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Kathy Lee Gifford

 
AnswerNote: Kathy Lee Gifford
Gifford, Kathy Lee
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Co-host of Live with Regis and Kathy Lee, from 1989-2000, Kathy Lee Gifford "chatted" her way into the hearts of American TV viewers, speaking candidly of her family and her foibles, and routinely teasing co-host, Regis Philbin, but her TV career got its start much earlier. In 1977, Gifford was visiting a friend on the set of the daytime soap opera Days of Our Lives, when a producer happened by and asked if she could act. For the next year, she played a minor character known as Nurse Callahan. While a regular on Days, she also worked in commercials (often singing the jingles), and she shot numerous network television pilots. Later that year, Gifford became the featured singer on the game show Name That Tune and co-starred in the musical situation comedy Hee Haw Honeys, a spin-off of Hee Haw. In the meantime, thanks to her exposure on Name That Tune, Gifford's nightclub singing career took off.

In 1982, Gifford was offered a position as substitute anchor, on Good Morning America and became a special correspondent covering human-interest stories. Three years later, Gifford won the job co-hosting with Philbin, and for the next year, she handled both positions. When she realized that she couldn't continue to spread herself so thin, she opted to give up Good Morning America and kept her permanent place on The Morning Show, which later changed its name to Live With Regis and Kathy Lee. Gifford and Philbin put together a very popular nightclub act

In addition to cutting albums and appearing onstage in concert, Gifford became the co-host of the fourth hour of NBC's The Today Show in 2008. She shares the hour with Hoda Kotb.

Kathy Lee and her husband, sportscaster Frank Gifford, whom she married in 1985, have two children, Cody and Cassidy. They are involved in numerous charitable causes such as Variety Club International's "The Children's Charity" and the Association to Benefit Children, which spawned the Cody Foundation. The resources from the foundation continue to support Cody House and Cassidy's Place — facilities that provide shelter and care to HIV-positive and crack-addicted children. She has developed a clothing line, the Kathie Lee Collection at Wal-Mart, and has written books, the proceeds of which go to help support her charitable causes.

Gifford was born on August 16, 1953, in Paris, France, moving to the US with her family, when she was a child. She was named Maryland Junior Miss at age 17, and went on to study drama and music at Oral Roberts University.

Last updated: February 04, 2009.

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Artist: Kathie Lee Gifford
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Kathie Lee Gifford

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Performed Songs By:

Elizabeth Pavone, Nancy Bryan

Formal Connection With:

See Kathie Lee Gifford Lyrics
  • Born: August 16, 1953, Paris, France
  • Active: '70s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Vocals, Bass, Performer
  • Representative Albums: "Goodnight Angel," "Party Animals," "Finders Keepers"

Biography

After a 20-year career doing game shows and night club acts, the Paris-born Gifford spent 15 years co-hosting Live with Regis & Kathie Lee, one of the most successful daytime talk shows in television history. During her stint on the show, Gifford also appeared on TV specials and wrote books such as Christmas with Kathie Lee and I Can't Believe I Said That!, her autobiography. Gifford left Live with Regis & Kathie Lee in summer 2000, just before the release of her first pop album, Heart of a Woman. Gifford continued to release albums of lullabies, children's songs, and praise and worship music during the 2000s. In 2008, she became one of the co-hosts of The Today Show. She returned to vocal pop with My Way Home, which was released early in 2009; Everyone Has a Story, a set of songs composed by Gifford and David Friedman and performed by Broadway singers, followed a few months later. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Kathie Lee Gifford
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Kathie Lee Gifford
Born Kathryn Lee Epstein
August 16, 1953 (1953-08-16) (age 56)
Paris, France
Occupation TV presenter
Talk show host
Actress
Singer
Spouse(s) Frank Gifford (18 October 1986 - present) 2 children
Paul Johnson (April 1976 - 1983) (divorced)
Children Cody Newton (b. 1990)
Cassidy Erin (b. 1993)

Kathie Lee Gifford (born August 16, 1953) is an American television hostess, singer, actor, noted for her 15-year run (1985–2000) on the talk show Live with Regis and Kathie Lee, which she co-hosted with Regis Philbin. She has received 11 Emmy nominations. Before her long stint in talk shows, Gifford's first television exposure was that of Tom Kennedy's singer/sidekick on Name That Tune, from 1974 to 1978.

On April 7, 2008, Gifford started co-hosting the fourth hour of NBC's Today Show with Hoda Kotb. They replaced Ann Curry and Natalie Morales. The show's ratings decreased since Gifford's arrival, drawing 1.9 million viewers the weeks prior and 1.7 million a few months after.[1]

Contents

Early life

Gifford, born as Kathryn Lee Epstein in Paris, France, is the daughter of Joan (née Cuttell), a singer, and Aaron Epstein, a musician and U.S. naval officer stationed in France at the time.[2] She grew up in Bowie, Maryland, attended Bowie High School[3] and was a singer in a folk group, Pennsylvania Next Right, which performed frequently at school assemblies. Gifford attended Oral Roberts University, Tulsa, Oklahoma and Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas, studying drama and music.

