Anthony Geary, Luke Spencer on ‘General Hospital,’ Dies at 78
One-half of the ultimate soap supercouple with Genie Francis, he won a record eight Daytime Emmys and starred on the ABC daytime drama over a 40-year span.
He was not on the list.
Anthony Geary, the thoughtful General Hospital actor who as the complex Luke Spencer raped and romanced Genie Francis’ Laura Webber Baldwin on the way to an unprecedented eight Daytime Emmy Awards and soap opera superstardom, has died. He was 78.
Geary lived in the Netherlands and died Sunday of
complications from a scheduled operation in his adopted country three days
earlier, the website TV Insider reported. “It was a shock for me and our
families and our friends,” his husband, Claudio Gama, said. “For more than 30
years, Tony has been my friend, my companion, my husband.”
A native of Utah, Geary came to Los Angeles with the help of actor Jack Albertson, guest-starred on the fifth episode of All in the Family and was a regular on the daytime dramas Bright Promise and The Young and the Restless before G.H. legend Gloria Monty approached him about coming to Port Charles, New York, in 1978.
“In my first meeting, I said to her, ‘I hate soap operas,’ and she said, ‘Honey, so do I, and we’re going to change all that,’” he recalled in a 2007 chat for the Television Academy Foundation website The Interviews.
The producer-director told Geary that G.H. was going to create a role for him, but it would only be written if he were going to accept it. “She knew how to talk to an actor. How do you say no to that?” he said.
She described Lucas Lorenzo Spencer as “an antihero, a person who does all the wrong things for the right reasons. He would be a man of action; he wouldn’t be sitting around drinking coffee and talking about who was sleeping with whom. She wanted this character to cause a lot of trouble for a lot of people.”
Geary signed on for 13 weeks, and Luke, a hitman with ties to the mob, made his first appearance on G.H. on Nov. 20, 1978, reuniting with his younger sister, Bobbie (Jacklyn Zeman), with whom he was raised in a Florida brothel. When that contract expired, he signed another one for six months.
On the episode that aired Oct. 5, 1979, Luke, in a scene late at night at the Campus Disco he managed, told Laura, who was married to Scotty Baldwin (Kin Shriner) at the time, that he was going to be killed and was in love with her.
“It’s like some kind of sickness inside me, it’s eating me up, I can’t concentrate on anything,” he said to her. “And in my business, that’s dangerous, baby. You got me between two worlds that don’t mix.”
With the Herb Alpert song “Rise” playing in the background, he raped her.
The incident was framed back then as a romanticized “seduction” of Laura, and he would bring her flowers in the hospital. Luke & Laura would become a steamy supercouple, and after teaming with Robert Scorpio (Tristan Rogers) to rescue humanity from the Ice Princess weather machine, they wed at the mayor’s mansion in thawed-out Port Charles on Nov. 16, 1981.
“The two young people before us, through their love for one
another, remind us of what it is that makes life precious to all of us — love,
loyalty and courage,” the officiant said. “Together in the face of extreme
danger to themselves, they overcame powerful forces that sought to destroy Port
Charles and its people, even the entire world.”
The most-watched soap episode of all time — and one of the most memorable moments in TV history — attracted 30 million viewers, featured Elizabeth Taylor as the villainess Helena Cassadine and inspired Princess Diana (who had own famous wedding four months earlier) to send the actors champagne.
“He spoiled me for leading men for the rest of my life,” Francis wrote on X. “I am crushed, I will miss him terribly, but I was so lucky to be his partner. Somehow, somewhere, we are connected to each other because I felt him leave last night. Good night sweet prince, good night.”
Geary exited the drama at the end of 1983, only to return full-time in 1991 — not as Luke but as his lookalike cousin, Bill Eckert. Luke, naturally, would return as well, and Geary remained with G.H. until his final episode as a regular aired July 27, 2015.
“This show has been a huge part of my life for over half my life, and Luke Spencer is my alter ego,” Geary told TVLine that year. “But I’m just weary of the grind and have been for 20 years. There was a point after my back surgery last year where it became clear to me that my time is not infinite. And I really don’t want to die, collapsing in a heap, on that G.H. set one day. That wouldn’t be too poetic.”
One of three kids, Tony Dean Geary was born on May 29, 1947, in Coalville, Utah. His father, Russell, was a contractor and the owner of a construction business and his mother, Dana, a homemaker. “She taught me it was OK, that it wasn’t unmanly, to have emotions,” he recalled.
