Deborah Norville

Television

Birthday August 8, 1958

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Dalton, Georgia, U.S.

Age 65 years old

Nationality United States

#32560 Most Popular

1958

Deborah Anne Norville (born August 8, 1958) is an American television journalist and businesswoman.

1976

She won her town's local Junior Miss contest, a beauty contest for high school senior girls and represented Georgia in the 1976 America's Junior Miss pageant.

She did not win but credits seeing the behind-the-scenes work of the CBS Television production team as inspiring her to switch her career goal from law to television journalism.

1979

In January 1979, she conducted a live interview with President Jimmy Carter.

Norville joined WAGA-TV as a full-time reporter after graduating and was named weekend anchor in October 1979.

1982

In 1982, she was hired as a reporter and later an anchor by WMAQ-TV, the NBC-owned station in Chicago.

1986

A brief glimpse of Norville on a billboard, during her time at WMAQ-TV can be seen in the background in the 1986 film Running Scared starring Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal.

In 1986, when it was announced Norville would be joining NBC News in New York, Mayor Harold Washington declared "Deborah Norville Week" in Chicago.

1987

Norville joined NBC News in January 1987 as anchor of NBC News at Sunrise, becoming the only solo female anchor of a network newscast.

Ratings on Sunrise jumped 40 percent when she joined the program, which led to her being asked to occasionally substitute on NBC's Today Show.

1989

In August 1989, a documentary in which Norville was the primary host, Bad Girls, on violent teenaged girls, was the seventh most watched show the week it aired, according to Nielsen ratings.

In September 1989, Norville was named news anchor on Today.

Soon after, Today co-host Jane Pauley announced her desire to leave the Today Show, and Norville was named her successor.

Pauley went on to host a prime-time show, Real Life with Jane Pauley.

1990

The 60-mile commute between school in Athens and work in Atlanta was grueling, as remembered by Norville in an interview with Larry B. Dendy for the Georgia Alumni Record (February 1990): "I'd leave the university on Friday afternoon and drive to Atlanta, and sometimes I had a place to stay and sometimes I slept in my car in the parking lot. I worked Saturday and Sunday; Sunday night after the 11:00 p.m. show I'd drive back and go to class Monday morning."

Norville became co-host of Today in January 1990.

During her tenure on Today, she won an Emmy award for her role in NBC's coverage of the democratic uprising in Romania.

Ratings on Today declined after Norville's arrival.

NBC management was accused of mishandling the transition.

One insider told People magazine, "NBC handled the whole situation in a very poor manner. I don't think she [Deborah] blames anyone in particular. I just think she feels the situation was handled unprofessionally—in an undignified manner for both her and Jane."

After Norville took maternity leave on the birth of her first child, she did not return to the program.

Norville was subsequently replaced on Today by Katie Couric.

1991

In May 1991, ABC TalkRadio Networks announced Deborah Norville would be hosting a prime-time program, broadcast from her homes in New York and Long Island.

The Deborah Norville Show: From Her Home to Yours featured newsmaker interviews and listener calls.

It ran from September 1991 to October 1992, when Norville joined CBS News to resume her television career.

1995

Norville is the anchor of Inside Edition, a syndicated television news magazine, a position she has held since March 6, 1995.

She markets and sells a line of yarns (Deborah Norville Collection) for knit and crochet enthusiasts, manufactured by Premier Yarns.

Previously, she was an anchor and correspondent for CBS News and earlier co-host of Today on NBC.

Her book Thank You Power was a New York Times best-seller.

Norville was born in Dalton, Georgia.

1999

She hosted the 1999 America's Junior Miss contest.

Norville is a graduate of the University of Georgia.

She graduated summa cum laude in three years with a perfect 4.0 grade point average in earning her BA in journalism from the university's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

She was named a First Honor Graduate and elected to Phi Beta Kappa.

During her studies, she served on the Main Court of the University's Student Judiciary and was a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority.

Norville began her television career while still a college student.

She received an internship through Georgia Public Television, where she worked on The Lawmakers, a nightly program covering the Georgia General Assembly.

She was spotted by an executive of WAGA-TV in Atlanta, who offered her a summer internship.

As Norville recalled, "The third day they were short on reporters and they asked me to cover a news story."

She reported that evening on the six o'clock news and was later offered a weekend reporting position during her senior year in college.