Pacific Palisades | |
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Genre | Soap opera |
Created by | |
Written by |
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Directed by |
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Theme music composer | Dan Foliart |
Opening theme | "Pacific Palisades" |
Composer | Tim Truman |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Editors |
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Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 45 minutes |
Production company | Aaron Spelling Productions |
Original release | |
Network | Fox |
Release | April 9 – July 30, 1997 |
Pacific Palisades is an American soap opera that aired on Fox during prime time from April to July 1997. Produced by Aaron Spelling, the show was canceled after thirteen episodes despite a last-minute attempt to increase ratings by casting Joan Collins as Laura's mother.
The show was originally supposed to be a vehicle for Erika Eleniak.[1] She was due to play the Laura Sinclair role, but turned it down due to the racy scene where the character described as "an aggressive real estate agent" seduces a client to secure an offer. The scene was eventually toned down, with Eleniak still passing, and eventually Kimberley Davies was cast.
Summary
Set in the Los Angeles district of the same name, the series follows the lives of young professionals who have it all, but haven't paid for it yet, on the Southern California fast track to fame, fortune, scandal and ruin.
The cast of characters includes Joanna (Michelle Stafford) and Nick Hadley (Jarrod Emick), a young married couple who left their native Midwest for the Pacific Coast where Nick has landed a job as an architect; Joanna's troubled teenage sister Rachel Whittaker (Natalia Cigliuti) – later discovered to be her illegitimate daughter at the end of the series; Rachel's friends Ashley (Jennifer Banko) and Michael (J. Trevor Edmond) who excel in sneakiness; Robert (Greg Evigan) and Kate Russo (Finola Hughes), whose sterling life is beginning to tarnish; Jessica Mitchell (Jocelyn Seagrave), a rising professional whose choice of men leads to trouble; Matt Dunning (Lucky Vanous), a construction businessman with a dark side; Laura Sinclair (Kimberley Davies), a real estate agent who does whatever it takes to close a deal; Cory Robbins (Dylan Neal), a promising but manipulative plastic surgeon; and beautiful Beth Hooper (Brittney Powell), who rents an apartment from Laura and is being romanced by Cory.
Cast
Main
- Natalia Cigliuti as Rachel Whittaker
- Kimberley Davies as Laura Sinclair
- Trevor Edmond as Michael Kerris (episode 7+, recurring previously)
- Jarrod Emick as Nick Hadley
- Greg Evigan as Robert Russo
- Finola Hughes as Kate Russo
- Dylan Neal as Cory Robbins #2 (episode 7+)
- Brittney Powell as Beth Hooper
- Jocelyn Seagrave as Jessica Mitchell
- Michelle Stafford as Joanna Hadley
- Lucky Vanous as Matt Dunning
- Joel Wyner as Cory Robbins #1 (episodes 1–6)
- Joan Collins as Christina Hobson (episodes 4–6, 10–13, credited as "special guest star")
Recurring
- Gianni Russo as Frank Nichols
- Paul Satterfield as John Graham
- Daphne Ashbrook as Julie Graham
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
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1 | "Welcome to the Neighborhood" | Richard Lang | Diane Messina Stanley & James Stanley | April 9, 1997 |
2 | "The Bet" | Eleanore Lindo | Joel J. Feigenbaum | April 16, 1997 |
3 | "The Other Woman" | David Semel | Diane Messina Stanley | April 23, 1997 |
4 | "All Hell Breaks Loose" | Chip Chalmers | Heather Conkie | April 30, 1997 |
5 | "Mothers and Other Strangers" | Les Sheldon | Carla Kettner | May 7, 1997 |
6 | "Runaway" | James Whitmore, Jr. | James Stanley | June 11, 1997 |
7 | "Past & Present Danger" | David Semel | Heather Conkie | June 18, 1997 |
8 | "Desperate Measure" | Richard Denault | Joel J. Feigenbaum | June 25, 1997 |
9 | "Best Laid Plans" | Gabrielle Beaumont | Lynn Marie Latham | July 2, 1997 |
10 | "Private Showing" | Les Sheldon | Diane Messina Stanley | July 9, 1997 |
11 | "Motherly Love" | Mel Damski | Lynn Marie Latham | July 16, 1997 |
12 | "Sweet Revenge" | David Semel | James Stanley | July 23, 1997 |
13 | "End Game" | Les Sheldon | Peter Dunne | July 30, 1997 |
References
- ↑ Ray Richmond (January 14, 1997). "Fox exex soft-shoe critical barrage". Variety.