Kirstie Alley had a bone to pick Thursday night on “Late Show with David Letterman.”

“I thought you loved me madly and then you talked about me being sort of chub,” Alley, 60, said to the talk show host.

When Letterman, 64, admitted to making jokes about the actress’ fluctuating weight, Alley pulled out a paper from her bra with a list of the jokes the TV host had previously cracked at her expense.

“Kirstie Alley is joining ‘Dancing with the Stars,’ ” the actress read. “If you don’t already own one, now might be a good time to get a wide-screen TV.”

With the crowd laughing, the former “Cheers” star, who recently lost over 60 pounds thanks in part to “DWTS,” continued.

“Last night on “Dancing with the Stars,” Kirstie Alley fell on the dance floor. … How many of you felt it?” she continued. “However, the judges scored her an 8 – on the Richter scale.”

A visibly red Letterman countered with a pseudo-loving jab.

“We do love you, and if you were skinny we would tell jokes about you. … Ehh, probably not,” he said.

Alley has had a good sense of humor regarding her heavier days. In 2005, she poked fun at her weight in a satirical reality show about her life titled “Fat Actress.”

 

The only thing more shocking than Kirstie Alley’s dramatic weight loss is that she claims to be almost the same size as none other than Megan Fox.

“My goal dress has a waist that’s 22 inches,” she told Life & Style. “I tried it on, and I can almost zip it up.”

The svelte Fox, well-known for an extremely thin body, told the magazine she does indeed have a “22-inch waist.”

And yet in recent photos, the two actress don’t even look remotely the same size.

Still, credit must be given to Alley’s determination. The 60-year-old said she expects to be her “target size” by the time she goes on an Italian vacation this summer.

With a strict diet and vigorous workouts thanks to “Dancing with the Stars,” Alley said on Twitter Thursday she has shed a total of 90 pounds.

“I’ve been dancing almost every day since ['DWTS'] ended,” she told Life & Style. “I like all the Latin dancing. It’s the best exercise and the best cardio.”

Fox, however, opts for a different kind of workout to maintain her tiny frame.

“I did a lot of Pilates,” she said. “An immense amount of Pilates.”

 

Actress Kirstie Alley says she is paying $41,000 in property taxes from last year on her Tampa-area mansion after published reports noted the delinquency.

The “Cheers” star and recent “Dancing With the Stars” runner-up called it an oversight. A spokesman released a statement Thursday saying “we were not aware of the amount owed, and her accountant never received the bill.”

Pinellas County tax records showed Alley owed $41,395, including fees and interest, on the $1.73 million mansion on Clearwater Harbor that she bought in 2008. The 2010 tax bill was due April 1.

Tax office spokesman Chad McLeod confirmed that one of Alley’s representatives called Thursday and promised to send a certified check.

 

The former ‘Cheers’ star – who has been struggling with the tricky routines she has had to perform over the past few weeks on the celebrity dancing show – and her professional partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy enlisted the help of the legendary ‘Saturday Night Fever’ actor, who named himself the ‘Dance Doctor’.

Advising the duo to release their “romantic tension”, John then told the 60-year-old actress she needed to reassess her footwear choices, after her high heels flew off mid-waltz during her last performance on April 11.

He said: “Let’s try a sneaker. I suggest perhaps a high-top.”

However, dancing guru John’s visit to Kirstie during rehearsals definitely seemed to improve her confidence levels.

She told partner Maksim: “Last week we survived, but I don’t want anyone to have any doubts: I’m in this to win this. I want to be the frontrunner!”

Before performing her raunchy foxtrot to Lenny Kravtiz’s ‘American Woman’ on the show last night, Kirstie admitted she was hoping to “create magic” following her visit from ‘The Dance Doctor’ John.
She joked: “Now that we’ve had a session with ‘The Dance Doctor’, the bad juju is gone and with this dance, we’re going to create magic.”

Earning a score of 23 out of a possible 30 for the routine, judge Carrie Ann Inaba praised the duo for their “bold, ambitious and borderline crazy” take on the foxtrot.

Carrie said: “That was a different take on a foxtrot, but it absolutely suited you. It was bold, it was ambitious, it was a little borderline crazy! You did it – it was magical and I think it was your best dance ever!”

 

Kirstie Alley has found comedy in reality TV with A&E’s “Big Life.” But she’s still got her eye on scripted shows.

Alley said she would adore guest roles on “Glee” and “Modern Family” and knows exactly what they should be. On Fox’s show about a high school glee club, Alley could see herself as an acting coach in search of singing talent for a musical. On ABC’s “Modern Family,” she’s itching for a more maternal part.

“I want to play the gay guy’s mom,” she said, referring to the heavyset character of Cameron, partner to Mitchell (actors Eric Stonestreet, Jesse Tyler Ferguson). “And they’ve got to do it quick, while I’m still plump.”

