Port Charles

Genre: Soap opera, Medical fiction
Started: 2nd June 1997
Ended: 3rd October 2003
Episodes: 1633
Country: United States of America
Created by: Wendy Riche, Carolyn Culliton, Richard Culliton
Starring: Debbi Morgan, Julie Pinson, Marie Wilson, Michael Dietz, Erin Hershey Presley, Ian Buchanan, Thorsten Kaye, Kelly Monaco, Brian Gaskill, Kin Shriner, Michael Easton, Kimberlin Brown, Lynn Herring, Rachel Ames, Jon Lindstrom, Sarah Aldrich, Tori Falcon, Marie-Alise Recasner, Jay Pickett, Rebecca Staab, Nolan North, Ion Overman, Kiko Ellsworth, Joy Bisco, Brian Presley, Charles Keating, Edward Albert, Anne Jeffreys, Linda Dano, Shannon Sturges, Eddie Velez, Nicholas Pryor, Amy Weber, Barbara Stock, Erin Gray, Rib Hillis, Carly Schroeder, Peter Hansen, Joseph Cali, Jennifer Hammon, Mitch Longley, Jean Bruce Scott, Jeffrey Byron, Anastasia Horne, Robin Christopher, Vanessa Branch, Warren Munson, Kay Panabaker, Linda Purl, Michael J. Anderson, Rodney Van Johnson, Susan Haskell

Port Charles is an American television soap opera which aired on ABC from June 2, 1997 to October 3, 2003. It is a spin-off of the serial General Hospital, which has been running since 1963 and takes place in the fictional city of Port Charles, New York. The new show featured longtime General Hospital characters Lucy Coe, Kevin Collins, Scott Baldwin, and Karen Wexler, along with several new characters, most of whom were interns in a competitive medical school program. In the first episode, tenured nurse Audrey Hardy (General Hospital's longest-running character, portrayed by Rachel Ames) was injured and an intern had to operate on her with a power drill to save her life.

In the first few years, Port Charles got a reputation for focusing most of its energies on the medical school program, setting more of its main action at Port Charles' General Hospital than was seen on the parent show, General Hospital. As it evolved, it turned its focus to stories with gothic intrigue that included themes such as forbidden love, vampires, and life after death (somewhat similar to the earlier series Dark Shadows, which also aired on ABC). It also abandoned the basic open-ended writing style used

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