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{{Infobox Television | {{Infobox Television | ||
| show_name = Gilmore Girls | | show_name = Gilmore Girls |
Revision as of 17:39, 2 August 2006
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Gilmore Girls | |
---|---|
Created by | Amy Sherman-Palladino |
Starring | Lauren Graham Alexis Bledel Melissa McCarthy Scott Patterson Keiko Agena Yanic Truesdale Liza Weil Sean Gunn Matt Czuchry Kelly Bishop Edward Herrmann |
Opening theme | "Where You Lead" by Carole King & Louise Goffin |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 131 (May 9 2006) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Amy Sherman-Palladino Daniel Palladino Gavin Polone |
Running time | 42 minutes (60 with commercials) |
Original release | |
Network | The WB (2000-2006) The CW (2006-) |
Release | October 5, 2000 – present |
Gilmore Girls is an hour-long American television drama/comedy that has aired since 2000. It is broadcast on The WB network in the United States and in dozens of other markets. Amy Sherman-Palladino created the show and served as its executive producer with husband Daniel Palladino until the end of the sixth season.
The show has been renewed for a seventh season, and will move to The CW in the 2006-2007 TV season. The CW is a merger of two networks (UPN and WB) that is co-owned by CBS and Time Warner. David S. Rosenthal, the current executive producer of the show, will take over as show-runner in the wake of the Palladinos' depature. The traditional time slot of the series, Tuesdays at 8 pm Eastern/7 pm Central, will remain unchanged with the move to The CW.
The show follows single mother, Lorelai Victoria Gilmore (Lauren Graham), and her daughter, Lorelai "Rory" Leigh Gilmore (Alexis Bledel), in the fictional town of Stars Hollow, Connecticut, roughly thirty minutes from Hartford. The series explores family, generational divides, and friendship, set in a close-knit small town with many quirky characters. Currently, the most significant of those characters is Luke Danes (Scott Patterson), to whom Lorelai is engaged and in whose diner the characters often meet.
Gilmore Girls features intricate, extremely fast-paced dialogue, with numerous modern pop culture references, along with many other references to politics and high culture. It also has specific perspectives on social class, represented most regularly by Lorelai's sometimes contentious relationships with her wealthy blue-blooded parents. The show's wit and character-based humor have won it a loyal following of both critics and viewers.
History
The pilot episode of Gilmore Girls received financial support from the script development fund of the Family Friendly Programming Forum. It was the first network show to reach the air with help from funding provided by that organization, which includes some of the nation's leading advertisers.
The show was not a ratings success initially, airing in the tough Thursday 8pm/7pm Central timeslot dominated by Survivor and Friends in its first season, but has grown a following that eventually saw it outdraw its timeslot competitor, popular series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, in the ratings after it moved to Tuesday nights in September 2001 in the wake of Buffy's move to UPN, along with Sunday night encores of the first season in 2001-2002 under the banner Gilmore Girls Beginnings. Several of the writers of Buffy have been prolific writers on Gilmore Girls.
In its fifth season, Gilmore Girls blossomed into The WB's second most watched primetime show, with a fan base which grew by double digits in all major demographics , though it remains strongest among girls and women. The show has also been syndicated, and airs exclusively on the ABC Family Channel. Re-airing the original episodes in their original order, the ABC Family repeats opened the show to viewers who missed its original WB showings. The ABC Family reruns have earned the new episodes airing on The WB/CW an even larger audience.
By the time of its fifth season, Gilmore Girls received an American Film Institute Award and two Viewers for Quality Television Awards, and was named New Program of the Year by the Television Critics Association.
The WB was originally going to air a spin-off featuring Jess Mariano as the main character, called Windward Circle, in which he gets to know his estranged father better and befriends a bunch of California skateboarders. (The Gilmore Girls episode 3.21 "Here Comes the Son" acted as the pilot for the show.) However, the network cancelled the show before it aired, citing high production costs to shoot on location in Venice Beach as the reason.
The show's actors have received many awards for their work on the series. Lauren Graham was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series and received two consecutive nominations for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series from the Screen Actors Guild and won two Family Television Awards along with a Teen Choice Award for Best TV Mom; and yet against much outcry from the fans, she has yet to be nominated for an Emmy. Alexis Bledel has won a Young Artist Award and a Family Television Award. The series also won a Family Television Award for New Series, and was named Best Family TV Drama Series by the Young Artist Awards.
