Kathie Lee Gifford supports ‘great friend’ Regis Philbin amid Kelly Ripa drama

Kathie Lee Gifford supports ‘great friend’ Regis Philbin amid Kelly Ripa drama

They sat side by side for more than 15 years as two of the greatest TV talk show co-hosts of all time, first in 1985 on “The Morning Show” and then together nationally in 1988 for “Live! with Regis and Kathie Lee.”

So it came as no surprise that Kathie Lee Gifford recalled only positive memories working with Regis Philbin amid claims Kelly Ripa, who filled in Gifford’s seat in 2001 when she left the show the year before, had difficulties with the late broadcaster.

“I’m not going to comment on Kelly’s story. It’s hers. She can say whatever she wants,” Gifford exclusively told Fox News Digital. “I’m a big believer in freedom of expression. I don’t believe we’re supposed to cancel anybody. She has the right to tell her story as she remembers it.”

Ripa, a former “All My Children” star, caught criticism earlier this month when excerpts of her new memoir revealed her “great privilege” of working with Philbin, also came the great burden of a less than “easy working relationship.”

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Kathie Lee Gifford refused to allow negative commentary about her late friend, legendary broadcaster Regis Philbin.
(Getty Images)

My experience with Regis was one of the greatest experiences of my entire life,” Gifford said. “I worked with him for 15 years. We never had one unkind word between us.”

“The God of the Way” author explained that her desire to leave the show while it was at the top of its game in 2000 was to pursue her own artistic passions.

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“I wanted to be a writer and a singer and an actress like I started out being long before I met Regis,” she said. “Grateful for the 15 years I had with him, but I had to go, just like I had to move away.

“There are times in your life when you got to have the courage to make a huge change in your life. I walked away from the greatest success in daytime television, except for Oprah, that ever was. I walked away from it because I needed to.”

Regis Philbin introduced new co-host Kelly Ripa in July 2001.
(Spencer Platt)

“I’m a big believer in freedom of expression. I don’t believe we’re supposed to cancel anybody.”

— Kathie Lee Gifford

Kathie Lee Gifford and Regis Philbin reunited on the “Today” show in 2012.
(Peter Kramer/NBC)

“Live! with Regis and Kathie Lee” first received national syndication in September 1988, three years after Regis and Kathie Lee had been paired together for the New York-based program, “The Morning Show.”

After years of ratings success, she left the program in July 2000. Regis undertook hosting responsibilities alone for a year while in search of his next co-host, he eventually found his replacement in Ripa.

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“I don’t want to feel like I’m slamming anyone or that I’m being disrespectful. But I also want people to know it was not a cakewalk. It took years to earn my place there and earn things that are routinely given to the men I worked with,” Ripa recently told People while detailing some “good and bad days” she endured with Philbin.

Gifford, on the other had, had a different experience, even when she had to leave the show.

“We were such great friends,” Gifford said. “He just didn’t like it, but he understood it. He loved me. We became close friends in the next 20 years.”

“I saw him two weeks before he died, and his wife told me that that’s the last time she ever heard him laugh, and I treasure that.”

— Kathie Lee Gifford

Kathy Lee Gifford and Regis Philbin worked together for 15 years as co-hosts of two daytime talk shows.
(Ron Galella Collection)

After taking an eight-year break from live television, Gifford returned to the studio and worked with Hoda Kotb on the fourth hour of “Today” in 2008.

She stayed with NBC until April 2019, in which she earned a Daytime Emmy Award for outstanding informative talk show host.

Gifford interviewed every major celebrity, discussed the hottest trends and biggest stories throughout her career in front of the camera. Still, she reflected on her time with Regis, who died in 2020 at the age of 88.

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“I saw him two weeks before he died, and his wife told me that that’s the last time she ever heard him laugh, and I treasure that,” Gifford said.

“So that says all you need to know about what I think about what Kelly is saying now.”

Kathie Lee Gifford and former football pro Frank Gifford (seen in 2008) were married for nearly 30 years and had two children together.
(Richard Corkery)

Gifford also had fond memories of her 30-year marriage with late husband, Frank Gifford, who was a former New York Giants football player and television sports commentator.

Frank died in 2015 at the age of 84, and was also survived by their two children, Cody and Cassidy. “Well, he was more than an NFL star,” Gifford said of Frank. “Frank was one of the greatest football players of all time … Tom Brady’s a magnificent player. Frank always felt that he was the greatest quarterback of all time … I don’t compare Frank to anybody else.”

Kathie Lee Gifford (seen in 2017) always boasted about her two children with late husband Frank, son Cody and daughter Cassidy.
(Greg Doherty)

The “Hello, Little Dreamer” author said she experienced challenges in her marriage as “everybody does,” and was upset when she heard the Super Bowl champion was in the midst of marital woes with Gisele B?ndchen.

“God loves marriage. God instituted marriage for reason, for a purpose. Family is so important to God. … Marriages are under attack. Monogamy is under attack,” she said.

“I think marriage should be a holy alliance. Now, there are reasons why certain people should get divorced, and they have physical reasons to … I don’t know their first story. I just know that I’m sorry to them and their children.”

As for her new book and why it’s so important for her to be a part of faith-filled projects, Gifford admitted the entire explanation is a “mini-series.”

“My faith is everything, the essence of everything I am as a human being and beyond,” she shared. “So why wouldn’t I make these movies that I make and write these books that I [write]… I don’t have a religion. I have a relationship with a living God, which is more than a 24/7 situation. It’s a time. And that’s why I do it. That’s the short answer.”

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