Entertainment
Days of Our Lives Star Bill Hayes Dies at 98
The US actor Bill Hayes, who starred in the soap opera Days of Our Lives for more than five decades, has died at the age of 98.
He first portrayed the character of Doug Williams in 1970 and also met his wife, the actress Susan Seaforth Hayes, while filming the series.
Last June, he celebrated his 98th birthday on the set of the American daytime soap surrounded by co-stars.
His agent told the BBC he died on Friday surrounded by family.
The cause of his death has not been revealed.
Born William Foster Hayes III in Harvey, Illinois, in 1925, Hayes began his career as a musician and had a hit with The Ballad of Davy Crockett.
He then began focusing more on acting, and landed his most notable role on NBC‘s Days of Our Lives in February 1970 as a convict who was also a lounge singer.
He went on to portray the character of Doug Williams on and off over the next 50 years, through to 2023.
His co-star, Seaforth Hayes, joined the daytime soap two years before him, playing the character of Julie Williams.
The pair played an on-screen couple, and eventually became a real-life couple, tying the knot in 1974.
They went on to say “I do” again – this time on television – when their characters got married to each other two years later.
The popularity of their romance even led to them appearing on the cover of Time that year.
In 2018, both he and Seaforth Hayes received the Daytime Emmys Lifetime Achievement Awards.
Hayes had five children from a previous marriage to Mary Hobbs.
A longtime star of the NBC soap opera “Days of our Lives,” died Friday at the age of 98.
Hayes played the character of Doug Williams on the daytime serial since 1970, five years after the show’s debut.
He met his real-life wife, actress Susan Seaforth, on the series set in the fictional Illinois town of Salem.
Hayes and Seaforth were married in 1974.
Two years later, their characters were married on the show.
The same year, the pair also appeared on the cover of Time magazine in a cover story on the popularity of daytime soaps.
“I have known Bill for most of my life and he embodied the heart and soul of ‘Days of our Lives,’ ” said executive producer Ken Corday.
“Although we are grieving and will miss him, Bill’s indelible legacy will live on in our hearts and the stories we tell, both on and off the screen.”
Hayes’ character was one of the longest-running characters on the soap, now produced by Sony Pictures TV.
As pillars of the show, the couple faced numerous trials, ranging from Doug’s deranged ex-wife, an exploding oven, and numerous serial killers.
Hayes earned two Daytime Emmy nominations for his work on the show in 1975 and 1976.
Hayes and Seaforth-Hayes earned lifetime achievements award from the Daytime Emmy Awards in 2018.
Hayes’ career began in the early days of network TV in 1949 when he starred on Olsen & Johnson’s “Fireball Fun-for-All” and later worked on Sid Caesar’s “Your Show of Shows.”
Born in Harvey, Ill., Hayes, a singer and dancer, made his Broadway debut in the Rodgers & Hammerstein tuner “Me and Juliet” in 1953. He also did national tours of such stage musicals as “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Student Prince,” “Anything Goes,” “Camelot,” and “The Pajama Game,” according to SoapCentral.
In 1956, Hayes had a pop hit with his rendition of “The Ballad of Davy Crockett,” the song made popular by actor Fess Parker, who played Crockett on the Disney-produced series that aired in daytime from 1954 to 1955.
By 1970, Hayes was a divorced father five children. The role as a formerly imprisoned con artist turned nightclub singer on “Days” proved to be that fit.
In 1984, the couple quit “Days” after their characters’ airtime diminished.
Seaforth Hayes ended up returning to the show in 1990 without Hayes.
Hayes made sporadic appearances in Salem and performed on stage throughout the rest of the 1990s.
Hayes also earned a doctorate in education from West Virginia University.
In 2003, Hayes and Seaforth Hayes returned to the series, even though both characters had been presumed by viewers to be dead.