Jeremy Hunter

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As The Stab Burns: Loving’s Ava and Kong

Published April 4, 2026 by biggayhorrorfan

Ava (to Kong): It would never work out between us. After all, you’re just a machine!

13 summers after Delia (Randall Edwards) was romanced by a gorilla named Prince Albert on Ryan’s Hope, Loving‘s Ava Rescott (Lisa Peluso) was kidnapped by an amusement park King Kong. This is seeming proof that the writers of ABC’s lowest rated soaps had a definite fascination with RKO Pictures’ most famous hirsute creation. 

This particular homage to Fay Wray occurred while Ava was immersed in a rollicking adventure, involving a multi-million dollar stamp (of all things), with art professor Jeremy Hunter (Jean LeClerc). Thus, throughout July of 1993, the oft-romanced Ava found herself being chased across the country, in trains, taxi cabs and other motorized vehicles, by seasoned criminal Cesar Faison (Anders Hove), a character famous for his many notorious stints on General Hospital

The dynamic duo of Ava and Jeremy eventually wound up In Universal Studios Orlando where, fearing for their lives, they donned various disguises as they romped, Hitchcock-like, throughout the grounds.  At one point, as Faison and his favored goon closed in on them, Ava was plucked from her escape by a very amorous, very mechanical Kong. Reasoning that their relationship would never work, the talkative femme fatale was soon dropped back into Jeremy’s arms by the very reluctant robotic beast. 

Resuming the chase, the duo continued to hide in a carhop, were they were impressively treated to musical numbers by colorful dressed workers, among the massive vacationing crowds and even in the Psycho house, where they were momentarily threatened by a Mrs. Bates approximation. 

Gamely, the ultra-handsome LeClerc and Peluso, whose character was the program’s Erica Kane equivalent, proved that even the least watched, although beloved, daytime dramas in that era had lots of money behind them. 

As seeming proof of this, the producers even hired acclaimed cult actress Shirley Stoler to play Faison’s female counterpart in the arc. Among Stoler’s many credits, she was probably best known for playing the vicious murderess in 1970’s acclaimed, documentary-like The Honeymoon Killers

Ava (to Jeremy): I’m telling you, King Kong is in love with me!!

Fruity Flashback: The Loving Murders

Published May 9, 2020 by biggayhorrorfan

Loving Murders

Long term cast member Randolph Mantooth has called it the show that nobody ever saw. But the ABC soap opera Loving did have plenty of loyal followers who have remembered it fondly since its cancellation in the fall of 1995. Interestingly, for a show that continually floated at the bottom of the daytime ratings, it certainly had pedigree. It was created in 1983 by soap opera legend Agnes Nixon and, over the years, it definitely had its inventive moments. A few of those even contained elements of horror and the supernatural. In one of his first acting jobs, television stalwart John O’Hurley played a devilishly evil character named Jonathan Matalaine while the program’s college age characters interacted with a tortured romantic couple, who just happened to be ghosts, in the early ‘90s. Perhaps its most genre laden plotline was the Loving Murders, the months long story arc that brought the show to a close and helped it morph into another (very short lived) soap called The City.

L-R: PETER DAVIES;JOHN O'HURLEY

O’Hurley as the satanic Matalaine

As longtime characters were murdered off by a stealthily cloaked serial killer, the show’s ratings actually rose 20%. This was perhaps due to some of the unusual ways in which the cast was offed. Longtime heroine Stacy Donavan, portrayed with heart and verve by frequent horror sweetheart Lauren Marie Taylor (Friday the 13th, Part 2, Girls Nite Out), met her end via a poisoned powder puff. Deadly candles, heart attacks and coldblooded drownings also made appearances. The most spectacular sendoff probably belonged to Jean Le Clerc’s popular Jeremy Hunter, though. Clerc’s Hunter, an important character for many years on the iconic All My Children, was a sculptor who met his demise by being turned into one of his own statues!

Notably, the producers originally planned for a former character named Trisha, who had a history of mental issues, to return as the culprit. Noelle Beck, her longstanding portrayer, nixed that concept, though. Thus, Gwyneth Alden (Christine Tudor), Trisha’s mother and the show’s diva-licious matriarch, was chosen as the villain. While Tudor did spectacular work and obviously relished the juicy emotional windfall that this turn of events brought her, it was hard for many devoted fans to buy her as the murderess. Tudor had filled Alden with such true-to-life heart over the years, it was next to impossible to believe that Gwyneth would be able to kill off her family and friends no matter her state of mind. Still, the plotline allowed her and the show a significant (if overlooked) place in afternoon television history.

Until the next time, SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

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Chrsrine Newman

Gwyneth/Tudor in “happier” days.