Geary said he always wanted to be an actor and kept a notebook from grade school through high school in which he logged every movie he saw. He rated each one and listed who acted in them, who directed them and often who wrote them.
In 1965, he was a member of the then-largest graduating glass in the history of Coalville’s North Summit High School — 53 students — then accepted a theater scholarship to attend the University of Utah.
As a sophomore in 1967, the blue-eyed Geary — who had done several musicals during a previous summer in Salt Lake City — starred in a college production of The Subject Was Roses opposite Albertson, who had received a Tony Award for his work in the intense Frank Gilroy drama two years earlier.
Albertson then asked him to tour with the play, and that brought Geary to L.A. (Albertson would reprise the role in an Oscar-winning turn in a 1968 MGM adaptation, with Martin Sheen portraying his son, as he had done on Broadway).
Geary made his onscreen debut on a 1970 episode of Room 222, then appeared on the All in the Family episode “Judging Books by Covers” as a guy named Roger who Archie (Carroll O’Connor) is convinced is gay. The installment was taped on Jan. 12, 1971, the night All in the Family premiered.
He also landed his first soap that year, playing a man who was incorrectly diagnosed as mentally impaired at birth and put in an institution on NBC’s Bright Promise. (Monty was a director on the show and Ivor Francis, Genie’s dad, played a doctor.)
In 1973, Geary was hired to play George Curtis, a rapist, on CBS’ The Young and the Restless. After six months, he was asked to re-sign — producers said they were going to “rehabilitate” his character — but he declined, thinking “it was about time I got this big film career going.”
That never developed, though he did get regular work on the Quinn Martin-produced shows Dan August, Barnaby Jones and The Streets of San Francisco, where he played a heroin addict in one of his proudest efforts. Meanwhile, he was studying acting with Lee Strasberg.
In 1974, he portrayed a psychotic killer who holds people
captive in the ABC telefilm Sorority Kill, directed by Monty and taped over two
nights.
For G.H., Geary first auditioned to play Sen. Mitch Williams in a scene with Jane Elliot as Tracy Quartermaine but was deemed too young for the role. Luke was originally supposed to be killed off after Geary’s 13 weeks were up and then again after the rape of Laura, but both times the character was spared.
“As it turned out, [ABC head Fred Silverman] wanted Asher Brauner, the young man who was playing my sidekick, Roy DiLucca, for a nighttime show,” Geary recalled. “So at the last minute, they had Roy shot, and Luke survived.”
He sent Francis flowers in real life, too, after they shot their controversial scene.
When their wedding aired, Geary was 34 and Francis was 19. “The Luke & Laura relationship is as real to me as any I’ve ever had,” he told Access Hollywood in 2007.
In 1983, after Francis had exited the show, Geary “didn’t just leave General Hospital, I fled, telling a director that I worked with on the stage that I would rather put hot pokers in my eyes than [ever come back],” he remembered.
While away, he produced and narrated stories for children’s radio, played Octavius opposite Lynn Redgrave and Timothy Dalton in a 1984 PBS-BBC production of Antony and Cleopatra and starred in Jesus Christ Superstar onstage. But he went a whole year without an acting job.
Geary said he was all set for a role in Oliver Stone’s Salvador (1986) until the director learned he was a famous soap actor. The offer was rescinded.
“Nobody wanted Luke Spencer in their movie,” he said. “And I understand that now, because for those 30 seconds or whatever, somebody [watching] would say, ‘Oh, isn’t that that guy on …?’ And then they would be taken out of the film.”
He did get to play a rotten gambler opposite the Fat Boys in Disorderlies (1987), an eccentric scientist named Philo in the “Weird Al” Yankovic comedy UHF (1989) and a preacher in Scorchers (1991).
In 1991, Monty was returning to G.H. and asked him to rejoin her — but told him she didn’t want him to play Luke. So he came back “for a lot of money” and made certain his contracts guaranteed him a great deal of vacation time — he would only work about six months a year — and the right to say his lines the way he thought they should be said.
As Bill Eckert, Geary wore a brown beard and brown contact lenses, but audiences didn’t approve of the character, and Eckert would die in Luke’s arms in October 1993, making for a full-fledged Luke comeback.
On May 8, 2015, he announced that he was leaving G.H. for
good, though he did return in May 2017 when Elliot was leaving the show. (Luke
and Tracy had married, and in January 2022, she revealed that he had been
killed in a cable car accident in Austria. But was it really an accident?)
