Harman Patil (Editor)

Angela D'Audney

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Cause of death
  
Brain tumour

Years active
  
1973–2001

Home town
  
Auckland

Nationality
  
New Zealander

Education
  
University of Auckland

Angela D'Audney httpswwwnzonscreencomcontentimages0027723

Full Name
  
Angela Louise Cerdan

Born
  
26 August 1944 (
1944-08-26
)
London, England

Occupation
  
Television and radio broadcaster, news anchor

Known for
  
One News Good Morning Eye Witness News The Venus Touch Kaleidoscope Angela: A Wonderful Life

Spouse(s)
  
Haddo D'Audney (m. 1965–72)

Died
  
6 February 2002, Auckland, New Zealand

Angela Louise D'Audney (née Cerdan, 26 August 1944 – 6 February 2002) was a New Zealand television news anchor and actress. She was the first woman to regularly anchor nationwide news bulletins on New Zealand television in 1973, and continued presenting news regularly until 1997 and occasionally until 2001, when failing health forced her to leave her role at Television New Zealand.

Contents

Early life

Born Angela Louise Cerdan in London, her parents separated when she was a toddler. D'Audney spent the first few years of her life in Brazil with her Jewish Orthodox mother and sister before moving with her family to Auckland in the early 1950s. She was homeschooled and developed a love for languages. She became a naturalised New Zealand citizen in 1956, and married Haddo D'Audney in 1965; they were later divorced.

Career

D'Audney began her career in broadcasting on the New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation's local news broadcasts in 1962, working part-time while studying microbiology at the University of Auckland. She gave up her studies to become a full-time broadcaster, moving on to national news presentation in 1973. Other roles included hosting the arts programme Kaleidoscope, and current events digest Eye Witness News. She also worked occasionally as an actress, and in 1982 shocked the public by appearing topless in the television comedy play The Venus Touch. She continued as a current affairs presenter and occasional newsreader until 2001, gradually shifting her focus from television work to radio.

In May 2001, D'Audney was diagnosed with a brain tumour, which proved to be cancerous, and underwent an operation two weeks later. She died in February 2002 at the age of 57. During her last year, she wrote and published her autobiography, Angela: A Wonderful Life.

She is buried in the Jewish section of Waikumete Cemetery.

Legacy

After her death, the Angela D'Audney Trust was set up to raise funds for cancer treatment in New Zealand.

References

Angela D'Audney Wikipedia