DELRAY BEACH, Fla.(AP)
Larry Haines, a two-time Daytime Emmy winner for his 35-year
role on the soap opera "Search for Tomorrow," has died.
He was 89.
Haines, who also had a successful career on Broadway, died July
17 at a Delray Beach hospital where he had been admitted a week
earlier, his attorney and friend, Tom Dachelet, said Wednesday.
The actor played Stu Bergman on "Search for Tomorrow"
for almost the show's entire run from 1951 to 1986, missing
only the first two months.
Stu was the neighbor and best friend of Joanne Gardner Barron,
later Joanne Tourneur, the character at the center of most of the
show's plot lines over the years. She was played by Mary Stuart
for the entire 35 years.
The soap opera, which was first on CBS, later on NBC, was the
longest-running daytime drama in television when its last episode
aired in December 1986.
Haines credited the longtime appeal of the show to
"basically believable characters that people kind of took
to."
In an Associated Press interview at the time, he said he felt
that quality was lost in its final years as more outlandish plot
developments were written.
"Soap opera is a story," he said. "It should be a
continuing story, rather than disoriented, meaningless
adventures."
Haines won Daytime Emmys for his role in 1976 and 1981, and in
1985 was presented with a special recognition award for his
longevity on the series.
He also appeared for shorter periods on "Another
World" and "Loving."
"Doing a daytime show requires a great deal more
concentration than people give us credit for," he told the Los
Angeles Times in 1967. "Every episode is like opening night
because it's a new script every day."
He was generally billed as A. Larry Haines in his Broadway
appearances. He was twice nominated for Tonys, for "Promises,
Promises," the 1968 musical version of the film "The
Apartment," and "Generation," a 1965 play starring
Henry Fonda.
He also was in the 1962 Broadway comedy "A Thousand
Clowns," as the brother of free-spirited Jason Robards,
"Twigs," a 1971 program of four one-act plays starring
Sada Thompson; and the 1978 "Tribute," which starred Jack
Lemmon.
He appeared as a card player in the 1968 film version of
"The Odd Couple," and made guest appearances on the TV
series "Maude" and "Kojak," among others.
He was born in Mount Vernon, N.Y. Early in his career, he was an
actor on radio series, including the popular horror series
"Inner Sanctum," which famously opened with the sound of
a creaking door.
Haines is survived by a niece. His first wife, Gertrude Haines,
second wife, Jean Pearlman Haines, and daughter Debora all preceded
him in death.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.