Kirstie Alley life and biography

Kirstie Alley picture, image, poster

Kirstie Alley biography

Date of birth : 1951-01-12
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Wichita, Kansas, USA
Nationality : American
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2011-01-12
Credited as : Actress and comedian, role in Cheers, Fat Actress

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Kirstie Alley (born Kirsten Louise Alley) is an American actress known for her role in the TV show Cheers, in which she played Rebecca Howe from 1987–1993, winning an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award as the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series in 1991. She is also known for her role in the Look Who's Talking film series as Mollie Ubriacco.

She lived a typical Middle American childhood. Her father Robert owned a lumber company and her mother Lillian was a homemaker to her and her two siblings. After finding her niche as cheerleader while in high school, she tried college, dropping out of both Kansas State University and the University of Kansas before deciding what she really wanted to do was act. She moved to Los Angeles in the early 1970s, working as an interior decorator, while at the same time, going out on auditions, albeit with little success. Her social life was another story. Alley ran with a fast Hollywood crowd and became addicted to cocaine. Sick and broke, she found salvation in the Church of Scientology, the cultish religion based on the teachings of L. Ron Hubbard, a former science fiction author. Scientology was at this time becoming popular among a group of young Hollywood actors, eventually attracting movie stars like John Travolta and Tom Cruise to its fold. Alley would forever claim the religion got her off drugs and saved her life. Now clean, she just needed to become a movie star.

Wanting to get noticed and hoping to raise extra cash, she auditioned for game shows. She appeared on “Match Game” (CBS, 1973-1982) in 1979 and “Password Plus” (NBC, 1979-1982) in 1980, impressing producers and the audience with her quick wit and dark girl-next-door good looks. Ironically, neither of these was put to good use when she got her first big break, playing Lieutenant Saavik in the feature film, “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.” Makeup artists transformed Alley’s wholesome features into the pointy-eared, stone-faced visage of a half-Vulcan, half-Romulan alien, and the director encouraged her to affect the flat Vulcan line readings made famous by Leonard Nimoy’s Mr. Spock. Nevertheless, the movie did well – to the point that Trekkies would consider it the best of the “Star Trek” films – and Kirstie Alley could now legitimately call herself a Hollywood actress.

Following her promising break-out role as Saavik, Alley worked steadily in unspectacular projects through the mid-1980s. Besides her work in the acclaimed Civil War-era TV miniseries “North and South” (ABC, 1985), the highlight of this period was her marriage to actor Parker Stevenson in 1983. Stevenson was a handsome, Princeton-educated actor who had gained fame playing boy detective Frank Hardy in “The Hardy Boys/ Nancy Drew Mysteries” (ABC, 1977-79). If Alley’s career had not quite taken off, at least her personal life had. All that would change, however, when she was cast as the new bar owner and love interest in “Cheers,” following the departure of the beloved Shelley Long and her character, Diane Chambers.

At the time Alley joined the show, “Cheers” was one of the best and most popular sitcoms in television history. The show centered around Sam Malone (Ted Danson), an alcoholic ex-Red Sox pitcher, and the eccentric patrons and staff at Cheers, the bar owned and run by Sam. The rocky romantic chemistry generated between Sam and one of his waitresses, Diane Chambers, drove the show to primetime supremacy and Long to leave for a career in movies. Replacing Long was, well, a long-shot, but the show did not miss a beat when Alley assumed the role of Rebecca Howe, the bar’s new owner and Sam’s eventual love interest. Alley actually appeared in more episodes than Long and helped keep the show a ratings champ and critical darling before it finally went off the air in 1993. She won an Emmy as the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for 1991 and won the Golden Globe as well that same year.

