Jane Elliot Honored as Sole 2025 Gold Circle Inductee at Daytime Emmys After 50 Years as Tracy Quartermaine—What This Means for General Hospital’s Legacy

Jane Elliot, best known as Tracy Quartermaine on General Hospital, is set to be honored with the Gold Circle at the 52nd Daytime Emmy Awards this October in Pasadena. The Gold Circle is awarded by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) to individuals with 50 years of distinguished service in daytime television, and this year Elliot is the sole honoree.

General Hospital to Celebrate 60th Anniversary with the Nurses' Ball, Stage  Dedication, and Jane Elliot to Return - Michael Fairman TV

52nd Daytime Emmys: General Hospital’s Jane Elliot Earns Gold Circle For Work As Tracy Quatermaine

For longtime soap fans, this is a recognition that feels both significant and overdue. Jane Elliot’s career stretches across decades, but it is her portrayal of Tracy Quartermaine that has cemented her place in television history. She first joined General Hospital in the late 1970s, quickly establishing Tracy as one of daytime’s most deliciously complex characters: scheming yet vulnerable, icy yet deeply human. Elliot even won a Daytime Emmy in 1981 for Outstanding Supporting Actress, proof of her ability to bring nuance and power to a role that could have been written off as another soap villain.

Elliot has never been afraid to leave the show and return on her own terms, a rarity in the soap world. She stepped back in 2017, returned briefly in 2019, and has since made multiple guest appearances. Each time she reappears, viewers are reminded of just how much weight and gravitas she brings to Port Charles. Tracy is not just a character, but a reminder of General Hospital’s long-standing tradition of powerful, complicated women who drive storylines rather than orbit them.

The Gold Circle is about more than one role, though. It’s about persistence, resilience, and sustained impact. Few actors manage to remain relevant across five decades, especially in daytime television where storylines shift, networks tighten budgets, and genres evolve. Elliot’s induction underscores that she is not only a cornerstone of General Hospital, but also an enduring figure in daytime itself.

How Jane Elliot's Knockout Audition Led To The Creation Of A New General  Hospital Character

This honor also highlights the importance of supporting characters. While Elliot has been recognized before, much of her career has been spent in a role that wasn’t always center stage. Tracy Quartermaine wasn’t the ingenue or the heroine; she was the one stirring the pot, delivering the sharp one-liners, and forcing the drama forward. The Gold Circle acknowledges that such roles are vital to the ecosystem of soaps and deserve to be remembered alongside the leads.

Some might argue the recognition should have come sooner, given Elliot’s longevity and impact. But better late than never. The award is also a reminder that as daytime TV struggles with ratings and the competition of streaming platforms, its legacy deserves to be celebrated. Honoring veterans like Elliot is a way of telling both fans and industry insiders that the genre’s history still matters.

For Jane Elliot, the Gold Circle honor is the ultimate acknowledgment that her decades of work have not only entertained but shaped daytime storytelling. For fans, it’s a chance to celebrate a performer who has given them some of General Hospital’s most unforgettable moments. And for the industry, it’s a reminder that even as times change, the foundation of daytime television rests on actors like Elliot who kept audiences watching year after year.