Facts about Paula Poundstone
4 Good Links
Paula Poundstone Official Site
With audio clips, an online diary, and notes on her catsPaula Poundstone
2005 news article about her career plansLarry King Live
Long transcript of her 2002 appearance on the cable talk showPoundstone Sprung From Rehab
2001 E! Online report, with details on the whole arrest sagaShare this:
Paula Poundstone Biography
After years as a stand-up comedian, Paula Poundstone took her wry observations about life and her liberal political perspective to TV in the 1990 HBO special Cats, Cops and Stuff. The show won a Cable ACE award and Poundstone became a steady comedy presence on cable and network TV throughout the 1990s. She was never quite a regular — her 1993 series The Paula Poundstone Show was cancelled after only a few episodes — but she was a popular guest on programs like The Rosie O’Donnell Show, where she often covered political topics while wearing her signature gaudy neckties. She also appeared in the short-lived TV series Science Court (1997) and Home Movies (1999) and was a panelist on the game shows Hollywood Squares and To Tell The Truth. Poundstone also wrote a regular column for Mother Jones magazine from 1993-98. An adoptive mother of three children, she became a prominent advocate for foster children. Poundstone’s career took a nosedive in June of 2001 when she was arrested and charged with drunk driving with her adopted children in the car, along with "lewd acts on a minor." The latter charge was later dropped and she pleaded no contest to a felony charge of child endangerment and misdemeanor charges. She was sentenced to five years’ probation and six months of drug treatment. She has since continued to tour with her stage act, and in 2006 published the book There’s Nothing in This Book That I Meant to Say. She has also been a frequent guest on Garrison Keillor‘s radio show A Prairie Home Companion.
Extra credit
Poundstone grew up in Sudbury, Massachusetts, but was born in Hunstville, Alabama.