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Susan Lucci talks ‘All My Children,’ Erica Kane cursing

Actress Susan Lucci is best known for portraying Erica Kane on the ABC daytime drama "All My Children." She is now set to star in the Marc Cherry dramedy "Devious Maids."
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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“Is there a lot of cursing on ‘All My Children’ now?” Susan Lucci asks in bewilderment (clutching her pearls, in our imagination).

The legendary soap opera actress, best known for her role as conniving vixen Erica Kane on “All My Children,” was well into our phone interview Wednesday morning when the topic came up. Had she heard the defunct ABC soap had gotten a little foul-mouthed in its online revival?

We assured her the cursing was at a minimum -- though, still jarring for some viewers. Such is the creative freedom when you move from broadcast to online. “All My Children,” along with fellow long-running soap “One Life To Live,” was canceled by ABC in 2011 -- only to get brought back to life on the Internet, via Hulu and iTunes, by production company Prospect Park. Both series made their online debut last week.

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But could Lucci, who did not make the online transition (instead, she’ll soon appear in Marc Cherry’s “Devious Maids” on Lifetime), envision Erica using profanity?

“Well, I don’t know, it would all depend on what they wrote for me and how organic it would be,” she said playfully. “Erica Kane seemed to get her point across pretty well without cursing!”

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Touché. Still, it got us wondering what might be the biting character’s favorite curse word.

“I don’t know,” Lucci said. “I’ve never thought about it. Maybe I’ll have to think about it.”

Let that serve as a glimmer of hope for those interested in seeing Lucci reprise her role on the soap. The actress, who keeps a busy schedule, what with the new Lifetime series and her Investigation Discovery series “Deadly Affairs,” says both sides are trying to make it happen. “All My Children,” which is produced by Prospect Park’s The Online Network, is on a five-weeks-on, five-weeks-off production schedule.

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“We are going to be meeting in the next couple of weeks, all in the same room to put our books on the table and see what we can come up with.”

ALSO:

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Prospect Park revives ‘All My Children, ‘One Life to Live’

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