Gilmore_Girls Gilmore_Girls

Gilmore Girls - Definition and Overview

Regarded by fans as the best female oriented drama on television
Gilmore Girls is an hour-long American television drama/comedy that has aired since 2000. It airs on The WB network in the United States and in dozens of other markets. It was created by Amy Sherman-Palladino who serves as executive producer with husband Daniel Palladino.

The show follows single, thirty-something Lorelai Victoria Gilmore (Lauren Graham) and her teenage daughter, Lorelai "Rory" Leigh Gilmore (Alexis Bledel), in the fictional town of Stars Hollow, Connecticut. Rory was fifteen when the show began (although Lorelai said she was sixteen in the pilot, she celebrated her birthday several episodes later).

The series exploring family, generational divides and friendship, set in a closeknit smalltown with many quirky characters. By the time of its fifth season, Gilmore Girls received an American Film Institute or AFI Award and two Viewers for Quality Television Awards, and was named New Program of the Year by the Television Critics Association.

Its 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. 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.

Gilmore Girls was the first series broadcast on network television which had received financial support from the Family Friendly Forum's script development fund for its pilot episode. The Family Friendly Forum was devised some of the nation's leading advertisers and The WB to combat criticism from the Religious Right and to promote more family values programming on network television. Some in the Religious Right might not approve of the new type of American family portayed in the series, however.

It was not a ratings success initially but has grown a following which eventually saw it defeat popular series Buffy the Vampire Slayer in the ratings. [1] (http://www.gilmoregirls.org/news/144.html)

Contents

Overview

Regular elements of the series include:

  • Lorelai's conflicts with her wealthy parents, particularly her headstrong mother. Emily (Kelly Bishop) and Richard (Edward Herrmann) had their societal hopes for Lorelai dashed by her becoming an unwed mother at the age of 16. Lorelai repaid her parents for their disapproval by keeping their contact with their granddaughter Rory to a minimum; by the time the series begins, Rory's private school fees require Lorelai to approach her parents for help which is provided on the proviso they both join Emily and Richard for dinner every Friday night.
  • Lorelai's relationship with Luke (Scott Patterson), which, at the end of the fourth season, finally grew from a friendship into a romantic relationship.
  • Lorelai's periodic reconnections with Rory's father, Christopher (David Sutcliffe), another child of a wealthy family and Emily and Richard's preferred partner for Lorelai. While it often seems like Lorelai and Christopher will get back together, other factors always seem to interfere.
  • Rory's coming of age, complicated by:
    • Her close relationship with her mother. At the time the series begins, Lorelai and Rory regard each other more as best friends than as 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.
    • Her academic aspirations. Rory wants to attend the elite Harvard University; to achieve this she is enrolled in the elite (fictional) Chilton Academy, an unfamiliar world to Rory filled with the rich and the high-strung. Rory ultimately decides to go to Yale after visiting the campus with her mother and alumnus grandfather.
    • Her romantic attractions. Rory's affections first fluctuate between new-in-town Dean Forester (Jared Padalecki) and bad-boy Jess Mariano (Milo Ventimiglia), Luke's nephew. Even after Dean marries, Rory engages in a short affair with Dean and breaks up his marriage. Rory's current interests include Yale classmates, including the privileged Logan.
    • Her relationships with longtime best friend Lane Kim (Keiko Agena)—a second-generation Korean-American from a strict background—and Paris Geller (Liza Weil), a friend/rival at both Chilton and Yale.
  • Lorelai's career as the manager of an inn, with aspirations to open one of her own. After years of planning, she and best friend Sookie (Melissa McCarthy) have opened their own inn, the Dragonfly.

A trademark of Gilmore Girls is the extremely fast-paced conversations between Lorelai and Rory. The show's wit and character-based, gentle humour have won it a loyal following. With its humour arising from small-town eccentricities, it resembles the American television comedy Northern Exposure. Another similarity is both shows' extensive use of contemporary music—some quite obscure—to help set mood and tone.

The first season was released on DVD May 4, 2004 and the second was released on December 7, 2004.

