- Melissa Rivers
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Melissa Rivers Born Melissa Warburg Rosenberg
January 20, 1968
New York City, New York, United StatesOccupation Television personality; host Years active 1978–present Spouse John Endicott (1998-2003) Melissa Joan Rivers (born January 20, 1968) is an American television host, producer and the daughter of Joan Rivers.
Contents
Early life
Rivers was born Melissa Warburg Rosenberg in Manhattan on January 20, 1968; the only child of Joan Rivers and Edgar Rosenberg. She is of Russian-Jewish descent on her mother's side and German-Jewish on her father's side.[citation needed]
Rivers attended the private John Thomas Dye School in Bel-Air[1] and then The Buckley School in Sherman Oaks, California.[citation needed] She is a 1989 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania.[citation needed] She was a founding member of the Tabard Society, an off-campus secret society for women.[citation needed]
After five years of dating, Rivers married horse trainer John Endicott in December 1998 at the Manhattan, New York Park Hotel in an extravagant $3 million dollar Dr Zhivago-themed winter wonderland wedding.[2] They divorced in 2003. She has one son named Cooper (born in 2000 Edgar Cooper Endicott)[3] who features with Rivers and her mother in the reality show "Joan and Melissa: Joan Knows Best?"[4]
Career
In 1990, Melissa took on her mother's stage surname.[5]
Rivers was an accomplished equestrienne competing on the show circuits.[6] She was known to jump horses over 4-1/2 foot obstacles.[citation needed]
Rivers began her career as an intern in the Los Angeles office of CBS News after graduation.[citation needed] She was a feature reporter for “CBS This Morning”. She was a regular contributor to MTV’s Hangin’ With MTV as an MTV spring break emcee, and, in time, a broadcast journalist of youth-oriented material.[citation needed]
As an actress, she has had roles in television shows including Beverly Hills, 90210, Silk Stalkings, The Comeback and The L Word.[citation needed] In 1998, she also appeared in the sci-fi/comedy made-for-television movie Men in White ;[citation needed] and in the 1999 film The Big Tease;[7] a comedy directed by Kevin Allen starring Craig Ferguson. Additionally, she teamed up with her mother Joan Rivers, portraying themselves in the 1994 celebrity docudrama Tears and Laughter: The Joan and Melissa Rivers Story.[8]
In the early 1990s, Rivers branched out on the pre-show red carpet, interviewing celebrities on nationally televised awards shows. [9] Rivers, who has hosted various events and served as a producer for the E! Network, has hosted two of the channel’s highest-rated specials: Oh Baby! Melissa’s Guide to Pregnancy[10] and Oh Toddler! Surviving the Early Years (aired in January 2002).[citation needed]
Teamed with her comedienne mother, Joan, Melissa hosted fashion on the red carpet interviews for the E! cable network. In 2003, Melissa and Joan left her red carpet pre-show on E! to accept a more lucrative deal with the TV Guide Channel valued at between $6 and 8 million.[11] Their contract was not renewed after it expired.[citation needed] Also in 2002, Rivers appeared on the ABC Network competitive reality show I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!, in which she finished in second place. Melissa Rivers has been a regular guest on the webcast show Tom Green's House Tonight.[citation needed]
Charity
Rivers raised $100,000 for the Make-A-Wish Foundation,[12] resulting from ABC's 2006 television show "I'm A Celebrity...Get Me Out Of Here!", LIVE.[12]
On June 24, 2008, Rivers appeared on the NBC game show Celebrity Family Feud as part of the Rivers Family Team. She and her mother first battled against the Ice-T Family Team, then went on to compete against the Raven Symone Family Team. They won $50,000 for their charity, Guide Dogs for the Blind.[citation needed]
She appeared on the NBC reality television program Celebrity Apprentice playing for the Lili Claire Foundation. She was fired in the episode that aired April 26, 2009 after which she stormed out of the boardroom, verbally assaulted other teammates, yelled at the production crew, and refused the obligatory exit interview. Her mother was also a contestant on that season of The Apprentice, and threatened to quit the show after Melissa's firing, but remained and ultimately won the competition [13].
