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'General Hospital' star Tristan Rogers diagnosed with cancer

'General Hospital' star Tristan Rogers diagnosed with cancer

USA Today10 hours ago
Tristan Rogers, best known for his longtime role on the medical drama "General Hospital," is facing a health scare of his own.
Rogers, who played Robert Scorpio on the classic ABC soap opera, has been diagnosed with cancer, publicist Anthony Turk confirmed in a July 17 press release to USA TODAY. The type of cancer that Rogers, 79, is battling was not disclosed.
"While he remains hopeful and is working closely with his medical team on a treatment plan, this is a challenging time for Tristan and his family," the statement read. "As they face both the emotional and physical burdens that come with this diagnosis, the family kindly asks for privacy and understanding."
Rogers has been married to Teresa Parkerson since 1995. The couple shares two children: daughter Sara, 32, and son Cale, 28. "They are deeply grateful for the outpouring of support and love from their friends and family," the statement continued.
'They just hated my character so much': Eva Larue on leaving 'General Hospital'
Rogers, who was born in Melbourne, Australia, cut his teeth as a soap actor in the 1970s with roles on the Australian TV series "Number 96," "The Box" and "Bellbird."
The budding actor traded the Down Under for the fictional town of Port Charles, New York, when he joined the cast of "General Hospital" in December 1980, playing super spy Scorpio.
Rogers went on to enjoy a 12-year stint on the long-running drama before departing the series in 1992. He was nominated for two Soap Opera Digest Awards during his initial "GH" tenure, including a 1986 nod for outstanding daytime actor in a leading role.
'General Hospital' star John J. York opens up about 'very welcoming' return amid cancer battle
After a nearly 15-year hiatus, Rogers returned to the show in 2006 for a series of recurring appearances, followed by additional guest performances in 2008, 2012-2016 and 2018-2024. In total, the fan-favorite actor has appeared on over 1,400 episodes of "General Hospital," according to Rogers' IMDb page.
Rogers also appeared on several episodes of the "General Hospital" spinoff "General Hospital: Night Shift" in 2008.
"Tristan sends his love to his fans and wants them to know how much he appreciates their loyalty and encouragement over the years," Rogers' cancer diagnosis announcement stated. "This support means more to him now than ever."
Rogers isn't the only "General Hospital" alum to have a bout with cancer.
John J. York revealed in September 2023 that he was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome and smoldering multiple myeloma the previous year, though he has since returned to the show.
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'Pink Slip' From 'Freaky Friday' Just Performed At Disneyland, And I'm A Moody Teen Again
'Pink Slip' From 'Freaky Friday' Just Performed At Disneyland, And I'm A Moody Teen Again

Buzz Feed

time20 minutes ago

  • Buzz Feed

'Pink Slip' From 'Freaky Friday' Just Performed At Disneyland, And I'm A Moody Teen Again

