The time has come forEllen DeGeneresto take her final bow.On Thursday, the comedian, 64, announced onTwitterthat she had taped the final episode ofTheEllen DeGeneresShow, which will air on May 26.DeGeneres then went on to praise her decades-long gig, calling it “the greatest privilege of my life.““When we started this show in 2003, the iPhone didn’t exist. Social Media didn’t exist. Gay marriage wasn’t legal. We watched the world change, sometimes for the better, sometimes not,” she wrote.“But whatever was happening, my goal was always for the show to be a place where we could all come together and laugh for an hour. Being invited into your lives has been the greatest privilege of my life and has brought me incredible joy. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.“On Thursday’s episode of the talk show, DeGeneres celebrated the 25th anniversary of her former sitcom’siconic coming-out episode. DeGeneres reflected on her experience, saying “look at me now.“On April 30, 1997, DeGeneres herself didn’t just publicly come out as gay — her character on the ABC hit sitcomEllendid too. The episode titled “The Puppy Episode” wastaped in front of a live audience.“When I came out, people warned me that it was going to ruin my career, and they were right for a while,” she said during heropening monologue.“Actually, for exactly three years, I lost my career. But look at me now.“DeGeneres, 64, was met with loud applause before stressing the importance of learning to accept and embrace people for their “authentic selves.“Michael Rozman/Warner Bros.DeGeneres has been married to wife Portia De Rossi since 2008 when same-sex marriage was legalized in California.Just months after the program was embroiled in controversy overallegations of workplace toxicity, DeGeneres revealed in May 2021 that the show would end with its 19th season. She toldThe Hollywood Reporterat the time thatthe scandal was not the reason behind the decision.

The time has come forEllen DeGeneresto take her final bow.

On Thursday, the comedian, 64, announced onTwitterthat she had taped the final episode ofTheEllen DeGeneresShow, which will air on May 26.

DeGeneres then went on to praise her decades-long gig, calling it “the greatest privilege of my life.”

“When we started this show in 2003, the iPhone didn’t exist. Social Media didn’t exist. Gay marriage wasn’t legal. We watched the world change, sometimes for the better, sometimes not,” she wrote.

“But whatever was happening, my goal was always for the show to be a place where we could all come together and laugh for an hour. Being invited into your lives has been the greatest privilege of my life and has brought me incredible joy. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.”

On Thursday’s episode of the talk show, DeGeneres celebrated the 25th anniversary of her former sitcom’siconic coming-out episode. DeGeneres reflected on her experience, saying “look at me now.”

On April 30, 1997, DeGeneres herself didn’t just publicly come out as gay — her character on the ABC hit sitcomEllendid too. The episode titled “The Puppy Episode” wastaped in front of a live audience.

“When I came out, people warned me that it was going to ruin my career, and they were right for a while,” she said during heropening monologue.“Actually, for exactly three years, I lost my career. But look at me now.”

DeGeneres, 64, was met with loud applause before stressing the importance of learning to accept and embrace people for their “authentic selves.”

Michael Rozman/Warner Bros.

The Ellen DeGeneres Show

DeGeneres has been married to wife Portia De Rossi since 2008 when same-sex marriage was legalized in California.

Just months after the program was embroiled in controversy overallegations of workplace toxicity, DeGeneres revealed in May 2021 that the show would end with its 19th season. She toldThe Hollywood Reporterat the time thatthe scandal was not the reason behind the decision.

source: people.com