LOS ANGELES • Ellen DeGeneres, one of America’s best-known talk-show hosts, said on Wednesday she will end her daytime show next year, adding that after 19 years, it was time to do something different.
DeGeneres, 63, told her virtual audience the show had been “the greatest experience of my life” and thanked her fans for watching. But she said she needed “to take a break from talking”.
“My instinct told me it’s time. As a comedian, I’ve always understood the importance of timing,” she said.
“Recently, I had a dream that a bird, a beautiful bird with bright red feathers, came to my window and whispered, ‘You can still do stuff on Netflix.’ And that was the sign I was looking for,” she quipped.
The Ellen DeGeneres Show, produced by AT&T Inc’s Warner Bros and syndicated to television stations, has won more than 60 Emmy awards.
But audiences have fallen in the past six months following an internal inquiry into media reports of a toxic work environment behind the scenes.
Three top producers exited the production last year and DeGeneres apologised, promising “a new chapter”.
She told The Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday that public attacks during that time “destroyed me”, but did not influence her decision to end the show.
That choice, she said, was made when she extended her contract for three years in 2019.
DeGeneres started her career in stand-up comedy in her New Orleans home town before moving to television, starring in the comedy Ellen in the mid-1990s.
In 1997, both she and her TV character came out as a lesbian long before gay people were accepted in mainstream America. She is married to former actress Portia de Rossi.
Ellen was cancelled a year later, but DeGeneres returned to television in 2003 with her daytime show.
An advocate for animals, gay rights and anti-bullying campaigns, DeGeneres became known for promoting kindness and compassion on her light-hearted show.
DeGeneres told The Hollywood Reporter her future plans are uncertain. She is open to movie roles and wants to be more involved in environmental conservation efforts.
REUTERS