Kay Alden
Kay Alden | |
---|---|
Born | Priscilla Kay Alden October 24, 1946 |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Years active | 1974–present |
Children | 3 |
Priscilla Kay Alden (born October 24, 1946) is an American television writer and the former head writer for the soap opera, The Young and the Restless.
Career[]
Alden began writing for The Young and the Restless as a script writer in 1974 while researching her dissertation at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.[1] She was promoted to associate head writer in 1987, then to co-head writer in 1997. [2]
She took over as head writer the following year when series co-creator William J. Bell stepped down from the position. With Alden as head writer, the show lost about two million viewers (most of the loss occurred in 2004 when Alden co-wrote the show with longtime Y&R scribe and producer John F. Smith), but all soap operas during that period experienced a similar scale of massive audience erosion.
She quit The Young and the Restless in late 2006, and was then hired by Brian Frons, president of ABC Daytime, to consult on its serials All My Children, General Hospital and One Life to Live. She left ABC Daytime after declining All My Children's head writer position in Spring 2007, and was hired by Bradley Bell in May 2007 to be an associate head writer for another CBS Daytime drama, The Bold and the Beautiful. On July 18, 2008, it was announced that Alden would be appointed co-head writer of The Bold and the Beautiful in the coming weeks. [3]
During the WGA strike she went under financial core status [4][permanent dead link] while working for The Bold and the Beautiful.
In 2012, Alden was spotted on the set of The Young and the Restless for the taping of the show's 10,000th episode, leading many to believe she'd re-joined the show as a writer or story consultant. [5] However, this never came to pass.
On September 21, 2016, Daytime Confidential reported that after ten years since being with the show, Alden had been hired to be story consultant at Y&R, under Sally Sussman's tenure as Head writer.[1] On July 31, 2017, Daytime Confidential announced that both Alden and Sussman will be departing from the show, with Mal Young being named as the new head writer.[2]
There is a scholarship in Alden's name from Emporia State University, in Emporia, Kansas.
Personal life[]
She has three children and lives with her husband in Illinois.
Positions held[]
- Scriptwriter: May 13, 1974–80
- Breakdown writer: 1980–87
- Script editor: 1983–85, 1986–87
- Associate head writer: 1987–97
- Co-head writer: 1997–July 3, 1998; February 16 – December 22, 2006
- Head writer: July 6, 1998 – February 15, 2006
- Story Consultant: December 6, 2016 – October 27, 2017
- Story Consultant December 2006 – April 2007
- Story Consultant: December 2006 – April 2007
- Story Consultant December 2006 – April 2007
- Co-head writer (2008–13)
- Associate Head Writer (August 6, 2007 – January 21, 2008; April 16, 2008 – 2008)
- Interim Head Writer (February 5, 2008 – April 15, 2008)
Head Writing Tenure[]
Awards and nominations[]
Daytime Emmy Award [6]
- Nominations, 2008, 2009, Best Writing The Bold and the Beautiful
- Nominations, 1976, 1979, 1986, 1987, 1990–1995, 1997–2001, 2003–2007, Best Writing, The Young and the Restless
- Wins, 1997, 2000, 2006, Best Writing, The Young and the Restless; 2010, Best Writing, The Bold and the Beautiful
Writers Guild of America Award
- Wins, 2002 & 2005, Best Writing, The Young and the Restless
- Nominations, 1999, 2001, 2006, Best Writing, The Young and the Restless
References[]
- ^ Giddens, Jamey (September 21, 2016). "Kay Alden Returns to The Young and the Restless as Story Consultant (Exclusive)". Daytime Confidential. Confidential Media (SAY Media). Archived from the original on September 26, 2016. Retrieved September 21, 2016.
- ^ Giddens, Jamey (July 31, 2017). "The Young and the Restless SHOCKER: Sally Sussman and Kay Alden to Retire; Mal Young in as New Head Writer! (EXCLUSIVE)". Daytime Confidential. United States: Confidential Media, Inc. (SAY Media). Archived from the original on August 1, 2017. Retrieved July 31, 2017.
External links[]
- American soap opera writers
- American women screenwriters
- Daytime Emmy Award winners
- American women television writers
- Living people
- Writers Guild of America Award winners
- 1946 births
- People from Hutchinson, Kansas
- Women soap opera writers
- Screenwriters from Kansas
- 21st-century American women