Arguably the most popular actor in soap opera history, Geary received the Emmy for outstanding actor in a daytime drama series in 1982, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2012 and 2015 and was nominated nine other times.
“The entire General Hospital family is heartbroken over the news of Tony Geary’s passing,” executive producer Frank Valentini said in a statement. “Tony was a brilliant actor and set the bar that we continue to strive for. His legacy, and that of Luke Spencer’s, will live on through the generations of G.H. castmembers who have followed in his footsteps.”
In addition to his husband of six year, survivors include his sisters, Jan Steele and Deann Geary, and his nephews, Brendan Steele, a professional golfer, and Dax Geary.
Asked in his TV Academy Foundation interview to describe his “proudest moment” as an actor, Geary recalled being at an awards event in Pasadena in the ’80s when he spotted a tiny woman in a large hat smoking a cigarette and realized it was Bette Davis.
“I had been a fan since I was a child, and I thought, ‘I
cannot let this opportunity pass,’” he recalled. “So I summoned all my courage
and walked over to her and said, ‘Miss Davis, I just have to tell you how
important you have been to me as an actor, as a person, as a role model, as an
idol,’ all of that. I put out my hand and said, ‘My name is Tony Geary.’ And
she shook it and said, ‘I know your work.’ I didn’t need any more than that.”
Actor
Finola Hughes, Maurice Benard, Steve Burton, Genie Francis,
Kelly Monaco, Laura Wright, Donnell Turner, Tanisha Harper, Josh Kelly, Eden
McCoy, Josh Swickard, and Tabyana Ali in General Hospital (1963)
General Hospital
6.6
TV Series
Luke SpencerBill EckertFake Luke ...
1978–2017
1995 episodes
The Obituary (2016)
The Obituary
8.9
Short
Drum
2016
Alice and the Monster (2012)
Alice and the Monster
5.8
George
2012
Katie Jarvis in Fish Tank (2009)
Fish Tank
7.3
Van Man (as Tony Geary)
2009
General Hospital: Night Shift (2007)
General Hospital: Night Shift
6.9
TV Series
Luke Spencer
2008
2 episodes
Carpool Guy (2005)
Carpool Guy
5.2
Carpool Guy
2005
Teacher's Pet (2004)
Teacher's Pet
5.7
JohnJuan (voice)
2004
Port Charles (1997)
Port Charles
6.8
TV Series
Luke Spencer
1998
3 episodes
General Hospital: Twist of Fate (1996)
General Hospital: Twist of Fate
7.9
TV Movie
Luke Spencer
1996
Gene Barry and Peter Barton in Burke's Law (1994)
Burke's Law
6.6
TV Series
Clayton Cole
1995
1 episode
Elizabeth Taylor in Luke and Laura Vol. 2: Greatest Love of
All (1995)
Luke and Laura Vol. 2: Greatest Love of All
Video
HostLuke Spencer
1995
Luke and Laura, Vol. 1: Lovers on the Run
7.8
Video
HostLuke Spencer
1994
John Goodman, Roseanne Barr, Sara Gilbert, Michael Fishman,
Alicia Goranson, and Laurie Metcalf in Roseanne (1988)
Roseanne
7.1
TV Series
Luke Spencer (uncredited)
1994
1 episode
Whistlestop Girl
7.3
Andy
1993
Scorchers (1991)
Scorchers
5.6
Preacher
1991
Lorenzo Lamas in Night of the Warrior (1991)
Night of the Warrior
3.8
Lynch
1991
Angela Lansbury in Murder, She Wrote (1984)
Murder, She Wrote
7.3
TV Series
Eric GrantKGB Lt. Fyodor Alexandrov
1989–1990
2 episodes
George Clooney in Sunset Beat (1990)
Sunset Beat
3.5
TV Series
1990
1 episode
Crack House (1989)
Crack House
5.5
Dockett
1989
High Desert Kill (1989)
High Desert Kill
5.1
TV Movie
Dr. Jim Cole
1989
Do You Know the Muffin Man? (1989)
Do You Know the Muffin Man?
