Elizabeth Vargas
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Elizabeth Vargas (born September 6, 1962 in Paterson, New Jersey) is a television journalist, currently co-anchor of ABC's television newsmagazine 20/20 and anchor of ABC News Specials.
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[edit] Biography
Vargas was born to a Puerto Rican father and an Irish-American mother; her father was then a Colonel in the U.S. Army. She spent her youth moving from base to base in Germany, Belgium and Japan.
[edit] Early years
Vargas graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in journalism from the University of Missouri in Columbia, where she made her debut broadcast as a reporter/anchor for KOMU-TV.
She spent four years as a reporter and anchor for WBBM-TV. Phyllis McGrady, a senior vice president at ABC, said of her: "Elizabeth is one of the most flexible talents I've ever worked with. She could do interviews, and do hour-long specials that make you think, and then she'll do a great interview with P. Diddy. She is versatile." Image:Abc woodruff vargas 3.jpg
[edit] Career
Vargas is the first woman to anchor an evening newscast in the U.S. since Connie Chung, and the first woman of Puerto Rican and Irish American heritage to be named a network nightly news anchor. She is said to be particularly proud of an ABC special report in which she questioned why the Laci Peterson case merited more attention than two other similar cases, one involving a black woman and the other involving a Hispanic woman. Another story she did, based on the book The Da Vinci Code and the role of Mary Magdalene, helped fuel a nationwide religious debate. Vargas stated that for centuries Mary Magdalene has been portrayed as a prostitute by the church, despite evidence to the contrary. She went on to question the strictly limited role of women within the church. In 1999 she won an Emmy Award for her coverage of the Elián González story and in 1998 was nominated for an Emmy Award for her 20/20 investigation into the wrongful conviction of Betty Tyson.
In April 2005, as Peter Jennings was receiving chemotherapy for his lung cancer, she and Charles Gibson temporarily filled in for him on World News Tonight until his death in August. After a period of mourning and indecision, she and Woodruff were chosen as co-anchors on December 05, 2005.
Despite Katie Couric being the first woman named to anchor an evening newscast solo, Vargas can be considered the first de facto solo woman evening news anchor given that, after Bob Woodruff's injury, she anchored almost every broadcast alone (although there was a brief period after Woodruff's injury where Vargas co-anchored WNT with either Charles Gibson and Diane Sawyer) during her short tenture as "co-anchor" of WNT.
From January 2006 to May 2006, she was co-anchor of ABC's flagship broadcast World News Tonight, anchoring much of the broadcast alone after co-anchor Bob Woodruff's severe injury in Iraq on January 29, 2006.
On May 23 2006, Vargas announced her resignation from WNT. Gibson was then named sole anchor of the show, effective May 29, 2006, replacing Vargas and her injured co-anchor Bob Woodruff[1]. To explain the sudden change, Vargas cited her doctors' recommendation to cut back her schedule considerably due to a difficult pregnancy and her wish to spend more time with her new baby when he arrives. Most "inside accounts", however, claim she fully expected and wished to return to the anchor chair soon after giving birth, but Gibson threatened to quit the network if he wasn't made sole permanent anchor <ref name="conqueror">"Charlie the Conqueror". New York Magazine, June 19, 2006.</ref>. According to these sources, his gambit succeeded and she was left embittered, although not enough to sever ties with the network. She is slated to return as co-anchor of 20/20 and primary presenter of ABC News specials.
[edit] Currently
Elizabeth Vargas is married to Grammy award-winning singer-songwriter Marc Cohn, whom she met at the 1999 U.S. Open after being introduced by Andre Agassi. On January 31, 2003, the couple had their first child, son Zachary Raphael Cohn. In February 2006, the couple announced that Vargas was pregnant and expecting their second son. She gave birth to Samuel Wyatt Cohn on August 16, 2006.[2] Cohn has two children, Max and Emily, from a previous marriage.
| Preceded by: Peter Jennings | ABC World News Tonight Co-Anchor with Bob Woodruff January 3, 2006–May 26, 2006 | Succeeded by: Charles Gibson |
| Preceded by: Barbara Walters and John Stossel | 20/20 Co-Anchor with John Stossel 2004 – present | Succeeded by: Incumbent |
| Co-Anchors of 20/20 |
|---|
| Hayes • Hughes • Downs • Walters • Miller • Stossel • Vargas |
| Anchors of ABC Evening News/World News Tonight/World News |
|---|
| Daly • Young • Reynolds • Smith • Reasoner • Walters • Robinson • Jennings • Woodruff/Vargas • Gibson |
[edit] References
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[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Elizabeth Vargas at the Internet Movie Database
- About.com Profile of Elizabeth Vargas, ABC News Journalist
- ABC News bioes:Elizabeth Vargas
Categories: 1962 births | Living people | ABC News | American Broadcasting Company personalities | American journalists | American reporters and correspondents | Chicago television anchors | Irish-American journalists | People from Paterson, New Jersey | Puerto Rican journalists | Television journalists | University of Missouri-Columbia alumni

