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The Gilmore Girls Books (or How I Learned to Correctly Spell Fahrfunugen Dugan Soogan)

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Back in 2002, HarperEntertainment released four WB-authorised Gilmore Girls books. I recently got hold of a second-hand set as a Christmas present to myself – opened early purely in the name of research, you understand.

Gilmore Girls books

Each is an adaptation of a number of collected episodes, for example The Other Side of Summer pulls together the second season episodes Nick & Nora / Sid & Nancy, Presenting Lorelai Gilmore, Like Mother, Like Daughter, The Ins and Outs of Inns and Run Away, Little Boy. A lot of Chilton, Tristin and Debutante Ball. This particular book was adapted by Helen Pai – that’s the Helen Pai, Gilmore Girls producer, script co-ordinator and the anagrammatical inspiration behind the band name Hep Alien.

Gilmore Girls booksThey are all written solely from Rory’s point of view, with Rory’s thoughts and reactions interjected appropriately. She has the occasional enjoyable train of thought that wasn’t reflected on-screen, for example, from the Prologue to Like Mother, Like Daughter:

We’re slaves to it. We talk to it. “Hey, Mr. Coffee, how are you today? Good? Glad to hear it. Me too.” Mom said if she ever had a boy she’d have to name it Juan Valdez.

However, such additions are sadly few. For the most part, the scenes are the lines from the show, adapted in prose form. Something like this:

“Does he have a motorcycle?” Mom yelled. “Because if you’re going throw your life away, he’d better have a motorcycle!”
I went into my room and closed the door. I did not want to talk about this. Meeting Dean was this surprising and exciting thing. Now all of a sudden Mom was talking about him like he wa an evil gang member, trying to lure me into his lair. A few minutes later, as I was getting ready for bed, my bedroom door opened. “I think that went pretty well, don’t you” Mom asked, coming in.

Each novel also contains 4 double-sided glossy pages of full-colour photographs. There’s a mixture of screengrabs, promotional shots and others are from recognisable scenes but from new angles.

Gilmore Girls books

 

So should you buy them? If you’re a completist, you either have them already or you stopped reading two minutes ago and ordered them. Personally, I prefer reading the scripts and using my imagination to picture Luke’s wry expressions or to process the timing. In novel form, the same lines are forced into a cadence punctuated by Rory’s interpretations and ‘he said’, ‘she said’ etc.

I can’t deny that they’re a talking point on any bookshelf and a sure way to sort the Gilmore-likers from the Gilmore-lovers.

Oh yes, nearly forgot. The Gilmore Girls transcript websites gilmoregirls.org and crazy-internet-people currently spell it ‘farfignugen sugen dugen’ but I’m happy to say I can set the record straight on this one, yessireebob. ‘What the Fahrfunugen is he muttering about now’ I hear you ask? It is, of course, from the first season finale, Love, Daisies and Troubadours, where Lorelai and Max attend a Stars Hollow Town Meeting and Grant Lee Mitchell is complaining about Mr Rosso (from Freaks and Geeks) encroaching on his Troubadour Turf.

Lorelai: Hear [the Troubadours] out Taylor. It can’t hurt.
[Taylor frowns at the bag of fries she’s holding in her hand]
These are not fries. They are Fahrfunugen Dugan Soogan.

The good book says so.  And here’s a gratuitous snow shot because it’s that time again, can’t you feel it in the air?

Gilmore Girls books

Have you already got them? What did you think?

Did you just buy them? Or add them to your Christmas list?

Pics c/o me (those are my actual books and thumbs) and Harper Collins

 

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Emily Kuroda Interview

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Emily Kuroda (Mrs. Kim on Gilmore Girls) was recently interviewed about how she got into acting and what it was like to work on Gilmore Girls.

Emily Kuroda

Emily shares that she loved worked with Keiko Agenca so much that she really didn’t have to act, after all that time. Her fave festivities on the show include the knitting, the holidays and Lane’s wedding.

Emily shares that she’ll be filming a movie, Justice Angel, this month.

Photo Credit: WB / Netflix

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Each of Rory’s Love Interests Will Get “Closure”

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Alexis Bledel as Rory Gilmore and Matt Czuchry as Logan Huntzberger on 'Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life'

Alexis Bledel recently sat down with US Weekly to talk about Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, as we saw in the magazine spread. In a further interview, Alexis speaks directly to all the anticipation about her love life, which both Lauren and Alexis have commented on before with some valid points about our infatuation with their love lives:

“Their main strength is that they have themselves and each other. The show is sneakily feminist in that it’s always been great for them to have love, but they’re also okay when they don’t. It’s why we sometimes bristle at “What team are you on?!” It’s like, “It doesn’t matter.”

But, of course, it does matter to fans of the show, who want some closure. In her new interview, Alexis shares that we will get that closure:

“It think there is satisfying closure for any fans of any of the three couples that tend to get some attention,” Bledel says. “But they’re very different interactions. I would say each one of them [gets] closure in a different way.”

