless'' became the first American daytime soap to include the names of its contract actors in the opening credits in 1999 (although due to the large number of actors on contract with the show at one time, it utilizes different versions of the title sequence with a randomized list of about nine actors, increased from the seven listed in each version until 2017). ''The Bold and the Beautiful'' listed its entire main cast (as well as some actors appearing on a recurring basis) from 2004 to 2017, with ''General Hospital'' following suit from 2010 to 2013; ''Beyond the Gates'', beginning with its 2025 premiere, uses a similar alternating title sequence structure as ''The Young and the Restless'', although uniform top billing is given to a handful of its primary lead actors. ({{As of|2025|post=,}} ''The Young and the Restless'' and ''Beyond the Gates'' are the only American daytime soap operas that list the names of their main cast during both their opening titles ''and'' extended closing credit sequence.)<ref>{{cite web|title='General Hospital' Gets New Credits: A Look at 'GH's' Opening Over the Years|url=http://www.aoltv.com/2010/02/25/general-hospital-gets-new-credits-a-look-at-ghs-opening-ov/|author=Michael Maloney|website=[[The Huffington Post]]|publisher=[[AOL]]|date=February 25, 2010|access-date=August 22, 2015}}</ref>
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