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http://www.newsweek.com/id/162357
- Barbara Walters essay
http://www.newsweek.com/id/162338
- Tyra Banks
http://www.newsweek.com/id/162342
- Rosario Dawson
http://www.newsweek.com/id/162340
- Dara Torres
Contact:
Jan Angilella FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
at
212-445-5638 Sunday, October 5, 2008
WOMEN
& LEADERSHIP
IN
ANNUAL SERIES, NEWSWEEK SPEAKS TO WOMEN IN LEADERSHIP ROLES ABOUT HOW THEY
ACHIEVED SUCCESS, OBSTACLES OVERCOME AND LESSONS LEARNED
----
BARBARA
WALTERS ON GETTING ON AIR EARLY IN CAREER: 'THERE IS A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
WHINING AND STANDING UP FOR WHAT YOU FEEL YOU MUST...
I PROTESTED LOUDLY AND STRONGLY...'
----
TYRA
BANKS ON PURSUING YOUR GOALS: 'IF YOU HAVE ENTREPRENEURIAL DREAMS,
YOU HAVE TO LIVE IT AND BREATHE IT';
ROSARIO
DAWSON ON USING HER FAME: 'I DON'T WANT TO JUST BE A SPOKESPERSON FOR
SOMETHING. I WANT TO BE AFFECTED BY IT AS WELL'
New York-Barbara Walters, co-host and
co-executive producer of ABC's "The View," tells Newsweek that in her early years at NBC's "Today"
show, she was a writer, but only on so-called women's features. Hugh Downs put
her on the air, but his replacement, Frank McGee, didn't want her to
participate in his "hard news" interviews. He insisted on doing them
alone. "Now there is a difference between whining and standing up for what
you feel you must, and that was one of the times when I did. I protested loudly
and strongly, and so the big compromise was that Frank McGee would ask the
first three questions. I could come in on the fourth."
Walters joined ABC's "20/20" in
1979 and has done hundreds of interviews since. Now if a young woman comes up
to her and says she's in journalism because of her, "I think that is my
reward. I never had a mentor, and I am both grateful and so proud that I can be
that for someone else."
Walters is one of 17 women who talk about
pursuing their passions and achieving their success in the fourth installment of Newsweek's "Women &
Leadership" series, which appears in the
October 13 issue of Newsweek (on newsstands Monday, October 6).
Talk-show
host and producer Tyra Banks says that after her successful modeling career,
which started when she was in high school, she decided to leave the industry.
"I never lost the dream of being in TV. When I hit 32, I said, 'Let me
leave this industry before it leaves me' ... I wanted to leave on top."
Now,
she's living out her dream of working in television. "If you have
entrepreneurial dreams, you have to live it and breathe it. You have to treat
the idea like a baby, like your child. You don't sleep when you have a new
baby. I didn't sleep. I didn't have weekends. I worked nonstop. You wouldn't
let just anybody baby-sit your child. When I hire someone, I have to feel that
I connect with them as a person. I'm looking for honest people. I'm looking for
loyalty. I'm looking for people who respect people at all levels, from the
people who clean the building to the people who own the building. Those are the
values that my mother instilled in me."
Rosario
Dawson, actor and political activist, says she never had any walls up or had
any particular idea of what success should look like. Now, "I think in
both parts of my life, acting and my activism, I'm starting to focus more. I really want to be doing meaningful things.
I think that comes with being 29. That's a natural progression. I was walking
in marches with my mom when I was 10, back when Al Sharpton still wore
sweatsuits."
She
says it took a long time for her realize "how to commit that celebrity
value to something that I really believed in. I don't want to just be the
spokesperson for something; I want to be affected by it as well." She got
involved in the Lower Eastside Girls Club. "I didn't have a place like
that to go to when I was younger. There's such a huge dropout rate, a huge
teen-pregnancy rate, and people weren't addressing that. It's about recognizing
and developing the community around you; you have the power to do that. I
always tell people: use your passion ... If you have something that makes you
filled up, that you're already caring about, that you're already talking about,
then you'll actually see progress. You're just feeding off that energy."
For
Olympian Dara Torres, who's been in five Olympic Games in 24 years, when people
tell her how she's inspired them, "that's a much more rewarding feeling
than bringing home medals. People think they are too old to do something.
Others put off doing something or don't think they could balance being a parent
and doing their work, so I guess they like my story. I feel like I'm going out
there and doing my thing and loving what I'm doing. I didn't do it to try to
show that a 41-year-old could do this. It just ended up that way.
Also in
the Women & Leadership package: Anna Sui, designer; Cynthia Nixon, actor
and activist; Helene Gayle, CEO, CARE: Sheryl Sandberg, COO, Facebook; Lisa
Price, founder, Carol's Daughter Bath and Body Works; Kimberly Peirce,
director; Nancy Andrews, dean, Duke Medical School; Jonelle Procope, CEO,
Apollo Theater Foundation; Alexandra Patsavas, owner, Chop Shop Music
Supervision; Lauren Zalaznick, president, Women & Lifestyle Entertainment
Networks, NBC Universal; Lisa Dennison, Executive VP, Sotheby's North America;
Carla Christofferson, attorney and co-owner, L.A. Sparks; Julie Hembrock Daum,
Practice Leader, Spencer Stuart.
# # #
(Read entire package at www.Newsweek.com)