Former 60 Minutes reporter Tracey Curro joined National Nine News in Melbourne in 2003 as a senior news presenter.
Curro began her career in journalism in 1986 as a reporter on regional television in Shepparton, Victoria. A year later she joined National Nine News in Brisbane as a reporter and weekend news presenter. In 1988, she moved to Melbourne to work as a presenter and reporter on Eyewitness News on Ten and Ten Morning News nationally.
Curro moved away from daily reporting in 1991 to join the acclaimed Beyond 2000 series on Seven. She travelled extensively for the next two years, reporting on science and technology breakthroughs. In 1993, she teamed with Jana Wendt, Richard Carleton, Charles Wooley and Jeff McMullen on the prestigious public affairs program 60 Minutes. For three-and-a-half years she filed stories from around the world, including the Middle East, Europe and the Falkland Islands.
Her most memorable stories on 60 Minutes include her interview with Pauline Hanson, which elicited Hanson's now-famous "please explain", and her candid interviews with celebrities such as Bono.
Curro left the Nine Network in 1997 to concentrate on documentary and feature film-making through Talking Heads Productions, which she has co-owned since 1990. The company has produced a number of documentaries for the Nine and Seven networks.
Already a familiar face to Victorian viewers, Curro joined the National Nine News team in Melbourne in 2003, presenting local and national news breaks and the weekend news bulletin over summer, as well as at other times throughout the year.
In 2006 she took up the position of General Manager of Communications at Sustainability Victoria, the Victorian Government’s leading agency on climate change, and was selected and trained as an Al Gore Climate Change Ambassador in 2007.
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