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Before Tina Louise found herself stranded on a tropical island, she was lonely loneliness as a child in boarding school.
The actress, who considered fame to be a glamorous ginger grant on the “Gilligan’s Island” sitcom, recently published an audio version of her 1997 book, “Sunday: Memoir.” The star said that for the first time, she finally felt free to talk about her painful childhood in depth.
“I haven’t lived with my mother for my 11 years,” Louise told Fox News Digital. “I had the whole period of life without her … I kept all that in me. And then I developed anger. When my mother picked me up, she was with her third husband and had a different life. It was a very sophisticated life she wanted for herself, so she found a very successful man.”

On the left: Dawn Wells, Bob Denver and Tina Louise, around 1965. Louise told Fox News Digital that, for the first time, she felt easy to apologize for her whole story. (Alamy)
“I live in the present,” Louise split. “But I never dealt with what happened to me. When the book came out for the first time, my mother was alive. She didn’t like her to the point that she said I invented it. I realized she didn’t want to deal with it … She was the most dominant force in my life.”
When Louise, then Tina Black, was born, her mother was 18 and her father was 10 years older. When she was 4, they divorced. At 6 years of age was sent to Internal School in Ardley, New York, where she wondered if her parents would ever come back for her.
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“I didn’t want to be there from the beginning,” she explained. “We were all just a bunch of angry girls. It was like” Lord Flies ” – no one wanted to be there. And there were gangs of girls. You always wanted to find someone to choose. I was told that my job was to hit this girl. That was funny. I never realized why they chose me.”

Louise’s audioclion “Sunday” is now available. (Sound)
“I remember constantly trying to catch a very bad cold so I could hardly speak, so I could leave this place,” Louise split. “They kept giving me hot milk. They asked me to call my mother. I told her I wanted to come to her, but I was told not to go out. I learned that she was with another husband, and he didn’t want a girl in the house. He just wanted to be alone with his beautiful husband.”
A pencil student stabbed Louise into the wrist. A weak scar is still present, she said. When she was caught at night with a chat with another girl, Louise claimed that the teacher had made her crawl on the ceiling on her own in the bathroom with a spider. She described that she was hit when she fought for a bath. Her closest friends were caterpillars she hid in the box under her bed. They were taken, she said.

Louise later found comfort as an actress who plays a make. (Silver Screen Collection/Getty Pictures)
“They took away everything,” Louise recalled. “My mother once brought me a doll, and that was immediately taken away in the night. I don’t remember ever returning her. You don’t remember such things. Remember that it was taken away.”

Louise spends his time reading children. (J. Countess/Warimage/Getty Pictures)
Louise always prayed for Sunday. It was a visiting day. She always waited for her parents that day, but they didn’t always come.
“I longed for hugs,” she said. “I don’t think I knew what was going on. I just knew it was painful.”
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To the left: producer Sherwood Schwartz, actress Dawn Wells and Tina Louise and actors Bob Denver and Russell Johnson with “Gilligan’s Island” in the TV Land Award, held in Hollywood Palladium in Hollywood, California, March 7, 2004. (Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)
It would not be Louise for 8 years if she could move in with her father and his new wife. She was delighted. But her happiness would not last long. At the age of 11, her mother, who married a rich doctor, a third of what would be four husbands, wanted to live with them in them Fancy New York City Townhouse.

Young Tina Louise recorded her only album “It’s Tina Tina”, 1957. (Popsie Randolph/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Louise admitted that she had been angry with her father for years because she was not willing to fight for her in court. She wouldn’t see him until Hollywood called.
“I was very upset,” she said. “I could never say his name. It couldn’t get out of my mouth … I just expected it to do something about it. When I went to live with my mother, I couldn’t believe I had to tell him I couldn’t see him anymore. It’s a very strange, strange thing, to put something like that because I wanted to see him.”

Louise said she was looking for her father at the age of 22. (Silver screen collection/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
At the age of 22, the adult Louise, who began acting, came out in search of her father.

Louise, around 1960. (Silver Screen Collection/Getty Pictures)
“We had to make a new relationship,” she said. “It was not easy … but we had to renew ourselves.”
Her relationship with her mother was complicated.
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Louise and Brad Pitt attend the premiere of Beverly Hills “Johnny Suede” at Laemmle’s Like Arts Theater in Beverly Hills, California, around 1992. (Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images)
“She was a lively person, but she lost her mother when she was 3,” Louise explained. “So, she had her problems … She couldn’t imagine that, at the age of 18, she would have a baby. She had no mother. My grandfather, whom I only saw twice, put his children in an orphanage for some time. Then he got a nanny.”

Louise was seen interviewing Elvis Presley after returning from her military duties in Germany in 1959-60. (Getty Images)
“My mother had a dream world,” she thought. “She wanted to live in a certain way and be surrounded by certain people. She was very beautiful. She loved art. But she lost a lot at her disposal with people … I don’t think she realized it herself … but she went with the fact that I wanted to study acting. And that was very exciting.”
Louise will later escape from his past as Castaway. Catapulted on a star Sitcom 60 Gilligan’s Island. “ Over the years, he would continue to find new viewers, thanks to repeating and streaming platforms.

Louise did not get rich from the “Gilligan Island”. (Jared Siskin/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
Louise insisted that the show did not make an acting role. She said earlier Forbes that she didn’t get the remains.

On the left: Ginger (Tina Louise), Mary Ann (Dawn Wells) and Mrs. Howell (Natalie Schaefer) in the 1960s Television Comedy Scene “Island Island Island”. (Getty Images)
“No one got them at the time – no one,” she told Fox News Digital. “I read somewhere [co-star] Dawn [Wells] I was able to get something through a lawyer. But that’s just what I read. I don’t remember. But we never. The people who owned him made a lot of money, that’s for sure. I’m just amazed at being still on! “
In 1996, Louise read another article, one about the fall of students’ ability to read, New York Times reported. This prompted her to join Leadaders Leaders, an unprofit organization that trained volunteers to teach public school students across New York. According to the socket, she was quietly working with students for the next two decades.
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Louise with her daughter during the New York Fashion Week, around 2002. (Evan Agostini/Imagedirect/Getty Pictures)
Outlet noted that after the organization lost the funds a few years ago, Louise began to help herself.

Louise said that helping children to learn how to read was one of her lifelong passions. (Chad Buchanan/Getty Images)
That’s something he’s still doing today.
“That gives me so much joy,” she said. “Helping students and giving them hope.”