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Showing posts with label Betty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Betty. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Betty White voted America's most trusted celebrity: poll (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Seems like former "Golden Girls" actress Betty White really does have the Midas touch.

White, 89, is both the most popular and most trusted celebrity with Americans and the person most likely to drive up the business of a brand she might choose to endorse, according to a poll released on Wednesday.

But the Reuters/Ipsos poll suggested that companies should stay away from Paris Hilton and Charlie Sheen if they want to promote their products.

The socialite and reality TV actress, and the fired "Two and A Half Men" star topped the list of the most unpopular and least trusted personalities and were deemed most likely to damage any brands they choose to support.

White, the only surviving member of the key cast members of TV's "Golden Girls" 1980s comedy, has enjoyed a career resurgence in the last few years as a saucy senior in films like "The Proposal" and the TV show "Hot in Cleveland".

She also won an Emmy Award last year for hosting satirical sketch show "Saturday Night Live".

White scored an 86 percent favorable opinion in the Reuters/Ipsos poll, beating Oscar winners Denzel Washington, Sandra Bullock and Clint Eastwood in the survey of the 100 most popular personalities. She easily edged out Britain's Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton (5th), Oprah Winfrey (6th), and U.S. first lady Michelle Obama (15th) in the most trusted personalities ranking.

Some 44 percent of those questioned said they would be more likely to do business with a company if White endorsed it.

At the other extreme, 54 percent of the 2,012 Americans questioned for the poll said they would trust a company less if it were endorsed by Sheen, with Hilton coming in second.

Pop star Britney Spears, actor Mel Gibson and golfer Tiger Woods -- who lost several major endorsements after his 2009 sex scandal -- also fared badly.

Below is a list of the top 10 most popular personalities with their "favorable" rating by percentage of voters.

1. Betty White ...........86 pct favorable

2. Denzel Washington .....85 pct

3. Sandra Bullock ........84 pct

4. Clint Eastwood ........83 pct

5. Tom Hanks .............81 pct

6. Harrison Ford .........80 pct tie 7. Morgan Freeman ........79 pct tie 7. Kate Middleton ........79 pct

9. Will Smith ............77 pct

10. Johnny Depp ...........76 pct

Below is a list of the top 10 most unpopular personalities with their "unfavorable" rating by percentage of voters.

1. Paris Hilton ..........60 pct unfavorable

2. Charlie Sheen .........52 pct tie 3. Britney Spears ........45 pct tie 4. Kanye West ............45 pct

5. Arnold Schwarzenegger..44 pct

6. Tiger Woods ...........42 pct

7. Kim Kardashian ........38 pct

8. Mel Gibson ............33 pct

9. Donald Trump ..........31 pct

10. LeBron James ..........29 pct

The full Reuters/Ipsos poll can be seen at http://www.ipsos-na.com/news-polls/ or http://www.ipsos-na.com/news-polls/pressrelease.aspx?id=5306

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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Thursday, July 14, 2011

Betty Ford body flown to Michigan for burial (AFP)

LOS ANGELES (AFP) – The body of former US first lady Betty Ford was flown Wednesday from California to Michigan, where she is to be buried next to her husband, former president Gerald Ford.

A day after three former US first ladies attended a funeral service in Palm Desert, California, a motorcade took her casket to Palm Springs airport for the flight by C-32 military aircraft to Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Her body will lie in repose Wednesday evening and Thursday morning at the Gerald R. Ford Museum in Michigan, before being interred next to her late husband, who died in 2006.

On Tuesday, former first ladies Hillary Clinton, Nancy Reagan and Rosalynn Carter, as well as current First Lady Michelle Obama and former president George W. Bush, attended a service for Ford, who died last week aged 93.

Ex-president Bill Clinton was to have been at the California service, but was prevented by a mechanical problem with his plane in New York, and was expected to pay his respects in Michigan.

Ford, who co-founded the Betty Ford center in Rancho Mirage, California, in 1982 after suffering from cancer and addiction problems herself, died on Friday at the nearby Eisenhower Medical Center.

President Barack Obama led tributes to her last week, praising her "courage and compassion" for speaking openly about her fight with breast cancer and drug and alcohol addiction, and then working to help others battle their demons.


