All
My Children's recent decision to initiate
a triangle between Bianca (Eden Riegel), Maggie
(Elizabeth Hendrickson) and Lena (Olga
Sosnovska) has received mixed reactions from fans. Some
saw the a triangle as a sign of progress, because it meant that
not only is there, for the first time, actually enough lesbian
or bisexual women on a TV series to even have a triangle,
and a sign that All My Children was finally prepared
to give these characters equal treatment (since love triangles
are de rigeur between heterosexual soap characters).
Others
believed this was a positive development because Maggie's coming-out
process--from denial, to confusion, to acceptance of her sexuality--realistically
portrays what a lot of lesbian and bisexual women experience.
This is a journey viewers never really got to see with Bianca,
since she had already accepted her sexuality when she returned
to Pine Valley after her long absence, or with Lena, since her
angst when she fell for Bianca was less around the fact that
she was attracted to a woman than that she was attracted to
a woman she was trying to manipulate at the time.
But
others were ambivalent or downright disapproving of the triangle
storyline, fearing it reinforced the idea that straight women
can be "converted" by lesbians, and/or that lesbians
and straight women can't be friends with sex becoming an issue.
Personal
preference for one pairing or another also played a
large role in viewer reaction to the triangle. Die-hard Lianca
(Lena-and-Bianca) fans were dismayed at what they perceived
as yet another disruption to Bianca and Lena's relationship,
which finally seemed to be getting back on track after being
derailed by the baby-and-murder plot that has been consuming
the All My Children storyline for months.
The
BAM (Bianca-and-Maggie) fans, on the other hand, were excited
about the possibility of finally seeing payoff for their two-year
campaign to turn Maggie and Bianca into more than friends. Although
when Bianca declared her feelings for Maggie in January 2003,
Maggie insisted she was only into guys, her sudden and unexpected
decision to kiss Bianca on early February 2004 indicates that
Maggie is reconsidering this statement.
But
the glacial pace at which the triangle is developing
(even by daytime TV standards) has left almost
all fans of the lesbian characters disappointed. Whether
you're rooting for the triangle or not, it is hard to deny that
the poor execution of this storyline has effectively sidelined
a satisfactory development of any relationship for
Bianca.
Since
the triangle was officially kicked off by Maggie's rekindled
interest in Bianca last month, the storyline has hardly progressed
at all, and seems to consist almost solely of revolving scenes
of Lena and Maggie glaring at each other while Bianca rattles
on cluelessly about her baby or her mother.
Meanwhile,
Maggie continues to deny her feelings for Bianca by spending
most of her time with pretty-boy Jaime, and Bianca and Lena's
"dating" is barely discernable from their relationship
when they were friends--that is, it consists mostly of talking
about Bianca's baby and stroking each other's hair.
The
bottom line is that neither relationship is currently portrayed
in a way that gives the viewers much to get excited about. In
fact, it's hard to come up with a more boring and drawn-out
love triangle on All My Children in recent history--which makes
it almost impossible to avoid concluding that the triangle is
just another stall tactic to let All My Children avoid
putting Bianca in a romantic situation.
Making
matters worse is the recent news that Olga Sosnovska
is voluntarily leaving All My Children soon for a full-time
role on the BBC series MI5, and rumors from less-reliable
sources that Maggie is headed for a heterosexual relationship
around the same time. Lena's departure from Pine Valley will
be an unfortunate loss for All My Children, since Sosnovska
brought a dynamic energy to the show and Lena's relationship
with Bianca was one of the more interesting ones in the last
few years, but a good career move for Sosnovska given how little
screen time her character has on All My Children.
Theoretically,
with Lena gone there should be no more obstacles to Maggie and
Bianca's relationship, except the biggest obstacle of all: the
writers' demonstrated reluctance to create fully-realized lesbian
characters and relationships. The character of Maggie has languished
on All My Children in the last several months, with
mostly supporting storylines; if the rumors of her upcoming
heterosexual relationship are true, perhaps the writers felt
that giving Maggie a boyfriend will be the best way to give
her character more attention while avoiding the controversial
aspects of finally developing a romantic relationship between
Maggie and Bianca.
All
of which leaves Bianca and All My Children's lesbian
storyline...well, nowhere, unless All My Children decides
to introduce yet another lesbian or bisexual character with
whom Bianca can have a non-relationship. With Eden Riegel's
contract up for renewal in May, it wouldn't be surprising if
Riegel herself were to look for greener pastures elsewhere (like
her upcoming guest stint on NBC's American Dreams).
But
even if Riegel doesn't leave, it seems obvious that All
My Children is not ready to fully support lesbian relationships
on the show, and in fact, may not be ready any time soon. Despite
having led viewers on for months, even years, with the promise
of a real relationship for Bianca while milking it for all the
PR value they can get, All My Children has left no
plot twist unturned--including increasingly incredulous storylines
involving rape, pregnancy, and suicide attempts--in their quest
to distract viewers from noticing that they've never delivered
on that promise.
Lesbian
visibility still has a long way to go on television, but it's
unlikely that many lesbian and bisexual viewers are going to
continue to settle for All My Children's double-standards;
with the increasing proliferation of TV lesbian characters in
actual lesbian relationships (on recent shows like The
L Word and Nip/Tuck,
and recently canceled shows like Buffy
and Once and Again),
we don't have to.