Carole radziwill and anthony

 Carole Radziwill is an award-winning journalist, author, and TV personality. She is widely recognized for her role on Bravo’s popular hit TV show, Real Housewives of New York City. She starred on the drama-filled reality show for six seasons and established herself as the “voice of reason” among a cast of eccentric characters.

Carole began her career at ABC News as a journalist working for Peter Jennings. She was part of the documentary unit, Peter Jennings Reporting, covering groundbreaking domestic stories, as well as, foreign stories in Haiti, India, and Cambodia.  She reported for World News Tonight and the magazine shows 20/20, Primetime Live, and Day One. She earned three EMMY awards for a career that spanned fourteen years. She also wrote a monthly column for Glamour magazine called, Lunch Date, where she interviewed celebrated people in the field of politics, film, and fashion. 

Carole’s first book a memoir titled, What Remains, spent twenty weeks on the New York Times list and was a national bestseller. In it she recounts her childhood in upstate, N.Y.

Carole Radziwill

Carole Radziwill's television career had two very distinct and diverse phases - first, as an Emmy-winning reporter and producer for ABC News, and later, as a castmate of the popular and dishy reality series "The Real Housewives of New York City" (Bravo, 2008- ). Born Carole Ann DiFalco on August 20, 1964 in Suffern, a village in upstate New York, she earned her bachelor's degree from Hunter College and an M.B.A. from New York University before joining ABC's news division as an unpaid intern for its magazine program "20/20" (1976- ). Radziwill soon worked her way up to news anchor Peter Jennings' documentary unit, where she produced specials and segments on domestic and international subjects, including abortion and gun control, which netted her three Emmys and a Peabody Award.

During this period, she also began working with fellow ABC News producer Anthony Radziwill, who was the son of Caroline Lee Bouvier-Canfield - the sister of former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis - and Polish Prince Stanislaw Albrecht Radziwill.

In 1991, Radziwill left ABC's documen

Exclusive: Carole Radziwill Is Happy. Deal With It.

The absurdly painful, fantastical life of this girl from the Catskills keeps blazing forward. ‘The Real Housewives Of New York City’ alum tells all.

By Richard Pérez-Feria

Photography by Natalie Chitwood for THE MOUNTAINS

The joys (and pitfalls) of surviving a genuinely interesting life—a life precisely like the one the woman I’ve been entranced by for the better part of three hours in our effortless, deeply satisfying Sunday afternoon conversation has led—is that you’ve set yourself up to perpetually reflect on what was, always forced to look back even as you’re moving forward.

The mesmerizing (and still flawless) Carole Radziwill has had three life-defining eras to reflect upon: her decidedly humble childhood running around her grandparents’ farm in Upstate New York’s Mount Marion, a tiny hamlet in the town of Saugerties near Kingston; her red-hot romance and subsequent marriage to Anthony Radziwill, a bonafide prince whose mother, Lee Radziwill, was Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis’ sister, with all of what that life entai

Copyright ©oakvibe.pages.dev 2025