Norma Quarles (born November 11, 1936) is a retired American television reporter and anchor. She worked for NBC, CNN and PBS during her career.
Early life
Quarles was born in New York City in 1936 into a
Trinidadians family. Her father worked at Macy's in New York which led to her being cast as an extra in
Miracle on 34th Street in 1947. Quarles attended
Hunter College and City College of New York before earning her real estate license and moving to Chicago.
Career
She began her career in 1965 as a radio reporter in Chicago. She worked as a general assignment reporter for television station
WKYC in Cleveland for three years, where she was the first African-American woman to file reports for a network.
She then moved to
WNBC in New York where she served as an anchor for the local morning news. While at WNBC, she requested to substitute
Barbara Walters on
The Today Show, but NBC feared that southern viewers would protest and refused her request.
In 1977, Quarles began producing
Urban Tales for
WMAQ-TV in Chicago. The series' success led her to being named a national NBC correspondent.
In 1984, she served as a panelist at the vice presidential debate.
In 1988, Quarles joined CNN as a news anchor on
CNN Daybreak. She anchored the show for two years and then switched to working as a correspondent, a job which she held until 1999. She then served as a reporter for
Religion and Ethics Newsweekly on
PBS, retiring in 2001. Quarles was inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame in 1990.
Film work
Quarles played a reporter in
The Last Days of Disco and was an extra in
Miracle on 34th Street.
Awards and honors
-
1973 Front Page Award
-
1990 National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame inductee
-
1993 CINE Golden Eagle