She kept smiling on camera while quietly dying off-screen. Friends, colleagues, and viewers had no idea how bad it really was. A broadcasting icon, a trusted voice for millions, suddenly gone at 61. Honors, awards, history-making interviews — and a final, private fight she refused to let define her. What colleagues revealed after her dea… Continues…
For more than three decades, she was the calm, steady presence Canadians turned to in moments of chaos and celebration. From Global News to CTV News Toronto, from Canada AM to the CTV News Channel desk, she carried the weight of breaking stories and intimate interviews with rare grace. Politicians, global superstars, and everyday people all trusted her with their words.
Behind that composure, she was fighting a long, punishing battle with cancer, choosing dignity and privacy over public spectacle. Her lifetime achievement award last October became, unknowingly, a farewell from an industry that adored her. Colleagues called her a mentor; executives called her a “trusted voice”; viewers felt she was family. Her death on Sunday, surrounded by loved ones, closes a remarkable chapter in Canadian journalism, leaving a silence on-air that no replacement can truly fill.