Shelley Long
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Shelley Long | |
Shelley Long |
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Birth name | Shelley Lee Long |
Born | August 23, 1949 (age 57)![]() |
Spouse(s) | Bruce Tyson, 1981-2004, divorced |
Notable roles | Diane Chambers in Cheers, 1982-1993, Lucy Van Patten Brodsky in Irreconcilable Differences, 1984 Anna Fielding in The Money Pit, 1986 Lauren Ames in Outrageous Fortune, 1987, Phyllis Nefler in Troop Beverly Hills, 1989 Carol Brady in The Brady Bunch Movie, 1995, A Very Brady Sequel, 1996, The Brady Bunch in the White House, 2002 |
Emmy Awards | |
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Outstanding Lead Actress - Comedy Series, Cheers, 1983 |
Shelley Lee Long, born on August 23, 1949 in Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States is a Golden Globe and Emmy Award winning American actress and comedienne.
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[edit] Early Career
Shelley Long was active on her high school speech team, and won the National Championship in Original Oratory. She delivered a speech on the need for sex education in high school.
After graduating from South Side High School in Fort Wayne, she studied drama at Northwestern University, but left before graduating to pursue a career in acting and modelling.
In Chicago, she joined The Second City comedy troupe and in 1975, she began writing, producing, and co-hosting the television program Sorting It Out.
The local NBC broadcast went on to win three Emmy Awards for Best Entertainment Show.

[edit] 1980's
Her first notable role came in 1980 with A Small Circle of Friends, opposite Brad Davis and Karen Allen. The film about social unrest at Harvard University during the 1960s was a critical success. In 1981, she played the role of Tala in the Ringo Starr film Caveman, starring opposite Dennis Quaid. She was also featured in the Henry Winkler comedy Night Shift, about life working on the night shift at a city morgue. She starred with Tom Cruise in the 1983 comedy film Losin' It.

Shelley Long's taste of fame, came when she was cast as the barmaid Diane Chambers in Cheers. The show was slow to capture an audience but eventually became one of the most popular shows on television and she became a most sought after actress.
In 1984, Shelley Long was nominated for a Best Leading Actress Golden Globe for her performance in Irreconcilable Differences.
She then appeared in a series of comedies, such as : The Money Pit, starring Tom Hanks, 1986, Outrageous Fortune with Bette Midler and Peter Coyote, 1987 and Hello Again with Corbin Bernsen, 1987.
Amidst much controversy, she abandoned her trademark role as Diane Chambers and the Cheers series at the height of the series' popularity. Producers of the show begged her to stay and even offered her 400,000 dollars just to stay but Long refused. Reports said that she left because did not have good relations with her costars and that she was overbearing on set, she was also said to want to leave the TV career and do movies. However, in a 2003 interview on 'THE GRAHAM NORTON SHOW', she said that she left for a number of reasons, but the one big reason was because she wanted to spend more time with her newborn daughter. It is therefore never going to be 100 per cent clear what her other reasons were for leaving and what really happened between her and the costars as there has been further reports contradicting the latter.
Her first post-Cheers project was Troop Beverly Hills, where she played a housewife who starts a "Wilderness Girl" troop as a distraction from her divorce proceedings.

[edit] 1990's
Shelley Long's career declined throughout the 1990s when she took several roles in films, such as, Don't Tell Her It's Me and Frozen Assets, that turned out to be commercially unsuccessful.
In 1993 she returned to Cheers for its series finale and starred in the short lived sitcom Good Advice with Treat Williams and Teri Garr, but the show was cancelled after two seasons.
In 1995, she re-appeared as Diane Chambers in an episode of Frasier and appeared in the campy big screen re-make of The Brady Bunch Movie, which was a surprise hit and revived her career as a comedienne. In 1996, she reprised her role as Carol Brady in A Very Brady Sequel, which had more modest success.
A series of ventures followed such as the made for TV remake of Freaky Friday, and the family sitcom Kelly Kelly, which, only lasted for a few episodes on The WB Television Network.
[edit] 2000's
In 2000, Shelley Long took a supporting role in the Richard Gere film, Dr. T and the Women.
In 2002 she reprised her role as Carol Brady in The Brady Bunch in the White House.
In the early and mid 2000's Shelley Long guest starred on several sitcoms such as 8 Simple Rules where she played John Ratzenberger's wife, and Yes, Dear where she and Alan Thicke portrayed a snobby couple interested in buying the house next door to Greg and Kim.

[edit] Emmy Award Nominations

For successful Emmy Awards, see the Infobox.
Unsuccessful Emmy nominations were :
- 1984 - Outstanding Lead Actress - Comedy Series - Cheers
- 1985 - Outstanding Lead Actress - Comedy Series - Cheers
- 1986 - Outstanding Lead Actress - Comedy Series - Cheers
[edit] Golden Globe Awards
[edit] Personal Life
In 1979, while pursuing her acting career, Shelley Long met securities broker Bruce Tyson, whom she married in October 1981. She gave birth to her only child, her daughter Juliana on March 27, 1985.
In 2004, after 23 years of marriage, Bruce Tyson filed for divorce.
Shelley Long was prescribed both pain pills and an analgesic patch to help deal with a back injury. On November 16, 2004, she overdosed on prescription painkillers and was admitted to UCLA Hospital for treatment, in what was an apparent suicide attempt.
She continues to work as an actress but in January, 2007, was admitted to an outpatient mental treatment facility. The T.V. show The Insider listed her condition as delusional. [1]
In a cruel twist of fate, Shelley is now classed by many as a fallen star or a 'has-been'. After her departure from the show [which many say was a fatal career move] that made her she never recaptured her fame again and went to become a guest star in TV shows. She went from been a household name in the 1980s to be virtually unrecognizable or B list celebrity today as the younger generation wouldn't know who she is and plenty more have forgotten her.
[edit] Trivia
Her name appeared in multiple "Kids in the Hall" sketches.
[edit] Selected filmography
- Sorting It Out (1975-1978; TV-series) also writer and producer
- A Small Circle of Friends (1980)
- Caveman (1981)
- Night Shift (1982)
- Cheers (1982-1987, 1993; TV-series)
- Losin' It (1983)
- Irreconcilable Differences (1984)
- The Money Pit (1986)
- Outrageous Fortune (1987)
- Hello Again (1987)
- Troop Beverly Hills (1989)
- Don't Tell Her It's Me (1990)
- Frozen Assets (1992)
- The Brady Bunch Movie (1995)
- Freaky Friday (1995; TV-movie)
- Susie Q (1996)
- A Very Brady Sequel (1996)
- Dr. T & the Women (2000)
- The Brady Bunch in the White House (2002; TV-movie)
- The Last Guy on Earth (2006) (post production)
[edit] References
- ^ "'Cheers' Star ODs in Apparent Suicide Try" November 27, 2004 New York Post story on Fox News site