Carole Radziwill
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Carole Di Falco Radziwiłł was born August 20,1968 and raised in Suffern, New York. She is a journalist/author.
She started her news career at ABC, working on 20/20, a news magazine show. She eventually worked for Peter Jennings documentary unit, producing shows on abortion, gun control and covering foreign policy stories in Cambodia, Haiti and India. In 1991, Radziwill was stationed in Israel and reported on the SCUD missle attacks during the Gulf War. In 2003, during the War on Afghanistan, she spent 6 weeeks in Khandahar, embedded with an infantry unit of the 101st Airborne Division. She produced segments for an ABC-TV show called Profiles From the Frontline. Radziwill won several awards, including three Emmys, one for a story she produced on landmines in Cambodia, and a Peabody.
In 1994, she married Anthony Radziwill, a son of Polish prince and a nephew of President John F. Kennedy and son of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis's sister, Lee Radziwill. Carole Radziwill's husband died at age 40 after a five-year battle with cancer, and she left ABC News to write a memoir. "What Remains: A Memoir of Fate, Friendship and Love," was published (Fall 2005) by Scribner Publishing, and was on the New York Times Best Sellers List for six weeks. It brought the author a measure of fame through television interviews on such popular American programs as Oprah Winfrey, Good Morning America, Charlie Rose and Larry King Live.
She is a member of an old Polish aristocratic princely family of The Radziwiłłs.
In 2006, Radziwill signed with Glamour magazine to write a monthly column called "Lunch Date". Some of her notable Lunch Dates have included: former mayor Rudy Giuliani, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper, Rachel Weisz, and Alec Baldwin.
She lives in New York City.