Ann Curry

Ann CurryAmerican journalist and television news reporter and anchor Ann Curry.

Ann Curry (born November 19, 1956, Agana (now Hagåtña), Guam) is an American journalist and television news reporter and anchor who was best known for her role as a correspondent on the Today show, a morning news program aired by the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC). Curry was noted especially for her reporting on humanitarian crises in war-torn countries and on natural disasters.

Curry’s father was a sailor in the U.S. Navy, and her mother was Japanese. Her parents met while her father was stationed in Japan after World War II. Because of her father’s military service, the family moved often. They eventually settled in Ashland, Oregon, where Curry attended high school. In 1978 she graduated from the University of Oregon with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. Her exposure to different cultures and experiences during her upbringing likely influenced her empathetic approach to communicating about international matters.

Curry began her career as an intern at KTVL, a television news station in Medford, Oregon, in 1978. She quickly worked her way up to become that station’s first female reporter. From 1980 to 1984 she worked as a reporter and anchor in Portland at the NBC affiliate station KGW. She spent the next six years as a reporter at KCBS-TV, a television station in Los Angeles. There her work included coverage of earthquakes, fires, and other disasters and events.

Curry joined NBC News in 1990. She spent the first year as a correspondent in Chicago before becoming an anchor on NBC News at Sunrise. She stayed with that show until 1996. Beginning in 1997, she was a reporter and news anchor for the NBC morning television news and talk show Today. From 2005 to 2011 she also served as cohost of the prime-time investigative newsmagazine show Dateline.

In 2011 Curry became a cohost of the Today show but was replaced the next year amid declining ratings. Although she still appeared occasionally as a reporter on the Today show, she concentrated on anchoring for NBC News. She ended her affiliation with NBC in 2015. Curry then started a media company. She worked on projects for other television broadcasters, including the documentary series We’ll Meet Again (2018–19) for the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), and hosted Chasing the Cure, a live television broadcast on TNT/TBS in which a panel of medical experts attempted to diagnose participants with undiagnosed, misdiagnosed, or potentially untreatable medical conditions.

During her career, Curry provided firsthand reports from war zones and areas affected by natural disasters. In the early 2000s she journeyed to Sudan to cover fighting between government and rebel forces in the Darfur region. She also reported from war zones in Lebanon, Afghanistan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In addition, Curry was at the scene after the twin towers of New York City’s World Trade Center collapsed in the wake of the September 11 attacks in 2001. She traveled to Haiti after the 2010 earthquake that killed or displaced hundreds of thousands of people. Curry interviewed numerous individuals, from world leaders, such as Iranian Pres. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, to celebrities, such as poet Maya Angelou and actor Brad Pitt.

Curry received numerous awards for her news reporting, including seven Emmy Awards and the Edward R. Murrow Lifetime Achievement Award (2022). She was also involved in charitable work.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.