5.6
TV Movie
Stephen Pugliotti
1989
'Weird Al' Yankovic in UHF (1989)
UHF
6.9
Philo
1989
Night Life (1989)
Night Life
5.6
John Devlin
1989
Dangerous Love (1988)
Dangerous Love
4.3
Mickey
1988
It Takes Two (1988)
It Takes Two
5.4
WheelGiuseppe's voice
1988
You Can't Hurry Love (1988)
You Can't Hurry Love
4.7
Tony
1988
Pass the Ammo (1987)
Pass the Ammo
5.9
Stonewall
1987
Perry Mason: The Case of the Murdered Madam (1987)
Perry Mason: The Case of the Murdered Madam
7.0
TV Movie
Steve Reynolds
1987
Penitentiary III (1987)
Penitentiary III
4.5
Serenghetti
1987
Disorderlies (1987)
Disorderlies
5.1
Winslow Lowry
1987
P.I. Private Investigations (1987)
P.I. Private Investigations
5.6
Larry
1987
You Are the Jury (1984)
You Are the Jury
5.9
TV Series
Sam Billings
1986
1 episode
Anne Baxter, James Brolin, and Connie Sellecca in Hotel
(1983)
Hotel
6.4
TV Series
Phil TannerEli Gilmour
1985
2 episodes
Shelley Hack in Kicks (1985)
Kicks
6.3
TV Movie
Martin Cheevers
1985
The Impostor (1984)
The Impostor
6.8
TV Movie
Cade
1984
Antony and Cleopatra (1984)
Antony and Cleopatra
5.7
TV Movie
Octavius Caesar
1984
Kirstie Alley, Barbara Carrera, Kim Cattrall, Debby Boone,
and Tracy Reed in Sins of the Past (1984)
Sins of the Past
6.0
TV Movie
Lieutenant Malovich
1984
Intimate Agony (1983)
Intimate Agony
5.3
TV Movie
Dr. Kyle Richards
1983
The Shaft of Love (1983)
The Shaft of Love
6.0
TV Movie
Doug Hathaway (as Tony Geary)
1983
Project U.F.O. (1978)
Project U.F.O.
7.1
TV Series
Darryl Biggs
1978
1 episode
The Return of Captain Nemo (1978)
The Return of Captain Nemo
4.8
TV Movie
Bork
1978
Starsky and Hutch (1975)
Starsky and Hutch
7.0
TV Series
Delano
1978
1 episode
Lee Majors in The Six Million Dollar Man (1973)
The Six Million Dollar Man
7.1
TV Series
Arta
1978
1 episode
Buddy Ebsen in Barnaby Jones (1973)
Barnaby Jones
6.9
TV Series
Jim AndersWillsNelson Mosley ...
1976–1977
3 episodes
Jo Ann Harris, Shelly Novack, and Robert Stack in Most
Wanted (1976)
Most Wanted
6.9
TV Series
Chops
1977
1 episode
The Blue Knight (1975)
The Blue Knight
6.9
TV Series
The Burglar
1976
2 episodes
The Streets of San Francisco (1972)
The Streets of San Francisco
7.3
TV Series
Gary JelinekCajunJoe Markham
1974–1976
4 episodes
Marcus Welby, M.D. (1969)
Marcus Welby, M.D.
7.0
TV Series
John GavanelliFlipped-Out Youth (as Tony Geary)
1971–1975
2 episodes
Polly Bergen, Donna Mills, Paul Burke, Judy Carne, and
Barbara Feldon in The Wide World of Mystery (1973)
The Wide World of Mystery
6.9
TV Series
Kurt Branden
1974–1975
2 episodes
Sorority Kill (1974)
Sorority Kill
7.3
TV Movie
Kurt Branden (as Tony Geary)
1974
Doc Elliot (1973)
Doc Elliot
6.5
TV Series
Dennis Graham (as Tony Geary)
1974
1 episode
Eileen Davidson, Bryton James, Joshua Morrow, Gina Tognoni,
Justin Hartley, Melissa Claire Egan, and Peter Bergman in The Young and the
Restless (1973)
The Young and the Restless
5.4
TV Series
George Curtis
1973
2 episodes
Richard Roundtree in Shaft (1973)
Shaft
6.5
TV Series
David Oliver (as Tony Geary)
1973
1 episode
Mannix (1967)
Mannix
7.4
TV Series
Eddie Decken (as Tony Geary)
1973
1 episode
Cleavon Little, Joan Van Ark, Nancy Fox, Reva Rose, and
James Whitmore in The New Temperatures Rising Show (1972)
The New Temperatures Rising Show
7.2
TV Series
Scott
1973
1 episode
Blood Sabbath (1972)
Blood Sabbath
4.1
David (as Tony Geary)
1972
The Partridge Family (1970)
The Partridge Family
6.6
TV Series
Greg Houser (as Tony Geary)
1972
1 episode
Peggy Lipton, Michael Cole, and Clarence Williams III in Mod
Squad (1968)
Mod Squad
7.0
TV Series
Johnson (as Tony Geary)
1972
1 episode
Donald Sutherland, Timothy Bottoms, Jason Robards, Kathy
Fields, Marsha Hunt, and Diane Varsi in Johnny Got His Gun (1971)
Johnny Got His Gun
7.8
Redhead (as Tony Geary)
1971
Burt Reynolds and Norman Fell in Dan August (1970)
Dan August
7.1
TV Series
Hippie #1 (as Tony Geary)
1971
1 episode
Rob Reiner, Sally Struthers, Carroll O'Connor, and Jean
Stapleton in All in the Family (1971)
All in the Family
8.4
TV Series
