Barbera walters biography

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  • Barbara Walters

    American reporter (1929–2022)

    Barbara Walters

    Walters in 1979

    Born

    Barbara Jill Walters


    (1929-09-25)September 25, 1929

    Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.

    DiedDecember 30, 2022(2022-12-30) (aged 93)

    Manhattan, New York, U.S.

    Burial placeLakeside Memorial Park, Doral, Florida, U.S.
    EducationSarah Lawrence College (BA)
    OccupationJournalist
    Years active1951–2016
    Notable credits
    Spouses

    Robert Henry Katz

    (m. 1955; ann. 1957)​

    Lee Guber

    (m. 1963; div. 1976)​

    Merv Adelson

    (m. 1981; div. 1984)​

    (m. 1986; div. 1992)​
    Children1

    Barbara Jill Walters (September 25, 1929 – December 30, 2022) was an American broadcast reporter and television personality.[1]

    Barbara Walters

    1929-2022

    Who Was Barbara Walters?

    Barrier-breaking TV journalist Barbara Walters developed her trademark interviewing style—a probing-yet-casual approach—throughout the 1960s and ’70s. She held long-standing jobs on NBC’s Today show and ABC’s 20/20 and, in 1976, became the first female co-anchor of a network evening news program. In addition to many other high-profile subjects, Walters interviewed every U.S. president and first lady from Richard and Pat Nixon to Barack and Michelle Obama, as well as Donald and Melania Trump during his 2016 presidential campaign. In 1997, she premiered a still popular talk show called The View and served as co-host until May 2014. The recipient of multiple awards and more than 30 Emmys, Walters died in December 2022 at age 93.

    Quick Facts

    FULL NAME: Barbara Jill Walters
    BORN: September 25, 1929
    DIED: December 30, 2022
    BIRTHPLACE: Boston, Massachusetts
    SPOUSES: Robert Katz (1955-1958), Lee Guber (1963-1976) and Merv Ad

    Exclusive: How Barbara Walters broke the rules and changed the world for women and TV

    Adapted from "The Rulebreaker: The Life and Times of Barbara Walters" by Susan Page. (464 pp. Simon and Schuster, April 23)

    She had been warned.

    Barbara Walters had finally won the anchor’s chair in 1976, the prize she had long sought and one that NBC News had refused to give her. ABC, then the third-ranking network with little to lose, offered her the job of co-anchoring the nightly news with Harry Reasoner and hosting four annual specials for the then-breathtaking salary of a million dollars a year.

    She was the first newswoman − the first newsperson, in fact − to get such an astronomical sum. She achieved that distinction by shrewdly playing each network against the other. But her price came with its own price. No one would ever let her forget it.

    “Barbara Walters: Million-Dollar Baby?” The Miami Herald asked in a headline trumpeted across all six columns at the top of page 1. “A Million-D

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