Okay, so you know about the absolute phenomenon that is Freaky Friday. Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan play Tess and Anna Coleman, a dysfunctional mother-daughter duo who end up switching bodies in a freak incident, and are forced to live each other's lives. A damn classic. There's so much to love about this 2003 film: the story, the performances, Chad Michael Murray's terrible rendition of Baby One More Time. But another thing that makes this film truly iconic is Anna's garage band, Pink Slip, and this banger: To refresh your memory, the song is Take Me Away. Watching this film at a time when being in a band was considered the epitome of coolness was something else. We all wanted to be a part of Pink Slip, because this song goes HARD. I mean, just look at them! The song, originally by the Australian alternative/punk rock band, Lash, was turned into a cover by Christina Vidal for Freaky Friday. We know and love Christina as Maddie, Anna's BFF. Recently, a sequel to the film was announced. Freakier Friday, with our favorite duo, releases August 8th. You can check out the trailer here. Of course, Christina Vidal and Haley Hudson of Pink Slip are part of the sequel; as is our beloved Chad Michael Murray. But the new cast members— Lucille Soong, Stephen Tobolowsky, Rosalind Chao, Julia Butters, Sophia Hammons, Manny Jacinto, and Maitreyi Ramakrishnan—are incredible! On July 17th—Disneyland's 70th birthday—the cast (minus Lindsay Lohan) made an appearance at the Disneyland resort. In a vlog uploaded by YouTube channel Mouse Vibes, we see the new cast come out and greet eager fans. Addressing the crowd, Jamie Lee Curtis says: "But the thing that makes this movie truly rock, is a particular OG band..." "...so without further ado, it is my thrill to be able to introduce to you, Pink Slip!" The band sang Take Me Away as the crowd roared. I too sang along, sitting at my computer and headbanging, lyrics at the tip of my tongue like muscle memory. Mouse Vibes / Via Walt Disney Studios / Via I could watch that scene a million times and not be bored. Disneyland shared a snippet of this event on Instagram, and naturally, our millennial hearts couldn't take it. And of course, Lindsay Lohan was terribly missed. Instagram: @disneystudios Well, I'm just grateful for moments like these, because they take me back to a simpler time. The only thing I wanted back then was to look as cool as Maddie, Anna, and Peg, crushing it on the guitar or on the mic. And I can't wait for Freakier Friday to be out! Here's the full vlog by Mouse Vibes:

Dollywood is 40 years old, and Dolly Parton says it's time to visit
Dollywood is 40 years old, and Dolly Parton says it's time to visit

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Dollywood is 40 years old, and Dolly Parton says it's time to visit

