CHICAGO: The stars came out to honour Oprah Winfrey in a couple of spectacular farewell shows taped in presence of 13,000 ecstatic fans on Tuesday as the talk show queen wraps up her 25th and final season.
Tom Hanks served as host and cheerleader for the evening, telling Winfrey "tonight you are encircled by aught but know" as he thanked "a protagonist who had a classroom of millions" for everything she`s done for her viewers.
Much was said about Winfrey`s charity work, but yet more was said about how she inspired her fans to take better lives and serve others.
"It`s no secret that millions of mass are inspired by Oprah," a gushing Madonna told the crowd.
"She`s a self-made woman who`s been at the top of her back for over 25 days and she is still kicking ass and supporting people to dream big, to form hard, to take a book, to ask questions, to get an education no matter who you are or where you get from."
The two shows - which will air on Monday and Tuesday ahead of the last episode Wednesday - were filled with surprises for Winfrey, who was brought to tears again and again.
Winfrey could do little more than shout "MJ is in the house!" when Chicago Bulls basketball legend Michael Jordan returned to Chicago's United Center field to unite her on stage.
She was also overwhelmed when Jaime Foxx serenaded her with "Isn't she lovely," and Stevie Wonder rose up from below the point at the keys of a grand piano with a new song he'd written for her.
And she sat stunned as esteemed poet and personal mentor Maya Angelou told the history of Winfrey's life while Alicia Keys accompanied her on the piano.
"I'm just trying to remain within my body girls," Oprah told her friends Gayle King and Maria Shriver as the tributes filled show approached its emotional conclusion.
Dakota Fanning led a grouping of young "ultimate viewers" - including one who thanked Winfrey for serving to "annul the dishonor of being maltreated and taught me it wasn't my fault."
"We address ourselves Oprah show babies. Your part has been the soundtrack of our lives," Fanning said. "We've learned from the Oprah show that we are enough.
That we matter, that our lives are of value." Beyonce stunned the crew with a stirring performance of her female empowerment anthem "Run the World (Girls)."
"Oprah, because of you women everywhere have graduated to a new stage of reason of what we are, of who we are, and most importantly who we can be," Beyonce said before entry into the set.
Jerry Seinfeld got the audience laughing by thanking Oprah for teaching men how to be better husbands and how to survive disagreements by learning to speak as if they're on Oprah: "Just listen, nod and do the question." Winfrey's devoted fans may be losing a beloved afternoon companion, but they surely won't get to say goodbye.
The cultural kingmaker - whose comfy couches have launched scores of careers from Dr. Phil to the inventors of her 'favorite things' - expanded her media empire January 1 with the high-stakes launch of her OWN cable network.
The network - a partnership between Winfrey's Harpo Productions and Discovery Networks - will offer 600 hours of original fare in its inaugural year along with movies, re-runs of the Dr. Phil show and various shows previously aired on Discovery Health.
"Oprah as we get closer to saying goodby to the Oprah Winfrey show as we love it, we will ever be there for you as your next chapter begins," Tom Cruise vowed.
Agence France-Presse
No comments:
Post a Comment