There has been a lot of talk about Rory’s return to Stars Hollow, and how her “vagabond life” has left her feeling unfulfilled, never “planting roots anywhere,” with no solid home of her own. I personally think this will be the catalyst that draws Rory back to think about her love life as well.

“She has been working hard, as she does. She started her work as a journalist at the same time that newspapers were going away. Her field changed dramatically as she was just kind of getting up and running. So that’s where we pick up with her.

It’s real time, so it’s been about eight years that she’s been living a bit of a vagabond lifestyle, kind of chasing each story that she becomes passionate about and wants to tell.”

In terms of her “closure” with Dean, Jess and Logan, we’ve previously heard that one character will have an “edge” and that Rory will make a choice, which we’ve always read as “she will choose one of them,” but of course could mean “she will reject them all,” so we don’t know for sure. Milo Ventimiglia commented that he was there to “move things forward” for others and he “never expected Jess to be the last stop,” and Jared Padalecki has commented on his very brief appearance in the show, making him unlikely to be “the one” for Rory. Matt Czuchry has been notably absent from interviews, though he did spend the most time on set.

So, we’ll just have to see what kind of “closure” we get from all the characters! I personally think that Rory’s age will make a huge impact in how we see her move forward. In the first seven seasons, she was young and her love life was dramatic and intense. As she’s grown older and matured, I think what we see from her will change how she approaches her relationships.

Photo credit: Saeed Adyani/Netflix

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Louise Goffin to Make Special Appearance on Gilmore Girls

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Louise Goffin to Make Special Appearance on Gilmore Girls

Just recently, I wrote a post all about the importance that music plays in Gilmore Girls, from the role it plays for the characters to the way that music – from the theme song to the lalalas – was the undercurrent of thought and feeling that acted as backdrop to the show and its most important lead characters, Rory and Lorelai. I talked about the significance of the title of the new revival, Gilmore Girls: Seasons, harking back to Carole King, who also wrote and performed the theme to Gilmore Girls, ‘Where You Lead.’ What I didn’t mention was the role of Carole’s daughter, Louise Goffin, in the recording of that song.

Now, in a new articleLouise Goffin gives us all some insight into how she came to record ‘Where You Lead’ with her mother, how her own journey into motherhood meant she missed the Gilmore Girls phenomenon, and how she’s circling back now to understand the presence of the show. And, coming full circle, how she’s been invited to have a small role on Gilmore Girls: Seasons

Song Theme

In the article, Louise shares how the theme song came to be:

“It was just another day; I was answering the phone and doing my laundry… when my mother called… soon she came to the part where she told me that a couple she was friendly with, Amy Sherman-Palladino and Dan Palladino, were creating a pilot about a mother and a daughter and thought it would be fitting to have my mother sing one of her songs from Tapestry with her own daughter for the theme… I said, “It’ll be fun!””

At the time, Louise had her own young child, so for her, it sounded like a fun break from her lack of sleep role as a Mom! She goes on to explain that it was produced by the father of her child, Greg Wells, in their own little studio, which was their previous home. They set up the vocals in what used to be the laundry room!

Louise shares that her mom, Carole King, hadn’t been performing the hit ‘Where You Lead,’ despite it’s universal love by fans, because she felt like it was being misinterpreted. Gilmore Girls changed all that, for the better:

“My mom later confessed she had taken a break from singing “Where You Lead” live because the meaning of the song may have, in the past, been interpreted as a woman singing to a man, and it didn’t have a message in that context that she felt she could get behind as an empowered woman. With the song in the context of Gilmore Girls, it took a positive turn, and now with my mother and I singing to one another, it had a deeper meaning of love between a mother and her child. Its new message was practically a pop music version of the children’s book The Runaway Bunny by Margaret Wise Brown (“If you run away,” said his mother, “I will run after you. For you are my little bunny”).”

For many years, Louise didn’t really know about the Gilmore Girls phenomenon. She didn’t watch TV, too busy being a mom, and lived in England during many of the years when she may have been exposed to it by chance. It wasn’t until many years later that, in passing conversation, people would be floored when she mentioned she sang the theme song. She confessed, in comedic fashion, that she later YouTube’d the opening theme for the first time and realized what she’d been missing! She even later met Sam Phillips, who composed all the music for the series, who told her “I’ve heard you sing every week of my life for over a decade,” not knowing of Sam’s own involvement in the show!

As she said, amends are being made with Netflix. She’s watching Gilmore Girls. and Now, she’ll be a part of it:

“And then, like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, I clicked my heels together and found myself walking onto the set on the Warner Brothers lot. I was invited, as part of the family tree of the history of Gilmore Girls, to make an appearance on one of the new Netflix episodes. I’m sworn to secrecy about the details. I was grateful to be able to witness Amy’s down-to-earth ease and confidence in the way she leads the actors, camera and crew. It’s not hard to understand why she’s back, why people have so deeply fallen in love with the characters and family themes, and why I can’t wait to see what happens next.”

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