The first season was released on DVD on May 4, 2004; the second season was released on December 7, 2004, the third on May 3, 2005, the fourth season was released on September 27, 2005, and the fifth season was released on December 13, 2005. All five seasons are framed in the traditional NTSC 4:3 format on the DVD box sets, despite the series transitioning to HDTV 16:9 framing in the fourth season; this was an artistic decision made by Sherman-Palladino to present the program as she visualizes it.
The sixth season of the series is tentatively scheduled for release on DVD on September 19, one week before the season premiere for the 7th season on September 26 . It is currently unknown if this season set will also be framed in 4:3 with Sherman-Palladino's departure from the series .
Plot
Further information: List of Gilmore Girls episodesLorelai's conflict with her wealthy parents is central to the back-story for the series. Her headstrong mother, Emily (Kelly Bishop), and her father, Richard (Edward Herrmann), had high hopes for their only child, Lorelai. At the age of sixteen, she was a college-bound student attending an elite prep school. Lorelai dashed their hopes, however, by becoming a teenage mother, without marrying Rory's father, Christopher (David Sutcliffe) (a match approved of by everyone but Lorelai). Lorelai ran away from home when Rory was about a year old. Lorelai supported herself and Rory by working as a maid at the Independence Inn in a small town about half an hour away from her parents' house. Lorelai eventually becomes general manager of the inn, her position at the start of the series, and tries to minimize her parents' contact with Rory.
The first season of the show begins with 16-year-old Rory's acceptance to Chilton, an elite prep school in Hartford, Connecticut. Lorelai knows that she cannot afford the high cost of tuition and reluctantly decides to ask her parents for help. They give her a loan on the condition that Rory and Lorelai must join Emily and Richard for dinner at their Hartford mansion every Friday evening.
Lorelai's various romantic entanglements also play a role in the show. Her relationship with Luke Danes (Scott Patterson) finally grows from friendship to a romantic relationship at the end of the fourth season, and they get engaged in the sixth season premiere. Prior relationships included Max Medina (Scott Cohen), Rory's Chilton English teacher, to whom she was engaged, as well as Jason "Digger" Stiles, Richard's much younger business partner. Lorelai's periodic reconnections with Christopher, another child of a wealthy family and Rory's father, also play a part in the series.
Lorelai's career as the manager of The Independence Inn is pivotal to the first few seasons of the show, as well as her aspirations to open an inn of her own. After years of planning, she and her best friend, chef Sookie St. James (Melissa McCarthy), open their own property, the Dragonfly Inn. Sookie and Lorelai are joined at the Dragonfly by their co-worker Michel Gerard (Yanic Truesdale), a Frenchman with attitude to spare.
Rory's coming of age is complicated by her close relationship with her mother. Rory is fifteen in the first episode (although Lorelai says she is sixteen in the pilot, she celebrates her sixteenth birthday several episodes later). She and Lorelai regard each other more as best friends than mother and daughter. Rory's burgeoning adulthood and occasional need to pull away begin to complicate this relationship, although the closeness between them remains a constant on the show.
Rory's academic aspirations also complicate matters. Rory had wanted to attend Harvard University since kindergarten; to achieve this she transfers to the private (fictional) Chilton Academy from the public Stars Hollow High at the beginning of her sophomore year. There, she encounters an unfamiliar world filled with rich and high-strung peers. Rory ultimately decides to go to Yale, her grandfather's alma mater, after making extensive pro and con lists and receiving her mother's blessing.
Paying for Rory's education is another recurring theme of the series that binds the main characters. Lorelai repays her parents' loan for Chilton just before Rory's graduation, but weeks later discovers Yale is not offering any financial aid for Rory, putting her education in financial jeopardy once again. This time, Rory goes to the elder Gilmores and asks for tuition money, once again in exchange for the continuance of the Friday night dinners. Emily and Richard agree and continue to pay for Yale until the spring semester of Rory's junior year, when Rory's father, Christopher, begins paying her tuition. This creates tensions with her grandparents, but ultimately the Friday night dinner tradition continues.
