What Lauren Graham, Alexis Bledel Said About Making More Gilmore Girls

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Lauren Graham Reveals Shocking Truth About Her ‘Gilmore Girls’ Paychecks

Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel have proven time and again that, where they lead, fans will follow.

And the Gilmore Girls costars take that responsibility seriously, which is why they won't sign up for just anything to keep the story of Lorelai Gilmore and her daughter Rory Gilmore going.

Well, maybe Graham would, having told E! News in 2024 she'd "play this character given any opportunity."

At the same time, lightning rarely strikes the same place twice, let alone three times. And even if another return to Stars Hollow as a follow-up to Netflix's four-episode Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life could answer a few burning questions, is that really what the people want?

Um, yes, judging by the response to Bledel and Graham's rare public reunion Sept. 14 at the 2025 Emmys —in honor of the 25th anniversary of GG's premiere—they would like it very much.

Winter, spring, summer or fall!

"Now is the time to announce a ten years later season for a year in the life !!!!!!!!!," greentreecups commented on an Emmys red carpet clip posted to the official Gilmore Girls Instagram. Added lianamodonova, "Can we have another season please!"

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First of all, wow, it has been nine years since creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and her husband/cowriter Daniel Palladino brought the loquacious mother-daughter duo—plus Scott Patterson's Luke, Kelly Bishop's Emily, Matt Czuchry's Logan, Melissa McCarthy's Sookie, etc.—back for a follow-up chapter.

So, with the leaves about to turn and the scent of pumpkin spice in the air, it's hard to not get a little starry-eyed about the idea of a cozy catch-up with Rory, Lorelai and everyone who mattered to them.

And we may not be the only ones who feel that way.

Playing Lorelai again in the 2016 revival "just made me so happy," Graham said on an April episode of Call Her Daddy. "I was, like, on a cloud the entire time. Because it was such an opportunity that you don't get very often to do it—not a do-over, but get to return to something with poeple feeling enthusiastic and you know it's going to be completed."

Though no matter how rapid-fire the GG discourse got at any given time, thanks to—as Bledel quipped at the Emmys—their "terrifyingly lengthy scripts," there is plenty of story left to tell.

But Graham didn't want to predict the likelihood of getting the gang back together one way or another.

"This is how much I'm superstitious or in love with the show," she explained, "is, like, there are questions I could probably get an answer to that I have never asked."

And she never inquired, Graham continued, "because Amy said, from the beginning, she knew what the final four words of the show were."

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But they famously didn't know that Gilmore Girls' seventh-season finale in 2007 would be the series finale, so those words—the full-circle "Mom?" "Yeah?" "I'm pregnant"—had to wait until 2016.

"So it did feel like a cliffhanger," Graham acknowledged. "I think it was. I think maybe the thought was we would go into another season then. But I have never asked and I don't know."

And she's way too superstitious to ask now. "I don't want to see behind the curtain," she said, "like, did they not feel like doing it? Did Netflix not feel like doing it? Were we waiting? What were they waiting on? There's just a little bit of movie magic that I would like to maintain." 

Patterson said after they wrapped in 2016 that "it'd be nice to do it every year," telling The Hollywood Reporter it was fun and easy. But, he added, "It was really rewarding and people got a sense that, if this was going to be the last thing, that we now have some closure."

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At least we know that Lorelai and Luke are "definitely still together,” as Graham told E!, thanks to her and Patterson's Stars Hollow-set 2024 Walmart ad.

Which, thanks to its snowy setting, may have sparked her idea for a special that would take place in the season that comes after fall.

"Given everyone's lives and schedules, it's a Christmas movie," Graham noted on a March episode of her Parenthood costar Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast. "It's not me trying to get out of the [GG revival] question. It is literally what I could picture."

Of course, she added, it couldn't be same-old.

"Lorelai and Luke got married," Graham said, advancing the plot. "Now, Rory's maybe having a baby, so it's not going to be necessarily the two of us circling the gazebo."

Word eventually got to Sherman-Palladino about the actress' idea for the most wonderful time of the year.

“The freaking Christmas special,” she cracked to E! News in April. “I'm hearing it from everybody else.”

While Graham's idea was "very cute," the Marvelous Mrs. Maisel creator noted, there were "no talks" about any furtherance of the Gilmore story.

