Kelly Bishop, the actor famous for portraying Emily Gilmore in Gilmore Girls, is set to publish a memoir about her life. The 79-year-old actor spent years on Broadway before breaking into movies and eventually television. Her professional life isn’t the only thing she’ll discuss in her book. Bishop promises to share details of her private life, too. The octogenarian has kept her personal life so quiet that most fans don’t even realize she’s been married twice. We have some details on her romances.
Kelly Bishop’s forgotten first marriage was a symptom of the times
Kelly Bishop doesn’t often talk about her marriages, but every so often, she shares a peak behind the curtain that proves her life, while glamorous, was not always perfect. In an interview with Bustle, Bishop once revealed that she was married once before meeting her lifelong mate.
Kelly Bishop as...
Kelly Bishop’s forgotten first marriage was a symptom of the times
Kelly Bishop doesn’t often talk about her marriages, but every so often, she shares a peak behind the curtain that proves her life, while glamorous, was not always perfect. In an interview with Bustle, Bishop once revealed that she was married once before meeting her lifelong mate.
Kelly Bishop as...
- 3/3/2024
- by Andrea Francese
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Kelly Bishop is returning to Stars Hollow with upcoming memoir The Third Gilmore Girl.
The 79-year-old Gilmore Girls alum is set to publish her book on Sept. 17 under Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster.
The Third Gilmore Girl delves into Bishop’s remarkable career, from starring as Sheila Bryant in A Chorus Line to her memorable role as matriarch Emily Gilmore in the hit TV series. Bishop also gets candid about her personal life, including insight into her tumultuous first marriage.
“From my first steps onto a Broadway stage, to the town of Stars Hollow, I am excited to take my fans along with me through the story of my life,” she shared in a statement obtained by People magazine, which first reported on the book.
The book’s editor Hannah Braaten added, “Kelly Bishop’s long career in show business includes so many indelible moments and characters,...
The 79-year-old Gilmore Girls alum is set to publish her book on Sept. 17 under Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster.
The Third Gilmore Girl delves into Bishop’s remarkable career, from starring as Sheila Bryant in A Chorus Line to her memorable role as matriarch Emily Gilmore in the hit TV series. Bishop also gets candid about her personal life, including insight into her tumultuous first marriage.
“From my first steps onto a Broadway stage, to the town of Stars Hollow, I am excited to take my fans along with me through the story of my life,” she shared in a statement obtained by People magazine, which first reported on the book.
The book’s editor Hannah Braaten added, “Kelly Bishop’s long career in show business includes so many indelible moments and characters,...
- 2/20/2024
- by Tatiana Tenreyro
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Duke Struck, a 14-time Emmy winner and CBS Sports veteran who directed installments of The Oprah Winfrey Show, The NFL Today, Good Morning America and The MacNeil/Lehrer Report, has died. He was 82.
Struck died Oct. 21 of respiratory failure in a hospital near his home in Parkland, Florida, his wife of 28 years, Victoria, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Struck began directing for CBS’ The NFL Today studio show on Sundays in 1974, when it was anchored by Jack Whitaker and Lee Leonard and aired live for the first time. (Brent Musburger, Phyllis George and Irv Cross would be hired the following year.)
When Robert MacNeil and Jim ...
Struck died Oct. 21 of respiratory failure in a hospital near his home in Parkland, Florida, his wife of 28 years, Victoria, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Struck began directing for CBS’ The NFL Today studio show on Sundays in 1974, when it was anchored by Jack Whitaker and Lee Leonard and aired live for the first time. (Brent Musburger, Phyllis George and Irv Cross would be hired the following year.)
When Robert MacNeil and Jim ...
- 11/24/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Duke Struck, a 14-time Emmy winner and CBS Sports veteran who directed installments of The Oprah Winfrey Show, The NFL Today, Good Morning America and The MacNeil/Lehrer Report, has died. He was 82.
Struck died Oct. 21 of respiratory failure in a hospital near his home in Parkland, Florida, his wife of 28 years, Victoria, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Struck began directing for CBS’ The NFL Today studio show on Sundays in 1974, when it was anchored by Jack Whitaker and Lee Leonard and aired live for the first time. (Brent Musburger, Phyllis George and Irv Cross would be hired the following year.)
When Robert MacNeil and Jim ...
Struck died Oct. 21 of respiratory failure in a hospital near his home in Parkland, Florida, his wife of 28 years, Victoria, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Struck began directing for CBS’ The NFL Today studio show on Sundays in 1974, when it was anchored by Jack Whitaker and Lee Leonard and aired live for the first time. (Brent Musburger, Phyllis George and Irv Cross would be hired the following year.)
When Robert MacNeil and Jim ...
- 11/24/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- When ESPN signed on 25 years ago Tuesday, SportsCenter was the first thing viewers saw. Looking back, the handful of viewers who had access to the channel on Sept. 7, 1979, could have been forgiven for not realizing that they were looking at the future of TV sports. SportsCenter co-anchors Lee Leonard or George Grande weren't nationally known, and ESPN was still years away from being routinely described as a sports powerhouse. The network's single studio was hidden away in a small town in central Connecticut. ESPN's first facility in nearby Bristol wasn't even finished yet, and the crew was housed in trailers in a muddy field. "There wasn't a lot of there there," recalls Chris Berman, who in September 1979 was a twentysomething TV sports reporter at a Hartford, Conn., station and would soon join this fledgling operation and stay on air throughout its first quarter-century. Since May 31, ESPN has been commemorating its silver anniversary year with a series of specials, including Sunday's SportsCenter: The Next 25 Years retrospective and leading up to a four-hour block of specials Tuesday.
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