Deborah Norville
Deborah Norville was born in Dalton, Georgia, United States on August 8th, 1958 and is the Journalist. At the age of 66, Deborah Norville biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 66 years old, Deborah Norville has this physical status:
Deborah Anne Norville (born August 8, 1958) is an American television journalist and businesswoman.
Norville is the anchor of Inside Edition, a syndicated television news newspaper, a position she has held since March 1995.
She is a member of the Viacom Corporation's board of directors.
Premier Yarns' Deborah Norville Collection) is available in the UK and Ireland.
She served as an anchor and reporter for CBS News and as a co-host of Today on NBC.
Thank You Power, by Barbara Regan, was a New York Times best-seller.
Early life
Norville was born in Dalton, Georgia, and was named after the artist. She won her town's local Junior Miss competition, a beauty competition for high school senior girls, and competed in the 1976 America's Junior Miss pageant. She did not win, but she cites the CBS Television production team's behind-the-scenes work as encouraging her to shift her focus from law to television journalism. She hosted the 1999 America's Junior Miss competition.
Norville is a graduate of the University of Georgia. She graduated with a 4.0 average in three years of receiving her Bachelor of Journalism and Mass Communication from the University's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. She was named a First Honor Graduate and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She served on the University's Student Judiciary's Main Court and was a member of Delta Delta Delta Delta Sorority during her studies.
Norville began her television career as a student. She obtained her internship at Georgia Public Television, where she worked on The Lawmakers, a nightly program covering the Georgia General Assembly. She was first noticed by an executive of WAGA-TV in Atlanta, who gave her a summer internship. "They were short on reporters the third day, and they asked me to cover a news article," Norville recalled. She appeared on the six o'clock news on the evening and was later offered a weekend reporting job during her senior year in college. In an interview with Larry B. Dendy for the Georgia Alumni Record (February 1990): "I'd leave the university and drive to Atlanta, but then I slept in my car in the parking lot." I worked Saturday and Sunday; after the 11:00 p.m. show, I'd drive back and go to class Monday morning." She conducted a live interview with President Jimmy Carter in January 1979.
Since graduating and was named as a weekend anchor in October 1979, Norville joined WAGA-TV as a full-time reporter. She was hired as a reporter and later an anchor by WMAQ-TV, Chicago's NBC-owned television station. In the 1986 film Running Scared starring Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal, a glimpse of Norville on a billboard during her time at WMAQ-TV can be seen in the background. Mayor Harold Washington announced "Deborah Norville Week" in Chicago in 1986, when it was announced that Norville would be joining NBC News in New York.
Personal life
In 1987, Norville married Swedish businessman Karl Wellner; the couple has three children, Niki (b). Kyle (b. 1991) Kyle (b.) Mikaela (b. 1995) and Mikaela (b. (1998).
Norville revealed on April 1, 2019 that she would have surgery to remove a cancerous thyroid nodule. After a viewer noticed a lump on Norville's neck, the cancer was diagnosed.