PIGEON FORGE, Tenn. — Nine-to-five would probably be a vacation for Dolly Parton. The living legend is always juggling multiple projects. 'And why not?' Parton told USA TODAY. 'I've lived this life, and I'm going to keep living it as long as I can, and I'm going to make hay while the sun shines.' Her new musical 'Dolly: A True Original Musical' debuts in Nashville on Friday. That's also where she's featured in a special Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit through September. This winter, she'll return to Las Vegas for her first run of shows there in more than 30 years. And all year long, her namesake theme park, which she co-owns with Herschend, is celebrating its 40th anniversary. Parton spoke to USA TODAY about Dollywood and other matters close to her heart earlier this park season. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. QUESTION: You dreamed of opening a theme park. What was your vision? Dolly Parton: When I first started getting successful, I used to think if I ever made it as big as I hoped to, then I (would) want to have my own theme park. I was just dreaming of having a wonderful place for people to come, have a good time, having all kinds of things to enjoy and providing jobs for my family and the kin folks around here and the good neighbors. And sure enough, we've got all that now. Of course we opened 40 years ago. It took a little while to get it all in the works, but it's more than I even imagined that it could be. When you have a dream, you gotta dream big, so I'm always dreaming big, but sometimes your dreams really take on a life of their own, and that's the way that it is with Dollywood. This is a wonderful part of the country to be in. We get a lot of tourists. I can't take credit for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. They were drawing people for many years before we came – another reason that I knew this would be a good place to have a business like Dollywood. A lot of great people have worked really hard to make it what it is. And here we are 40 years later and it's just bigger and better every year. Dollywood's original dream team: They came for the summer and stayed 40 years What would you want folks around the country to know about Dollywood? DP: I want them to know they should get here and do whatever you gotta do to get here cause once you've been here, you're going to love it. Almost everybody that's been here, they always come back. Our slogan is (creating) memories worth repeating and love every moment. And we've had different slogans through the years like that, but I really think people just make beautiful memories here because there's something for every age group in the family. Even the teenagers can get their jollies, as they say, on the roller coasters and a lot of the things we have. Grandparents can love all the shopping, all the arts and crafts and the old mill and the glass blowing and so many wonderful things that couples can enjoy and the kids can enjoy, so they can meet up at one point or another during the day. You can bring the whole family and there's something for everybody to enjoy without being in each other's face all day. You've also got Splash Country and these world-class resorts and your dinner theater opportunities. You could have a whole week's vacation. DP: I am very proud of the businesses that we have over on the parkway. We have the Pirates Voyage. We have the Stampede and we have the Comedy Barn. We have so many things, like the Hatfields and McCoys and all the fun things (outside) the park. But here in the (resort) we have, as you mentioned, Splash Country; people love that. We open early in May, and we go through until September when the weather starts to cool off. We just have something for everybody in this whole area. Plus, not to be selfish with just my own, but there's so many great businesses around here, so many great things for people to see. This, to me, is sincerely one of the greatest places that anyone could visit. This part of the country, right here in Pigeon Forge, Sevierville and Gatlinburg, and in this general area, there's just so much. You're the Dreamer in Chief here. Can you tell us a little bit about that? DP: Well, we all get together and we kind of brainstorm, thinking about how well we've done with certain things and how much better this did than that and what we don't need to do again. And then we think, 'Oh, we need to really expand on this idea.' And so out of the great people that have great minds, we come up with great things. Sometimes I'll come up with an idea and it's not always great, but they'll take that and we can incorporate that into something else in the park. For instance, the restaurants, we even theme a lot of our meals based on things that I've talked about, about my own childhood, like stone soup ... My mom used to make that. We all felt special because we thought that stone made it twice as good as what it was, only because of Mama's stories and she was a good cook. But we try to have little things that really connect people to me as much as we possibly can, stories that I've told, songs that I've written, memories that I've had, talking about the people in the community. We try to have little links to kind of connect that chain that goes all the way through any and all the businesses that we have. Over the past 40 years, you've done so much through the park. What are you most proud of? DP: Well, I'm proud of all of it. I'm proud of the whole idea that it was a big dream and it came true. That's a lot to be proud of. I'm proud of all the things we have, but I'm extremely proud of the Imagination Library, which is our Dollywood Foundation, and we do a lot of giving. We do a lot of things through that, and the Imagination Library is one of the things I'm proudest of anything I've done, even outside the park, just my whole career in general. That's a very warm, loving, emotional thing for me to think that I'm the book lady and that I've done something for the little kids, because being from a big family, I have a special love for children. There are eight kids younger than me in my family. I have a sister and two older brothers, but there's just something about young kids. They're the future. They're the ones that's going to be going on after us, and so I think if you can give them a head start, a little chance of any kind in their early years and their most impressionable years, that's a good thing. A lot of theme parks try to make you feel like you're in one place or another, but Dollywood really showcases the Smokies. What was the intention behind that? DP: Well, we wanted to try to keep as much of the Smoky Mountains and all the nature that we can. It always breaks your heart when you're going to have to build something. You have to cut down a tree or bushes or uproot this or that. But we've tried very hard to work around as much nature as we can rather than just mowing it down and just scooting it off a mountain somewhere or off a bank. We try to work around nature, and we try to keep as much as we can. We have all the beautiful flowers all over the park. I think it's one of the prettiest parks ever. You'd have to agree, right? I mean, when you walk around, there's trees and bushes and flowers everywhere, and we love that. So, we want to keep as much of the Smokies and that attitude and that feeling, because I'm a mountain girl and I think people know all that and they would expect that of me as well. Mountain people are also very important to you. For those who haven't been here, how would you describe the warmth and hospitality of the people? DP: There's just something about Southern people in general – they call that the Southern hospitality – but there's something even more than that about mountain people, people that are in the hills 'cause most of them grew up hard, so they have an appreciation and understanding of all people. There's just a warmth and a depth and a knowing in mountain people, I think. And they welcome you because most of them are from big families. Most of them take their own kinfolk in like that, so it's just almost like everybody's a friend, everybody's a family member. I know myself, when I do shows, I look out at my audience. I can see somebody I know in every person out there. Somebody reminds me of Uncle So-and-so. That looks just like my sister Stella. Oh, that person looks like Uncle Fred, so I kind of feel that warmth and I play to those people, so I'm always home wherever I'm at. And I think people go away from here, when they've been here, they think, 'Wow, that's just like we're having to leave some kin folks that we really like. Can't wait to go back next summer and spend our summer vacation out on the farm with the Partons and the Owenses.' So many people want to connect with you, and they have some other ways to do so around the country coming up DP: Come and be part of it and enjoy it. I'm very proud of my life story as a musical. We're going to open that in Nashville. We're actually doing previews in July and August. Then we go to New York, and we'll be opening on Broadway sometime next year, along with the (Nashville) hotel. I'm very excited about that and my museum (exhibit). And I have a new book coming out called 'Star of the Show.' It's about my life on stage and on the road, and so there's this whole lot of stuff going on. As much as I can do while I'm living, I'm going to try to get it done.

