Kirstie Alley
- Born: Jan 12, 1955 in Wichita, Kansas
- Occupation: Actor, Writer
- Active: '80s-2000s
- Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
- Career Highlights: Look Who's Talking, Deconstructing Harry, North and South
- First Major Screen Credit: Blind Date (1984)
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"You are not in business to be popular."
| Kirstie Alley | ||||||||||
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Kirstie Alley at the 1994 Emmy Awards. |
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| Birth name | Kirsten Louise Alley | |||||||||
| Born | January 12 1951 |
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| Spouse(s) | Parker Stevenson (1983-1997) (divorced) | |||||||||
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Kirsten Louise Alley (born January 12, 1951) is an American Emmy Award winning actress best known for her role in the TV show Cheers, where she played Rebecca Howe from 1987-1993, winning an Emmy as the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for 1991. A year later, she won a Golden Globe for her performance in Cheers as well. She won an Emmy in 1994 for her role in the TV-drama David's Mother. Other critically acclaimed roles Alley is known for include: playing Diane Barrows in It Takes Two and a single mother in Look Who's Talking, Look Who's Talking Too, and Look Who's Talking Now (all co-starring John Travolta). Alley has won two People's Choice Awards in the years 1991 and 1998.
Alley was born in Wichita, Kansas, where she was raised, to Robert Deal Alley, who owned a lumber company, and Lillian Mickie Heaton, a homemaker;[1] she has two siblings, Colette and Craig. Her mother died in a car accident caused by a drunk driver in 1981. Alley attended Wichita Southeast High School and became a cheerleader. She attended college at Kansas State University and the University of Kansas, but dropped out in her sophomore year to pursue acting. She was first seen as a contestant on the game shows Match Game in 1979 and Password Plus in 1980. On both shows she stated her occupation as an interior designer.
Alley won a supporting role in the 1982 movie Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, playing Vulcan officer Lieutenant Saavik. Alley turned down the role of Saavik in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock because the producers would not meet her salary demands and because she didn't want to be typecast as a science fiction actress. Therefore, Robin Curtis assumed the role. Alley also co-starred in a short-lived secret agent television series, Masquerade, and in the acclaimed miniseries North and South. In 1984 Alley starred in a low budget theatrical film called "Blind Date". Although the movie was a critical and commercial failure at the time, it has become a minor cult classic due primarily to the only on-screen nude scene of Alley's career. She rose to prominence in her 1987–1993 role as the neurotic corporate executive Rebecca Howe on the long-running hit TV sitcom Cheers. While Cheers was the launching pad for the successful spin-off Frasier, Alley was the only regular actor from Cheers not to appear on Frasier. She later starred in the movie Look Who's Talking (1989) with fellow Scientologist John Travolta, which earned more than $100 million at the box office. This film was followed by two sequels — 1990s Look Who's Talking Too and 1993's Look Who's Talking Now. In 1992, she played a TV news reporter in Prince's video for "My Name Is Prince." Her second NBC sitcom, the critically panned Veronica's Closet, ran for three seasons in the late 1990s. Alley reportedly received $2 million in up-front fees for her work on that series and $150,000 per episode.
Alley has been honored with two Emmy Awards during her career. Her first two nominations for her work on Cheers did not earn her the award, but her third, in 1991, garnered her the statuette for that series. In her speech, she thanked then-husband Parker Stevenson "for giving me the big one for the last eight years".[2] Talk show hosts, as well as the creators of Cheers, poked fun at the quip for weeks afterward. Alley won her second Emmy for her portrayal of the title role in the made-for-TV movie drama David's Mother (1994). In 1997, Alley's career took a different turn when she appeared in Woody Allen's movie Deconstructing Harry. In this movie, Alley, who was then primarily known as a comedic actress, displayed a strong talent for being a serious dramatic actress by playing a psychiatrist who is married to Woody Allen's character. She is angered upon learning that he has had an affair with one of her patients.
