Kathie Lee Gifford
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born: | August 16, 1953 (age 53) Paris, France |
---|---|
Occupation: | TV presenter/Talk show host/actress/singer |
Spouse: | 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 Kathryn Lee Epstein on August 16, 1953 at 11:30pm-CET) is an American singer, songwriter, and actress, famous for her stint on the television talk show Live with Regis and Kathie Lee, which she co-hosted with Regis Philbin for 15 years.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Kathie Lee Gifford was born in Paris, France to Aaron Leon Epstein and his wife, Joan. Her father was serving in the United States Navy. She grew up in Bowie, Maryland, in the United States. Her father was part Jewish and her mother was a Methodist; Gifford grew up in a culturally Jewish environment, but she became a born-again Christian at the age of 12 (after seeing a Christian education film directed by Billy Graham), although she still refers to herself as Jewish.[1]
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. David and Kathie Lee have remained close through the years.
Kathie Lee attended Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Oklahoma, studying drama and music.
[edit] 1970s
Gifford's career took off in the 1970s (during her first marriage to 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.
[edit] 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.
By that time, she was several months into her most famous television role, as a full-time morning talk show personality. In 1985, she replaced Ann Abernathy as co-host of The Morning Show on WABC-TV with Regis Philbin. The chemistry between the two provided stability to a show that had gone through a series of titles and hosts (AM New York, The Stanley Siegel Show) during the previous decade. The program went into national broadcast in 1988, as Live with Regis and Kathie Lee (now Live with Regis and Kelly) 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), although Gifford has been gently ridiculed for constantly talking about her children on the air. She has appeared as a spokesperson for Slim Fast diet shakes after the birth of Cody.
The inspiration for the name Cody (the first born child) is when Kathie Lee was watching Frank on a Monday Night Football game in 1989 featuring the Cleveland Browns and Chicago Bears (the Browns went on to win 27-7 with Webster Slaughter catching a 99-yard touchdown pass and therefore tying the NFL record). Cody Risen 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 or other foreign object from his eye that forced him to the sideline. The announcers kept on panning the camera over to Risen and the name Cody was indelibly etched on Kathie Lee's brain.
Gifford has stated that her religious faith has carried her through several personal crises.
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.[1] The group reports that they uncovered her involvement when a worker in Honduras smuggled a clothing label out of the factory, which had a picture of Kathie Lee on it.[2] 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." [3]
Kathie Lee defended herself in a passionate response on the air during Live. Later, she appeared with President Clinton at the White House in support of U.S. Federal government initiatives to counter international sweat shop abuses.
In 1997, the tabloid The Globe uncovered an affair between Frank Gifford and Trans World Airlines flight attendant Suzen Johnson. The incident was extremely embarrassing to Kathie Lee.
[edit] Later career
About a year after The Globe uncovered the affair, the same tabloid published photographs of Kathie Lee's youngest child, Cassidy, next to a photo of child murder victim JonBenét Ramsey. The Globe selected photos in which the children were posed similarly, under a headline that announced that Kathie Lee was doing the "same" thing to her own daughter as Patsy Ramsey did to JonBenét. While some believe Patsy murdered her daughter, others believe that JonBenét's mother had somehow invited the murder upon her child. The title of the Globe article therefore suggested that Kathie Lee's parenting was negligent.
In 2000, within two weeks of the Globe article, after 15 years as Philbin's sidekick, Gifford announced that she was leaving Live with Regis and Kathie Lee in order to protect her children, although she said nothing on the air about the latest attacks from tabloids on her family. Kelly Ripa replaced Kathie Lee as Philbin's Live co-host.
She has since made guest appearances in films and television series, and has several independently released albums on CD, including 2000s The Heart of a Woman, featuring music from the Big Band era as well as Contemporary Christian songs.
Since September 2005, Gifford is a special correspondent on The Insider, a syndicated entertainment magazine television show.
Kathie Lee also devotes time to Variety: The Children's Charity. She has also sponsored and supported 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.
[edit] Trivia
In the second episode of South Park Kathie Lee comes to South Park as Mr. Garrison's childhood rival. In the episode, Mr. Garrison tries to kill Kathie Lee, but ultimately fails. (Gifford did not provide her own voice; she was impersonated by a voice actor)
In a Season 3 episode of Hey Arnold!, Kathie Lee is parodied as Jackie Lee.
Kathie Lee and her husband, Frank, share the same birthday, 23 years apart.
Kathie Lee appeared as Miss Hannigan in "Annie" at Madison Square Garden in December 2006.
Kathie Lee's line of clothing has been discussed in the documentary film The Corporation as it was discovered that despite pledges to children's charities, the clothes were in fact manufactured in South American sweatshops by children as young as 13 years old (though Ms. Gifford was apparently oblivious of that fact until it became national news.)
[edit] External links
- Official website
- Kathie Lee Gifford on IMDb
- Kathie Lee Gifford discography (Music City)
- Gifford interview, 2004, The Christian Post
- Gifford interview transcript, Larry King Live, 2000
- Kathie Lee Gifford's clothing line and its connection to sweatshop work
- Kathie Lee Gifford (Part 1) interview , the DREW MARSHALL Show, May 8, 2004
- Kathie Lee Gifford (Part 2) interview , the DREW MARSHALL Show, May 8, 2004
- Kathie Lee Gifford interview , the DREW MARSHALL Show, December 24, 2005
Categories: 1953 births | Living people | American actors | American actor-singers | American female singers | American television actors | American character actors | American television personalities | American television talk show hosts | Christian musicians | Infotainers | Jewish American actors | Jewish American singers | People from Paris | People from Maryland | Military brats