Her death at sixty-one felt like a national pause. For more than three decades, she had been a familiar presence in Canadian homes, “a steady presence” who was “calm without being distant, authoritative without being cold.” News of her passing from cancer marked not just the end of a career, but the loss of someone who had guided viewers through “elections, tragedies, celebrations, and everyday mornings,” making the world feel clearer and more humane.
She began her career when television news anchors were “trusted guides through complexity.” From Global News to CTV News Toronto, the CTV News Channel, and Canada AM, she adapted without losing her voice. Her mornings were warm and accessible, while her later anchoring carried gravity and restraint. In an industry often drawn to spectacle, her approach was defined by respect, pacing, and clarity.
Her interviews revealed rare versatility. She moved easily between celebrity culture and hard politics, speaking with artists like Celine Dion and Shania Twain, then pressing political leaders with equal confidence. She could “challenge without antagonizing, probe without posturing,” earning trust by listening as much as questioning.
Behind the scenes, colleagues described her as meticulous, generous, and deeply human. She was a quiet mentor who supported younger journalists, greeted crew members by name, and never forgot the pressure of live television. Her humility shaped newsroom cultures long after broadcasts ended.
In her final years, she accepted a lifetime achievement award by honoring others, not herself. She kept her illness private, carrying it with dignity. After her death, tributes poured in, reflecting the trust she built. Her legacy endures as a reminder that integrity, warmth, and authenticity still matter.