Belfast Telegraph

The making of Oprah

She’s bagged the Meghan and Harry interview the whole world wanted. Natasha Mwansa charts the rise of the inimitable Queen O

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It’s difficult to imagine a living person more integral to the cultural psyche than Oprah Winfrey. If the US had a monarchy, Oprah Winfrey would be its Queen — with an endorsemen­t from her akin to a kind of showbiz knighthood.

It only makes sense, then, that when actual royalty need a platform to tell their story, they go to Oprah. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have recorded a much anticipate­d interview which will air on March 7 on CBS with the Queen of Daytime TV (ITV is the favourite to broadcast it here).

We can only speculate how much they’ll reveal about living on the margins of royalty, but it’s a testament to Winfrey that the couple chose her as their consiglier­e when they decided at last to bare their souls.

There is precedent — in 1996, shortly after she stopped being a working royal, Sarah Ferguson spoke to Oprah (and told her that royal life was no fairytale).

And so, ahead of her big interview with the Sussexes, we track the rise and reign of the philanthro­pist, author, actress, television producer and author who rules Hollywood Hills from on high.

Becoming Oprah

Born in Mississipp­i in 1954, Oprah Gail Winfrey first entered the public eye as the youngest and first black female news anchor at Nashville’s WLAC-TV.

From Nashville, she joined Baltimore’s WJZ-TV, working lower profile positions before eventually being tapped to host Chicago’s WLS-TV morning talk show, AM Chicago. She was a hit. So much so that it became the highest-rated talk show in Chicago.

On film critic Roger Ebert’s recommenda­tion, Oprah went on to sign a syndicatio­n deal with King World for a talk show which would later become The Oprah Winfrey Show.

The daytime show ran from 1986 to 2011 and garnered her a wealth of accolades, including 18 Emmys, and averaged 20 million viewers a day at its height. The final season of the show aired in 2011 — a natural departure for the talk show host who was quoted in a Vogue interview as saying, “I never want to stay too long in the ring so I end up punch-drunk.

“I didn’t want people saying, ‘She shoulda quit that show three years ago!’”

Money moves

Oprah is worth an estimated $2.6bn (£1.8bn) — largely thanks to the success of her daytime talk show.

She also launched the cable channel OWN in 2011 and maintains a 25.5% stake in the network worth more than $65m (£46m), according to Forbes. She also has a 7% stake in Weight Watchers and is brand ambassador for the company.

As for her property portfolio, her main residence which she calls The Promised Land is in Montecito, California and was purchased for a cool $50m (£35m) in 2001.

The estate includes six bedrooms and fourteen bathrooms as well as a pool, stables and vegetable gardens.

In 2015, she purchased an additional 23 acres of land for $29m (£20.5m), bringing her total acreage in the area to almost 70 acres.

High profile neighbours include none other than Harry and Meghan, (right) as well as fellow daytime A-lister Ellen Degeneres.

She also has more than $40m (£28m) of real estate in Hawaii as well as properties in Chicago, Colorado and an $8.2m (£5.8m) property on Orcas Island, off the coast of Washington State.

Magical magnetism

Spiritual gurus, politician­s, drug addicts, white supremacis­ts, Michael Jackson — name any category of person and Oprah has likely had them on her couch.

“There is a kind of magic about Oprah — a connectivi­ty that draws people to her,” wrote British Vogue editor Edward Enninful.

What makes Oprah Winfrey so “magical” is her ability to put people at the focus of her interviews rather than subject matter. She engages with her guests openly and expressive­ly, punctuatin­g their insights with an animated “Aha!” and often asking them to repeat profound points.

You get the sense that Oprah really roots for whoever she’s speaking to, an approach comfortabl­e enough to break down Rihanna’s bolshie exterior and build up an excitement feverish enough to have Tom Cruise jumping on couches. She extends a warmth that can melt the most recalcitra­nt star.

As for the “bad guys”? When people want atonement, they go to Oprah. Following his doping scandal, Lance Armstrong found himself in front of Oprah.

When Lindsay Lohan wanted to overhaul her party girl image, she sought refuge in Oprah. When author James Frey was found to have fabricated parts of his best-selling memoirs, it was Oprah’s hot-seat he cowered in.

Politics and philanthro­py

Oprah’s power to influence public opinion on everything from presidenti­al candidates to book sales has been dubbed The Oprah Effect. Take Oprah’s Book Club, which is said to have been influentia­l enough to send each selection straight to the bestseller list, including Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina and four books from Toni Morrison, including Paradise and Sula.

Her endorsemen­t of Barack Obama during his 2008 presidenti­al campaign was said to have been so successful that without it, Obama may not have made it into the Oval Office. Though she took more of a backseat in subsequent elections, telling The Hollywood Reporter she was “quietly figuring out where I’m going to use my voice in support”. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris also appeared on Oprah’s platforms before winning the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Could she be eyeing up the White House herself in the future? Most likely not — Winfrey has previously shot down rumours of any desire to run for president, telling Instyle magazine, “I’ve always felt very secure and confident with myself in knowing what I could do and what I could not. It’s not something that interests me. I don’t have the DNA for it.”

She is also an ultra-philanthro­pist, who has donated millions of dollars to various charities including the Clinton Foundation, the Born This Way Foundation and Women for Women Internatio­nal. In the past year she’s also given $10m (£7m) to coronaviru­s relief efforts, as well as a venture to help Americans access food during the pandemic.

She founded the Angel Network in 1998 — since dissolved — which raised $11m (£7.8m) for people affected by Hurricane Katrina. Her Oprah Winfrey Foundation supports organisati­ons that serve children, families, and communitie­s, with a focus on youth education, and The Oprah Winfrey Operating Foundation was founded in 2007 to support education and career developmen­t for young girls in South Africa.

Relationsh­ips

Though unmarried, Oprah has been in a long-term relationsh­ip with Stedman Graham, an educator on identity leadership, author and speaker, since 1986.

In an essay published in O Magazine, Winfrey wrote, “I realised I didn’t actually want a marriage. I wanted to be asked. I wanted to know he felt I was worthy of being his missus, but I didn’t want the sacrifices, the compromise­s, the day-in-dayout commitment required to make a marriage work.

“My life with the show was my priority, and we both knew it.”

© Evening Standard

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Talk show host: Oprah Winfrey is one of the most influentia­l people in America
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