Elizabeth Vargas
- Born:
- September 6, 1962, Paterson, New Jersey, U.S. (age 62)
Elizabeth Vargas (born September 6, 1962, Paterson, New Jersey, U.S.) is an American television journalist best known as a coanchor of the ABC (American Broadcasting Company) news programs World News Tonight and 20/20.
Vargas earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri in 1984 and soon began working as a reporter and anchor for KOMU television in Columbia, Missouri. After a brief stint in Reno, Nevada, she became a reporter for the ABC affiliate KTVK in Phoenix in 1986. She reported and anchored for WBBM television in Chicago from 1989 to 1993, when she joined the national news media as a correspondent for the NBC (National Broadcasting Company) program Now with Tom Brokaw and Katie Couric. She soon began working as a correspondent and substitute coanchor for other NBC news shows, including Today, Dateline, and NBC Nightly News.
Vargas departed NBC in 1996 to join ABC, where in 1997 she was named a correspondent for 20/20 and Primetime Thursday. During this time she also filled a number of swing roles for the network, including coanchor of Primetime Monday and substitute anchor for Good Morning America. In addition to her regular reporting duties, Vargas anchored numerous news specials, including an award-winning documentary series, I.C.U.: Arkansas Children’s Hospital, which aired in 2002. From 1999 to 2002 she anchored the debut series 20/20 Downtown, and she then joined 20/20 as a coanchor in 2004. In 2005 she became one of the most prominent reporters in the United States as a coanchor of World News Tonight. Vargas—who was expecting her second child with husband Marc Cohn, a musician (married 2002–14)—stepped down as coanchor in May 2006 but returned to 20/20 later that year. In 2016 she published Between Breaths: A Memoir of Panic and Addiction, in which she detailed her struggles with alcoholism. Vargas left ABC in 2018 and subsequently joined A&E Networks as host of A&E Investigates. Three years later she began hosting America’s Most Wanted on Fox; the show sought to catch fugitives.