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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Former US first ladies pay respects to Betty Ford (AFP)

PALM DESERT, California (AFP) – Three former US first ladies including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton joined mourners Tuesday at a funeral service for Betty Ford, the widow of president Gerald Ford who died last week.

Former US president George W. Bush also attended the service in Palm Desert, California, along with Nancy Reagan and Jimmy Carter's widow Rosalynn to remember the co-founder of the Betty Ford drug and alcohol addiction center.

Ex-president Bill Clinton was to have flown in, but was prevented by a mechanical problem with his plane in New York, and will travel to another service in Michigan where Ford's body will be taken Wednesday, reports said.

"Millions of women are in her debt today" because of leadership on early detection of breast cancer," said Rosalynn Carter, who gave the first eulogy with Bush, Clinton and Reagan sitting in the front row.

Recalling how her relationship with Ford could have been awkward after her husband, Jimmy Carter, succeeded Gerald Ford in the White House in January, 1977, Carter said: "She was just Betty, as gracious as always."

"Her example also helped me recover from Jimmy's loss in 1980," when Carter was beaten by Ronald Reagan, and "showed me that there is life after the White House," she added, paying tribute to "this truly remarkable woman."

Ford, who co-founded the Betty Ford center in Rancho Mirage, California, in 1982 after suffering from cancer and addiction problems herself, died on Friday aged 93 at the nearby Eisenhower Medical Center.

Ford's body was due to lie in repose later Tuesday at St. Margaret's Church in Palm Desert, near Palm Springs southeast of Los Angeles, before being transferred on Wednesday to Grand Rapids, Michigan.

In Grand Rapids, her body will also lie in repose before being interred on Thursday next to that of her husband, former president Gerald Ford who died in 2006.

President Barack Obama led tributes to her last week, praising her "courage and compassion" for speaking openly about her fight with breast cancer and drug and alcohol addiction, and then working to help others battle their demons.

His wife Michelle, who traveled to California, made no public remarks at the public service Tuesday, which followed a private memorial for her family. Neither did Reagan or president Bush.

The director of the Betty Ford Center paid tribute to her on Monday, underlining her dedication to treatment which changed the lives of countless people.

"An 11-year-old girl from Los Angeles wrote Mrs. Ford and said, 'My tummy hurts really bad whenever my mom is drinking,'" John Schwarzlose wrote on the Center's website.

Recalling how former patients would come to thank Ford, he added: "She would smile, look into their eyes and say, 'You did this. You decided you didn't have to continue living that old life. You deserve everything you have today.'"


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Sunday, July 10, 2011

Betty Ford to get Calif. memorial, Mich. burial (AP)

By SHAYA TAYEFE MOHAJER and ANTHONY MCCARTNEY, Associated Press Shaya Tayefe Mohajer And Anthony Mccartney, Associated Press – 1 hr 56 mins ago

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. – Before she is laid to rest, Betty Ford will be memorialized in the Southern California desert region she and her rehab center made world famous by treating a stream of spiraling Hollywood stars.

Rancho Mirage was already a billionaires' playground, but Ford's center made it a household name as it provided help to luminaries from ranging from Elizabeth Taylor to Lindsay Lohan.

Tributes poured in Saturday from A-listers and average residents alike in the desert golf community where Ford settled with husband former President Gerald Ford after he left office more than three decades ago.

She died of natural causes at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage on Friday at age 93, family attorney and spokesman Greg Willard said.

She will be memorialized Tuesday in California's Coachella Valley, which includes Rancho Mirage, before her casket travels by motorcade and military transport for a private burial Thursday alongside her husband in Grand Rapids, Mich., at the Gerald R. Ford Museum.

In Rancho Mirage, residents were saddened by her death even as they praised her devotion to removing the stigma from addiction. The Betty Ford Center treated more than 90,000 people since its beginnings in 1982 and although it was most famous for a string of celebrity patients, it kept its rates relatively affordable and provided a model for effective addiction treatment.

She revealed her own longtime addiction to painkillers and alcohol 15 months after leaving the White House, and regularly welcomed new groups of patients to rehab with a speech that started, "Hello, my name's Betty Ford, and I'm an alcoholic and drug addict."

Carol Pruter, 67, said she was proud that Betty Ford chose to set up her rehab center in Rancho Mirage and admired Ford for making a point of reaching out to average people too, Pruter said.