Main characters

Lorelai is the strong-willed, beautiful owner of the Dragonfly Inn in Stars Hollow. She has a daughter, Rory, who she had when she was sixteen. Partly because of the small age gap, they are the best of friends.
Rory is a student, initially at Chilton and later at Yale. She once planned on going to Harvard but after making a list of advantages of going to each university, she decided to enroll in her grandfather's alma mater, Yale.
Sookie is a brilliant, slightly neurotic chef who enjoys her own cooking. She has one child and another on the way. She is Lorelai's business partner in the Dragonfly Inn as well as one of her best friends. Sookie is married to Jackson, her produce supplier and current town selectman.
Lane is Rory's closest friend, a Korean girl brought up by an extremely strict mom. She rebelled and moved in with two male members of her rock band.
Michel is a neurotic Frenchman who works with Lorelai at the Inn, insults customers and annoys his colleagues, but is considered lovable because of this by people who know him. He, Sookie and Lorelai are good friends.
Emily is Lorelai's somewhat snobbish mother. She once had great hopes for her daughter which were abandoned when Lorelai became a single mom at sixteen. In the one hundredth episode, Emily and Richard re-affirm their vows on their fortieth anniversary after many months of difficulties, trial separations and even Emily dating.
Richard is Lorelai's father - a very wealthy but not very scrupulous insurance industry executive. He gives off the aura of New England patrician respectability but is very astute.
Luke owns the diner in Stars Hollow and after many episodes of hinting at a relationship, is now Lorelai's love interest. Prior to this, they were still extremely close friends.
Jess is somewhat of a stereotypical "bad boy" who lures Rory away from her first love Dean. He acts tough and uncaring on the surface, but in reality is very intelligent and sympathetic - he is rarely seen without a book on his person. Seeing this, Rory falls for him, but Jess's problems prove to be too much and the two separate. In real life Alexis is dating Milo.
  • Paris Geller - Liza Weil (episodes 22 - , recurring previously)
Initially a serious rival of Rory at Chilton, Paris and Rory eventually become good friends in spite of their competitive natures. They now live in the same dorm at Yale. Paris ends up falling in love with a distinguised elderly English Professor at Yale, who dies while visiting England. Paris inherits an antique printing press from him which she treasures and stores in the dorm.
  • Kirk Gleason - Sean Gunn (episodes 44 -, recurring previously)
Kirk is the definitive quirky weirdo of Stars Hollow and works at every conceivable job in the town. He is a geek without computer skills who still lives with his mom. Recently he has found love with a girl named Lulu.
  • Jason "Digger" Stiles - Chris Eigeman (episodes 68 - 87)
Jason is the son of Richard's former employer. He leaves his father's firm to go into business with Richard. Not long after, he and Lorelai become lovers, but keep it secret from Lorelai's parents. Jason's father sues Richard and Jason and in a panic over losing everything, Richard brutally dumps his business partner Jason and returns to Jason's father's firm. Jason sues Richard prompting Lorelai to break up with him and creating an opening for the much-anticipated Luke-Lorelai partnership.
Dean is a long-time occasional love interest of Rory's. His marriage now complicates their relationship, with Rory losing her virginity to him while he was married. He breaks up with her for the third time after seeing how her life and choice of company has changed after going to Yale.

Other recurring characters

  • Babette Dell - Sally Struthers
  • Patricia "Miss Patty" LaCosta - Liz Torres
  • Mrs. Kim - Emily Kuroda
  • Headmaster Charleston - Dakin Matthews (Has been absent since Rory graduated from Chilton at the end of the third season, with the exception of episode 10 in the fifth season)
  • Tristin DuGray - Chad Michael Murray
  • Town Troubadour - Grant Lee Phillips
  • Morey Dell - Ted Rooney
  • Christopher Hayden - David Sutcliffe
  • Jackson Melville - Jackson Douglas
  • Sherry Tinsdale - Mädchen Amick
  • Taylor Doose - Michael Winters
  • Brad Langford - Adam Wylie

Episode List

Season 1 (2000-2001)

  1. Pilot
  2. The Lorelais' First Day at Chilton
  3. Kill Me Now
  4. The Deer-Hunters
  5. Cinnamon's Wake
  6. Rory's Birthday Parties
  7. Kiss and Tell
  8. Love and War and Snow
  9. Rory's Dance
  10. Forgiveness and Stuff
  11. Paris is Burning
  12. Double Date
  13. Concert Interruptus
  14. That Damn Donna Reed
  15. Christopher Returns
  16. Star-Crossed Lovers and Other Strangers
  17. The Breakup, Part 2
  18. The Third Lorelai
  19. Emily in Wonderland
  20. P.S. I Lo...
  21. Love, Daisies, and Troubadours