Roger (as Tony Geary)
1971
1 episode
Michael Constantine, Lloyd Haynes, Denise Nicholas, and
Karen Valentine in Room 222 (1969)
Room 222
7.7
TV Series
Tom Whalom (as Tony Geary)
1970
1 episode
Bright Promise (1969)
Bright Promise
6.9
TV Series
David Lockhart (1971-1972)
1969–1972
Producer
Sound of Sunshine - Sound of Rain (1983)
Sound of Sunshine - Sound of Rain
6.8
Short
co-producer (uncredited)
1983
Thanks
Sound of Sunshine - Sound of Rain (1983)
Sound of Sunshine - Sound of Rain
6.8
Short
special thanks (as Tony Geary)
1983
Self
Amelia Heinle in The 42nd Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (2015)
The 42nd Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
3.8
TV Special
Self - Winner
2015
Katie Couric and Si Robertson in Katie (2012)
Katie
3.5
TV Series
Self
2013
1 episode
The 39th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (2012)
The 39th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
7.5
TV Special
Self - Winner
2012
Oprah Winfrey in The Oprah Winfrey Show (1986)
The Oprah Winfrey Show
5.0
TV Series
Self
2011
1 episode
Wendy Williams in The Wendy Williams Show (2008)
The Wendy Williams Show
3.4
TV Series
Self
2010
1 episode
On the Edge: The Poverty Crisis in Africa (2009)
On the Edge: The Poverty Crisis in Africa
TV Movie
Self
2009
Live from the Red Carpet: The 36th Annual Daytime Emmy
Awards
7.1
TV Special
Self
2009
The 35th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
5.3
TV Special
Self - Winner & Presenter
2008
The 34th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (2007)
The 34th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
7.7
TV Special
Self - Nominee
2007
The View (1997)
The View
2.4
TV Series
Self
2006
1 episode
Kevin Frazier and Nischelle Turner in Entertainment Tonight
(1981)
Entertainment Tonight
3.6
TV Series
Self
2006
1 episode
TV Land's Top Ten (2004)
TV Land's Top Ten
5.2
TV Series
Self
2006
2 episodes
The 33rd Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
7.8
TV Special
Self - Winner
2006
Lisa Rinna and Ty Treadway in SoapTalk (2002)
SoapTalk
5.3
TV Series
Self
2005–2006
2 episodes
David Canary and Caroll Spinney in The 32nd Annual Daytime
Emmy Awards (2005)
The 32nd Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
6.4
TV Special
Self - Co-Presenter
2005
The 31st Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
6.5
TV Special
Self - Winner
2004
Intimate Portrait (1990)
Intimate Portrait
7.5
TV Series
Self
2001–2003
3 episodes
The 30th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
7.4
TV Special
Self - Nominee
2003
Biography (1987)
Biography
7.7
TV Series
Self
2003
1 episode
The 27th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (2000)
The 27th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
8.3
TV Special
Self - Winner
2000
Susan Lucci in The 26th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (1999)
The 26th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
7.0
TV Special
Self - Winner
1999
The 15th Annual Soap Opera Digest Awards
7.4
TV Special
Self - Winner
1999
The 25th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (1998)
The 25th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
6.7
TV Special
Self - Nominee
1998
Rosie O'Donnell in The Rosie O'Donnell Show (1996)
The Rosie O'Donnell Show
4.2
TV Series
Self
1997
1 episode
The 22nd Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
TV Special
Self
1995
50 Years of Soaps: An All-Star Celebration
7.7
TV Movie
Self
1994
The 20th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
TV Special
Self
1993
The Special 84th Birthday Celebration for Buddy Ebsen
TV Special
Self
1992
Bob Hope's Comedy Salute to the Soaps
TV Movie
Self
1985
Dick Clark and Ed McMahon in Super Bloopers and Practical
Jokes (1984)
Super Bloopers and Practical Jokes
6.5
TV Series
Self
1984
1 episode
Richard Dawson in Family Feud (1976)
All-Star Family Feud Special
7.0
TV Series
Self - Celebrity Contestant
1980–1984
2 episodes
Breakaway (1983)
Breakaway
6.9
TV Series
Self
1984
1 episode
Salute!
