Christiane Amanpour

Journalist

Birthday January 12, 1958

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace London, England

Age 66 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#7712 Most Popular

1958

Christiane Maria Heideh Amanpour (born 12 January 1958 ) is a British-Iranian journalist and television host.

Amanpour is the Chief International Anchor for CNN and host of CNN International's nightly interview program Amanpour and CNN's The Amanpour Hour on Saturdays.

She is also the host of Amanpour & Company on PBS.

Amanpour was born in the West London suburb of Ealing, the daughter of Mohammad Taghi Amanpour (Iranian) and Anne Patricia Hill (British).

She was baptized at the Church of Saint Benedict in Ealing and was raised in Tehran until the age of eleven.

Her father was Shia Muslim and her mother was Roman Catholic.

1979

Her father worked as an airline executive for Iran Air and later lost his job and fortune after the Iran Revolution in 1979.

After completing the more significant part of her primary school education in Iran, her parents sent her to a boarding school in England when she was 11.

She attended the Convent of the Holy Cross, an all-girls preparatory school in Chalfont Saint Peter, Buckinghamshire, and then, at the age of 16, she attended New Hall School, a Roman Catholic school in Chelmsford, Essex.

Christiane and her family returned to England shortly after the Islamic Revolution began.

She maintains that they were not forced to leave the country but were returning to England due to the Iran–Iraq War.

The family ultimately remained in England, finding it difficult to return to Iran.

After leaving New Hall, Amanpour moved to the United States to study journalism at the University of Rhode Island.

During her time there, she worked in the news department at WBRU-FM in Providence, Rhode Island.

She also worked for NBC affiliate WJAR in Providence as an electronic graphics designer.

1983

In 1983, Amanpour graduated from the university summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa with a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism.

In 1983, Amanpour was hired by CNN on the foreign desk in Atlanta, Georgia, as an entry-level desk assistant.

1986

During her early years as a correspondent, she was given her first major assignment covering the Iran–Iraq War, followed by a transfer in 1986 to Eastern Europe to report on the fall of European communism.

1989

In 1989, she was assigned to work in Frankfurt am Main, West Germany, where she reported on the democratic revolutions sweeping Eastern Europe at the time.

1990

By 1990, she served as a correspondent for CNN's New York bureau.

Following Iraq's occupation of Kuwait in 1990, Amanpour's reports of the Persian Gulf War brought her wide notice while also taking CNN to a new level of news coverage.

Thereafter, she reported from the Bosnian war and other conflict zones.

While in Bosnia, she interviewed Serb general Ratko Mladic, who would later be convicted of genocide.

Because of her emotional delivery from Sarajevo during the Siege of Sarajevo, viewers and critics questioned her professional objectivity, claiming that many of her reports were unjustified and favored the Bosnian Muslims, to which she replied:

""There are some situations one simply cannot be neutral about, because when you are neutral, you are an accomplice.

Objectivity doesn't mean treating all sides equally.

It means giving each side a hearing.""

Amanpour gained a reputation for being fearless during the Gulf and Bosnian wars for reporting from conflict areas.

1992

From 1992 to 2010, Amanpour was CNN's chief international correspondent.

1994

On 9 October 1994, Stephen Kinzer of The New York Times criticized Amanpour's general coverage of the Bosnian War.

1996

From 1996 to 2005, she was contracted by 60 Minutes creator Don Hewitt to file four to five in-depth international news reports a year as a special contributor.

1998

These reports garnered her a Peabody Award in 1998 (she had earlier been awarded one in 1993 ).

Hewitt's successor Jeff Fager terminated her contract.

2007

On 23 October 2007, she received the Commander badge (No. 3) of the Order of the British Empire for her journalism work.

2009

From 2009 to 2010, she was the anchor of Amanpour, a daily CNN interview program.

Amanpour has reported on major crises from many of the world's hotspots, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, Iran, Israel, Pakistan, Somalia, Rwanda, and the Balkans and from the United States during Hurricane Katrina.

She has secured exclusive interviews with world leaders from the Middle East to Europe, Africa and beyond, including Iranian presidents Mohammad Khatami and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as well as the presidents of Afghanistan, Sudan, and Syria, among others.

After 9/11, she was the first international correspondent to interview British Prime Minister Tony Blair, French President Jacques Chirac, and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf.

Other interviewees have included Hillary Clinton, Nicolás Maduro, Hassan Rouhani, Emmanuel Macron, Angela Merkel, John Kerry, the Dalai Lama, Robert Mugabe and Moammar Gadhafi.

She has also conducted interviews with Constantine II of Greece, Reza Pahlavi, Ameera al-Taweel and actors Angelina Jolie, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep.