Gregory Harrison Reflects On General Hospital Run And Earning A Daytime Emmy Nomination At 75 (EXCL)
Outside of his 1991 Soap Opera Digest Award nomination for Favorite Villain: Primetime (for playing Michael Sharpe on Falcon Crest), veteran actor Gregory Harrison had never been in the running for an acting award for his work on soaps. But that all changed this year, when he found himself nominated for a Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor for his poignant portrayal of Gregory Chase, who battled ALS before passing away in 2024 on General Hospital. He opened up to Digest about what the recognition means to him and looked back on his run in Port Charles.
The Pleasure is Mine
“I don’t think of acting as a competitive sport,” muses Harrison. “I never paid much attention to nominations or lack of them. I’m a process-oriented guy. I don’t do things in the hopes of a result as much as I love the process of every job I’ve had. I love Hollywood, I love show business, I love acting — but I love the day to day. I love developing characters. I guess there’s some validation in [this nomination], but I don’t do it for the validation. I do it because it’s so much fun for me!”
That proved to be especially true when it came to playing Gregory. “I loved being able to calibrate the slow erosion of Gregory Chase’s abilities because of this disease he had,” Harrison says. “And being able to find nuance and believability and show that while this guy is losing his faculties, he’s developing even more dignity and even more humanity. I always believed personally that within every curse, there was a blessing, and within every blessing, there was a curse. I played that with Gregory and that, to me, is the fun of [acting]. I had some good writers who had done their research, and I personally had done so much research on ALS.”
His research process began decades ago. “I had played a character with ALS 20 years ago on Touched by an Angel,” he explains. “In that episode of the show, I portrayed him in his final months and portrayed him dying. So, I had sort of gone through this before and learned a lot about the disease. But this opportunity on General Hospital gave me a chance, instead of [packing it all] in a one-hour show, to really calibrate the tiny little nuances of a day-to-day degradation of abilities and how to find incremental hope and dignity within that context. All the research, all of the nuance and the fine-tuning is, is where the fun lies — not in the bows and the reviews and the awards, but in the work. I love the work.”
Of course, how much his performance resonated with GH fans touched Harrison deeply. “That people were moved is a reward for me,” he smiles. “I’ve had lots of fan reactions — people who have members of their family with ALS or who have experience with the disease have thanked me for for my performance and that means a lot to me.”
Still, the accolades are just gravy to Harrison. “Acting isn’t a competitive sport,” he notes, “and I think it’s really hard to try and compare one performance with another performance. I’ve never valued myself as an actor based on being more popular than some other guy, you know?” What does matter to him is his longevity in such a difficult industry. “I’ve had 52 year acting career. And if you had asked me at 20 when I first hit Hollywood, ‘What do you want?’ I would have said, ‘I want to work until the day I drop. I want to be an actor til the day I drop’ And I have fulfilled that and then some. And so for me, that’s the reward. I feel that reward all day, every day. And I guess to, at 75, get an actual nomination from my peers … it’s validation, I appreciate it, and I’m going to be appreciative of whatever happens. I’m glad to be in the mix. But mostly, I’m just going [to the ceremony, which takes place on Friday, October 17] because it’ll be fun to be with all these people from the show who I loved and enjoyed working with for three-and-a-half years.”

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