Oprah Winfrey was born on January
1954, in Mississippi. After a troubled adolescence in a small farming
community, where she was sexually abused by a number of male relatives and
friends of her mother, Vernita, she moved to Nashville to live with her father,
Vernon, a barber and businessman. She entered Tennessee State University in
1971 and began working in radio and television broadcasting in Nashville.
In 1976, Winfrey moved to
Baltimore, where she hosted the TV chat show, People Are Talking. The show
became a hit and Oprah stayed with it for eight years, after which she was
recruited by a Chicago TV station to host her own morning show, A.M. Chicago.
Winfrey launched the Oprah
Winfrey Show in 1986. The Oprah Show is an American talk show that ran all over
the country for 25 seasons from 1986 to 2011. Produced and presented
by its namesake, Oprah Winfrey, it remains the highest-rated talk show in
American TV history.
The show was greatly
influential, and many of its topics penetrated into the American pop-cultural
consciousness. Oprah used the show as a platform to show and inspire, providing
viewers with a positive, spiritually uplifting experience by featuring book
clubs, compelling interviews, self-improvement segments, and philanthropic
forays into world events. The show gained credibility by not trying to profit
off the products it endorsed; it had no licensing agreement with retailers when
products were not promoted, nor did the show make any money from endorsing
books for its book club.
Oprah is one of the
longest-running daytime television talk shows in history. The show received 47
Daytime Emmy Awards before Winfrey decided to stop submitting it for
consideration in 2000.
In 1994, with talk shows
becoming progressively exploitative, Winfrey pledged to keep her show free of
tabloid topics. Although ratings initially fell, she earned the respect of her
viewers and was soon rewarded with an upsurge in popularity. Her projects with
Harpo have included the highly rated 1989 TV miniseries, The Women of Brewster
Place, which she also starred in. Winfrey also signed a multi-picture contract
with Disney. The initial project, 1998's Beloved, based on Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel by Toni Morrison and starring Winfrey and Danny Glover, got
mixed reviews and generally failed to live up to expectations.
According to Forbes magazine,
Oprah was the richest African American of the 20th century and the world's only
Black billionaire for three years running. Life magazine hailed her as the most
influential woman of her generation. In 2005, Business Week named her the
greatest Black philanthropist in American history. Oprah's Angel Network has
raised more than $51,000,000 for charitable programs, including girls'
education in South Africa and relief to the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
In her final season of her talk show, Oprah
made ratings soar when she revealed a family secret: she has a half-sister
named Patricia. Oprah's mother gave birth to a baby girl in 1963. At the time,
Oprah was 9 years old, and living with her father. Lee put the child up for
adoption because she believed that she wouldn't be able to get off public
assistance if she had another child to care for. Patricia lived in a series of
foster homes until she was 7 years old.
Patricia tried to connect with her birth mother
through her adoption agency after she became an adult, but Lee did not want to
meet her. After doing some research, she approached a niece of Winfrey's, and
the two had DNA tests done, which proved they were related.
Winfrey only learned of her sister's existence
a few months before she made the decision to publicize the knowledge. "It
was one of the greatest surprises of my life," Winfrey said on her show.
Since 1992, Winfrey has been
engaged to Stedman Graham, a public relations executive. The couple lives in
Chicago, and Winfrey also has homes in Montecito, California, Rolling Prairie,
Indiana, and Telluride, Colorado.