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Ellen DeGeneres Named as the 15th Recipient of the Mark Twain Prize

The Kennedy Center’s prestigious award for comedy will be presented to the daytime TV star October 22.

DeGeneres dancing with First Lady Michelle Obama on the set of her show in February. Official White House photograph by Chuck Kennedy.

In its 15-year history, the Kennedy Center’s Mark Twain
Prize for American Humor has been awarded to such comedy giants as
Richard Pryor (1998), Lorne Michaels (2004), Steve Martin
(2005), Bill Cosby (2009), Tina Fey (2010), and Will Ferrell (2011).
In a press release sent out today, the KenCen announced that
this year’s recipient would be daytime TV talk show host and
former
American Idol judge
Ellen DeGeneres.

In a statement, DeGeneres responded to the news in
typical understated style. “It’s such an honor to receive the Mark Twain
Prize. To get the same award that has been given to people like
Bill Cosby, Tina Fey, and Will Ferrell, it really makes me
wonder . . . why I didn’t get this sooner?”

DeGeneres is only the fourth woman to receive the award (following Fey, Whoopi Goldberg, and Lily Tomlin), and the second
openly gay recipient. Best known these days for
The Ellen DeGeneres Show on NBC, DeGeneres was first launched into the public eye by her sitcom,
Ellen. The show ran from 1994 to ’98 on ABC, and
peaked in 1997 when DeGeneres publicly revealed that she was gay to
Oprah Winfrey.
Since the launch of her talk show in 2003, DeGeneres has hosted
the 2006 Academy Awards, written two books, and provided the
voice of Dory in Disney/Pixar’s
Finding Nemo.

“The Kennedy Center is happy to recognize Ellen DeGeneres’s unique contributions to the world of comedy,” said KenCen chairman

David Rubenstein in a statement. “Through her television programs, standup appearances, movies, and even commercials, her special brand of
humor has allowed us to find hilarity in the mundane, and has kept us laughing for years.”

DeGeneres will receive the award in a ceremony at the Kennedy Center October 22; PBS will broadcast the show at a later date.
For more information, visit the Kennedy Center’s website.