By Bridget Bland, BlackVoices.com

She's amassed eighteen Emmy Awards, been chosen as one of Time magazine's "Most Influential People in the World" five times over and been at the top of Forbes "Richest Americans List" numerous times.
We know her net worth is currently at two and a half billion dollars and would like to think that we know Oprah Winfrey's life story inside and out.
A little black girl from rural Mississippi is abused. She grows up promiscuous and gets pregnant. After a miscarriage, she is shipped to live with her father who provides strict discipline, which results in the teenager excelling in school. She wins beauty pageants and transitions to working as a television news reporter and anchor in Baltimore. She gets her own morning talk show in Chicago and competes with Phil Donahue. Soon thereafter she effortlessly catapults to become the most successful talk show host of all-time and the first African-American woman billionaire.
But that's not it.
There seems to be more to learn about the reserved media mogul -- and some of it is shared for the first time on 'Oprah: The E! True Hollywood Story,' debuting this Oct. 17, 2008 at 9 PM on E!.
Oprah Hair Transformation
This was Oprah in 1986, the same year 'The Oprah Winfrey Show' entered national syndication. Oprah brought her style of emotional reporting to the main stream wearing a short hair style with feathered bangs. Winfrey's look said "working mother" not "power broker." (Photo: AP)
Perhaps inspired by shocking '80s hair styles, Oprah teased her hair to towering heights in 1987. By this time, her show was the highest rated talk show in television history. (Photo: Getty Images)
Fast forward to 1996: Almost ten years later, Winfrey's look is considerably more stylish. By this time she has established her media dominance, becoming the third woman in entertainment history to found her own production facility, Harpo Studios. (Photo: Chris Kasson, AP)
In the year 2000, Oprah began to take her hair to new lengths, while keeping a demure sensibility. This was also the year she launched O, The Oprah Magazine. (Photo: Kevin Winter, Getty Images)
By 2004, Oprah took her magazine game to the next level with the introduction of O at Home. Her hair was spunkier and younger, with layers that finally gave it a modern silhouette. (Photo: Carlo Allegri, Getty Images)
Oprah also began exploring more feminine hair styles in 2004. She looked almost girlish in chin-length curls as she received the United Nations Association's Global Humanitarian Action Award that year. (Photo: Getty Images)
Winfrey finally began looking more like a woman of power in 2005. She softened a severe bob by bending the ends under slightly for a sophisticated finish. (Photo: Getty Images)
At the 60th annual Tony Awards later in 2006, Oprah seemed to take two steps back with her hair, perhaps looking to keep it simple. Her hair lacked volume and shine, but at least it looked like it was all real! (Photo: Seth Wenig, AP)
In a look almost inspired by Marilyn Monroe, Oprah wore a softer bob in early 2006. (Photo: Paul Hawthorne, Getty Images)
In 2007, Oprah often wore soft curls. While not her first attempt at rocking this hair style, the more recent rendition looked more natural. (Photo: Frazer Harrison, Getty Images)
Some of Winfrey's closest friends, including her best friend Gayle King, celebrity chef/ and talk show host Rachael Ray, 'The Oprah Winfrey Show' special correspondent, Lisa Ling, and superstar singer Alicia Keys are a few boldfaced names offering insight into the life and legacy of the multi-media powerhouse.
Shortly after helping Ray to launch her own talk show, reports surfaced that Winfrey and the Food Network star were in a tiff about the direction of Ray's show. In the new E! show, Ray sets the record straight, calling the rumors, "complete garbage and utterly ridiculous," adding, "I've never feuded with Oprah. I've never disagreed with Oprah. I've never not taken Oprah's advice 'cause my momma ain't raise no dummy."
Ling offers an intimate look at how vulnerable Winfrey was when her beloved dog, Sophie passed away. Ling reveals that Winfrey had a true breakdown causing show producers to halt production after a video montage of her late dog over the years.
When Winfrey speaks, America listens. The 'True Hollywood' show highlights some of the most controversial shows she has done, including the court battle that she won against cattle farmers in Texas after speaking out against beef, as well as the ups and downs of her very public weight battle. It also touches on how her viewers donated $15 million to post-Hurricane Katrina relief efforts. But, also how criticized she was after endorsing Presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama.
The show also features never-before-seen footage from inside the Johannesburg courtroom where dorm matron, Tiny Virginia Mokopo -- of Oprah's Leadership Academy for Girls -- went on trial for alleged abuse. Mokopo has pleaded not guilty and the case has been postponed until later this month.
'Black Enterprise' magazine's Sonia Alleyne reflects on Oprah's legacy in the 'True Hollywood' show, adding, "Living a life of service for Oprah is the reason she's here. It's the reason she exists."
King, Winfrey's best friend and confidante, echos that sentiment, saying that she doesn't think that Oprah should be counted out in 2010 when her show's syndication contract ends.
"I know she still so loves doing what she's doing," she says. "She's never done anything for the money, but she's in a stage in her life where if she wanted to go to her home in California and sit under a tree and read a book for the rest of her life she certainly could do that."
"But, the truth of the matter is Oprah loves working," she adds.
With her new television network, The Oprah Winfrey Network, OWN, launching Fall of 2009, we're betting King knows her best friend well.


Comments: (476)
Add a comment
By: Myrah on 10/21/2008 1:20PM
I really admire Oprah for her tenacity. She is determined to be successful regardless of people's opinion. My one wish is to see her one day. I love you Oprah!!!!!
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: dweetta adams on 10/22/2008 10:28AM
A real women and a real american story.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: dweetta adams on 10/22/2008 10:29AM
We I look at oprah I am proud of being a black southern women.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Carol Plowman on 10/22/2008 12:03PM
I'm so done with Oprah, now she is going to have her show in Spanish. What is wrong with this picture. We are enabling the Spanish community they need to learn to speak and understand the language what is spoken right here in the U.S.A. (which if anyone forgot is English).
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: LINDA on 10/28/2008 4:08AM
IS IT TRUE THAT OPRAH IS NO LONGER WITH STEADMAN.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: teddy wells on 2/21/2009 5:27AM
The cartoon the NY post printed was tasteless. I can’t believe the guys @ NY Post would print such an ad. Cartoons are supposed to be funny.
The lady in Connecticut was saddened by the lost of her pet. (NOT FUNNY). Are they saying the police should shoot the person who wrote the stimulus bill? (NOT FUNNY) Are they saying our new president is a monkey? (NOT FUNNY) This is an outrage. The New York Post should close for business. We know our new president is black and the New York Post obviously thinks our president resembles a monkey. Does the New York Post feel that all its black employees resemble monkeys? This is a serious issue. This issue needs to be addressed on a grand level. We will not be able to move forward as a country if large highly influential companies are able to speak life to racial hatred. I really feel we should all get together and file a class action lawsuit. We need to express the urgency of our country moving towards racial equality, then and only then we are able to concentrate on getting our economy back on the right track. If we don’t address this issue to the fullest extend, we will go into the worst depression in the history of the world, because we did not take control of the spirit of racial hatred that holds us back from reaching our full potential. Hurricane Katrina was a perfect example of many years of black people going silent when racial injustice issues are surfaced. There’s no time like the present. Time to make a stand
Reply to this Comment | Report This