Not that the coffee pot of ideas had run dry. “We never thought that the Netflix movies would happen,” Daniel Palladino told E!. “We're constantly thinking of stuff for Stars Hollow, because anything kind of quirky-American makes us want to put it into Stars Hollow."

But, he added, echoing his wife, "There's no set thing right now."

Eric Charbonneau/Netflix

Graham told Shepard, "I do still get asked, is it literally just better to leave them wanting more? I don't know. Thank God it isn't up to me. And what I have clearly said, is if somebody calls me to do it, I'll do it."

And Rory wouldn't just have her mom by her side.

"Amy's so talented that if she was excited about an idea," Keiko Agena, a.ka. Rory's bestie Lane, told E! in June 2024, "and if she had a way that she wanted to tell some of these stories, if people were available, I think everyone would be interested in finding where these characters are now."

What is clear is that there would be nowhere for Lorelai to go (in this timeline, as opposed to a prequel) without Rory.

Saeed Adyani/Netflix

And Bledel has been much more circumspect about revisiting GG after the events of A Year in the Life.

The Netflix revival "really seemed like the right thing," the Handmaid's Tale star said during Hulu’s Television Critics Association press day in January 2017.

So, she continued, "The only thing I can say about a future installment of the show would be that it would be about the story and certainly the timing. We want to tell a great story. It all lives in [Sherman-Palladino’s] imagination. She has a very clear vision and always has. We haven’t had input as to the story or the characters on that show very much. A Year in the Life, we did a little bit more than the original round of the show, but it really is all Amy."

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At the time, Sherman-Palladino got her last four words in and was sticking to 'em.

"We really had a very specific journey in our minds, and we fulfilled the journey," she told The Hollywood Reporter before the revival dropped and was devoured by millions. "So to us, this is the piece that we wanted to do. And the whole thought about, 'Is there more, is there more, is there more?'—this has to go out into the universe now. We've got to put this to bed. And then whatever happens, happens."

But despite all the thought that would have to go into such an endeavor, it was a no-brainer for Graham and Bledel to say yes to presenting together at the Emmys.

"There really wasn't anything planned to celebrate the 25th," Graham told THR on the red carpet before the show, "and it wasn't exactly a reunion, because we've seen each other. But to honor the show in this way feels like the party we didn't quite have. Maybe we'll be better prepared for the 30th."

And it's not as if there aren't seven seasons, plus four 90-minute days in the life, to enjoy in the meantime on Hulu or Netflix. Read on for behind-the-scenes Gilmore Girls secrets you can rattle off to your closest confidante over coffee:

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1. The show's fictional Stars Hollow—which has gone on to become one of TV's most beloved settings—was inspired by Amy Sherman-Palladino's unexpected visit to Washington, Conn. Charmed by the people she met, traditions she witnessed and the inn she stayed at, she left the small town with the concept for the series—including some of the pilot's dialogue.

"If I can make people feel this much of what I felt walking around this fairy town," Sherman-Palladino told Deseret News, "I thought that would be wonderful."

2. Alexis Bledel had only one uncredited acting role on her resume and was a student at New York University when she auditioned for Rory.

"I was very sick, I was a student at NYU, and they kept calling me back up to audition," Bledel recalled during an appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers. "I think I went, like, six times. Oddly, I wasn't a very seasoned actor at all. I didn't know the process. I grew a tad bit impatient. I had a little attitude and our boss really liked that a lot. She was like, 'That's our girl!' I was like, 'Are you guys going to bring me back again?' and she was like, 'I like that, that's perfect.'"

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3. Gilmore Girls without Lauren Graham as Lorelai? Unimaginable, right? But it almost happened.

"When I got the script for the Gilmore Girls pilot," Graham wrote in her 2016 book, Talking As Fast As I Can: From Gilmore Girls to Gilmore Girls (and Everything in Between). "I was in New York, staying in a friend's studio apartment, waiting to hear if the series I just completed for NBC — Don Rooses' M.Y.O.B.—was going to be picked up for a second season or canceled."

Fortunately for us, M.Y.O.B. was not picked up, allowing Graham to play the fast-talking lead, which was also good for any other actress in consideration for the part.

"There's a sort of manic recognition that happens very rarely when I read something that I want so much that I go briefly but totally bonkers," she explained of her connection to the character after reading the script. "That feeling is a combination of 'Hello, old friend,' meets EVERYONE GET OUT OF MY WAY SHE'S ALL MINE."

