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Betty White: Entertainer of the year

New York - What Betty White did in 2010 doesn't usually happen: an 88-year-old actress with more than six decades in Hollywood suddenly became the object of adulation of the Facebook-connected masses, which campaigned for her to host the sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live, boosting its ratings and helping her set ratings records for her own show.

After a year, remarkable for a star of any age, White has been voted the Entertainer of the Year by members of The Associated Press.

"It's ridiculous," White says of the honour, in an interview from her home in Los Angeles. "They haven't caught on to me, and I hope they never do."

Final tally

But more than acclaim, her unlikely, age-defying success resonated deeply with people who saw in her a spirited, hilarious aberration, a woman not dimmed by age but enhanced by it: The genuine article in a pop culture awash in imitators.

There were 102 ballots submitted from US news organisations that make up the AP's membership. Voters were asked to cast their ballots for who had the most influence on the entertainment world and culture in 2010. Previous winners include Taylor Swift, Tina Fey and Stephen Colbert.

The final tally was close: White's 20 votes beat the cast of Glee, Fox's hit musical, by only two votes. Tied for third with 13 votes were late-night TV host Conan O'Brien, film director James Cameron and Apple's iPad. Satirical news host Jon Stewart closely followed with a dozen votes.

SNL

White's 2010 began with her acceptance in January of a lifetime achievement award from the Screen Actors Guild. Her speech, in which she thanked SAG "from the bottom of my bottom", reminded many of her talent - showcased for years on The Golden Girls and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

Gesturing at presenter Sandra Bullock she asked, "Isn't it heartening how far a girl as plain as she is can go?"

The appearance led to a fan-created Facebook campaign urging SNL to make her a guest host. After White's award-winning Snickers Super Bowl ad, more than 500 000 were supporting her on the social networking site.

It wasn't a new idea to the NBC sketch programme, though. White says that she had turned down SNL three times before.

Biggest audiences

"I thought I was so Californian and it's so New York-oriented that I would be like a fish out of water," she says. "This time, my agent said, `No, you've got to do it.' ... But I was scared to death."

"It was the insecurity, I think, that had me scared," she says, noting that she can't stand using cue cards, a necessity for a live show that's revised until minutes before broadcast. A tip to focus on the cue cards instead of her fellow actors helped, but she still had to adjust. "I thought, `How do you not look at Tina Fey when you're standing right next to her?"'

But the show came off incredibly. Airing on Mother's Day weekend in May, most of the recent female SNL alum returned for the show, including Fey, Amy Poehler and Rachel Dratch. White appeared in every sketch and the episode was watched by 12.1 million viewers, one of the show's biggest audiences in years. The appearance also won White her seventh Emmy, for outstanding guest actress in a comedy series.

Will Forte, a longtime cast member who has since left the show, wasn't alone in describing it as the best show he had ever done.

"Each week is not always super fun," said Forte. "From every step of the way, (that week) was just a joy. There was this energy about her that was so wonderful."

Working steadily

For those who didn't know White, she was a breath of fresh air. For others, they were seeing her anew.

"She re-entered the hearts of all ages in 2010," said Mark Vasche, editor and vice president of the Modesto Bee in California, "from parents and grandparents who watched her on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and The Golden Girls, to their kids and grandkids who discovered her spunky octogenarian style in film and used the Internet to petition for her Saturday Night Live appearance."

All the feting has come as a surprise to White.

"It's been phenomenal, but everybody keeps congratulating me on my resurgence and my big comeback," she says. "I haven't been away, guys. I've been working steadily for the last 63 years."


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