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- Hillary B. Smith
is the Outstanding Performer
For the week of April 27, 1998
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- Soap Opera Weekly, April
27, 1998
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- Everyone knows that ONE LIFE
TO LIVE'S Hillary B. Smith is a crackerjack actress. However,
it's been a while since she had a storyline worthy of her talents.
That all changed this week when Nora took on a room full of bikers
at a bar where she sought refuge after being duped into thinking
that Bo had been unfaithful with Georgie.
Fueled by anger, confusion and too much hard liquor, Nora turned
the bar and its rough-hewn regulars into a courtroom where every
man was on trial. Although as a defense lawyer it's Nora's job
to convince a jury to consider all the facts before rendering
a verdict, since things are often not what they appear to be,
this seemingly scorned woman didn't give a rat's ass that Bo
and Georgie's so-called relationship was based on nothing more
than circumstantial evidence. Substituting the bikers for Bo,
she indicted them all. "Every single man in this courtroom
is a liar!" she spat out with venom. "Don't do the
crime if you can't pay the fine." In this scene, Smith proved
why she's an Emmy Award-winning actress: Whether she was yelling,
crying, doing a sexy dance, or threatening the bikers with bodily
harm, each transition, be it to show her vulnerability or adrenaline-induced
strength, was seemless and believable.
This pattern was replaced later in scenes with Kale Brown's Sam,
who came to Nora's rescue. After hacking away at her hair with
a razor, Nora regained some of her self-worth when Sam told her
she is beautiful. Yet this didn't stop her from yelling at him
if he said anything that sounded the least bit like a betrayal
to her pain. Smith's mannerisms, voice inflections - everything
- were true for someone who's life was being turned upside-down.
And Browne was magnificent as a former suitor who could have
had her from that moment on but instead chose to do the right
thing and not take advantage of her situation. It was clear from
the way Browne handled the scene that Sam ached for Nora; breaking
away following a passionate kiss was probably one of the hardest
things he ever had to do. After hashing out Bo's supposed guilt
and Nora's insistence that Sam take her to Chicago, both characters
(and the viewer) were physically spent. Finally, an overabundance
of dialogue was unnecessary. Smith and Browne sat side-by-side,
haggard looks on their faces. Thanks to the skill of both actors,
the audience knew exactly what each character was thinking.
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