Maggie Tabberer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maggie Tabberer, AM, also known as Maggie T, (born 11 December 1936) is an Australian fashion, publishing and television personality.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
She was born Margaret May Trigar on 11 December 1936 in Parkside, Adelaide, South Australia.
[edit] Modelling and fashion career
Maggie's first modelling job was a one-off assignment at the age of 14, after a photographer spotted her at her sister's wedding. She attended a modelling school in her early twenties, and at the age of 23 was discovered by photographer Helmut Newton, who mentored her and launched a highly successful modelling career. While living in Melbourne in 1960, she won 'Model of the Year', and moved to Sydney to take advantage of the modelling opportunities there, but she chose to end her modelling career at the age of 25 after she began to lose her slim figure.[1]
Tabberer stayed well connected to the fashion industry, however. In 1967 she started a public relations company, Maggie Tabberer & Associates, which took on many fashion-related clients and assignments. In 1981, she launched a plus-size clothing label called Maggie T.[2]
A portrait of her by Paul William Newton was hung in the 1999 Archibald Prize.
[edit] Publishing work
Tabberer began working in publishing when she wrote a fashion column, "Maggie Says", for Sydney's Daily Mirror newspaper in 1963. She remained with the paper for sixteen years, until billionaire Kerry Packer asked her to become fashion editor of Australian Women's Weekly magazine in 1981, and she soon became the public face of the magazine, frequently appearing on its cover and television advertising. Tabberer stayed with Women's Weekly for fifteen years until 1996.[1]
[edit] Television work
Tabberer began appearing on television in 1964, as the "beauty" on panel talk show Beauty and the Beast (the "beast" being the show's host: Eric Baume until 1965, and then Stuart Wagstaff). Tabberer's appearances on Beauty and the Beast made her a household name, and she began hosting her own daily chat show, Maggie, for which she won two consecutive Gold Logies in 1970 and 1971.[1]
Since 2005, she has hosted her own television interview show, Maggie... At Home With on Australian pay TV channel Bio. (formerly The Biography Channel). On her show she "visits the homes of various Australian celebrities and elites to discuss their lives, careers, tragedies, and triumphs." [3]
[edit] Personal life
Maggie took her surname from her first husband, Charles Tabberer, who she married at the age of 17, and with whom she had two daughters: Brooke and Amanda. The success of her modelling career, however, saw that marriage end after seven years.[4]
After moving to Sydney with her daughters in 1960, Tabberer was introduced by Helmut Newton to Ettore Prossimo, an Italian restauranteur, who she married in 1967. In that same year, Tabberer gave birth to their son, Francesco, who died of sudden infant death syndrome at ten days old. Ettore left her for a younger woman after 17 years of marriage, although the pair rekindled their friendship before his death from a heart attack in 1996.[4]
In 1985, Tabberer announced that she was in a relationship with journalist Richard Zachariah, and the couple co-presented a lifestyle television series, The Home Show, on the ABC from 1990 until 1995 when they split up.[4]
[edit] Honours
- In the 1998 Queen's Birthday Honours, Maggie Tabberer was made a Member of the Order of Australia for service to the community, particularly through support for charitable organisations, and to the advancement of the Australian fashion industry.[5]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Anthony, Nicole: Maggie Tabberer: This Is Your Life, 21 August 1997.
- ^ Nicholson, Sara: Model doesn't date, The Courier-Mail, 13 December 2006.
- ^ Maggie... At Home With TV Show - Maggie... At Home With Television Show - TV.com
- ^ a b c Tabberer, Maggie (1999). Maggie. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1865080683.
- ^ TABBERER, Margaret May, It's an Honour (Australian Government).