Marian Finucane
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Marian Finucane | |
Born | 1950 Dublin, Ireland |
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Nationality | Irish |
Education | Scoil Chaitríona; College of Technology, Bolton Street, Dublin |
Salary | €455,190 a year (2008)[1] |
Marian Finucane (born 1950) is an Irish broadcaster with Radio Telefís Éireann.
Finucane was born in Dublin and educated at Scoil Chaitríona, and the College of Technology, Bolton Street, Dublin. She practised as an architect until 1974 when she joined RTÉ as a continuity announcer, having been recruited by Eoghan Harris.[1] In 1976 she became a programme presenter working mainly on programmes concerned with contemporary social issues, especially those concerning women, in particular the hugely influential Women Today.
Finucane won the Prix d'Italia for a documentary on abortion and, in 1979, was also the recipient of a Jacobs' Award for Women Today. Her Liveline programme on radio, a combined interview and phone-in chat show on weekday afternoons, attracted a large listenership from the outset and won for Finucane the Radio Journalist of the Year Award in 1988.
Her television work includes major information programming on RTÉ such as "Consumer Choice" and the Garda investigation programme Crime Line.
Along the way, there was a failed marriage, and then two children with her partner, John Clarke. Their daughter, Sinead, developed leukaemia, and died, aged eight, in 1990.
On Gay Byrne's retirement in 1999, she took over his early morning radio slot to present The Marian Finucane Show. The popular broadcaster Joe Duffy took over her Liveline programme. On 24 June 2005 she presented her final Marian Finucane Show. One of her guests that morning was President of Ireland, Mary McAleese. McAleese described Finucane as "the country's top female broadcaster", saying she was possessed with "the wonderful gift of empathetic broadcasting". Later that afternoon she received an honorary degree from NUI Galway. Apart from her media work this degree was in recognition of her work raising funds along with Clarke, towards the building of an AIDS hospice and orphanage in Cape Town, South Africa. In September 2005 she was replaced in her radio timeslot by the young broadcaster, Ryan Tubridy.
In February 2007, the son of Marian Finucane 20-year-old, Jack Clarke, was badly beaten up at the family home in Kilteel, Rathmore, just outside Naas, Co Kildare. It is believed the men were unarmed but they remained in the house for up to an hour before fleeing on foot with just a small amount of cash and two mobile phones. Gardaí were alerted after Mr Clarke managed to free himself and contact a neighbour. It is understood that Mr Clarke was questioned about his mother's identity when he was tied up.
RTÉ is to pursue Flynn for the €2.4 million in costs arising from her failed libel action against the station, according to RTÉ's broadcaster, Marian Finucane on her programme of June 16, 2007.
[edit] Earnings
Marian Finucane earned €439,265 at RTE in 2004 and €360,507 in 2003