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Years active. 1990–2022. Sonya Eddy (June 17, 1967 – December 19, 2022) [1][2][3] was an American actress. She was best known for playing Epiphany Johnson in the American ABC soap opera General Hospital (2006—2022) for which she won a posthumous Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series in 2023. [4][5][6]
Mekishana Pierre. December 21, 2022 at 5:36 PM. Longtime General Hospital star Sonya Eddy has died, ET can confirm. She was 55. " General Hospital is sad to confirm the passing of actress Sonya ...
General Hospital has a lot to celebrate for its 60th anniversary, but it will also honor those who have recently died. The late actress Sonya Eddy, who played head nurse Epiphany Johnson from 2006 ...
“General Hospital” star Sonya Eddy has died. She was 55. Octavia Spencer first revealed Eddy’s death on her Instagram on Tuesday.
cast members. General Hospital is an American television soap opera, airing on ABC. Created by Frank and Doris Hursley, the serial premiered on April 1, 1963. The longest-running cast member is Leslie Charleson, who has portrayed Monica Quartermaine since August 17, 1977, also making her one of the longest-tenured actors in American soap operas ...
Prior to its premiere, SOAPnet had announced that Night Shift would "delve deeper into the relationships, friendships and medical cases seen at the hospital." [2] It was noted that unlike General Hospital itself, the stories on Night Shift would be "self-contained and wrap up during each weekly one-hour episode," as well as being "understandable to viewers who do not watch General Hospital."
General Hospital star Sonya Eddy died on Monday, December 19. She was 55. Celebrity Deaths in 2022: Stars We’ve Lost Read article Eddy’s friend Octavia Spencer confirmed the news the following ...
General Hospital was created by Frank and Doris Hursley and premiered on April 1, 1963, replacing the canceled game show Yours for a Song.The first stories were mainly set on the seventh floor of General Hospital, in an unnamed midsize Eastern city (the name of the city, Port Charles, would not be mentioned until the late 1970s by headwriters Eileen and Robert Mason Pollock. [11]). "