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4. Scott Patterson was the only actor to audition for Luke, winning over the casting directors immediately with his charming yet curmudgeonly take on the diner owner and Lorelai's future husband.

"Amy said, 'I don't need to see anyone else," casting director Jill Anthony told Vanity Fair. "'He's 100 percent it.'"

But Patterson never thought he was going to sport Luke's signature hat and flannel shirts. 

"I had three auditions that day, and this was the second one," the actor detailed to Glamour. "I had prepared one scene, but I was supposed to have prepared two. So I went in and I did my thing. I didn't care anymore...I knew I wasn't going to get [Gilmore Girls]. The script was too good. The pilot script was so good; they were going to offer it to stars, so what was I wasting my time for? I'm late for this other [audition], I'll probably get a ticket [outside], so can I get out of here, please?"

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5. Before Jared Padalecki could land his starring role as Rory's first love Dean Forester, two other Canadian actors had to be fired. Why? The character had been altered to be less "alternative," Anthony explained to Vanity Fair.

6. Ryan Gosling and Chris Pine both auditioned for the series. Gosling was brought in to read for a small part, with casting director Jami Rudofsky admitting at the 2015 ATX TV Festival that his audition fell—gasp!—flat.

Pine, meanwhile, revealed his father, actor Robert Pine, had secured him an audition (his first professional one), though he couldn't remember for which part. As he said in a W Magazine video, "I dunno, maybe a boyfriend."

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7. While Melissa McCarthy went on to become one of the biggest comedy stars in Hollywood, Sherman-Palladino revealed she "had to fight" to cast the actress as the lovable and kooky chef Sookie.

"They weren't sure. It wasn't that people didn't like her, but she was a different energy. She was a different kind of chick," Sherman-Palladino explained during the cast's reunion panel at 2015 ATX TV Festival. "And the part was just written for a woman, There was no body type, there was nothing specific about it. I was like, 'I need someone funny who could really act.'"

And while Sherman-Palladino knew from the minute McCarthy walked in the door that she was the perfect person for the role, she said, "It was a tricky sell. And it took awhile…everyone came around, but it took a few shows."

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8. In the pilot, Sookie was played by Alex Borstein, but she had to drop out of the role because of her obligations to MADtv. She would take on small recurring roles later in the series as a harpist and stylist. Sherman-Palladino would later cast Borstein in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, the actress going on to win two Emmys for her work on the Amazon comedy. 

9. Jackson Douglas, Borstein's then-husband, however, landed a more permanent role on Gilmore Girls after Sherman-Palladino wrote the role of Sookie's farmer love interest Jackson with him in mind. Meant to only be in a few episodes, his chemistry with McCarthy landed him a seven-season stay.

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10. Liza Weil originally auditioned for Rory, and while producers were impressed, they knew she wasn't the right fit.

"I got a call and they were like, 'They really liked you but it wasn't quite right. But if [the show is picked up] maybe they'll find something for you to do,'" Weil recalled during the ATX Festival panel. "I thought that was probably the end of it."

As it turns out, they didn't just find something, they created something for Weil to do, writing the role of Paris, Rory's foe-turned-friend, specifically for her. And while Paris went on to become a fan-favorite, Weil was initially unsure about the prickly part.

"The younger version of myself was really freaked out that that's what they wrote," the How to Get Away With Murder star joked. "I couldn't fathom that they would think that they could do that! But now I think it's really flattering and I'm really glad."

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11. Graham and Bledel's chemistry? A total stroke of luck as the two stars didn't meet until their first day on set. And Bledel was so new to acting that Graham would have to grab her onscreen daughter's arm to make sure she hit her marks.

"People are like, 'You have such great chemistry,'" Graham joked on Today. "And I'm like, ‘I'm mauling her. That's why.'"

12. Unlike most other actors, Graham and Bledel really ate most of the food Lorelai and Rory consumed during the series, which, any fan knows, was a lot.

"It really bothers me when actors don't eat the food that's in the scene," Bledel explained on the Today show. But after several takes and upset stomachs, Graham says they eventually relied on spit buckets to get them through it.

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13. Throughout the series' run, Bledel dated two of her main onscreen boyfriends IRL, according to casting director Mara Casey.

