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  1. Guiding Light. Guiding Light (known as The Guiding Light before 1975) is an American radio and television soap opera. Guiding Light aired on CBS for 57 years between June 30, 1952, and September 18, 2009, overlapping a 19-year broadcast on radio between January 25, 1937, and June 29, 1956. [1] With 72 years of radio and television runs, Guiding ...

  2. Template:Italic title Guiding Light (known as The Guiding Light before 1975, or simply GL) is an American daytime television drama that is listed in Guinness World Records as the longest running drama in television, running for 57 years from June 30, 1952 to September 18, 2009, following the 15-year radio run. At the time of its cancellation in 2009, it was the longest-running soap opera in ...

  3. Guiding Light (GL) was a soap opera on CBS. It was set in the fictional town of Springfield, Illinois. Debut (on TV): June 30, 1952 Ended: September 18, 2009 Production company: TeleNext Media, Inc. for Procter & Gamble Productions Inc. Producing team: Ellen Wheeler (Executive Producer), Alexandra Johnson-Gamsey, Maria Macina, Jan Conklin, Christopher Cullen, Jill Lorie Hurst, David Brandon ...

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  5. Guiding Light (GL) was a soap opera on CBS daytime. It was set in the fictional town of Springfield. Debut (on TV) on CBS: June 30, 1952 Ended on CBS: September 18, 2009 Production company: TeleNext Media, Inc. for Procter & Gamble Productions Inc. Executive Producer: Ellen Wheeler Written by: Christopher Dunn, Lloyd Gold, Jill Lorie Hurst, David Kreizman, Tita Bell, Kimberly Hamilton, Rebecca ...

  6. Guiding Light: Created by Irna Phillips, Agnes Nixon. With Kim Zimmer, Beth Chamberlin, Maureen Garrett, Robert Newman. This show took place in the fictional Midwestern town of Springfield and centered on the middle class Bauer family.

  7. Show development. During the 1970s, the head writer for Guiding Light stabilized, with two main storylines from January 1, 1970, to December 31, 1979. Robert Soderberg and Edith Sommer wrote the first half of the decade until the spring of 1973. Then James Gentile, Robert Cenedella, and James Lipton continued in the same direction until near ...

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