COMEDIAN Ellen DeGeneres returned to her TV show today after taking a long weekend to escape a national uproar over an adopted puppy, saying she hoped the drama would not discourage people from adopting pets.
DeGeneres, one of the country's best known entertainers, sobbed on TV last week as she recounted how an animal rescue group took back a puppy she had adopted but then given to her hairstylist's family without the animal agency's permission.
The on-air tears stirred an outpouring of public support, and footage of her begging for the agency to return the dog, Iggy, was replayed endlessly. DeGeneres later made a public appeal for an end to death threats that had been reported against some of those involved.
After taking a long weekend to recover from the shaggy-dog tale that went too far, DeGeneres returned to her show today saying the reaction to her crying on air had taken her totally by surprise, making headlines from Australia to England.
"I have always cried since I was a little kid. I am a sensitive person, I cry. I cry at commercials, I cry at stories, I cry at anything sweet, I cry at babies," she said.
"You don't want to keep in a good cry because then you get bloated ... there is nothing wrong with having feelings and I think more people should cry."
DeGeneres invited various guests involved in pet adoptions onto her show, including the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) and online pet adoption website
petfinders.com.
"There are so many dogs and cats out there that need homes and they just need to end up in a good home," DeGeneres said. "That is all I care about ... I don't want anybody to be discouraged from this."
DeGeneres said the crew on her television show had also been left distraught over the incident.
"People on the staff are upset because we are a family," DeGeneres said as cameras panned to crew members fake-crying into their hands and tissues.
DeGeneres, host of this year's Oscar awards, said she adopted the shaggy-haired mixed breed dog in September, but the little dog did not get along well with her cats, so she gave Iggy to her hairstylist.
The agency from which she adopted the dog, Mutts and Moms, reclaimed the dog on the grounds that DeGeneres violated the adoption agreement, which required her to return the pet to the agency if she chose not to keep it.
"I've rescued so many animals over the years ... this came out of the blue," she said.
Straight talk from Ellen on new TV character
By BILL BRIOUX
PASADENA, Calif. -- Yup, she's still gay. Ellen DeGeneres met with critics on the press tour yesterday to talk about her fall CBS sitcom, The Ellen Show.
Her new character, a former Internet executive, moves back to a small town to live with her daffy mother (Cloris Leachman) and become a high-school guidance teacher. An old beau, played by Jim Gaffigan (Welcome To New York), still has a crush even though Ellen's gay. "He's just this nice guy who doesn't fully get it," she said.
On her last sitcom, DeGeneres broke ground by coming out as a lesbian, both in real life and in character. Today, with gay characters on hit shows like Will & Grace and ER, that's no big deal. But Ellen never recovered from being the first "lesbian show" and quickly flamed out after a flurry of publicity.
The real Ellen got burned, too. "I learned that it's really hard to do a sitcom and do very important political issues," she said. "I think people want to sit at home and turn on their TV and just laugh. And I understand that now."
That's why this show is more Ed or Mayberry than Will & Grace, she explained.
She also accepts some responsibility for the media circus surrounded her past relationship with actress Anne Heche. "I think we contributed to that," she said. "We didn't run away from it or hide it, so again I have to take responsibility for how much my private life became everybody's business."
And while the tabloid publicity may have hurt her career, DeGeneres, 43, says she has no regrets about coming out. "People may not really like the fact that I'm gay, and they may not understand it fully. But I think people, for the most part, respect what I've done." (More on: Ellen Degeneres).
'The Ellen DeGeneres Show Performances' (Full Show)