Days of our Lives Wiki
Bryon Carmichael
Doug Williams
Days Of Our Lives
Portrayed by Bill Hayes
Current status Former; Recurring
Duration 1979
Cause/reason Died
Created by Ann Marcus
Introduced by Betty Corday andH. Wesley Kenney
Profile
Gender Male
Died 1979
Cause of death Cancer
Residence Paris, France
Relationships
Family Carmichael Family
Siblings Doug Williams(half)
Romances Lee DuMonde(dated; 1979)
Nieces and nephews Hope Williams Brady
Dougie LeClair
Great-nieces and nephews Shawn Douglas Brady
Zack Brady
Ciara Brady Weston
Doug Williams III
Addie Weston (great great)
Bo Weston (great great)
Claire Brady (great great)
Baby Black-Brady(great great)
Baby Lockhart-Brady(great great)


Bryon Carmichael was a character from the soap opera Days of Our Lives.

Storylines

While in Paris to attend a jewelry auction, Steve Olson was shocked to see amongst his fellow bidders a bespectacled gentleman who was the literal spitting image of his brother-in-law Doug Williams.

Steve made the man’s acquaintance and intrigued the southern aristocrat with tales of the man he so resembled. Upon the auction’s conclusion, Byron extended an invitation to Steve to join him at his opulent estate.

The stories about his doppelganger tickled and intrigued Byron, who instructed his private attorney, Desmond Towers, to investigate the man in question. Slowly, the facts about Doug’s life began to pour in. Like Byron, he had been born in Wheeling, West Virginia and, in their infancy, both men had been offered up to an adoption agency.

Towers’ research eventually uncovered that the men shared the same father but his digging also revealed Doug’s birth name – Brent Douglas – and the extensive rap sheet he incurred.

Unperturbed by the latest development, Byron made immediate plans to visit Salem and get to know his brother. However, Byron unable to embark on his journey thanks to terminal cancer, and he instead had to settle for a phone call.

The conversation between the two was, at first, strained. Doug had given little credence to Steve’s claims that he had a Confederate carbon copy out there in the world but the more he spoke to Byron, the more convinced he became that he was indeed talking to the brother he had never known.

Byron delighted in hearing about Doug’s life and was especially pleased to learn that he was an uncle. As the dialogue continued, the wheels began to turn inside Byron’s head. Now, he realized, he had relations that his vast fortune could benefit.

He was no longer obligated to simply bequeath the entire Carmichael legacy to his outwardly charming but emotionally cold and lascivious spouse Lee DuMonde, who would no doubt squander the cash on extravagant purchases or use it as barter for the sexual favors she frequently sought outside their marriage bed.

After saying goodbye to Doug, a weakened Byron took to his bed but even as he lay ill and dying, he gathered the strength to summon Desmond and instruct him on a number of alterations that he expected to be made to his will.

Soon after, Byron Carmichael passed. A few weeks later, those named in his testament assembled for the reading. To Lee, Byron left a Manhattan condo, a limousine, and an annual stipend of $35,000. To Doug, Byron left the lion’s share, amounting to about $5 million, plus various properties and the antique holdings within.

Although Doug felt blessed by his sudden and unexpected windfall, the subject of money had not been broached during their one and done chinwag. He would soon be regretting Byron’s generosity.

Lee was on the warpath, and she arrived in Salem determined to extract what she felt was her rightful due.