Her paternal grandfather was Jewish and her mother was a Methodist; Gifford became a born-again Christian at age 12 (after seeing The Restless Ones, a Christian education film directed by Billy Graham), and told interviewer Larry King, "I was raised with many Jewish traditions and raised to be very grateful for my Jewish heritage."[4] Her brother, Rev. David Paul Epstein, is an evangelical Baptist preacher and pastor of Calvary Baptist Church on West 57th Street in Manhattan, New York City.

She has two children, Cody, 19, and Cassidy, 16.

1970s

During one summer in the early 1970s she was a live-in secretary/babysitter for Anita Bryant at her home in Miami. Gifford's career took off in the 1970s (during her first marriage to Christian composer/arranger/producer/publisher Paul Johnson) as a vocalist on the game show Name That Tune with Tom Kennedy (she performed the "sing a tune" segment as Kathie Lee Johnson). In 1978, she joined the cast of the short-lived Hee Haw sitcom spinoff, Hee Haw Honeys.

Gifford appeared in television advertisements for Carnival Cruise Lines beginning in 1984. The ads were the first cruise line ads to air on network television.

Live with Regis and Kathie Lee

Following her divorce from Johnson in 1983, Gifford met sports commentator Frank Gifford during an episode of ABC's Good Morning America; the couple married in 1986. Coincidentally, they share the same birthday, 23 years apart.

By that time, she was several months into her most famous television role, as a full-time morning talk show personality. On June 24, 1985, she replaced Ann Abernathy as co-host of The Morning Show on WABC-TV with Regis Philbin. The program went into national broadcast in 1988, as Live with Regis and Kathie Lee and Gifford became well-known across the country. Throughout the 1990s, millions of morning-TV viewers watched her descriptions of life at home with her sportscaster husband and their two children: son Cody Newton Gifford (born in 1990) and Cassidy Erin Gifford (born in 1993). She appeared as a spokesperson for Slim Fast diet shakes after Cody was born.

Gifford was inspired to name her son Cody after watching her husband on a Monday Night Football game in 1989 featuring the Cleveland Browns and Chicago Bears.[5] Cody Risien was an offensive lineman for the Browns and got much attention during the course of the contest because he was struggling with removing a piece of dirt from his eye that forced him to the sideline. The announcers kept on panning the camera over to Risien, making the name "Cody" instantly memorable for her.

Countering international sweat shop abuse

In 1996, the National Labor Committee, a human rights group, reported that sweatshop labor was used to make clothes for the Kathie Lee line, sold at Wal-Mart.[6] The group reported that a worker in Honduras smuggled a piece of clothing out of the factory, which had a Kathie Lee label on it.[7] One of the workers, Wendy Diaz, came to the United States to testify about the conditions under which she worked. She commented that "I wish I could talk to [Kathie Lee]. If she's good, she will help us."[8]

Labor activist Charles Kernaghan spoke to the media and accused Gifford of being responsible for the sweat shop management activity. Gifford addressed Kernaghan's allegations on the air during Live, explaining that she was not involved with hands-on project management in factories. Gifford subsequently contacted Federal authorities to investigate the issue, and worked with U.S. Federal legislative and executive branch agencies to support and enact laws to protect children against sweat shop conditions. She appeared with President Bill Clinton at the White House in support of the government's initiatives to counter international sweat shop abuses. (Years later, on April 13, 2007, in an unrelated appearance at the National Press Club, Gifford, in answer to questions, stated that Kernaghan had called her three months after his first public allegations against her and apologized.)

Current career

Since Live, Gifford has made guest appearances in films and television series, and has several independently released albums on CD, including 2000's The Heart of a Woman, featuring the single "Love Never Fails".[9][10]

In September 2005 she became a special correspondent on The Insider, a syndicated entertainment magazine television show, ending her relationship with that program upon her co-hosting role with Today.[11]

Gifford appeared as Miss Hannigan in a concert performance of Annie at Madison Square Garden in December 2006.[12]

In February 2007 Gifford was attending a CD-signing event at a shopping mall in Paramus, New Jersey. During this event Gifford was attacked by Joey Boots, a member of The Wack Pack from the Howard Stern Show. Boots removed a box from a shopping bag, threw it at Gifford, from which two dozen white mice emerged. Boots was evicted from the mall, and Gifford was unhurt.