"She let people know that people who aren't well-known can get addictions too. It's not something for a certain part of society, it's not something to hide," Pruter said as she stopped by a local coffee shop in Saturday's 104-degree desert heat.

Pruter's family attends St. Margaret's Episcopal Church in nearby Palm Desert, where the Fords also worshipped. The church will host a tribute service Tuesday to Mrs. Ford for friends and family, and a public visitation Tuesday evening.

Ford chose her close friend and fellow former First Lady Rosalynn Carter to eulogize her in California, along with journalist Cokie Roberts and a University of Michigan dean, Jeffrey MacKie-Mason.

Willard, who has served the family since 1975, recalled when the outspoken bosom buddies Ford and Carter went to Capitol Hill to lobby for mental health legislation.

"Several Senators and Congressmen have since observed that they have not seen a political force of nature as they did that day when they saw those women arm-in-arm in the halls of Congress," Willard said Saturday.

Other residents of the desert town reminisced about the celebrity cache that the Betty Ford Center brought to Rancho Mirage and the other desert cities in the Coachella Valley — but without the frenzy that so often accompanies the comings and goings of today's troubled stars.

"It's probably shallow to say, but I think it's really cool she was able to get celebrities here," said Pat Kellogg, who has lived in the area for 22 years.

Florist John Ballow for years has catered to Rancho Mirage's wealthy and famous, but there were few with whom he developed as close a relationship as the woman he reverentially calls "Mrs. Ford."

"I took this almost as bad as a member of my family dying — the world does not make Mrs. Fords anymore," said Ballow.

The city's annual Betty Ford Pro-Am Golf Tournament draws on the lush fairways to raise money for people who cannot afford addiction treatment.

The rest of the world, however, knew the rehab center's hometown primarily for its ties to Hollywood's elite, so much so that it became the punch line in discussions of celebrity overindulgence.

In 1996, Kelsey Grammer described to Jay Leno how his treatment at Betty Ford helped restore his joy of living. The comedian also quipped about the center's stature and its famous patients.

"When I was on my way to the Betty Ford Center, I turned to one of my friends and said, `You know, I've finally made it. I'm going to the Betty Ford Center,'" he said.

Grammer, however, also credited the center with saving his life as did many of the celebrities who honored Ford on Friday as news of her death spread, from Oscar-winner Marlee Matlin to "One Day at a Time" actress Mackenzie Phillips to Ali McGraw, who was treated at the center in 1986.

"She changed so many of our lives with her courage and intelligence, her honesty and humility, and her deep grace," McGraw said. "Her vision impacted my own life as few people have."

But Ford herself would have rejected the praise as she did in life, preferring instead to turn the attention back to the person who was struggling with the demons of addiction.

"People who get well often say, `You saved my life,' and `You've turned my life around,'" Ford once said. "They don't realize we merely provided the means for them to do it themselves, and that's all."

After the Tuesday service in California, Ford's casket will travel Wednesday to Gerald R. Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids, where she grew up, and where she met her husband of 58 years.

As in California, there will be another tribute service for family and friends at Grace Episcopal Church before a public visitation is held. Lynne Cheney, the wife of former vice president Dick Cheney, and history scholar Richard Norton Smith will give eulogies at the Michigan service.

_____

McCartney reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press Writers Gillian Flaccus and Chris Weber in Los Angeles contributed to this report.


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Saturday, July 9, 2011

Former US First Lady Betty Ford dies, aged 93 (AFP)

LOS ANGELES (AFP) – Former US First Lady Betty Ford died at the age of 93, drawing tributes for her inspiring role notably in helping treat drug and alcohol addicts at her California-based health center.

The widow of president Gerald Ford, who died in 2006, was also hailed for campaigning for breast cancer awareness and was outspoken on women's rights issues.

"Throughout her long and active life (Ford) distinguished herself through her courage and compassion. As our nation?s First Lady, she was a powerful advocate for women?s health and women?s rights," said President Barack Obama.

"After leaving the White House, Mrs. Ford helped reduce the social stigma surrounding addiction and inspired thousands to seek much-needed treatment," he added in a statement.

And he added: "While her death is a cause for sadness, we know that organizations such as the Betty Ford Center will honor her legacy by giving countless Americans a new lease on life."

