Biography of Tina Fey
Elizabeth Stamatina "Tina" Fey (/ˈfeɪ/; conceived May 18, 1970) is an American performer, humorist, scholar and maker, known for her deal with the NBC sketch parody arrangement Saturday Night Live (SNL, 1997–2006), the discriminatingly acclaimed NBC satire arrangement 30 Rock (2006–2013), and such movies as Mean Girls (2004), Baby Mama (2008), Date Night (2010), and Admission (2013).Fey first broke into comic drama as an offered player in the Chicago-based improvisational satire bunch The Second City. She then joined SNL as an essayist, later coming to be head journalist and an entertainer, known for her position as co-stay in the Weekend Update fragment. In 2004 she adjusts the screenplay Mean Girls in which she likewise co-featured. In the wake of leaving SNL in 2006, she made the TV arrangement 30 Rock, a scenario parody approximately dependent upon her encounters at SNL. In the arrangement, Fey depicts the head author of a fictional portrayal comic drama arrangement. In 2008, she featured in the drama film Baby Mama, close by previous SNL co-star Amy Poehler. Fey next showed up close by Steve Carell in the 2010 drama film Date Night and with Will Ferrell in the energized film Megamind.
Fey has gained 8 Emmy Awards, 2 Golden Globe Awards, 5 Screen Actors Guild Awards, 4 Writers Guild of America Awards and has been selected for a Grammy Award for her self-portraying book Bossypants, which beat The New York Times Best Seller record for five weeks. In 2008, the Associated Press (AP) gave Fey the AP Entertainer of the Year recompense for her sarcastic depiction of Republican bad habit presidential applicant Sarah Palin in a visitor presence on SNL. In 2010, Fey was the beneficiary of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, the most youthful ever champ of the honor. On January 13, 2013, Fey had the Golden Globe Awards, on top of her long-time companion and individual humorist, Amy Poehler. Their execution was discriminating.
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