Phyllis Ann George | |
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Phyllis George signing autographs at the Miss America 2008 pageant |
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Born | Phyllis Ann George[1] June 25, 1949 [1] Denton, Texas |
Other names | Phyllis George Brown |
Occupation | Sportscaster, actress |
Height | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)[2] |
Weight | 121 lb (55 kg)[2] |
Title | Miss Dallas 1970 Miss Texas 1970 Miss America 1971 |
Spouse | Robert Evans (1977-1978) John Y. Brown, Jr. (1979-1998) |
Phyllis Ann George Brown (born 25 June 1949) is an American businesswoman, actress and a former sportscaster. She is a former Miss Texas and Miss America of 1971.
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George was born to Diantha Cogdell and James George in Denton, Texas.[1] She attended the University of North Texas for three years until crowned Miss Texas in 1971.[3] At that time, Texas Christian University awarded scholarships to Miss Texas honorees. As a result, Phyllis left UNT and enrolled at TCU for several weeks until winning the Miss America crown later that fall. She is a member of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority. George won the 1971 Miss America pageant.
In her year-long stint as Miss America, George appeared on numerous talk shows, including three interviews on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.[3]
CBS Sports producers approached George to become a sportscaster in 1974. The following year, she joined the cast of The NFL Today, co-hosting live pregame shows before National Football League (NFL) games.[4] She was one of the first females to have a nationally prominent role in television sports coverage.[5]
Another duty George had with CBS Sports was working on horse racing events, including the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes.[6] Additionally, George had a brief stint on a television news version of People in 1978[7] and a job as a morning television talk show host as co-anchor of the CBS Morning News in 1985.[8] Since that time, she has sporadically returned to the media spotlight, hosting her own prime-time talk show, 1994’s A Phyllis George Special, on which she interviewed then-President Bill Clinton, and a 1998 talk show called Women's Day on the cable network Pax.
In 1985, CBS settled on Phyllis George to serve as a permanent anchor for their morning news program. George was given a three-year contract following a two-week trial run.[9] As co-anchor, she interviewed newsmakers including then–First Lady Nancy Reagan.
George has founded two companies in her business career, the first of which was "By George" chicken fillets. In 1988 after operating for only two years, George sold the company to consumer giant, Hormel Foods, which agreed to operate it as a separate division.[10] In 1991 George received the "Celebrity Women Business Owner of the Year" from the National Association of Women Business Owners.[11]
In 2003 George created Phyllis George Beauty which markets a line of cosmetics and skincare through television shopping network HSN.[12][13]
She has also written or co-authored five books—three about crafts, one on dieting (her first book, The I Love America Diet-1982) and her most recent, Never Say Never (2002).[14]
George was previously married to Robert Evans,[15] and to former Kentucky Governor, John Y. Brown, Jr., with whom she had two children,[16] including television reporter, Pamela Ashley Brown,[17] and served as Kentucky's First Lady. George was the founder of the Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft,[18] and is an avid folk and traditional arts collector.
George resurfaced in 2000 when she played a minor character in the hit movie, Meet the Parents.[19] It was one of her very few film roles.
On January 28, 2007, reporter Howard Fineman said on The Chris Matthews Show that George had moved back to Kentucky and was considering entering politics with either a run for governor in 2007 or a Senate race against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in 2008.[20] She is a founding board member of the Henry Clay Center for Statesmanship.
On October 3, 2009, Verne Lundquist of CBS Sports said during the broadcast of the LSU at Georgia football game that George had moved to Athens, Georgia.
Honorary titles | ||
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Preceded by Belinda Myrick |
Miss Texas 1970 |
Succeeded by Dana Dowell |
Preceded by Charlann Harting Carroll |
First Spouse of Kentucky 1979–1983 |
Succeeded by Billy Louis Collins |
Media offices | ||
Preceded by Gary Collins & Mary Ann Mobley |
Miss America host 1989-1990 (co-host with Gary Collins) |
Succeeded by Regis Philbin and Kathie Lee Gifford |
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