She is a celebrity ambassador for the non-profit organization Childhelp. She regularly makes appearances at fund raisers and events for the child abuse prevention and treatment organization and is an ardent supporter.[13]

Gifford and her husband raised the money to build and continue to financially support two shelters in New York City for babies born with HIV or a congenital crack cocaine addiction. These shelters were named in honor of her children, Cody and Cassidy.[14]

On March 31 2008, NBC announced that Gifford was to join its morning show, Today, as co-host of the fourth hour, alongside Hoda Kotb. This marked her return to morning television; in many markets, she now airs directly after her old show, now called Live with Regis and Kelly. Because the 4th hour of Today airs live at 10:00am EST, and Live with Regis and Kelly airs live at 9:00am EST, Gifford's hour will not compete directly with her former show in most markets.[15]

On 1 July, 2008, Gifford appeared on NBC’s Celebrity Family Feud. She and her friends and family competed against the cast of Dog The Bounty Hunter for their favorite charity. Gifford's family won the $50,000 for The Association to Benefit Children.[16]

She is a recipient of the "Mousecar" Award (as in "Oscar"), a silver Mickey Mouse statue award that was personally designed by Walt Disney himself. The award was presented personally by Disney CEO Michael Eisner who said that only five had been given out previously.[17]

Gifford is frequently parodied on Saturday Night Live by actress Kristen Wiig opposite Mikaela Watkins as Hoda Kotb. Wiig portrays Gifford as loudmouthed, self-obsessed, racist, alcoholic and a shameless self-promoter. One such skit featured Zac Efron as her son, Cody. He behaved identically to her by making faces, telling lewd jokes, singing and dancing, and berating Watkins' Hoda Kotb. Kathie Lee Gifford responded to the skit featuring her son by walking unnanounced onto the set of Efron's Today Show interview with Matt Lauer. Sporting hair curlers, she told Efron that his portrayal of her son was inaccurate, and that the real Cody Gifford was much taller and more handsome than Efron.

Playwright

In the late 1990s, Gifford began working in musical theatre as a playwright. She contributed a number of musical numbers to Hats, and wrote and produced Under The Bridge,[18] based upon the children's book The Family Under The Bridge by Natalie Savage Carlson.

In 2007, she premiered Saving Aimee, a play about evangelist Aimee McPherson, at the Signature Theatre in Arlington, Virginia.[19][20] The premiere stars Tony-nominated actress Carolee Carmello in the lead role.[21]

On April 16, 2007, Gifford was a guest presenter at the Washington, DC Helen Hayes Award Ceremony, honoring contributions and professional accomplishments in theatre.[22]

In 2008, Gifford and David Friedman wrote a junior high school musical entitled Key Pin It Real.[23] The play depicts a coming-of-age story about a young girl named Key Pin. The first production took place in December 2008 in Kendallville, Indiana at East Noble High School.[24] A workshop production opened at The Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center.[25]

References

  1. ^ Forthright or Clueless? Kathie Lee Draws Fire
  2. ^ http://www.filmreference.com/film/88/Kathie-Lee-Gifford.html
  3. ^ George Rush and Joanna Molloy. "Daily News". http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/gossip/1996/05/13/1996-05-13_kathie_lee_s_high-school_cla.html. Retrieved 2009-02-19. 
  4. ^ http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0005/11/lkl.00.html Transcripts.cnn.com
  5. ^ "Browns sizzle, Bears fizzle Kosar's passing gives offense lift," The Plain Dealer (Cleveland, OH), October 23, 1989 [1]
  6. ^ "The Man Who Made Kathie Lee Cry," Washington Post, July 31, 2005
  7. ^ "Zoned for Slavery: The Child Behind the Label," 1995, a Crowning Rooster Production.[2]
  8. ^ Keeper of the Fire
  9. ^ Love Never Fails video on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3m812cQ4d0
  10. ^ Amazon - Love Never Fails - http://www.amazon.com/Love-Never-Fails/dp/B000VZRBOW
  11. ^ Kathie Lee Gifford on The Insider - http://www.tv.com/story/544.html
  12. ^ Kathie Lee Gifford is Miss Hannigan in MSG 'Annie' - http://broadwayworld.com/article/Kathie_Lee_Gifford_is_Miss_Hannigan_in_MSG_Annie_20061012
  13. ^ Childhelp goes Hollywood for fundraiser - http://www.azcentral.com/community/scottsdale/articles/2009/01/02/20090102sr-shocket0103.html
  14. ^ http://www.kathieleegifford.com/lamb04/charity/abccharity.php
  15. ^ http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/23871853
  16. ^ http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/2008/06/23/2008-06-23_kathie_lee_gifford_other_celebs_fuel_al_.html
  17. ^ http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/entertainment/2000/07/29/2000-07-29_the_long_goodbye_is_over.html
  18. ^ http://www.kathieleegifford.com/lamb04/messages/6706mesg.php
  19. ^ http://www.kathieleegifford.com/lamb04/messages/sablog.php
  20. ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/24/AR2007042402428.html
  21. ^ Carmello Is Famed Evangelist in Kathie Lee Gifford's Saving Aimee Musical April 10 - http://www.playbill.com/news/article/107157.html
  22. ^ Celebrating the Stars at the Helen Hayes Awards - http://www.washingtonian.com/blogarticles/Arts%20&%20Events/afterhours/3930.html
  23. ^ http://allday.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/04/21/929229.aspx
  24. ^ http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/1987797/
  25. ^ http://www.tbpac.org/pr/releases/KeyPinItReal.pdf

External links

Media offices
Preceded by
Gary Collins and Phyllis George
Miss America Pageant host
1991-1995 (co-host with Regis Philbin)
Succeeded by
Eva LaRue and John Callahan

 
 

 

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