"We did have a joke about casting all of Alexis' [real-life] boyfriends," she revealed to Life & Style in 2016. "She dated Jared and Milo [Ventimiglia]. And she also dated a young New York actor named Chris Heuisler, who played a guest role. Real sweet kid."

14. While Sean Gunn initially was introduced as Stars Hollow's DSL installer Mick, he would eventually become a series regular as Kirk, who would have a different odd job in every episode. So why the name change? Gunn revealed Sherman-Palladino had simply forgotten he already had a name.

Warner Bros. Television/Entertainment Pictures via ZUMA Press

15. The WB was interested in a spinoff starring Ventimiglia, with the season three episode "Here Comes the Son" serving as a backdoor pilot for the new series. Windward Circle would've centered on Jess' life in Venice Beach, Calif., but the series ultimately didn't go forward due to budget concerns. 

16. As Gilmore Girls was ending its seventh season, there were talks of continuing to follow Rory in her adult life after Graham decided she was not going to return. 

"I did formally say at one point, 'I'm not coming back,'" Graham revealed to TV Guide. "Then they thought, 'Well, can we do it with just Alexis?' I don't want to speak for her, but we both went back and forth. Ultimately, neither of us wanted to do it without the other one."

She continued, "They were trying to think of everything. There was a time when we thought maybe I would produce and not be on the show in the same capacity."

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17. After contract negotiations stalled, Stars Hollow was rocked when it was announced the Sherman-Palladino and husband Daniel Palladino would not be returning for the seventh (and ultimately final) season.

"The short answer really is that we just could not come to terms with the studio for a new contract," Palladino told TV Guide at the time, with Sherman-Palladino adding they "tried" to get a multi-year deal.

"Deals have options," she explained. "There are all sorts of things that go into deals. What we were asking for was not crazy. It was not insane. It was not the moon. It was really about, frankly, protecting the show."

While the couple had hired their replacement, Dave Rosenthal, Sherman-Palladino admitted passing over the reigns was "horrifying. It's like a freaking nightmare."

And she's since revealed she's never watched the final season.

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18. For years, there were rumors of tension on set between Patterson and Graham, despite their undeniable chemistry as Luke and Lorelai. The couple's rabid fanbase believed it was the reason their favorite pair broke up in a polarizing season six storyline, but Graham denied those claims in an interview with TV Guide after the series ended.

"Yes, it was overblown," she said, though she admitted she was "closer" to David Sutcliffe, who played Rory's father Christopher. "I always thought that maybe people thought I was trying to give him some sort of advantage because we're friends. But that's not it."

And Graham was just as disappointed and frustrated as the fans were with how Luke and Lorelai's relationship ended on an ambiguous note in the series' original run.

"I just love the tension between [Luke and Lorelai] so much…For me, it didn't end in a satisfying way," she explained to TV Guide. "We weren't sure it was the end. Amy wasn't with us in the last season. I can't answer it because it didn't really end. It didn't resolve satisfactorily."

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19. Because of her exit from the series after season six, the show did not end the way Sherman-Palladino originally intended to. And she wasn't shy about voicing that, teasing fans for years with the lore of the "last four words" she had planned to end the Gilmore women's run with. 

Almost every interview with the Palladinos in the years that followed included a question about the mythical words, though they never spilled any details for a hopeful reason. "I don't want to totally say [what my ideas were]," Sherman-Palladino told Entertainment Weekly, because if there is a movie in the making, I'm going to be basically delving back into where I left off, and then I'm kind of [screwed]."

And when the Netflix revival was announced in 2016, it was confirmed that the four-episode miniseries would end with the long-awaited four words. Which you can read all about right here. (Yes, they were worth the wait.) 

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20. Cast as Lorelai's waspy-but-loving parents Richard and Emily Gilmore, Edward Herrmann and Kelly Bishop became quite close and his spouse Star Herrmann even referred to Bishop as his "second wife." Herrmann died in 2014 at the age of 71 after a battle with brain cancer. In the weeks just before he passed, his wife  invited Bishop to visit with him.

"She was the only person we had come," she told Vanity Fair. "It was important to him, and it was important to her."

Bishop called the invitation "wonderful and sad and surprising." At the cast's reunion panel at the ATX TV Festival, a chair was left open on the stage in honor of Herrmann.

(Originally published Sept. 15, 2025, at 1:05 p.m. PT)

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