Born January 26, 1958 in Metairie, LA, DeGeneres worked a variety of odd jobs in the New Orleans area after high school and before making her standup debut in 1981 at an area coffeehouse's amateur hour. A year later, she won a "Funniest Person in America" competition sponsored by the Showtime cable network. Buoyed by her success, DeGeneres moved to San Francisco -- at the time a hotbed of standup clubs -- and launched a comedy career largely steeped in observational humor. However, it was a more personal tour de force, a telephone conversation with God inspired by the accidental death of her girlfriend, which became the centerpiece of her act and won her an invitation to perform on NBC's The #Tonight Show in 1986; DeGeneres was so well-received that host Johnny Carson invited her over to sit on the studio set's couch, a career-making boost for any comedian. (She was the first female comic ever to earn the invitation during her debut appearance on the program.)
Within months, DeGeneres was a headliner on the national standup circuit, and she soon starred on a number of cable specials. In 1988, she accepted a supporting role on the Fox sitcom #Duet, and as her stature as a comic continued to grow, she was besieged by other television offers. After rejecting a role on the series which became the blockbuster #Friends, she accepted a starring role in the sitcom #These Friends of Mine, a series clearly modelled on the success of #Seinfeld. By the following season, the show had undergone a complete supporting cast overhaul and also received a new title, #Ellen. While not the smash many expected the program to be, DeGeneres became a star; she headlined a romantic film comedy, 1996's #Mr. Wrong, and even authored a best-selling book, -My Point...And I Do Have One. She also recorded a comedy LP, Taste This. However, nothing in DeGeneres' career ever earned so many headlines or sparked so much controversy as the decision to out her #Ellen TV character as a lesbian, the first homosexual lead character ever depicted in an ongoing series. At the peak of the media frenzy, the real-life DeGeneres also admitted to being gay in a -Time magazine cover story, ending months of media speculation. She began hosting a talk show in 2003, earning consistently high ratings and dozens of Daytime Emmy awards. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi