Leslie Charleson, Longest-Tenured General Hospital Cast
Member, Dies at 79
The actress played Monica Quartermaine on the series from
1977 until her death
People
By Victoria Edel
January 12, 2025
Leslie Charleson has died at the age of 79.
The actress was best known as Monica Quartermaine on the
soap opera General Hospital, a role she began playing in 1977, making her the
cast member who was on the show the longest. She was a four-time Daytime Emmy
nominee.
General Hospital's executive producer Frank Valentini
announced Charleson's death on the show's official Instagram page on Sunday,
Jan. 12. "It is with a heavy heart that I announce the passing of my dear
friend and colleague, Leslie Charleson," he began.
"Her enduring legacy has spanned nearly 50 years on
General Hospital alone and, just as Monica was the heart of the Quartermaines,
Leslie was a beloved matriarch of the entire cast and crew," he continued.
"I will miss our daily chats, her quick wit and incredible presence on
set."
Valentini concluded his message: "On behalf of
everyone at General Hospital, my heartfelt sympathy goes out to her loved ones
during this difficult time."
Charleson was born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1945. Her
sister Kate, who died in 1996, also became an actress. Charleson acted as a
child and in high school, and studied theater at Bennett College in upstate New
York.
In 1964, she was cast on the NBC soap A Flame in the
Wind. Then she joined As the World Turns in 1966, before moving to CBS’s Love
Is a Many Splendored Thing. She stayed with that series until 1970.
After leaving the show, she made guest appearances on
series like Marcus Welby, M.D., Happy Days (as a love interest for Ron Howard's
Richie Cunningham), The Streets of San Francisco, Owen Marshall, Counselor at
Law, McMillan & Wife and The Rockford Files. She also starred in the 1971
made-for-TV horror film Revenge!.
In 1977, she was brought onto General Hospital as the
series’ ratings were floundering, replacing Patsy Rahn, who had debuted as
Monica Bard Webber (later Monica Quartermaine) a year earlier. Monica, a
doctor, filled the bad-girl archetype on the show, and Charleson loved playing
her.
“I only signed on for two years, and I don’t know what
happened,” she told Digital Journal in 2019. “Back then, there weren’t a lot of
good female roles that had that. It was an amazing time, and it was strong
material to act.”
“She’s interesting, dedicated in all areas,” Charleson
told Soap Opera Digest in 1981. “Her dedication in her social life can be a bit
over the top, but it’s true. When she loves, it’s passionately. She puts her
effort into it, sometimes at the expense of others.”
And at the time, the actress was happy with her
character's growth. “I’m delighted with the progress she’s made, her sense of
humor," she said. "As an actress I enjoy Monica because she can wear
any hat, go any place, do any thing.” Of her character’s reputation, she added,
“When you’re all good, you’re boring. And nobody is just ‘good,’ unless she’s a
saint.”
Monica’s most impactful relationship on the show was with
fellow doctor Alan Quartermaine, played by the late Stuart Damon. The
Quartermaine family joined the show the same year Charleson did, ultimately
giving Monica deep ties to the show.
But Monica's relationship with Alan was often volatile.
In the '80s, she often slapped Alan in the face. “We’d do real slaps,”
Charleson told PEOPLE in 2023 for the show’s 60th anniversary. “Stuart was
always afraid I’d take his eye out. I would fake a slap in dress rehearsal, but
when we went to tape it, all that went out the window!”
Monica was often in the middle of love triangles and even
accidentally had an affair with her nephew. But not all of Monica’s storylines
emphasized over-the-top drama. In 1994, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
“Monica’s battle with breast cancer was just so
incredibly fulfilling,” Charleson told FBJ Fit in 2020. “Dealing with a
real-life issue that afflicts so many women and their families and being able
to show the struggle and issues they face, was something I am so proud of. It
was exhausting and incredibly difficult work, but the response to the storyline
was truly humbling.”
Charleson began to appear on General Hospital on a
recurring status beginning in 2010 and made less frequent appearances in the
last years of her life.
Once she joined the GH cast, Charleson rarely made TV
appearances outside it. But she starred in the 1993 TV movie Woman on the Ledge
and made guest appearances on Diagnosis: Murder and Dharma & Greg. She
played herself in a 2004 episode of Friends, where she faced Joey (who was also
a soap star) on a game show.
Charleson was married once, to Bill Demms, from 1988 to
1991.
Looking back at her GH tenure, she told Soap Opera Digest
in 2001, “I really do love this job. Look at it this way — what better job can
you do than get up in the morning, roll out of bed, throw something on and then
have someone take care of how you look and how you dress and what you say? How
much more grateful could you possibly be? Not bad, not bad at all."
CHARLESON, Leslie (Leslie Ann Charleson)
Born: 2/22/1945, Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.A.
Died: 1/12/2025, U.S.A.
Leslie Charleson’s westerns – actress:
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1968 (Dooley Sloan)
Kung Fu (TV) – 1975 (Amy Starbuck)