Soap opera writer Leah Laiman faces a daytime dilemma. ALICE BURDICK SCHWEIGER Special to The Jewish News hen Leah Tolman began writing for soap operas, she wanted to introduce Jewish characters. And she did. In the early 1980s, she created Jake, a Jewish lawyer on "General Hospital," with an uncle who kept kosher. A few years later, Laiman introduced Robin, a prominent Jewish doctor who was female and Orthodox, to "Days of Our Lives." Robin had a mezuzah outside her door, and her pharmacist father wore a yarmulke. But after two decades in the busi- ness, Laiman, currently head writer for "Another World," is reluctant to create another Jewish character. "On 'Days of Our Lives,"' Laiman explains, "Robin became romantically involved with one of the longtime heroes on the show who, of course, was not Jewish. "They were quite a popular couple, but I didn't want her to marry a non- Jew, or convert or ignore her religion. The non-Jewish writers didn't want a non-Jew to convert, and in the end, the romance wound up going nowhere. "Since all core characters [on the soaps] are not Jewish, ultimately any new Jewish character would be faced with an interfaith marriage." That's counterproductive, Laiman believes, "even if you are saying some- thing good about the Jewish character, Jewish people and the Jewish religion." Still, Laiman goes on to say, she is grateful for having had the opportunity Leah Laiman, standing center, is head writer for "Another World." She develops plots and passes them out to her fellow writers, who create the dialogue. Jewish soap actress Lesli Kay Sterling is on top of the "World." that my grandmother had had a heart attack and a stroke," she recalls. "So I Special to The Jewish News got on a plane that night, and took the red-eye from L.A. to New York. hen Lesli Kay Sterling "The next day, I got a call from my watched soap operas agent saying I had been offered a while working out at a screen test in New York. Since I was Los Angeles gym, she already there, I was able to slip away had no idea that club members soon from the hospital and take the screen would be watching her on the gym's test. But it didn't matter anymore if I television sets as Molly Conlan on "As got the part. The only thing that mat- the World Turns." tered was my grandmother. Every "One day, I was running on a morning I went to synagogue with my treadmill in L.A. watching soap grandfather to pray. operas, and I thought to myself, 'Why Sterling was offered are these actresses working and Lesli Kay the plum part of Molly, Left. I'm on a treadmill?"' says the ruing on Ste but sadly, her grandmoth- actress. "As the World er died on Sterling's first She'd been doing some inde- 7' urns': air date. "But my grand- pendent features for Showtime "A g cod gig." father began to watch me, and Cinemax, but hadn't and it gave him some- worked in three months. "I to do at 2 p.m. each day," says thing called my agent and said, 'Please try the actress. He would call me up and get me a job on a soap.' and say, 'Guess what Molly did,' and But, just as a contract role on day- I would say, 'Yes, Grandpa, I know. I time television seemed like a strong play her!' possibility, Sterling was hit with some "Unfortunately, he passed away this bad news from home. past fall, exactly one day after the offi- "My grandfather called to tell me ALICE BURDICK SCHWEIGER ) 1/S 1999 74 Detroit Jewish News \/