(Redirected from Bridget Dobson)'Bridget and Jerome Dobson' were writers for American
soap operas and created the
NBC soap opera ''
Santa Barbara'' in
1984.
Bridget Dobson is the daughter of ''
General Hospital'' creators
Frank Hursley and
Doris Hursley. Bridget and Jerome married in
1961. Bridget began writing for ''General Hospital'' in the early
1970s and Jerome joined her soon after.
In
1975 the Dobsons were hired as the head writers for the long-running
CBS soap opera ''
Guiding Light''. They spent the rest of the 1970's at ''Guiding Light'' where they created alluring nurse
Rita Stapleton (who became the show's heronie for the remainder of the 1970s), the rich, upper class Spaulding family in
1977 (who are still one of the show's core families three decades later), and wrote the infamous storyline of
Holly Norris Bauer's rape by her own husband Roger Thorpe in
1979. The Dobsons would later go on to become the head writers of another
Procter and Gamble soap opera, ''
As The World Turns'' were they created the infamous character of James Stenbeck and also paired the characters of
Tom and Margo.
In 1984 NBC debuted ''Santa Barbara'' where Bridget and Jerome Dobson had creative control of the show's storylines until they were locked out of ''Santa Barbara's'' NBC offices in
1988 after the Dobson's repeated attempts to fire ''Santa Barbara's'' then head writer, Anne Howard Bailey. The Dobson's filed a $53 million lawsuit against NBC and
New World Television (the company that owned ''Santa Barbara''). That same year, when claiming Santa Barbara's Outstanding Daytime Drama emmy, a bittersweet Bridget Dobson taunted, "Though New World Television locked me out of the studio, they couldn't lock me out of the Emmys!"
[1] In 1991, the case was finally settled out of court and the Dobsons returned to the show they created.
In 1995, the Dobsons moved to Atlanta, Georgia, where Bridget began pursuing her lifelong passion for painting. She quickly developed a loyal following in the art community for her distinctive work and became the featured artist at gallery shows across the United States. More than sixty of her paintings were featured in a solo traveling museum tour.
At the urging of friends, Bridget Dobson began to transfer the vibrant designs of her artwork to the surface of lifestyle products. Her series of fine china, crystal, and giftware -- sold by the company Bridget Dobson Studios -- was unveiled in 2006 in New York City.