Rivers raised $22,250 on a special celebrity edition of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" where all the celebrities played to raise money for the research of Alzheimer's disease.[14]
References
- ^ "Biography of Melissa Rivers". I am a Celebrity. ABC. Archived from the original on 28 June 2006. http://web.archive.org/web/20060628103939/http://abc.go.com/primetime/imacelebrity/bios/melissa_Rivers.html. Retrieved 8 March 2009.
- ^ "VOWS; Melissa Rivers, John Endicott" December 13, 1998, New York Times
- ^ Daily News (New York). http://articles.nydailynews.com/2000-12-02/entertainment/18144280_1_melissa-rivers-movie-star-joan-rivers.
- ^ "Joan Rivers is a nice person -- really" June 24, 2010, Miami Herald
- ^ "Melisa Rivers takes mother's surname" September 14, 1990, Spokane Chronicle
- ^ "VOWS; Melissa Rivers, John Endicott". The New York Times. December 13, 1998. http://www.nytimes.com/1998/12/13/style/vows-melissa-rivers-john-endicott.html.
- ^ Melissa Rivers on IMDb http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0729557/
- ^ Tears and Laughter: The Joan and Melissa Rivers Story http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111379/
- ^ Melissa Rivers on IMDb http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0729557/#Self
- ^ Hale, Mike. "Test". The New York Times. http://tv.nytimes.com/show/57005/Oh-Baby-Melissa-s-Guide-to-Pregnancy/overview.
- ^ "TV briefs: Rivers duo may leave E! for TV Guide Channel" June 25, 2004, The Seattle Times
- ^ a b List of charity contributions
- ^ NBC Celebrity Apprentice 2 Press Release
- ^ Yahoo News http://tv.yahoo.com/melissa-rivers/contributor/873717/bio
External links
The Apprentice Mark Burnett (series creator) • Donald Trump (executive producer) • List of candidatesOriginal U.S.
seriesStarring: Donald Trump • Carolyn Kepcher (2004–2006) • George H. Ross • Donald Trump, Jr. (2006–present) • Ivanka Trump (2006–present) • Eric Trump (2010–present)
Guest appearances: Erin Burnett (boardroom advisor) • Bill Rancic (boardroom advisor) • Joan Rivers (boardroom advisor)
Candidate residences: Trump Tower in Manhattan (Location for seasons 1–5, 7–present)
Seasons: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 (Celebrity Edition) • 8 (Celebrity Edition 2) • 9 (Celebrity Edition 3) • 10 • 11 (Celebrity Edition 4) • 12 (Celebrity Edition 5)
Winners: Bill Rancic • Kelly Perdew • Kendra Todd • Randal Pinkett • Sean Yazbeck • Stefanie Schaeffer • Piers Morgan • Joan Rivers • Bret Michaels • Brandy Kuentzel • John RichMartha Stewart
series (2005)Related programs Australian series • Irish series • New Zealand series • UK seriesJoan Rivers · Annie Duke · Jesse G. James · Brande Roderick · Clint Black · Melissa Rivers · Herschel Walker · Natalie Gulbis · Brian McKnight · Khloé Kardashian · Tionne Watkins · Dennis Rodman · Claudia Jordan · Tom Green · Scott Hamilton · Andrew Dice ClayPresenters Winners Runners-up Melissa Rivers · Torrie WilsonInternation series I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! · German series · Indian series · Swedish Series · Hungarian series · Dutch seriesCris Judd · Melissa Rivers · John Melendez · Bruce Jenner · Downtown Julie Brown · Tyson Beckford · Nikki Schieler Ziering · Maria Conchita Alonso · Alana Stewart · Robin LeachCategories:- 1968 births
- Living people
- Actors from New York
- American people of Russian-Jewish descent
- American people of German-Jewish descent
- I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! contestants
- Jewish actors
- Participants in American reality television series
- People from New York City
- The Apprentice (U.S. TV series) contestants
- University of Pennsylvania alumni
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