CINDY TRANE CHRISTESON -- The Moral of the Story
You probably recognize her voice after eighteen years of commercials
for Lucky Food Stores. You’re sure to identify this co-host who has
joined Bob Eubanks for 19 years of the Tournament of Roses Parade. But
you truly know her heart when you hear her story.
Stephanie Edwards shared that story last week to more than 300 women
at a luncheon hosted by Marketplace Women of Orange County. Marketplace
Women is a gathering to join together for friendship and encouragement,
as well as to integrate personal, professional and spiritual lives. The
luncheon was part of Christian Outreach Week.
Stephanie captured the audience’s attention as she eloquently shared
about all those areas of her life. One minute everyone was laughing, and
the next, the room went silent. A hush happened when someone’s cell phone
rang.
Stephanie looked up. “Whose phone is ringing?”
We looked around nervously. Her crystal blue eyes twinkled and she
rescued the room with both grace and wit by saying, “Go ahead and answer,
it might be for me.”
Stephanie’s career in show business began more than 30 years ago.
“I wrote Ralph Story and told him that I am a great actress, but in
the meantime, I need a job, do you know of a place in show business where
I could fit? It was one of the most aggressive things I’ve ever done,”
Stephanie said. “He called me back that day [and] hired me, I became his
assistant and eventually he told ABC he was bringing me along as the
co-host of his morning program.
“It was a tremendous break for me and he remained a great mentor and a
wonderful gentleman. Ralph is struggling with emphysema, but the brain is
as brilliant as ever.”
Stephanie said that she interviewed just about everybody, mainly
because “everyone was willing to go on television and talk about
themselves.”
“I have interviewed the head of the American Nazi Party, and I have
interviewed animals. Those are some of the most pleasant,” Edwards said.
“I interviewed a wonderful cheetah and the other guest of the day was
Maria Von Trapp, the lady who lived the ‘Sound of Music.’ She was rather
elderly by then. She came in her Austrian costume, with lots of red in
it. She sat at one end, and from the other side of the stage came this
lunging, out-of-control cheetah. Well, they brought it under control or
you would have heard the story by now.”
Stephanie also shared some advice with the women at the luncheon.
“It pays to tell the truth, because eventually you get to that point,
like the old show business axiom, where you better be nice to the people
on the way up, because you’re going to meet them again on the way down.”
Stephanie has spoken to countless groups of men, women and children.
She said she has developed a theory about how times have changed --
People are now “aspiring to what is not real.”
“Nowadays I believe people go to the movies, but mistake what they see
on screen as being real, and that their life is not,” she said. “They
think, ‘I am not yet real. When is my life going to be real and how can I
get there?”’
Later in the luncheon, she said that left to her own nature, she is
someone who hopes for the best, but expects the worst. She said that
knowing that this is part of her character has “really bent the roads
I’ve taken since I was 12 years old,” in part because of depression.
“People are beginning to quietly admit that depression is an epidemic
in our world. Even in this God-kissed environment, life can be very
hard,” Stephanie said. “When you break your arm, you have a sling, when
you have depression, you’d better get help.”
God’s love is what Stephanie credits with keeping her buoyant.
“In the midst of the greatest pain and tragedies of my life. . .I have
known one joy and that is the truth of God’s promise in Christ,” she
said. “Christ is the way, the truth and the life and this is a way
offered to everyone, no matter what their present religion, background or
creed.”
Her belief in Christ, however, has not helped her when it comes to
Hollywood.
“It’s not popular to be a Christian in show business,” she said. “In
show business, when I’ve had enough rapport with someone to speak of who
I am as a Christian, invariably they ask, ‘Why would you want to be one
of those?’ And the ‘one of those’ that they explain to me is someone who
calls themselves a Christian, but who does not know the Lord.”
Holding up a Bible, Stephanie said “If the world could see that God
calls the game, then we could accept that the way to live with God is
just as He said in the Bible. . . . This book outsells any piece of
literature since papyrus was first written on with a quill pen.”
Stephanie, also known as the “Lucky Lady with red hair,” closed the
afternoon by encouraging people to open up their hearts and minds to
Jesus Christ and see what happens. “Do you trust the god of your
experience or do you trust a fresh experience of God? May you know the
joy and love of God before the day is over.”
The standing ovation Stephanie received at the end was not just to
honor beautiful words by a beautiful woman. The standing ovation was also
a sign that a room full of women showed that they too stood with her to
live their lives for God.
* CINDY TRANE CHRISTESON is a Newport Beach resident who speaks
frequently to parenting groups. She may be reached via e-mail at o7
[email protected] or through the mail at P.O. Box 6140-No. 505,
Newport Beach, CA 92658.
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