Times Colonist

Y&R’s Braeden pens memoir of difficult life

- LAUREN LA ROSE

TORONTO — Eric Braeden knows how good it feels to be bad.

Since 1980, Braeden has inhabited the role of the cutthroat, cunning and charming Victor Newman on the daytime drama The Young and The Restless. His Emmy-winning portrayal of the much-married, villainous business tycoon has cemented his status as a legendary TV bad guy who viewers both cheer for and curse.

“Some deep characteri­stics within me come through as the character,” said the 75-year-old actor in a phone interview from New York.

“I had a relatively hard life and don’t take any [crap],” Braeden added candidly, using an unprintabl­e expletive. “But I’m very friendly, I’m very open, I love meeting people.”

In his new memoir I’ll Be Damned (Dey Street Books), Braeden offers a window into an early life marred by the horrors of war and personal tragedy.

Born Hans Gudegast on April 3, 1941, in the basement of a bomb-stricken hospital in Kiel, Germany, the actor’s father died of a heart attack when he was 12, leaving his widowed mother with four boys to raise on her own.

Braeden earned a partial trackand-field scholarshi­p to a university in Montana, and later landed a series of stage and screen roles, rubbing shoulders with Hollywood heavyweigh­ts along the way.

After finding fame on Y&R, Braeden developed a soft spot for another role linking him to Canada. Several years ago, a tuxedo-clad Braeden starred in commercial­s for the now-defunct discount retailer Zellers, which served as a playful send-up of his character.

Braeden spoke with the Canadian Press about the ads, working on Titanic with Canadian filmmaker James Cameron and what he loves most about becoming Victor Newman.

CP: You were born in the middle of the Second World War and those events and the legacy of Hitler and the Nazis clearly had a strong impact on you and your family. What was it like for you to revisit that part of your life?

Braeden: I’ve done that very often, obviously, and then you lay it to rest until I wrote the memoir again. It was an event with enormous consequenc­es on many, many levels. It was the most cataclysmi­c thing that ever happened in our history.

It left many scars on a lot of people, but I think some of it has resulted in better government, a more conscious public — certainly in Germany — and lessons learned from that. Now, we need to make sure that we don’t fall into the same simplistic, fascistic trap that Hitler plunged Germany into.

CP: In your early roles, you were so often typecast as the bad German or the Nazi. How did you not grow frustrated and bitter by that whole experience?

Braeden: Not only Germans — I played heavies of all stripes and all nationalit­ies after a while. It was very emptying. Hence, I became eventually — not at first — but eventually very happy to do Y&R. Because it allowed you to play something akin to a human being, you know?

CP: I wanted to ask you about those Zellers commercial­s that you did many years ago ...

Braeden: I loved them! I loved doing those commercial­s. Whatever happened to that?

CP: Well, Zellers is no longer. They brought in Target to replace Zellers, and Target also disappeare­d.

Braeden: No kidding? I loved doing them. I thought they were funny.

CP: How did that even come about?

Braeden: I don’t know. I heard one of the guys at the ad agency said: “Oh, that would be perfect for Victor Newman, Eric Braeden, or whatever.” And the [other] guy said: “Who?”

People in the ad business are apparently not aware of what goes on in daytime television.

 ??  ?? Eric Braeden: Zellers demise comes as surprise.
Eric Braeden: Zellers demise comes as surprise.

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