Description
Book Synopsis Glamour, power, champagne breakfasts in satin sheets--welcome to television''s most dazzling and overlooked genre: women-centric melodrama miniseries of the 1980s and 1990s. Decades before Real Housewives, rags-to-riches fantasies depicting strong women overcoming tragedy to take charge of their destinies were a big hit with TV audiences.
Reflecting the greed is good ethos of the day and encoded with feminist messaging, these glitzy, often camp stories depicted statuesque superwomen facing off with square-jawed men in boardrooms and bedrooms. This book explores the shows that epitomized the prime-time soap era and gave us such memorable scenes as Stefanie Powers trading lovers with her twin sister, Joan Collins fighting Nazis in haute couture and Phoebe Cates demanding, Which one of you bitches is my mother?
Trade ReviewA deep literary dive into all those sumptuously over-ripened, over-the-top miniseries we can never forget…lyrical, deliciously witty, and backed-up with a myriad of good, solid facts."—John De Vito, co-author of
Epic Television Miniseries: A Critical HistoryTable of Contents
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part One—Defining the Genre
- 1. Overview of the Female-Centric Melodramatic Miniseries
- 2. Novels for Television…. Lost in Adaptation?
- 3. Women of Substance: Character Types and Tropes
- 4. Reception of the Melodramatic Miniseries
- Part Two—Analyzing the Texts
- 5. A Woman's Place: Mother, Family, and Home
- 6. Lady Bosses: Work, Power, and Conflict
- 7. Lifestyles of the Rich and Vacuous
- 8. Melodrama, "Down Under"
- Afterword
- Appendix A: List of Cited Miniseries
- Appendix B: Methods for Reception Analysis
- Chapter Notes
- Bibliography
- Index