More than 30 years after their characters first set daytime television on fire, Shemar Moore and Vivica A. Fox are heading back to The Young and the Restless. The two actors, who helped build the show’s cultural footprint in the 1990s, are reprising their roles as Malcolm Winters and Dr. Stephanie Simmons in a multi-week return that has fans of the long-running soap opera counting down the days.
Promotional clips released by the show earlier this week made clear that whatever brought audiences to their screens decades ago has not gone anywhere. Moore and Fox appear together with an ease that suggests no time has passed, teasing viewers with just enough to make the wait feel genuinely exciting. The clips quickly circulated among fans, and at least one moment in the footage registered as the kind of dramatic beat that soaps built their reputations on.
Where they started
Moore joined The Young and the Restless in 1994 and stayed with the show until 2005, building a following that would carry him through decades of work in Hollywood. His character, Malcolm Winters, was the half-brother of Neil Winters, a beloved figure in the show’s history whose portrayer, Kristoff St. John, died in 2019. Moore has returned to Genoa City several times in the years since, including during the show’s 50th anniversary, to honor his former co-star and the legacy they built together.
Fox’s time on the show as Dr. Stephanie Simmons was shorter but no less significant. She left the role in 1995, and the character has not been seen in Genoa City since. What the show gave her, however, was something invaluable. Her work on The Young and the Restless caught the attention of a key decision-maker at just the right moment, opening a door that led directly to her breakout film role in Independence Day. From there, Fox built a career that included Set It Off, Soul Food and Why Do Fools Fall in Love, among others.
More than nostalgia
The return of Moore and Fox is not being framed simply as a tribute to the past. The promotional push, which began ramping up well before their on-screen debut, suggests the show sees their reunion as a genuine event capable of drawing in both longtime viewers and new ones. That framing makes sense. Malcolm and Stephanie were not just beloved characters — they were a cultural moment for a generation of daytime television fans who watched the show find its footing as one of the defining soaps of its era.
Moore has spoken with evident feeling about what the show and the people he made it with mean to him, particularly in the context of honoring St. John’s memory. That emotional weight gives this return something beyond the typical nostalgia play. There is real history in Genoa City for both of these actors, and the show appears intent on making the most of it.
What else is coming
The Moore and Fox reunion is not the only major development on the horizon for fans of the show. The Young and the Restless is set to participate in a crossover event with another CBS soap opera, Beyond the Gates, beginning in June. The pairing of two shows under the same network marks an unusual creative move for daytime television and suggests the genre may be looking for new ways to expand its audience and generate the kind of conversation that drives engagement in an era when so many entertainment options compete for attention.
For now, though, the focus belongs to Moore and Fox. After more than three decades, they are back where their stories began — and if the early promotional footage is any indication, Genoa City is about to get very interesting.