Why Kaylor Martin says she won't watch 'Love Island: Beyond the Villa'
Why Kaylor Martin says she won't watch 'Love Island: Beyond the Villa'

USA Today

time7 hours ago

  • USA Today

Why Kaylor Martin says she won't watch 'Love Island: Beyond the Villa'

If there's anything Kaylor Martin learned from her online following skyrocketing after starring in Season 6 of "Love Island USA," it might be that tuning out social media is for the best sometimes. Martin, 23, tells USA TODAY that it's "such an honor" to be part of the "USA" franchise's first spinoff show, "Love Island: Beyond the Villa" (new episodes out Thursdays on Peacock). "Looking back, (seeing) how much our lives have changed, we're very blessed and lucky," she adds. But Martin acknowledges her second go-around on Peacock will be "more difficult" than her breakout role on "Love Island USA" last year. Last summer, an exponentially growing audience of fans watched her fall head-over-heels for Brit Aaron Evans, only to be left heartbroken over his deception and sobbing to an entirely too appropriate Sabrina Carpenter song chosen by the show's editors. But at the time, she had no contact with the outside world and was spared from outside opinions until she left the villa right before the finale. "It's going to be even more difficult, our show airing and us having our phones in real time, hearing everyone's opinions and backlash and everything like that," Martin says. "That's going to be the most challenging part, at least for myself." 'Some of the fans ... they're very toxic' So, what is Martin going to do to set boundaries? "I'm not going to watch the show. I want to have a Europe summer and just sign off," she says. This desire to escape is, in part, because of online hate. "Some of the fans, we are very lucky, but they're very toxic. And sometimes they forget we are real human beings," Martin says. "You never know how you're going to be perceived or what the public's going to think," she continues. "But as long as you feel like you've stayed true to you, I feel like that's the most important thing." "Beyond the Villa," in its first two episodes, sees Martin and her best friend from the show, Liv Walker, feud as tension builds over a missing invite to a boyfriend's birthday celebration and lack of communication over how much effort they will put into their appearances for an event. Her "Villa" co-stars include fan-favorite Season 6 couples JaNa Craig and Kenny Rodriguez, Leah Kateb and Miguel Harichi, and winners Serena Page and Kordell Beckham (who make guest appearances while he's filming his first movie). For better or worse, Evans is also on the show, and he and Martin reunite, without much resolution, months after a contentious reunion episode. Unlike "Love Island," which is a reality romance-slash-competition show, "Beyond the Villa" is more along the lines of fellow NBCUniversal show "Vanderpump Rules." "Beyond the Villa" follows the cast socializing and navigating inner-circle drama in Los Angeles. It filmed in the spring, close to the show's July 13 premiere. "Filming this season, I feel like it was way more difficult than filming 'Love Island,'" Martin says. "When you're there (in the villa), you're there for love, and it's all happy. And, I mean, some parts sad, but all this was very challenging for me at least, dealing with the real world and real (stuff) going on."

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