Judy Woodruff
Quick Facts
Biography
Judith "Judy" Woodruff (born November 20, 1946) is an American television news anchor, a journalist, and a writer. Woodruff has worked for several television organizations, including CNN, NBC News, and PBS. She is a board member of the International Women's Media Foundation and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
She is not related to fellow television news journalist Bob Woodruff.
Early life and education
Woodruff was born on November 20, 1946, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to Anna Lee (Payne) Woodruff and U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer William H. Woodruff. She has one sister, Anita.
At 17, she won a beauty pageant in Augusta, Georgia, and was crowned Young Miss Augusta 1963. Woodruff graduated from the Academy of Richmond County, then attended Meredith College before transferring to Duke University, where she earned a degree in Political Science.
Career
Woodruff began her career in 1970 as a news anchor at CBS affiliate WAGA-TV in Atlanta, Georgia. In 1975, she joined NBC News and was originally based in Atlanta where she covered the 1976 U.S. Presidential Campaign of the then-governor of Georgia Jimmy Carter. She was the Chief White House Correspondent for NBC News (1977–82) and covered Washington for NBC's The Today Show (1982–83).
In 1983, Woodruff moved to PBS, where for 10 years she was chief Washington correspondent for The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour (Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer). She also hosted the PBS documentary series Frontline with Judy Woodruff (1984–90).
In 1993, she joined CNN, where for 12 years she hosted Inside Politics. Woodruff stayed with CNN until 2005, when she decided not to renew her contract, looking toward teaching, writing, and working on documentaries. CNN founder Ted Turner stated in an interview on The Diane Rehm Show on May 7, 2009, that he was upset that CNN had let Woodruff go.
In August 2005, Woodruff was named a visiting fellow for the fall semester at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University. She had previously taught a course in media and politics at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University.
In 2006, she returned to PBS to work on Generation Next, a documentary about American young people and their characteristics, values, and thoughts on family, faith, politics, and world events—produced in conjunction with MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. Generation Nextpartnered with USA Today, Yahoo! News, and NPR. Also in 2006, Woodruff contributed as a guest correspondent to the National Public Radio (NPR) Morning Edition week-long series Muslims in America, as part of NPR's fifth-year observance of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
On February 5, 2007, Woodruff returned to PBS on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer full-time as senior correspondent, editor of 2008 political coverage, and substitute anchor. As of early 2007, she was also working on Part 2 of the Generation Next documentary for PBS.
Since 2006, she has also anchored a weekly program, Conversations with Judy Woodruff, for Bloomberg Television. Streaming video podcasts of her monthly interviews are available at Bloomberg.com.
Woodruff was selected to present the 2007 Red Smith Lecture in Journalism at the University of Notre Dame. The Red Smith lectureship annually selects renowned journalists to speak at the university to foster good writing and honor high journalistic standards.
On August 6, 2013, the PBS NewsHour named Woodruff and Gwen Ifill as co-anchors and co-managing editors of the broadcast. Woodruff and Ifill shared managing newsgathering duties until Ifill's death from cancer in 2016. Woodruff succeeded Ifill as the program's sole main presenter.
Other activities
Woodruff has written several books, including This Is Judy Woodruff at the White House(1982).
She is a founding co-chairperson of the International Women's Media Foundation. She serves on the boards of trustees of the Freedom Forum and of the Freedom Forum's Newseum and is a member of the steering committee of the Reporters' Committee for Freedom of the Press. She sits on the advisory board for America Abroad Media, a nonprofit organization.
Woodruff has also served on the boards of trustees of a number of other organizations, including the Newseum, the Freedom Forum, the National Museum of American History, Global Rights, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, America's Promise, the Urban Institute, The Duke Endowment, and the John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships at Stanford.
Personal life
On April 5, 1980, Woodruff married Al Hunt, formerly of CNN and the Wall Street Journal, now an executive editor of the Washington, D.C., bureau of Bloomberg News. They have three children: Jeffrey (1981), Benjamin (1986), and Lauren (1989). Woodruff gave birth to Jeffrey about five hours after appearing on air. Jeffrey was born with a mild case of spina bifida and became disabled and brain-damaged after surgery in 1998, which caused Woodruff to reduce her workload at CNN. Lauren was adopted from Korea when she was four months old.
Awards and recognition
Year | Award | Organization | Note(s) | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
1986 | Joan Shorenstein Barone Award | Radio and Television Correspondents' Association | first time the accolade was awarded | |
1996 | News & Documentary Emmy Award in the category "Outstanding Instant Coverage of a Single Breaking News Story" | National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences | together with others of CNN for the coverage of the Centennial Olympic Park bombing | |
1998/99 | Futrell Award | Duke University | ||
1995 | Al Neuharth Award for Excellence in the Media | Newseum and University of South Dakota | together with her husband Al Hunt | |
1996 | CableACE Award in the category "Newscaster" | NCTA | together with Bernard Shaw | |
2003 | International Matrix Award | Association for Women in Communications | ||
2003 | Leonard Zeidenberg First Amendment Award | Radio Television Digital News Association | ||
2009 | Duke Distinguished Alumni Award | Duke University | ||
2010 | Edward R. Murrow Lifetime Achievement Award in Television | Washington State University | ||
2012 | Gaylord Prize for Excellence in Journalism and Mass Communication | University of Oklahoma | ||
2016 | Pat Mitchell Lifetime AchievementAward | Women's Media Center | together with Gwen Ifill | |
2016 | Foremother Award | National Center for Health Research | ||
2017 | Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Journalism | Poynter Institute | ||
2017 | Radcliffe medal | Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study | together with Gwen Ifill (posthumously) | |
2017 | Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism | Arizona State University | together with Gwen Ifill (posthumously) | |
2017 | Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award | Committee to Protect Journalists | first time the accolade was awarded |
In 2003, Woodruff was inducted into the Georgia Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame.