Gwen Ifill
Panamanian-American journalist, television newscaster, and author (1955–2016)
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Key Takeaways
- Ifill ( EYE -fəl ; September 29, 1955 – November 14, 2016) was an American journalist, television newscaster, and author.
- public affairs program with Washington Week in Review .
- Ifill was a political analyst and moderated the 2004 and 2008 vice-presidential debates.
- Early life and education Gwendolyn L.
- According to The New York Times , she disliked her middle name and never publicly used it beyond the initial.
Gwendolyn L. Ifill ( EYE-fəl; September 29, 1955 – November 14, 2016) was an American journalist, television newscaster, and author. In 1999, she became the first African-American woman to host a nationally televised U.S. public affairs program with Washington Week in Review. She was the moderator and managing editor of Washington Week and co-anchor and co-managing editor, with Judy Woodruff, of the PBS NewsHour, both of which air on PBS. Ifill was a political analyst and moderated the 2004 and 2008 vice-presidential debates. She authored the best-selling book The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama.
Early life and education
Gwendolyn L. Ifill was born on September 29, 1955, in Jamaica, Queens, in New York City. According to The New York Times, she disliked her middle name and never publicly used it beyond the initial. She was the fifth of six children of African Methodist Episcopal (AME) minister (Oliver) Urcille Ifill Sr., a Panamanian of Barbadian descent who emigrated from Panama, and Eleanor Ifill, who was from Barbados. Her father's ministry required the family to live in several cities in New England and on the Eastern Seaboard during her youth, where he pastored AME churches. As a child, she lived in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts church parsonages and in federally subsidized housing in Buffalo and New York City. Ifill graduated from Springfield Central High School (then Classical High School) in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1973. She graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor of Arts in communications from Simmons College, a women's college in Boston.
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