Cathryn harrison biography of rory gilmore
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Gilmore Girls
Gilmore Girls, which wraps up forever on May 15, worked because by all rights it shouldn’t have. Its creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino, is a San Fernando Valley Jewish girl who created a Connecticut WASP fantasy world so real, no one noticed William F. Buckley Jr. was missing from it. Furthermore, it was a drama played for laughs and speed, yet its greatest theme was dead serious: Love is its own reward, but it can leave some of the best humans unrewarded.
Sherman-Palladino always said that her creation was about two best friends who happened to be mother and daughter. That was the pitch that sold the show to The WB and birthed a perfect television idyll: an ideal relationship placed within an ideal community that we were all, supposedly, too jaded/media-savvy to respond to. Hah. Millions of us not only did, we yearned for that damn fantasy. Depending on who you are, you wanted Lauren Graham’s Lorelai Gilmore as either your mother/sister/wife/hot girlfriend; you w
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Related: Gilmore Girls: 10 Scenes That Make Viewers Nervous When Rewatching
Logan is the last boyfriend Gilmore Girlssees Rory with. They were together throughout college and later in life when he moved to London. However, the two were anything but perfect. Rory's life has never been simple but the inclusion of Logan Huntzberger made everything dramatic, unhinged, and resulted some of the hardest years of her life.
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Gilmore Girls
Nobody Wants This Season 2 Casts Leighto
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The 5 biggest 'Gilmore Girls' revelations from Kelly Bishop's memoir
Long before she ever took on the now-iconic role of Emily Gilmore in Amy Sherman-Palladino’s beloved comedy-drama “Gilmore Girls,” Kelly Bishop had a stunning résumé. From the mid-1960s and on, Bishop appeared in numerous Broadway shows, earning a Tony Award for her performance as Sheila in the first iteration of “A Chorus Line.” In the ’80s, she appeared as Frances “Baby” Houseman’s mother in “Dirty Dancing” and in subsequent years lit up daytime television on “One Life to Live” and “All My Children.”
For all her career highs, however, Bishop likely will remain best known for her cutting and complex performance as the moneyed New England matriarch in “Gilmore Girls” from 2000 to 2007 — a period she chronicles beautifully in her new memoir, “The Third Gilmore Girl.”
Read more:Review: 'Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life' is a welcome slice of smart holiday escapism
In candid and down-to-earth prose, Bis