We lost a comedic icon on this date in 1989, when ovarian cancer took Gilda Radner from us far too early. Bob Sirott dug into his ‘Dumpster of Memories’ to grab an interview he did with the Second ...
"Saturday Night Live" launched the careers of some of comedy's biggest stars, including Gilda Radner. Remembering the comedian is the mission of a new documentary, "Love, Gilda." Her brave but losing ...
The director of the Emmy-nominated documentary Love, Gilda says a previously unknown film script written by the late Gilda Radner could soon make the rounds in Hollywood. “She left behind a screenplay ...
Gilda Radner, the funniest woman on television in the 1970s, got hired by Lorne Michaels for what was originally called NBC’s Saturday Night before anybody else — before John Belushi, before Chevy ...
I arrived in America in 1994, so for the longest time all I really knew about Gilda Radner was the Gilda’s Club near Film Forum, downtown in New York City. I knew it was named for a famous comedian ...
Gilda Radnor was a comedy legend who has influenced countless comedic actors, male and female alike. Yet as the first person cast for Saturday Night Live in 1975, she effortlessly solidified a place ...
As a chubby child and, later, a cancer patient, Gilda Radner found that laughter kept the world at bay. “I would use comedy to be in control of my situation,” Radner says in the new movie “Love, Gilda ...
Younger generations might not recognize the characters popularized by comedian Gilda Radner. Nor might they remember Radner herself, an original cast member of "Saturday Night Live" who died 23 years ...
Gilda Radner on Saturday Night Live in 1977. Photo: NBC/NBC via Getty Images I’ve seen in other interviews that you volunteered for Gilda’s Club and that ultimately led to you making the documentary.
Gilda Radner, the funniest woman on television in the 1970s, got hired by Lorne Michaels for what was originally called “NBC’s Saturday Night” before anybody else — before John Belushi, before Chevy ...
Hillary Johnson sues over "Love, Gilda," alleging that 1987 tapes reflect her creativity and skill as an interviewer. By Eriq Gardner Former Legal Editor-at-Large In a new lawsuit that is hardly ...
Gilda Radner, the funniest woman on television in the 1970s, got hired by Lorne Michaels for what was originally called “NBC’s Saturday Night” before anybody else — before John Belushi, before Chevy ...