Vice President Joseph Biden said he believed Betty Ford's work would live on "through the millions of lives she has touched" and many more people who will continue to look to her for inspiration.

Ford died Friday evening with family at her bedside, according to a family member cited by CNN. Former president George H.W. Bush said he and his wife Barbara "loved Betty Ford very much."

"She was a wonderful wife and mother; a great friend; and a courageous First Lady. No one confronted life's struggles with more fortitude or honesty, and as a result, we all learned from the challenges she faced.

Elizabeth "Betty" Ford turned her battles with two devastating illnesses -- breast cancer and drug and alcohol addiction -- into triumph as she overcame them and went on to help others follow suit.

Speaking openly about her fight with breast cancer and her dependence on prescription drugs and alcohol, Ford removed much of the stigma attached to both illnesses and aided others who were battling the same demons.

She notably helped create the renowned Betty Ford Center for alcohol and drug rehabilitation in Rancho Mirage, California, where tens of thousands have been treated since 1982.

Born Elizabeth Ann Bloomer on April 8, 1918 in Chicago, Ford, one of three children, grew up in Grand Rapids, Michigan and studied dance at Bennington College in Vermont.

She divorced her first husband, William Warren, after five years, and began dating then-Navy lieutenant Gerald Ford a short time later. The couple married on October 15, 1948, just two weeks before Gerald Ford was elected to Congress.

They lived in the Washington area for nearly three decades, as he climbed up the political ladder from the US Capitol to the White House.

Ford, who entered the White House after the resignation of Richard Nixon following the Watergate scandal, died on December 26, 2006, also at the age of 93.

Fellow former first lady Nancy Reagan said of Betty Ford: "She has been an inspiration to so many through her efforts to educate women about breast cancer and her wonderful work at the Betty Ford Center.

"She was Jerry Ford's strength through some very difficult days in our country?s history, and I admired her courage in facing and sharing her personal struggles with all of us," added the widow of president Ronald Reagan.

Obama added: "Today, we take comfort in the knowledge that Betty and her husband .. are together once more. Michelle and I send our thoughts and prayers to their children, Michael, John, Steven, and Susan.


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Betty Ford helped pave road to recovery for stars (AP)

By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer Anthony Mccartney, Ap Entertainment Writer – 1 hr 3 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – Long before it became reality show fodder, Betty Ford helped create the original celebrity rehab.

The center that bears her name has a legacy of rehabbing Hollywood's elite. In the process it became a household name, a punchline, but — above all — a highly respected addiction treatment center.

Since its opening in Rancho Mirage, Calif., in 1982, stars such as Elizabeth Taylor, Johnny Cash and, most recently, Lindsay Lohan have been among the more than 90,000 people who have received treatment at the center.

Taylor met one of her husbands, Larry Fortensky, while in treatment. Kelsey Grammer credited his stay there with saving his life. So, too, did Oscar-winner Marlee Matlin, who paid tribute to the former first lady on social networking site Twitter on Friday evening.

"She & Betty Ford Center helped me beat my addiction & she was an angel to many," Matlin wrote.

"One Day at a Time" actress Mackenzie Phillips, another Betty Ford alumna, wrote on the site, "RIP Betty Ford. A pioneer in treatment of addicts. We owe Mrs. Ford our gratitude and prayers. And love. She was one classy woman."

Ali McGraw, who was treated at the center in 1986, said in a statement Friday that she is grateful for what Ford has done for her.

"She changed so many of our lives with her courage and intelligence, her honesty and humility, and her deep grace," McGraw said. "Her vision impacted my own life as few people have."

Taylor's first stay at the center came in 1983 and provided another high-profile face to those struggling with addiction.

Cash soon became a patient after he broke five ribs and relapsed into abuse of painkillers. "I ended up in the Betty Ford Center for 43 days," Cash told The Associated Press in 1986. "I've had no drugs since then. It has been the best three years of my life, the most productive and the happiest."

One of Ford's defining characteristics was her candor, and that included confronting her own addiction head-on. She revealed a longtime addiction to painkillers and alcohol 15 months after leaving the White House, and regularly welcomed new groups of patients to rehab with a speech that started, "Hello, my name's Betty Ford, and I'm an alcoholic and drug addict."