Season 2 (2001-2002)

  1. Sadie, Sadie...
  2. Hammers and Veils
  3. Red Light on the Wedding Night
  4. Road Trip to Harvard
  5. Nick & Nora/Sid & Nancy
  6. Presenting Lorelai Gilmore
  7. Like Mother, Like Daughter
  8. The Ins & Outs of Inns
  9. Run Away, Little Boy
  10. The Bracebridge Dinner
  11. Secrets and Loans
  12. Richard in Stars Hollow
  13. A-Tisket, A-Tasket
  14. It Should've Been Lorelai
  15. Lost and Found
  16. There's The Rub
  17. Dead Uncles and Vegetables
  18. Back in the Saddle Again
  19. Teach Me Tonight
  20. Help Wanted
  21. Lorelai's Graduation Day
  22. I Can't Get Started

Season 3 (2002-2003)

  1. Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days
  2. Haunted Leg
  3. Application Anxiety
  4. One's Got Class and the Other One Dyes
  5. Eight O'Clock at the Oasis
  6. Take the Deviled Eggs...
  7. They Shoot Gilmores, Don't They?
  8. Let the Games Begin
  9. A Deep Fried Korean Thanksgiving
  10. That'll Do Pig
  11. I Solemnly Swear
  12. Lorelai Out of Water
  13. Dear Emily and Richard
  14. Swan Song
  15. Face-Off
  16. The Big One
  17. A Tale of Poes and Fire
  18. Happy Birthday, Baby
  19. Keg! Max!
  20. Say Goodnight, Gracie
  21. Here Comes the Son
  22. Those are Strings, Pinocchio

Season 4 (2003-2004)

  1. Ballroom & Biscotti
  2. The Lorelais' First Day at Yale
  3. The Hobbit, The Sofa and Digger Stiles
  4. Chicken or Beef
  5. The Fundamental Things Apply
  6. An Affair to Remember
  7. The Festival of Living Art (aka Love Me or Louvre Me)
  8. Die, Jerk
  9. Ted Koppel's Big Night Out
  10. The Nanny and the Professor
  11. In the Clamor and the Clangor
  12. A Family Matter
  13. Nag Hammadi Is Where They Found the Gnostic Gospels
  14. The Incredible Shrinking Lorelais
  15. Scene in a Mall
  16. The Reigning Lorelai
  17. Girls in Bikinis, Boys Doin' The Twist (aka Gilmore Girls Gone Wild)
  18. Tick, Tick, Tick, Boom!
  19. Afterboom
  20. Luke Can See Her Face
  21. Last Week Fights, This Week Tights
  22. Raincoats and Recipes

Season 5 (2004-2005)

  1. Say Goodbye to Daisy Miller
  2. A Messenger, Nothing More
  3. Written in the Stars
  4. Tippecanoe and Taylor, Too
  5. We Got Us a Pippi Virgin
  6. Norman Mailer, I'm Pregnant!
  7. You Jump, I Jump, Jack
  8. The Party's Over
  9. Emily Says Hello
  10. But Not as Cute as Pushkin
  11. Women Of Questionable Morals
  12. Come Home
  13. Wedding Bell Blues (To be aired: 08-Feb-2005)
  14. Say Something (To be aired: 15-Feb-2005)
  15. Jews and Chinese Food (To be aired: 22-Feb-2005)

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 is into '80s music like The Bangles, while Rory and Lane have more eclectic tastes. Even Jackson is revealed to have a penchant for Creedence Clearwater Revival. 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". The original score to the show is performed by Sam Phillips.

The theme of the show is performed by Carole King and Louise Goffin. "Where you Lead" was originally written as a song about a woman who will follow a man anywhere and because of this, King is said to have refused Amy Sherman-Palladino's request that she re-record the song for the show. However, the idea Palladino presented of remaking the song as a song about a close mother/daughter relationship appealed to King, who has a close relationship with her daughter Louise and she re-recorded the song with Louise for the show. King would later guest star on the show as the proprietor of a music store which Lane practices the drums in.

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.

External links

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