As with Lorelai, Rory's romantic attractions also play a part in the show. Rory meets Dean Forrester (Jared Padalecki) during the first season and maintains a relationship with him for the first two seasons. She does break up with Dean briefly in the first season, when Rory isn't able to say "I love you." It is during this time apart that Rory kisses Tristan Dugrey (Chad Michael Murray), a boy she has a love-hate relationship with at Chilton. However, by the end of the season, she is back together with Dean. She meets Luke's nephew, Jess Mariano (Milo Ventimiglia), during the second season. They become friends, but their relationship grows, and Rory kisses Jess in the second season finale. Early in the third season, Rory is torn between Dean and Jess, but she chooses Jess and remains with him throughout the third season. In season four, after Rory and Jess break up, she has a fling with now-married Dean, which ultimately ends his marriage and creates a short-lived rift between her and her mother. At Yale, Rory becomes involved with Logan Huntzberger (Matt Czuchry), an underachiever whose wealthy family owns a newspaper empire and immediately disapproves of Rory. Logan's father, the infamous Mitchum Huntzberger, hires Rory as an intern. His crushingly negative evaluation of her work leads to her leaving Yale temporarily at the end of the fifth season.
In the sixth season premiere, Lorelai and Rory are estranged and Rory is living with her grandparents. She is taking time off from college and serving community service for stealing a yacht with Logan. Eventually, the mother and daughter reunite after Jess makes her realize her mistake. Logan gets upset at Rory and leaves without resolution. Rory then returns to Yale for the spring semester of the 2005-2006 school year. Lorelai, who is now engaged to Luke, is frustrated by his keeping his newly-discovered daughter (April) from her, and their relationship is on the rocks. Rory's relationship with Logan is on-again-off-again, after she attends the wedding of Logan's sister to discover that he slept with some of the bridesmaids during their brief "break up" earlier in season 6. The next episode, Rory takes Logan back, although she has not forgiven him. Logan leaves for three days on a Life and Death Brigade event. Meanwhile, Rory visits former love interest Jess and kisses him and apologizes because she loves Logan. During the trip Logan is seriously injured. Rory takes care of Logan after his accident, and their relationship is repaired.
At the end of the season six finale, Logan leaves for London to work for his father's newspaper. Rory confronts Mitchum Huntzberger about sending Logan away and he tells her it is time for Logan to grow up. She does not disagree and later she and Logan have a tearful farewell. Meanwhile, Lorelai is upset with Luke when he refuses to elope. She spends the night with Christopher and the episode ends with a shot of her in bed with him.
Rory's friendships with long-time best friend Lane Kim (Keiko Agena)—a first-generation Korean American from a strict background—and Paris Geller (Liza Weil), a friend/rival at both Chilton and Yale, are also themes in the show. Template:Endspoiler
Characters
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Main characters
- Lorelai Victoria Gilmore (Lauren Graham)
- Lorelai is the young and single mother of Rory, with whom she shares a unique bond. The two are often more like best friends than mother and daughter. Lorelai owns her inn, The Dragonfly, with her best friend Sookie St. James-Melville. She is in a difficult relationship with long-time friend turned love-interest Luke Danes.
- Lorelai "Rory" Leigh Gilmore (Alexis Bledel)
- Rory is a quick-witted teenager, who prefers studying and hanging out with her mother. She attends Yale University, and wants to become a foreign correspondent/journalist like Christiane Amanpour. She is in a long distance relationship with Logan Huntzberger who is spending the year in London. In the past, she has also had relationships with Dean Forester and Jess Mariano.
- Luke Danes (Scott Patterson)
- Luke owns a diner in Stars Hollow, which used to be his father's hardware store. He's kind, giving, and willing to help out anyone, if they ask for it or not. And though he had a few decent relationships, and even got married once, he longed to be with Lorelai, and now is. Luke has a daughter from a previous relationship which may or may not break up his and Lorelai's engagement.
- Sookie St. James-Belleville (Melissa McCarthy)
- Sookie is the clumsy, but brilliant chef of the Dragonfly Inn. She marries the Inn's vegetable supplier, Jackson Melville, and they have two children, Davey and Martha. She now co-owns the Dragonfly Inn with Lorelai after the Independence Inn is sold after Lorelai talks to the long-distance owner about opening her own inn.
