Gavin O'Reilly

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Gavin O'Reilly (born 1966) is a Dublin-born businessman with Irish and Australian citizenship, the second son and fourth child of Irish media magnate Tony O'Reilly and Australian Susan Cameron. He is currently Group Chief Operating Officer of Independent News and Media, the largest press group in Ireland and South Africa, and one of the largest in Australia and New Zealand, with 175 titles and a readership of over 100 million, and is also President of the World Association of Newspapers (2005-2008), and a director of the Ireland Funds.

Contents

[edit] Life

[edit] Early life

O'Reilly was born, the eldest of triplets, in 1966, in Dublin, and brought up in Dublin and Kilcullen, Ireland and Fox Chapel, Pittsburgh, USA, completing school at Clongowes Wood near one of the then main family homes, Castlemartin in Kildare, after a year at Harrow School.

[edit] Early career

After taking his Leaving Certificate exam in 1985, O'Reilly went to London, taking a summer job in advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach (now part of DDB), and staying there for around two years. He then attended Georgetown University School of Business but interrupted his studies to work as a stockbroker in Hong Kong and London, before finishing his degree with honours.

[edit] Later career

In 1993, O'Reilly was hired by the public company led by his father, Independent News and Media plc (INM), by then already the largest press group in Ireland, and worked on the Independent Directory and then in other areas. He was appointed CEO of the Irish operations of INM in 1999 and oversaw the move of the company's printing operations to Citywest Business Park in 2000[1]. He was additionally made Group Chief Operating Officer in December 2001 and appointed to the board in 2004.

In late March 2008 O'Reilly, at a company meeting not attended by his father, launched an attack on the second-largest shareholder in Independent News and Media, telecoms entrepreneur Denis O'Brien, who has been building a stake in the company which nearly rivals that of the O'Reilly family[2]. O'Reilly and O'Brien mixed socially in the 1990's.

[edit] Other roles

In 2004, O'Reilly was elected First Vice-President of the World Association of Newspapers, succeeding the sitting President, who resigned to take up diplomatic duties, in 2005, and then being re-elected for two years in June 2006. He is also Chairman of the National Newspapers of Ireland, and of two hotels in which his family has interests, Dromoland Castle and Ashford Castle, and is a director of Norkom Technologies and numerous charitable foundations, including the Ireland Funds[3].

[edit] Personal life

Gavin O'Reilly married model and actress Alison Doody on June 25 1994, at family residence Castlemartin, with 560 guests present. Making their home at Bartra House,[4] a 10,000 sq ft home overlooking the sea in Dalkey, purchased in 1996, with neighbour's including singer Enya and U2 guitarist The Edge, the marriage produced two daughters (Alanna in 1996; Lauren in 1999). Separating in 2002, the couple finalised their divorce in 2005. Doody and the children still live at Bartra, while O'Reilly lives in Dublin and London.

[edit] Sources

  • Cork, Ireland, 19 December 2001: Irish Examiner, "Gavin O'Reilly likely heir apparent to take over father's mantle" - Conor Keane.
  • Dublin, Ireland, February 2002: The Dubliner, "Independent Man" - Trevor White.
  • London, The Observer, 27 January 2008: "O'Reilly junior proves passion for print is in the genes / But Gavin insists Independent News & Media is not a family heirloom", James Robinson The Observer, retrieved online 27 March 2008 ([2]])

[edit] References

  1. ^ Cork, Ireland, 19 December 2001: Irish Examiner, "Gavin O'Reilly likely heir apparent to take over father's mantle" - Conor Keane
  2. ^ International Herald Tribune: Irish billionaires' feud over newspapers gets personal, p. 8 (Business/Media & Communications), Julia Werdigier
  3. ^ [1] Gavin O'Reilly profile on Board of Directors page of APN website, as retrieved 27 March 2008
  4. ^ Hughes, Emer (2003-03-02). Rich chase streets of dreams. ThePost.ie. Retrieved on 2008-05-18.