Phyllis George, former Kentucky first lady and Miss America, dies at 70
She was not on the list.
Phyllis George, a former Miss America, television
personality and ex-wife of Gov. John Y. Brown Jr. has died in Lexington after
an illness.
George, who had been hospitalized at the University of
Kentucky Albert B. Chandler hospital, was 70.
She died Thursday from complications from a blood disorder
she had developed in her mid-30s but had managed for many years, Brown told The
Courier Journal on Saturday.
"Phyllis was a great asset to Kentucky," said
Brown, who also lives in Lexington and said he had maintained an amicable
relationship with his ex-wife. He said he especially valued their four years as
Kentucky's governor and first lady.
"We had a great partnership," he said. "I
think we enjoyed every single day."
Brown said the couple's two children, Lincoln Brown, a
technology entrepreneur, and Pamela Brown, a news reporter with CNN, had been
with George in recent weeks providing care and support.
"We're sorry to lose her," her former husband
said. "She's been a big part of our lives."
In a statement, her two children praised George for her
strength and spirit.
"For many, Mom was known by her incredible
accomplishments," Lincoln and Pamela Brown said. "To us, she was the
most incredible mother we could ever ask for, and it is all of the defining
qualities the public never saw, especially against the winds of adversity, that
symbolize how extraordinary she is more than anything else. The beauty so many
recognized on the outside was a mere fraction of her internal beauty, only to
be outdone by an unwavering spirit that allowed her to persevere against all
the odds.”
Gov. Andy Beshear offered his condolences on Twitter on
Saturday.
"I was blessed to know Phyllis and her family. Her
connection with Kentucky runs deep," Beshear said in the tweet. "Our
thoughts and prayers are especially with her children, Lincoln and Pamela."
Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer also spoke out about George's
passing, calling her a "trailblazing sports broadcaster, First Lady,
advocate for the arts, and mother" in a tweet.
George, a Texan, rose to prominence after winning the 1971
Miss America title at age 21 and relocating to New York, where she said her
"Texas personality" helped her land her first television assignments.
Named Miss Congeniality in the Miss Texas pageant, George
described herself in a 1998 Courier Journal interview as a small-town Christian
girl "very close to my family"
who entered the Miss America pageant determined to win.
"I was focused," she said. "I was
prepared."
In New York, after appearing in commercials and some minor
roles, George's first major break was as a commentator with CBS Sports. A 1976
People magazine cover featured a smiling photo of her with the headline,
"An ex-Miss America becomes TV's first lady of the locker room."
She came to count among her friends Norman Vincent Peale,
the prominent New York pastor who officiated at her wedding to Brown; Bill and
Hillary Clinton; George and Barbara Bush; and Sir Elton John.
But it was her 1979 marriage to Brown, a self-made
millionaire and Kentucky Fried Chicken magnate, that brought her to Kentucky
and thrust her into the political spotlight when he decided, just 10 days after
their New York wedding, to run for governor in his home state.
Though it would later end in divorce, the marriage of the
handsome couple with "his and her matching dimples" brought a splash
of celebrity and national attention to the race that swept Brown into office as
Kentucky's 55th governor.
The Washington Post described them as "Phyllis of the
multimillion-dollar smile, and John Y., of the multimillion-dollar
checkbook" in a 1979 story about Brown's campaign.
And while Brown's personal fortune helped him win a crowded
Democratic primary that included former Louisville Mayor Harvey Sloane and go
on to win the 1979 general election, observers credited George's radiant charm
and celebrity appeal for giving Brown the edge in his first bid for public
office.
She won it for him, there's no doubt about that," said
Terry McBrayer, a Lexington lawyer and former state legislator who was among
the Democrats who lost to Brown. "They beat me fair and square, but it was
her glamour and his as well."
The couple barnstormed the state by helicopter on a
"honeymoon campaign," according to The Courier Journal, a race that
attracted widespread national attention.
A New York Times story about the race described it as
"the kissing campaign."
"John Y. Brown Jr., Kentucky's Democratic candidate for
governor, and his wife of seven months, Phyllis George, constantly hug and kiss
like newlyweds on the campaign trail," the newspaper reported. "And
everybody in Kentucky, it seems, wants to kiss the former Miss America turned
television personality."
A Washington Post story headlined "Phyllis George and
the Kentucky Fried Candidate" described the pair as "a campaign
manager's dream of media heaven," with George, as the adoring wife,
warming up crowds followed by Brown with his sales pitch to be governor.
George, in a Courier Journal interview, gave Brown the
credit for his win though she acknowledged she may have helped boost his confidence.
"John was handsome, charismatic, successful,
entrepreneurial, a visionary," she told The Courier Journal in 1998.
"But he's a little shy."
Sometimes Brown just needed encouragement, she said,
recounting one incident where they arrived at a campaign stop and she greeted
some bystanders enthusiastically.
"Phyllis, don't bother them," she recalled him
saying. She replied, "John, if you want to be governor, you gotta come
over here."
A native of Denton, Texas, George was a student at North
Texas State University when she won the Miss America title that would change
her life, leading to dozens of national appearances during her one-year reign
before she settled in New York to try to break into television.
In 1972, she joined the cast of "The NFL Today,"
co-hosting pregame shows before games and was one of the first women to have a
national role in television sports. In early 1985, after her four years as
Kentucky's first lady, she became a co-host with Bill Kurtis of "CBS
Morning News," a disappointing run for George that lasted only eight
months.
After taking off about 10 years to raise the couple's two
young children, George would return to television and cable work, hosting
interviews, shopping shows and promoting crafts.
She told The Courier Journal she was happy with the new
roles and her new life in New York, where she lived in an apartment overlooking
Central Park.
"I've gone through a lot," she said in the 1998
interview. "I've had a lot of life experiences. ... From here on out, I
want every day to count."
She once said that her favorite place on Earth was
"Kentucky in the fall" and had moved back to Kentucky in recent
years, settling in Lexington, where John Y. Brown Jr. and their son, Lincoln
Brown, also live. Their daughter, Pamela Brown, lives in the Washington, D.C.,
area.
McBrayer said he recently was called on to roast George at
her 70th birthday party in Lexington, an event attended by members of the
extended family, including her ex-husband. Brown and George had enjoyed an
amicable relationship in recent years, he said.
McBrayer said he found it hard to say anything negative
about George at the roast.
"I can tell more stories about John Y. than I can about
Phyllis," McBrayer said. "She was always a very, very nice person and
very decent to me."
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