The motto at Cheers was “Everybody knows your name” and now everybody knew who Kirstie Alley was, at long last. She used her TV success as a launching pad into features, starring in the comedy “Look Who’s Talking” (1989) with friend and fellow Scientologist John Travolta. The movie got middling reviews but grossed over $100 million, ensuring two sequels – “Look Who’s Talking Too” (1990) and “Look Who’s Talking Now” (1993). Alley did not abandon TV, however, and won another Emmy for her starring turn as the mother of an autistic boy in the made-for-TV movie, “David’s Mother” (CBS, 1994). She played a social worker in “It Takes Two” (1995), the movie debut of Ashley and Mary-Kate Olson, then moved on to more prestigious fare, earning excellent reviews as a psychiatrist married to Woody Allen’s writer character in the film “Deconstructing Harry” (1997).

Alley’s career was at its zenith at this time. Unfortunately, her personal life was bottoming out. When Alley won the Emmy in 1991, she thanked her husband in her speech “for giving me the big one for the last eight years.” By 1997 he was giving her a divorce. Alley and Stevenson’s marriage crumbled under the pressure of her success and his lack of it. “Cheers” had made her rich, and they lived a luxurious lifestyle, complete with multiple homes, yachts, and high-performance cars. Alley allegedly paid Stevenson a settlement of $6 million and agreed to joint custody of their two adopted children. Not a bad deal for Stevenson, whose career highlight after “The Hardy Boys” was playing a beefcake lifeguard on the jiggle-fest beach-and-babes TV drama, “Baywatch” (NBC/ Syndicated 1989-2001).

Alley’s physical appearance was changing along with her marital status. By the mid-1990s, she was putting on weight, due to many factors in her life, she would later admit. In an industry obsessed with borderline anorexic thinness, her curvy figure stood out as either a bold declaration of self or slovenly excess. In either case, it did not stop her from getting work initially. After slogging through a few unmemorable TV movies, she hooked up with the powerhouse producing team of Kevin Bright, Marta Kauffman and David Crane, the creators of the TV sitcom smash “Friends” (NBC, 1994-2004). The show they created for Alley was “Veronica’s Closet” (NBC, 1997-2000), in which the star played Veronica Chase, the divorced owner of a lingerie company called (surprise!) Veronica’s Closet. Just as she had with Rebecca Howe, Alley was once again playing a funny, neurotic career woman – albeit one 10 years older and 30 pounds heavier. “Veronica’s Closet” stayed open for business despite bad reviews, mediocre ratings and high production costs, but NBC finally shut the door and cancelled it after three seasons.

As the star and a producer of “Veronica’s Closet,” Alley’s bank account afforded the star some pickiness when it came to new roles. She did a beauty pageant movie, “Drop Dead Gorgeous” (1999), then settled into a fallow period of undistinguished TV roles while her weight ballooned to well over 200 pounds. At that time, Alley spent more time on the cover of the tabloids than on TV or movie screens. But while her weight gain made her the butt of late night talk show comics, the ever savvy Alley worked it to her advantage. She published her memoirs, How to Lose Your Ass and Regain Your Life (2005), in which she chronicled how her depression over her miscarriages and infertility led to binge eating. She played herself in “Fat Actress,” which, while not a hit, won her new fans for its self-deprecating tone. And finally, she landed her well-paying spokeswoman gig for Jenny Craig.

All this naked confessing kept Alley in the public eye, but it was not without controversy. In late 2006, she appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” (ABC, 1986- ), wearing a semi-bikini outfit and claiming she had lost 75 pounds thanks to Jenny Craig. The next day on “The View” (ABC, 1997- ), host Rosie O’Donnell – no stranger to weight problems herself – publicly called Alley a liar, claiming she had exaggerated her weight loss to keep herself on the Jenny Craig payroll. To most observers it looked like Alley was overstating the effectiveness of the diet program. But in an age where the media bombarded the public with images of insubstantial celebrity waifs, more women looked like Kirstie Alley, not Paris Hilton. She remained a sympathetic and resilient figure to her fans and women worldwide.

Television

* 1987-1993 Cheers
* 1994 David's Mother
* 1997-2000 Veronica's Closet
* 1997 The Last Don
* 2005 Fat Actress
* 2007 Write & Wrong

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