"People who get well often say, `You saved my life,' and `You've turned my life around,'" Ford once said. "They don't realize we merely provided the means for them to do it themselves, and that's all."


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Former first lady Betty Ford dies, age 93 (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Betty Ford, the wife of the late President Gerald Ford, who overcame alcohol and prescription drug addictions and helped found a rehabilitation clinic that bears her name, died on Friday at the age of 93.

"I was deeply saddened this afternoon when I heard of Betty Ford's death," another former first lady, Nancy Reagan, said in a statement confirming Ford's death.

Ford once was dubbed the "fighting first lady" by Time magazine because of her outspoken political views, which often differed from those of her husband's Republican Party.

She strongly supported women's rights while her husband was president from 1974 to 1977, working the phones in a vain attempt to get states to pass the Equal Rights Amendment, which sought to give women and men equality under law.

Ford's candor was surprising for the time. She took a tolerant stance on abortion and admitted without shame that some of her children had tried marijuana. Nor was she alarmed by the prospect of her daughter having premarital sex.

Ford also was an early campaigner against breast cancer. She underwent a mastectomy in 1974, less than two months after her husband succeeded the disgraced Richard Nixon as president.

Her frank discussions about her disease helped raise awareness about breast cancer and she eventually took the same approach toward her alcoholism, which she battled even as first lady.

Ford's problems with chemical dependency may have begun in 1964, when doctors prescribed her painkillers for a pinched nerve. She developed an addiction to prescription drugs and also became dependent on alcohol during the 1960s.

The Betty Ford Center in California came into being in 1982 after Ford was treated for her addictions at the U.S. Naval Hospital at Long Beach, and saw the need for treatment that emphasized the special needs of women.

"She has been an inspiration to so many through her efforts to educate women about breast cancer and her wonderful work at the Betty Ford Center," Nancy Reagan, the wife of the late President Ronald Reagan, said in the statement.

"She was Jerry Ford's strength through some very difficult days in our country's history and I admired her courage in facing and sharing her personal struggles with all of us."

PRAISE FROM OBAMA, GEORGE W. BUSH

President Barack Obama praised Ford's courage and compassion.

"As our nation's first lady, she was a powerful advocate for women's health and women's rights," he said in a statement. "After leaving the White House, Mrs. Ford helped reduce the social stigma surrounding addiction and inspired thousands to seek much-needed treatment."

Former President George W. Bush described her as a valued friend who "made countless contributions to our country."

Ford remained an active chairman of the center's board of directors for decades and also worked to help handicapped children, the arts and the fights against AIDS and arthritis.

For most of her adult life, Ford was best known as the wife of Rep. Gerald Ford, a Michigan Republican, and the mother of four children. The couple had planned to retire from Congress in 1973 when Nixon, already under fire in the Watergate scandal, chose Ford to serve as vice president after the resignation of Spiro Agnew.

Ford became president after Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974, but he was defeated when he ran for the presidency in 1976 by Democrat Jimmy Carter. Betty delivered her husband's concession speech because he had lost his voice on the campaign trail.

Born April 8, 1918, in Chicago, Elizabeth Bloomer was raised in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She wanted to be a dancer and studied under Martha Graham and modeled in New York before returning to Grand Rapids and marrying a furniture salesman. They divorced after five years and she married Ford in 1948.

In her later years, Betty Ford slipped from the public eye but returned when her husband of 58 years died in 2006. Her stately demeanor in time of grief brought her to the attention of a whole new generation that possibly knew her name only from the famous clinic.

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte and Deborah Zabarenko; Editing by Christopher Wilson and Bill Trott)


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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

"Ugly Betty" star America Ferrera marries (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – "Ugly Betty" star America Ferrera has married longtime boyfriend Ryan Piers Williams, a representative for the actress said on Tuesday.

Ferrera and Williams were married on Monday night in a ceremony attended by Vanessa Williams and Rebecca Romjin, who are former co-stars from the ABC comedy, said the actress' spokeswoman Carrie Byalick.

"Ugly Betty" ran from 2006 to 2010, and since then the 27 year-old Ferrera has played a recurring role on CBS drama "The Good Wife."

Williams is a filmmaker who directed "The Dry Land," an independent film released last year that starred Ferrera.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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