Today is the 80th birthday of Tammy Faye LaValley Bakker Messner. Given numerous reasons why we shouldn’t love her or at least be cautiously indifferent toward her, we love her not in spite of those reasons, but because of those reasons. Watch the documentary. She was a sweet woman, a bit nutty, but a very good person. The world is a better place because she was in it and still feels the loss that she has left.

NAME: Tammy Faye Messner
OCCUPATION: Evangelist, Reality Television Star
BIRTH DATE: March 07, 1942
DEATH DATE: July 20, 2007
PLACE OF BIRTH: International Falls, Minnesota
PLACE OF DEATH: Loch Lloyd, Missouri
FULL NAME: Tamara Faye LaValley Bakker Messner
CAUSE OF DEATH: Cancer – Colon
REMAINS: Buried, Waldron Cemetery, Waldron, KS
Husband: Jim Bakker (televangelist, m. 1961, div. 1992)
Daughter: Tammy Sue Bakker-Chapman (b. 2-Mar-1970, runs Tammy Sue Bakker Outreach Ministries)
Son: Jay Bakker (b. 18-Dec-1975, runs Revolution Ministries, a Christian outreach program for ‘counterculture’ types)
Husband: Ronald Roe Messner (Christian construction executive, m. 1993)
BEST KNOWN FOR: Tammy Faye Messner was the wife of disgraced televangelist Jim Bakker, with whom she hosted The 700 Club and the Praise the Lord Club. The couple split in 1992, after Jim Bakker’s affair with a church secretary surfaced.
Tammy Messner was born Tamara Faye LaValley on March 7, 1942, in International Falls, Minnesota. The oldest of eight children, Tammy Faye was raised in a devoutly Christian environment by her mother, Rachel. With a desire to become a missionary, Tammy Faye enrolled at North Central Bible College, in Minneapolis, where her engaging personality earned her many friends and one ardent admirer-fellow classmate Jim Bakker. The couple married in 1961, at which time they were forced to drop out of college because of the school’s strict policy regarding married students. They had two children.
With the goal of establishing a traveling ministry, Tammy Faye and Jim spent the next few years preaching in various cities throughout America. In the mid-1960s, they were introduced to Pat Robertson, who was in the midst of launching the Christian Broadcasting Network. At Robertson’s request, the Bakkers moved to Portsmouth, Virginia, and agreed to host the Christian talk show The 700 Club. Premiering in 1966, the show met with overwhelming popularity, becoming the prototype of modern television ministry.







In 1973, the Bakkers left CBN in order to establish the short-lived Trinity Broadcasting Systems. The following year, Jim and Tammy Faye became the hosts of an existing North Carolina-based talk show, which they renamed the Praise the Lord Club. Fueled by the success of the PTL Club, the Bakkers quickly established an entire Christian television network, which they called the PTL or Inspirational Network. With contributions from their loyal audience, the Bakkers were able to finance a 2,300-acre Christian theme park, Heritage U.S.A. At the height of their popularity, the Bakkers were celebrities in the gospel circuit, with an opulent lifestyle to match. The PTL Club reached an audience of 13 million viewers, while Heritage U.S.A. attracted six million visitors annually.
The Bakkers’ empire began to unravel in 1980, when the national spotlight fell on Jim’s adulterous affair with a church secretary, Jessica Hahn. Over the next few years, sufficient evidence of Jim’s numerous sexual escapades surfaced, causing the Assemblies of God to strip him of his ministerial credentials.
In 1987 and 1988, he made a few failed attempts to rebuild his ministry. Ultimately, the Federal Communications Commission’s investigation into the financial activities of the PTL Network culminated in Jim’s conviction of fraud and conspiracy in 1989. During the tumultuous six-week trial, the federal government succeeded in proving that Jim solicited a total of $158 million from followers of the PTL ($3.7 million of which he used for personal means). He was given a 45-year prison sentence, which was later reduced to six years. Jim Bakker was paroled in 1994, and has since re-established himself as a minister.
In 1992, after a 31-year relationship, Tammy Faye and Jim divorced. The following year, Tammy Faye wed Roe Messner, a family friend and business associate of the Bakkers’. Shortly thereafter, Messner was imprisoned for fraud, but has since been released.
Also in 1996, Tammy Faye teamed with former Too Close for Comfort star J.M.J. Bullock to host a short-lived daily talk show titled The Jim J. and Tammy Faye Show. Later that year, she published an autobiography, Tammy: Telling It My Way. Also in 1996, that Tammy Faye was diagnosed with colon cancer.
Tammy Faye was the subject of a fairly well-received documentary, The Eyes of Tammy Faye (2000), and then in 2004, appeared on the second season of the VH-1 reality series The Surreal Life, which featured B-List celebrities such as Erik Estrada and Vanilla Ice. The group of former stars lived together in a Hollywood mansion while cameras followed their antics. It was during 2004 that Tammy Faye’s cancer spread to her lungs.
In May 2007, Tammy Faye announced that doctors had stopped treating her cancer, and her weight soon dropped to 65 pounds. She posted a goodbye letter to her friends and supporters on her website. In early July 2007, a gaunt Tammy Faye made a final TV appearance on Larry King Live, where she said goodbye to fans. Tammy Faye Messner lost her battle with lung cancer on July 20, 2007, at the age of 65, at her home in Missouri.
TELEVISION
The Surreal Life
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Windy City Heat (12-Oct-2003) · Herself
The Eyes of Tammy Faye (25-Jan-2000) · Herself
Tammy Faye will long live as an example of a “Wronged Woman”. Even the feds could not find ALL of the money that Jim Baker scammed in his career, but you can rest assured that he never missed a meal. 6 years was NOT long enough for him to be in Club Fed.
Tammy was left on her own without Jim’s “Advice” and did struggle for a while. No woman wants to be as thoroughly betrayed by her husband as Tammy was. And to be as widely thought of as “Fooled” could not have been good for her ego. I do hope her faith in God was good. She did deserve some comfort.
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