- Lane Kim (Keiko Agena)
- Lane is Rory's best friend. She was raised in a strict Seventh Day Adventist household, learning that even the Cookie Monster is a sin (gluttony). But secretly she loves everything that is rock'n roll and full of calories. She is in a band called "Hep Alien" (an anagram of producer Helen Pai's name) and is married to a fellow band member.
- Michel Gerard (Yanic Truesdale)
- Michel is the Independence Inn's French concierge. He's extremely health conscious and sarcastic. Michel is now the manager of the Dragonfly.
- Emily Gilmore (Kelly Bishop)
- Emily is Lorelai's nosy, rich mother. She's continuously trying to rebuild her relationship with her daughter, but isn't quite able to get along with her. She cares for her family, but often tries to do something that's "best" for them that they don't agree to.
- Richard Gilmore (Edward Herrmann)
- Richard, Lorelai's father, is an avid businessman. He has trouble communicating with Lorelai, like his wife, but has a special relationship with Rory.
Supporting characters
- Paris Geller (Liza Weil) (seasons 2-6, recurring previously)
- Kirk Gleason (Sean Gunn) (seasons 3-6, recurring seasons 1 and 2)
- Dean Forrester (Jared Padalecki) (seasons 1 - 3, recurring seasons 4 and 5)
- Jess Mariano (Milo Ventimiglia) (seasons 2 and 3, seasons 4 and 6)
- Jason "Digger" Stiles (Chris Eigeman) (season 4)
- Logan Huntzberger (Matt Czuchry) (seasons 6, recurring season 5)
Recurring characters
- Babette Dell - Sally Struthers
- Patricia "Miss Patty" LaCosta - Liz Torres
- Mrs. Kim - (Lane's mom) Emily Kuroda
- Town troubadour - Grant-Lee Phillips
- Morey Dell - Ted Rooney
- Jackson Belleville - Jackson Douglas
- Taylor Doose - (owner of Doose's market & the soda shoppe) Michael Winters
- Christopher Hayden (Rory's father) - David Sutcliffe
- Andrew - (book store owner) Mike Gandolfi
- Tristan DuGrey - Chad Michael Murray (2000 - 2001)
- Brad Langford - Adam Wylie (2001 - 2003)
- Louise Grant - Teal Redmann (2000 - 2004)
- Madeline Lynn - Shelly Cole (2000 - 2004)
- Headmaster Charleston - Dakin Matthews (2000 - 2004)
- Straub Hayden, Rory's paternal grand father - Peter Michael Goetz (2001, 2003)
- Francine Hayden, Rory's paternal grandmother - Cristine Rose (2001, 2003)
- Gypsy -(car repairer) Rose Abdoo (2002 - )
- Dave Rygalski (Lane's bandmate and ex-boyfriend) - Adam Brody (2002 - 2003)
- Zach (Lane's bandmate and husband) - Todd Lowe (2002 - )
- Brian (Lane's bandmate) - John Cabrera (2002 - )
- Gil (Lane's bandmate) - Sebastian Bach (2003 - )
- Liz Danes (Luke's sister and Jess' mother) - Kathleen Wilhoite (2003 - )
- T.J. aka Gary (Luke's brother-in-law) - Michael DeLuise (2003 - )
- Lulu - (Kirk's girlfriend) Rini Bell (2003 - )
- Lindsay Lister - (Dean's ex-wife) Arielle Kebbel (2003 - 2004)
- Marty - Wayne Wilcox (2003-2005,2006-)
- Nicole Leahy - Tricia O'Kelley (2003 - 2004)
- Mitchum Huntzberger (Logan's newspaper-mogul father) - Gregg Henry (2005 - )
- Shira Huntzberger - Leann Hunley (2005 - )
- Honor Huntzberger - (Logan's sister) Devon Sorvari (2005 - )
- Colin McCrae - Alan Loayza (2005 - )
- Finn - Tanc Sade (2005 - )
- Stephanie - Katherine Bailess (2005 - )
- Robert (Grimaldi) - Nick Holmes (2005 - )
- Max Medina - Scott Cohen (2000 - 2003)
- Kyon (Exchange student living with Mrs. Kim) - Susane Lee - (2004 - )
- Francine Jarvis (Paris and Rory's enemy, Senior class president) - Emily Bergl (2001 - 2003)
Guest stars
- Mädchen Amick played Sherry Tinsdale, Christopher's former girlfriend and mother of his second child.
