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Ann Curry

News anchor, TODAY

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Pictured: Ann Curry
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TODAY celebrates 10 years of Ann
May 10: A look back at her incredible decade— from the heartfelt moments to the crazy fun adventures.

Today show

TODAY
updated 1:19 p.m. ET Oct. 1, 2008

Ann Curry is the news anchor of NBC News’ TODAY, America’s No. 1 morning news program, and the anchor of “Dateline NBC,” the network’s award-winning newsmagazine. Curry joined TODAY in March of 1997, and in May 2005, she was named co-anchor of “Dateline NBC.” Curry also regularly substitute-anchors on “NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams.”  

Curry has distinguished herself in global humanitarian reporting, frequently traveling to remote areas for under-reported stories. Between March 2006 and March 2007, she traveled three times to Sudan to report on the violence and ethnic cleansing taking place in Darfur and Chad.  While there, she provided in-depth reports on victims of the deadly conflict in that region, and conducted exclusive interviews with Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and Chadian President Idrsiss Deby.

In spring 2008, Curry broadcast live from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where she reported on the horrific struggles of the women and children of the city of Goma. In 2008 she also traveled to Serbia, where she examined the deplorable conditions of Serbia’s mental institutions. Curry was the first network news anchor to report on the humanitarian refugee crisis caused by the genocide in Kosovo in 1999, reporting for NBC News from Albania and Macedonia. 

Curry has conducted numerous exclusive interviews with world leaders and dignitaries, including a one-on-one with Dalai Lama during his trip to the U.S. amid violence in Tibet in April 2008, and a sit-down with former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto just two months before her assassination in December 2007. Curry also talked to Pakistani president Asif Ali Zardari in his first-ever interview with an American news organization.

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Other Curry exclusives include Liberia’s Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the first female elected president of an African nation; a highly sought interview with Thomas Hamill, the truck driver for Halliburton subsidiary KBR, who escaped captivity in Iraq; the first interview with accused spy Wen Ho Lee after he was cleared of all charges of espionage against the United States; and the first interview with the parents of the McCaughey septuplets.

In July 2006, Curry reported on the Israel-Lebanon war, one of the only American reporters to file stories on both sides of the conflict. In summer 2005, Curry traveled throughout Africa with then-first lady Laura Bush to examine the continent’s HIV/AIDS epidemic, women's rights and education.

Curry was the first network news anchor to report from inside the tsunami zone in Southeast Asia. For TODAY, Curry has extensively examined the effects of climate change, traveling to Antarctica and the South Pole in November 2007, and climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in November 2008. 

In weeks following the attacks of September 11, Curry reported live from ground zero every day. When the U.S. bombed Al Qaeda targets in Afghanistan in November 2001, she reported extensively from the USS Theodore Roosevelt in the Arabian Sea, and landed the first exclusive interview with the war’s military commander, General Tommy Franks.

Curry reported from Baghdad in the weeks leading up to the invasion of Iraq, and then from the USS Constellation as the war began, interviewing fighter pilots who flew the first wave of bombing runs. She also filed reports from inside Iraq, from Qatar, and Kuwait during the first weeks of the war.

Curry first joined NBC News in August 1990 as a Chicago-based correspondent. In 1992 she was named anchor of “NBC News at Sunrise.” She later helped launch MSNBC and then became news anchor at TODAY.

Before coming to NBC, Curry was a reporter for KCBS in Los Angeles. In 1981, she was a reporter and anchor for KGW, the NBC affiliate in Portland, Oregon. Curry began her broadcasting career as an intern in 1978 at KTVL, in Medford, Oregon, rising to become that station's first female news reporter.

Curry has earned four Emmy Awards, four Golden Mikes, several Associated Press Certificates of Excellence, two Gracie Allen Awards, and an award for Excellence in Reporting from the NAACP. In June 2007, Curry was honored with the Simon Wiesenthal Medal of Valor for her extensive reporting in Darfur.  She has been awarded by Americares, Save the Children, the Anti-Defamation League as a Woman of Achievement, and the Asian American Journalists Association, receiving its National Journalism Award in 2003. She has also won numerous awards for her charity work, primarily for breast cancer research.

Curry graduated from the University of Oregon School of Journalism in 1978.

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