TV Series
Self
1983
1 episode
Merv Griffin in The Merv Griffin Show (1962)
The Merv Griffin Show
6.6
TV Series
Self
1980–1983
3 episodes
Hour Magazine (1980)
Hour Magazine
7.5
TV Series
Self
1983
1 episode
Celebrity Daredevils (1983)
Celebrity Daredevils
7.8
TV Movie
Self
1983
Star-Studded Spoof of the New TV Season, G-Rated, with
Glamour, Glitter and Gags
7.4
TV Special
Self
1982
The 9th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
TV Special
Self - Winner
1982
Larry David and Michael Richards in Fridays (1980)
Fridays
7.5
TV Series
Self - Co-HostSelf - Host
1981–1982
3 episodes
The First Annual Hairstylists and Makeup Artists Awards
TV Special
Self
1982
I Love Liberty
6.3
TV Special
Self (as Tony Geary)
1982
Night of 100 Stars (1982)
Night of 100 Stars
7.0
TV Special
Self
1982
The 28th Annual American Music Awards (2001)
The American Music Awards
TV Special
Self
1982
Robin Roberts, George Stephanopoulos, and Michael Strahan in
Good Morning America (1975)
Good Morning America
4.4
TV Series
Self
1981
1 episode
The John Davidson Show (1980)
The John Davidson Show
4.7
TV Series
Self
1980–1981
2 episodes
The 8th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (1981)
The 8th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards
TV Special
Self - Nominee & Presenter
1981
Phil Donahue in Donahue (1967)
Donahue
6.3
TV Series
Self
1981
1 episode
The Toni Tennille Show (1980)
The Toni Tennille Show
7.2
TV Series
Self
1980
1 episode
Archive Footage
Mario Lopez and Scott Evans in Access Hollywood (1996)
Access Hollywood
3.2
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2021–2025
2 episodes
GMA3 (2020)
GMA3
4.7
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2025
1 episode
Deborah Norville in Inside Edition (1988)
Inside Edition
4.0
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2025
1 episode
Harris Faulkner, Kayleigh McEnany, and Emily Compagno in
Outnumbered (2014)
Outnumbered
5.0
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2025
1 episode
The Five (2011)
The Five
5.9
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2025
1 episode
Kevin Frazier and Nischelle Turner in Entertainment Tonight
(1981)
Entertainment Tonight
3.6
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2015–2024
3 episodes
General Hospital: 60 Years of Stars and Storytelling
7.2
TV Special
Self - Luke Spencer (archive footage)
2024
Finola Hughes, Maurice Benard, Steve Burton, Genie Francis,
Kelly Monaco, Laura Wright, Donnell Turner, Tanisha Harper, Josh Kelly, Eden
McCoy, Josh Swickard, and Tabyana Ali in General Hospital (1963)
General Hospital
6.6
TV Series
Luke Spencer (archive footage)
2010–2018
2 episodes
'Weird Al' Yankovic: The Ultimate Video Collection (2003)
'Weird Al' Yankovic: The Ultimate Video Collection
8.7
Video
Philo (UHF) (archive footage, uncredited)
2003
I Love the '80s (2002)
I Love the '80s
8.5
TV Mini Series
Self - Luke (archive footage)
2002
1 episode
'Weird Al' Yankovic: The Videos (1998)
'Weird Al' Yankovic: The Videos
8.2
Video
Philo (UHF) (archive footage)
1998
'Weird Al' Yankovic: The Ultimate Collection (1993)
'Weird Al' Yankovic: The Ultimate Collection
5.4
Video
Philo (UHF) (archive footage)
1993
Alapalooza: The Videos (1993)
Alapalooza: The Videos
5.8
Video
Philo (UHF) (archive footage, uncredited)
1993
'Weird Al' Yankovic: UHF (1989)
'Weird Al' Yankovic: UHF
6.8
Music Video
Philo (archive footage)
1989
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