Christina Applegate made her first public appearance since announcing she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame honoring her was unveiled Monday.
"Holy crap holy crap holy crap!!!'' Applegate tweeted on June 20, 2019, when the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce announced that she was among the latest group to receive stars. "Childhood dream! Thank you soooooo much! I was a tiny kid when I would think, wow that's effing cool! I'm so humbled and grateful!!!''
The ceremony is being held three days before the release of the third and final season of "Dead To Me,'' the Netflix dark comedy that has brought Applegate two of her six Emmy acting nominations.
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Applegate was joined at the 11:30 a.m. ceremony at 7007 Hollywood Blvd., across from The Hollywood Roosevelt hotel, by Katey Sagal, who played her mother on "Married... with Children,'' and David Faustino, who played her brother on the 1987-97 Fox comedy, Linda Cardellini, her co-star on "Dead To Me,'' and Liz Feldman, its creator.
The star is adjacent to the stars of Sagal and Ed O'Neill, who played her father on "Married With Children.'' It is the 2,740th since the completion of the Walk of Fame in 1961 with the first 1,558 stars.
The ceremony was streamed on the Walk of Fame's website, walkoffame.com.
Applegate was born on Nov. 25, 1971 and made her television debut on the March 7, 1972, episode of the NBC daytime drama, "Days of Our Lives,'' as the baby son of the character played by her mother, Nancy Priddy. Her next roles came in 1981 as a dancer in the film, "Beatlemania'' and on an episode of the NBC Western drama "Father Murphy.''
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Applegate's first series was the 1985 Showtime comedy, "Washingtoon,'' playing the daughter of an idealistic new congressman (Thomas Callaway). Her first series on a major broadcast network was "Heart of the City,'' an ABC crime drama that ran for 13 episodes in the 1986-87 season as the daughter of a police detective (Robert Desiderio).
Applegate was cast later in 1987 in her most famous role, the sexy and sarcastic Kelly Bundy, after the actors who first played the Bundy children in the "Married... with Children'' pilot, Tina Caspary and Hunter Carson, were dropped because the show's producers worried about a lack of chemistry between them and O'Neill and Sagal.
Applegate recently told the entertainment trade publication Variety she initially refused to audition for the role.
"I was way more into drama; I was not into comedy and I refused to audition for it. Refused!,'' Applegate told Variety. "I was an edgy person. I was not fun to be around! I was not funny. They went ahead and shot the pilot with two other Kellys and Buds. They weren't the fit that they wanted.
"They came back to me, and I said no. And they're like, 'Can we just send you the pilot? And if you like it, come in and read with a couple of other kids?' My mom and I were like, uccch! -- like that. Literally, like we were, like, 'Ucch, toilet humor!' We were seriously such snobs about it.''
Applegate returned to television in the season following the cancellation "Married... with Children,'' starring in "Jesse'' as a single mother raising her nine-year-old son (Eric Lloyd). The NBC comedy ran from 1998-2000.
Applegate received her first Emmy nomination and only victory in 2003 for outstanding guest actress in a comedy series for her portrayal of the middle sister of Rachel Green (Jennifer Aniston) in "Friends."
Applegate reprised the role the following season, receiving another Emmy nomination in the category, but lost to Laura Linney, who won for her recurring role on the final season of the NBC comedy "Frasier'' as a matchmaking agent Frasier Crane (Kelsey Grammer) falls for.
Applegate received outstanding lead actress in a comedy series Emmy nominations for both seasons of the 2007-09 ABC comedy, "Samantha Who?'' for role as a woman who wakes up from an eight-day coma with no recollection of past experiences, then discovers she wasn't a particularly honest, good-hearted or loving person and is forced to struggle with her desire to be good and temptation not to be.
Applegate's other honors include a best actress in a musical Tony nomination as taxi dancer Charity Hope Valentine in the 2005 revival of "Sweet Charity.''
Applegate's film credits include "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy'' and it sequel, "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues''; "Bad Moms''; "The Sweetest Thing''; "Hall Pass''; and "Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead.''
Applegate announced on Aug. 9, 2021, she had been diagnosed a few months earlier with multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease that disrupts communication between the brain and body.
"Being technically disabled is what it is,'' Applegate tweeted on Oct. 27, 2021. "I didn't know what MS was before I had it. My life is changed forever.''