For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Kirstie Alley has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7000 Hollywood Blvd.
In 2005, after her weight increased to over 200 lbs., she headlined a sitcom for Showtime called Fat Actress. The show details the daily life of an overweight actress trying to make it in Hollywood. Alley has become an advocate against obesity and was/is a spokeswoman for the Jenny Craig weight-loss program; TV ads document her weight loss, which has reached 75 lbs., according to Alley on a November 7, 2006, appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show. She appeared clad in a semi-bikini outfit, with a fabric midriff and several yards of translucent chiffon to hide her back-view. The next day on The View, Rosie O'Donnell pulled up a woman from their audience who was approximately the same body size as Kirstie; the woman admitted to weighing much more than Kirstie. The implication was clear that Rosie thought Kirstie was a liar. It was announced in early February 2007 that Alley will play the lead in a new Fox network sitcom entitled The Minister of Divine, based upon the British show The Vicar of Dibley, which starred Dawn French and was first broadcast on the BBC in 1994.[3] However, the show was not picked up for the Fall lineup.
Alley was married to actor Parker Stevenson (Richard Stevenson Parker, Jr.) from December 22, 1983, until 1997. During their marriage, the couple adopted two children — William True (born October 5, 1992) and Lillie Price (born June 15, 1994). Alley also experienced a miscarriage as well as a stillbirth. According to media reports at the time of the couple's divorce, Stevenson walked away from the marriage with a healthy $6,000,000 (USD) settlement, after asking for $75,000 per month in alimony from Alley. At the time of their split, Alley and Stevenson were joint owners of a mansion in Encino, California, complete with exotic animals, plus vacation homes in Islesboro, Maine, and in Kansas. She also has a ranch in the Applegate Valley of Jackson County, Oregon. The couple owned two yachts and several high-performance cars. Today, they share joint custody of their children.
| “ | I don't believe in walking on eggshells around children. I don't want them to have a static, middle-class life. I want them to experience a real life, not some pretentious existence | ” |
Alley was raised Methodist but is now a Scientologist, like her good friends John Travolta and Kelly Preston. She is dedicated to and a strong activist for V-Day, a global movement to stop violence against women.
Alley admits to having had a cocaine addiction from 1976 until 1979, when she joined Scientology. She has served as the national spokesperson for Narconon (a controversial Scientology-affiliated drug treatment program). She has continued her Scientology training and, as of 1999, had attained the level of OT VI (Operating Thetan level 6).[4] In May 2000, she purchased the former home of fellow Scientologist Lisa Marie Presley, a 5,200-sq-ft. waterfront mansion in Clearwater, Florida, for $1.5 million. Clearwater is the spiritual headquarters of the Church of Scientology.
In October 2005, the Church of Scientology again announced that Alley had completed another course, the PTS/SP course.[5]
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan | Lt. Saavik | |
| 1983 | One More Chance | Sheila | |
| 1984 | Champions | Barbara | |
| Blind Date | |||
| Runaway | Jackie Rogers | ||
| 1987 | Summer School | Ms. Robin Bishop | |
| 1988 | Shoot to Kill | Sarah Renell | |
| 1989 | Look Who's Talking | Mollie | |
| Loverboy | Dr. Joyce Palmer | ||
| 1990 | Madhouse | Jessie Bannister | |
| Look Who's Talking Too | Mollie | ||
| Sibling Rivalry | Marjorie Turner | ||
| 1993 | Look Who's Talking Now | Mollie Ubriacco | |
| 1994 | David's Mother | Sally Goodson | |
| 1995 | Village of the Damned | Dr. Susan Verner | |
| It Takes Two | Diane Barrows | ||
| 1997 | Deconstructing Harry | Joan | |
| For Richer or Poorer | Caroline Sexton | ||
| 1999 | Drop Dead Gorgeous | Gladys Leeman | |
| 2002 | Back By Midnight | Gloria Beaumont |
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