Background
Ferrari was born in Aix-les-Bains, Savoie, the daughter of a former mayor of the city and member of the French National Assembly, Gratien Ferrari, and has Italian ancestry.
Ferrari was born in Aix-les-Bains, Savoie, the daughter of a former mayor of the city and member of the French National Assembly, Gratien Ferrari, and has Italian ancestry.
She attended the École Française des Attachés de Presse (French School for Press Attachés) in Lyon and graduated from the Sorbonne University with a Master of "Communication Politique and Sociale".
She also work for Europe1 sometimes. Early life and education
Media career
She started her career in 1986 as a stringer at the French news agency, AFP, and Le Figaro Magazine. She also worked at the French language radio station, Europe 1, as a researcher with special responsibility for health policy.
She began her television career in 1994 with Michel Drucker in Studio Gabriel on France 2 and thereafter with Jean-Pierre Pernaut in "Combien ça coûte ?" on TF1.
In June 2008, she became the new anchor of "Le 20 Heures de TF1" (the flagship television news programme, which has the highest ratings in Europe), replacing its long-serving anchor Patrick Poivre d"Arvor, and taking over the weekday programme on 25 August 2008. Ferrari presented her final 8pm newscast for TF1 on 31 May 2012, a day after announcing her resignation from the network in order to join Direct 8.
Humanitarian work
Laurence Ferrari has been an ambassador for SOS Children"s Villages since November 2003. In March 2007, along with other famous personalities including journalists Claire Chazal, Marie Drucker, Tina Keiffer, Béatrice Schönberg and Mélissa Theuriau, she sponsored the Louisiana Rose Marie Claire project with United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund to help educate young girls.
Private life.
After her divorce, she moved in 2006 to Canal + to present the channel"s weekly political magazine "Dimanche +" where she covered the French presidential election of 2007. Ferrari incited controversy in 2010 by wearing a veil to interview Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.