- Alex Borstein played Drella, the inn's harpist in season one, and returned in subsequent seasons as Emily's wardrobe advisor, Miss Celine. Borstein played Sookie in the series' original pilot; her real-life husband, Jackson Douglas, plays Sookie's on-screen husband.
- Joel Gion of the band Brian Jonestown Massacre played a tambourine-playing addition to Hep Alien in a reference to the film DiG!. (In the film, BJM brawls with themselves in front of record company reps at a showcase at the Viper Room, much like Hep Alien does in the episode.)
- Carole King played music store owner Sophie Bloom and also is the composer of the opening theme for the show.
- Norman Mailer, Madeleine Albright, U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-California), former Rep. Doug Ose (R-California), and Paul Anka have appeared as themselves.
- Traci Lords played Emily's interior decorator, Natalie Zimmermann.
- Bruce McCulloch (The Kids in the Hall) played Tobin, night manager of the Independence Inn.
- Marion Ross played Lorelai 'Trix' Gilmore, Richard's mother (now deceased), and her niece Marilyn.
- Michael York played Yale professor/author Asher Flemming, a love interest to the undergraduate Paris (40 years his junior) in the fourth season. The character passed away from a heart attack off-screen before season five.
- Sherilyn Fenn played Anna Nardini, Luke's ex-girlfriend and mother of his daughter, April (Vanessa Marano); Fenn played a separate character, Sasha, the girlfriend of Jess' father, Jimmy (Rob Estes) in a 2003 episode largely set in California that was a backdoor pilot for a Jess-centric series (Windward Circle) that was not picked up.
- Brandon Routh (the new Superman in Superman Returns) made a minor appearance in a 2001 episode, playing a boy at a Bangles concert who attracted the attention of Madeline and Louise, and the indifference of Paris and Rory; he is credited as "BJ Routh" in the episode's credits.
- Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon of noise-rock band Sonic Youth play troubadours in the season 6 finale, along with their daughter Coco Gordon Moore.
Cultural references
In addition to its fast-paced dialogue, Gilmore Girls is also known for the amount of cultural references made by the characters. The references, which may point to anything from movies, television shows, music and books to quotes from celebrities, are frequently quite obscure and thus seem to be understood only by the characters, reinforcing the image of their quick wit.
To help the viewer understand what the characters are talking about, The WB has included "Gilmore-isms" booklets in the DVD sets of the seasons (except for season five, where purchasers of that set were referred to the site below). The booklets contain "the 411 on many of the show's pop culture references", along with comments from the show creators.
The "Gilmore-isms" booklets for seasons 2-5 can also be found on the series' DVD promotional website; the booklet files are in PDF format.
Music
Music plays a large part in the show. Most of the main or recurring characters on the show have had their musical tastes revealed at one time or another. Lorelai famously likes '80s music like that of The Bangles and The Go-Go's as well as Metallica, but Rory credits her with introducing her to new books and music throughout her life, and she and Rory often swap CDs. As we find out in 5th season Rory doesn't like the famous American singer Bob Dylan.
Lane is a true audiophile, and her list of musical influences ran to five pages when she was writing her "drummer-seeks-rock-band" ad. David Bowie, the Ramones, Jackson Browne (Lane: "Ah, see, cool people know that he’s more than a mellow hippie-dippy folkie, that he actually wrote some of Nico’s best songs and was in fact her lover before he bored us with 'Doctor My Eyes.' That will separate the poseurs from the non-poseurs." —Season 3, Ep. 3 "Application Anxiety"), the Accelerators , The Adverts, Agent Orange, the Angelic Upstarts, and the Agnostic Front. Template:TV quote Lane's band, Hep Alien, plays rock with different influences, and Sebastian Bach, formerly of Skid Row, plays Gil, the band's guitarist.