As viewers of her “Kirstie Alley’s Big Life” know, the actress is intent on shedding the pounds that have routinely landed her on the covers of what she dismisses as “rag magazines.”

Articles and photos that she says distort her and her life are part of the reason she decided to appear in her first reality series.

“Anything bad you can say about me, they say. I’ve never collapsed, fainted, passed out. Basically, anything they’ve said, I never. The only true thing is I got fat,” Alley said.

She also sees the show as a vehicle to work with her teenage son and daughter, True and Lillie, and to provide a realistic take on weight loss.

“I wanted people to watch the journey of it, instead of me showing up with, `Oh, I’m skinny,’” said Alley, 59.

The ex-Jenny Craig spokeswoman, who regained weight she lost on the program, is aiming to drop 80 pounds through an organic regimen she’s launched. Before she gained weight about five years ago, she said, she was used to carrying a svelte 130 pounds or so on her 5-foot-8 frame.

The Emmy-winning “Cheers” and “Veronica’s Closet” sitcom star is enjoying her foray into reality TV after a brief period of adjustment to being on camera as herself in “Big Life” (airing Sunday).

“The show feels like a comedy to me. It’s the definition of an actual sitcom,” she said.

The humor stems in part from what Alley calls a happy but unconventional household.

“We’re a group of people that love each other and work together. The kids are in total communication with me. But I didn’t realize how eccentric we are until I saw the footage,” she said. I thought, `Doesn’t everybody live with lemurs?’”

(The lemurs, technically, have their own section of the house, which connects to a room-sized outdoor caged area.)

One thing not found in Alley’s life at this point: a partner. After a lifetime of attachments, including two marriages, she said she enjoys the freedom.

If she had a relationship, she speculates, “I’d leave the guy within 24 hours because I’m sure he’d tell me not to do something.”

A business associate, overhearing her, says she deserves someone who appreciates her beauty and lets her be free.

“That sounds swell. Where do I get that man?” Alley replied, with an ample touch of sarcasm.

 

Kirstie Alley has attacked the Hollywood Reporter’s Roger Friedman and NBC’s “Today” show for reporting allegations of a link between her Organic Liaison weight-loss system and the Church of Scientology, of which she’s a member.

Alley posted several venomous posts on her Twitter feed after Friedman wrote Monday on THR.com that several Organic Liaison advisers have strong Scientology connections and that the company’s Clearwater, Fla., corporate headquarters is in the same building as the World of Scientology.

“Please Google Mr. Roger Friedman,” Alley posted Tuesday. “He is spreading lies about me and my new business. You will see his history & why Fox fired him.” Friedman was a columnist at FoxNews.com before leaving the company last year after he reviewed a pirated version of “Wolverine.”

Alley added, “Going to have Mr. Attorney call Mr. Friedman’s Attorney tomorrow . . . Mr. Friedman is treading on thin LIBELOUS ice with my company. Crackkkk”
The weight-challenged actress also claimed Friedman changed a headline on his THR.com post to avoid legal action. “Mr. Friedman changed his libelous headline . . . TOO late. Unleash the DOGS.”

But Friedman hasn’t been contacted by Alley’s lawyers, and both mingled with guests at the premiere of “The Runaways” Wednesday at the Bowery Hotel without incident.

“Kirstie is a talented comedian. I wish her the best,” Friedman said. He maintained that the headline on his story never changed.

Alley also lashed out at the “Today” show Tuesday morning when Meredith Vieira asked her about her company’s alleged ties to Scientology. Alley called the claims “bull[bleep]” on-air.

In a statement yesterday, Alley said, “After the ‘Today’ show brought fringe bigotry and intolerance into the forefront of the national media, I feel compelled to clarify. Organic Liaison LLC is not affiliated with the Church of Scientology or the World Institute of Scientology.”

 

Kirstie Alley has hit back at reports her new weightloss programme will fund Scientology teachings, insisting the accusations are “not true”.

The former Weight Watchers spokeswoman recently launched Organic Liaison LLC after years of battling her size under the glare of the spotlight.

Members pay between $10 and $149 per month to follow the regime, which combines an organic food diet with vitamins and supplements.

Recent reports suggested money from the company was channelled directly into the church after links between Organic Liaison and Scientology were uncovered. The firm’s accountant, Saul B Lipson, is a known Scientologist whose company is approved by the church and based near its headquarters in Clearwater, Florida. The board also features active Scientologist Michelle Seward.

But Alley, a practising Scientologist, insists the claims have no merit.

She says, “It’s bulls**t. It’s not true. The address in Clearwater is my accountant, and he’s a Scientology Jew.”



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