Bill Hayes(1925-2024)
- Actor
- Writer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Throughout the 1970s and a good part of the 1980s, Bill Hayes and his
second wife, Emmy-winning Susan Seaforth Hayes, reigned as the Lunt and Fontanne of
daytime soaps. Prior to this he had become a noted singer/actor on the
Broadway stage and in night clubs. Born William Foster Hayes III in
Harvey, Illinois, on June 5, 1925, and raised in the Midwest, his
father was a bookseller (for 41 years). He got his talent from his dad
who enjoyed singing and local community theater performing on the sly.
Bill entered WWII as a naval airman, then studied at De Pauw
University, where he met and married first wife Mary. They went on to
have five children. He later received his master's degree at
Northwestern. Blessed with a sturdy tenor, his interest in a
professional career was piqued after happening upon a tour of
"Carousel" in 1947. From singing telegrams to barbershop quartets to
choir directing to jazz group vocals, Bill persevered musically until
earning his first big break on TV. A lead singing/stooge role in Olsen
& Johnson's zany burlesque revue "Funzapoppin'" in 1949 led to him
joining the pair on their short-lived TV show and, ultimately, his
resident crooning on Your Show of Shows (1950) starring Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca. In the
meantime he also performed in vaudeville and broke into films with a
supporting role in Stop, You're Killing Me (1952). Despite a wife and family to support, he
left the show on his own volition for the chance to star in a new
Broadway musical. "Me and Juliet" opened with moderate success in 1953
and lasted over a year, touring with the show in its aftermath. Bill
also happened to record "The Ballad of Davey Crockett," which became a
surprise #1 Billboard hit and sold over three million copies. A
nightclub and TV-variety fixture in the late 1950s, he later managed to
flex his vocal chords in such musicals as "Bye Bye Birdie" (national
tour), "Brigadoon," "The Pajama Game" and "George M!" The 1960s were a
slow, difficult time for Bill professionally and personally, which
culminated in the breakup of his marriage. Luck and talent played a
part when he was hired to join the cast of Days of Our Lives (1965) playing the role of
Doug Williams. The character was originally a louse and con artist, but
grew more reputable after his character fell in love with feisty
troublemaker Julie Olson, played by Susan Seaforth. Their seesaw
romantic relationship became one of daytime's top story lines of the
1970s. Off-screen the couple also ignited sparks and, despite their
major age difference (she is 18 years his junior), they married on
October 12, 1974. In 1984, after 14 years and two daytime Emmy
nominations, he and Susan left the show due to their dwindling status.
While Susan went on to join the cast of The Young and the Restless (1973) the following year,
Bill refocused on his singing by performing on the cabaret circuit and
recording a few albums. The couple returned on and off to their soap
opera alma mater over the years, but in 1999 they became part of the
regular cast again with a stronger story line. Bill is still performing
on stage, more recently playing Beauregard in "Mame" and with his wife
in productions of "A Christmas Carol," "Love Letters" and "Same Time,
Another Year," which is a sequel to "Same Time, Next
Year."