The Bangles made a guest appearance in the Season 1 episode "Concert Interruptus" while The Shins guest-starred in the Season 4 episode "Girls in Bikinis, Boys Doin' the Twist" (also, their 2000 single "Know Your Onion!" is heard in season two "Like Mother, Like Daughter", while their album "Chutes Too Narrow" later appears). Carole King, who re-recorded her 1971 song "Where You Lead" as a duet with her daughter Louise Goffin as the Gilmore Girls theme song, appears occasionally as music store owner Sophie. The original score to the show is performed by Sam Phillips. Grant-Lee Phillips appears in at least one episode per season (up to season 6) as Grant, the town troubadour. Kim Gordon & Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth appeared in the 6th season finale along with their daughter Coco. The famous singer Paul Anka appeared in season 6th as himself in the episode "The Real Paul Anka". Joel Gion, formerly of The Brian Jonestown Massacre, also appeared in an episode, playing tambourine for Zack's side project while Hep Alien is on hiatus.
In 2002, a soundtrack to the show was released by Rhino Records, entitled Our Little Corner of the World: Music from Gilmore Girls. The CD cover of the album features anecdotes from show producers Amy Sherman-Palladino and Daniel Palladino covering the large part music has played in their lives.
Food and drink
Food is another important part of the show. Lorelai and Rory are coffee addicts and they love all kinds of junk food. (Actually, actress Alexis Bledel hates coffee. What is truly in her coffee mug is soda, tea, water, or nothing at all.
- Luke: So what'll you have?
- Lorelai: Coffee, in a vat.
- Rory: I'll have coffee also. And chili fries.
- Luke: That's quite a refined palate you got there.
- —Season 1, Ep. 1 "The Pilot Episode"
- Luke: Coffee?
- Lorelai: You have to ask?
- — Season 2, Ep. 4 "The Road Trip To Harvard"
It is a running gag that the two of them can eat copious amounts of junk food but never seem to gain weight. When they aren't eating at Luke's Diner or having refined Friday night dinners at Emily and Richard's they often order pizza or take-out Chinese food. Sookie, the chef at the Inn, is very passionate about cooking and often obsesses over the menu. Lane Kim's mother, Mrs. Kim, is a fan of health food, and Luke's healthy eating habits are sometimes contrasted with Lorelai's junk-food diet.
DVDs
Release dates
Season | Region 1
North America |
Region 2
United Kingdom |
Region 4
Australia |
---|---|---|---|
One | May 4, 2004 | February 6, 2006 | April 5, 2006 |
Two | December 7, 2004 | March 13, 2006 | April 5, 2006 |
Three | May 3, 2005 | July 17, 2006 | July 5, 2006 |
Four | September 27, 2005 | TBA | July 5, 2006 |
Five | December 13, 2005 | TBA | September 13, 2006 |
Six | September 19, 2006 | TBA | TBA |
Cover art
The cover art for each Gilmore Girls box set has so far been the same for all regions.
- Season One Season One
- Season Two Season Two
- Season Three Season Three
- Season Four Season Four
- Season Five Season Five
- Season Six Season Six
International broadcasts
- Austria - ORF 1
- Brazil - Warner Channel ; SBT, title in Portuguese "Tal Mãe, Tal Filha" - "Like Mother, Like Daughter"
- Canada - Global Television Network
- Denmark - Kanal 4
- Germany - Vox
- Ireland - RTÉ 1/Hallmark Channel
- Italy - Italia 1, title in Italian "Una Mamma per Amica" - "A mother for a friend"
- Netherlands - Net 5
- Portugal - FOX and FOX Life, title in Portuguese "Tal Mãe, Tal Filha" - "Like Mother, Like Daughter"
- Sweden - Kanal 5
- UK - Nickelodeon/Hallmark Channel
- US - CW
External links
- Gilmore Girls official site
- Gilmore Girls at The WB's website
- WB's site for DVD sales — includes PDF versions of the DVDs' "Gilmore-isms" booklets.
- GilmoreGirls.org - fansite
- Gilmore Girls at IMDb
- Template:Tvtome show
- Recaps of All Episodes
- CW Network Introduction Announcement, featuring Gilmore Girls as one of the first shows considered for the new network