The ending of the beloved series Gilmore Girls left so many questions unanswered for fans of the show: What will become of Rory’s career? Will she ever get back together with Jess? Will Lorelei marry Luke? And what were Amy Sherman-Palladino’s planned last four words for the series before she left the show??
Now, some of those questions just might get answered: according to TV Line and The Hollywood Reporter, the series just might get a reboot on Netflix. The streaming company is apparently in talks for a limited-series revival that would involve series creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and her husband, producer Daniel Palladino.
According to TV Line, it looks like much of the original cast could be involved, including Lauren Graham, Alexis Bledel, Kelly Bishop and Scott Patterson—though no mention of Melissa McCarthy, who is now much more famous than she was in her days playing Sookie St. James.
Here’s hoping we all get to revisit Stars Hollow and all of its marvelous citizens.
A spokesperson for Netflix declined to comment. Lauren Graham weighed in on the rumors on Twitter, taking a rather cagey (but promising) approach:
See These Portraits of Stars Before They Became Really Famous
Julie AndrewsPhotographed for TV Times in 1977.
If you want to get ahead, get a hat, as the English rose demonstrated in the stage version of My Fair Lady and then on screen in Mary Poppins. Here, she was reflecting on her image after raiding a dressing-up box for this fancy titfer.
Time Inc. UK/TV TimesMaggie SmithPhotographed for TV Times in 1965.
Downton’s acerbic Dowager Countess would surely have something to say about her real-life self being photographed on a beach. The following year, Dame Maggie received her first Oscar nomination for playing Desdemona in a film of Othello.
Time Inc. UK/TV TimesClive OwenPhotographed for TV Times in 1990.
Several years before becoming one of Hollywood’s leading men, the actor was snapped on the set of the ITV drama Chancer. The hit show charted the adventures of a wide-boy financial adviser.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesRoger MoorePhotographed for TV Times in 1968, just before the final series of The Saint.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesIan McKellenPhotographed for TV Times in 1982, at his London riverside home.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesPaul NewmanPhotographed for TV Times in 1974.
The motorsport fanatic was snapped during an interview about his love of cars. He first took to the track for real after being cast in a 1969 racing film called Winning. A few years later, he came second in the famous Le Mans 24-Hour Race.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesEmma Thompson and Kenneth BrannaghPhotographed for TV Times in 1989.
The young couple, who married that year, were snapped for an ITV adaptation of Look Back in Anger. Time Inc. UK/TV TimesTom Jones
Photographed for TV Times in 1987.
The Welsh heart-throb was a consistent cover favorite for the magazine, happily posing here in swimming trunks in front of his Bel Air mansion.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesKarl Malden and Michael DouglasPhotographed for TV Times in 1974.
The crime-fighting duo from the classic U.S. series, The Streets of San Francisco. Time Inc. UK/TV TimesRupert Everett
Photographed for TV Times in 1987.
Looking mean, moody and magnificent, the former model posed for this shot by Patrick Lichfield to mark a screening of the film that made his name, Another Country. Time Inc. UK/TV TimesJoanna LumleyPhotographed for TV Times in 1976
Only months later, she’d instruct a hairdresser to cut and colour her hair ‘like a prep schoolboy’, thus creating The New Avengers blonde Purdey bob that would cause a copycat frenzy at salons nationwide. Time Inc. UK/TV TimesJoan CollinsPhotographed for TV Times in 1971.
The age-defying beauty invited the magazine for an exclusive look around her palatial home in the year she was divorced from second husband Tony Newley. Racy film romp The Stud and U.S. soap superstardom were still to come.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesHelen Mirren
Photographed for TV Times in 2005, after winning the TV Times Award for its readers’ All-Time Favourite Actress.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesElton John Photographed for TV Times in 1977.
Having already achieved superstardom on both sides of the Atlantic, Elton reaches the pinnacle of his career, appearing on The Muppet Show in Oct. 1977. But Kermit still has to persuade the reluctant rocker to perform his hit 'Benny and the Jets'.Time Inc. UK/TV TimesThe Rolling Stones
Photographed for TV Times in 1965, at the ITV studios in London. This was the year of their huge hit 'Satisfaction'. Time Inc. UK/TV TimesThe Avengers (Diana Rigg & Patrick Macnee)
Photographed for TV Times in 1964.
An iconic shot taken when Diana Rigg took over from Honor Blackman in the ‘spy-fi’ classic. The name Emma Peel derived from the writers’ attempts to create a character with Man Appeal.Time Inc. UK/TV Times