Honorific-Prefix: | Excelentísima Señora Doña |
Paloma Gómez Borrero | |
Honorific-Suffix: | OIC MML |
Birth Name: | María Paloma Gómez Borrero |
Birth Date: | 18 August 1934 |
Birth Place: | Madrid, Spain |
Death Place: | Madrid, Spain |
Occupation: | Journalist, writer |
Spouse: | Alberto de Marchís[1] |
María Paloma Gómez Borrero (18 August 1934 – 24 March 2017) was a Spanish journalist and writer.[2] In 1976, she became the second female television foreign correspondents from Spain, when appointed correspondent in Italy and the Vatican for Televisión Española (TVE).
Gómez Borrero received the Iris Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the Spanish Television Academy in 2016.
Gómez Borrero was a descendant, by maternal line, of Juan Álvarez Mendizábal. Her maternal grandfather,, had a prominent role with the Isabelino troops during the Carlist Wars. She began her studies at the Deutsche Schule Madrid, and during the summers she had the opportunity to visit France, the United Kingdom, and Germany, thanks to a scholarship program. She continued her studies at the Colegio del Sagrado Corazón on Madrid's Caballero de Gracia Street, graduated from the, and worked as a special correspondent for the weekly in Germany, Austria, and the United Kingdom. She spoke five languages.
In December 1976, she was appointed foreign correspondent of Televisión Española (TVE) in Italy and the Vatican,[2] being the second female television foreign correspondents from the country.[3] Gómez Borrero was dismissed from office in 1983 by personal decision of the then director of RTVE, .
Later she contributed to many of the magazine series that María Teresa Campos hosted: (1991–1996) on TVE, (1996–2004) on Telecinco, and (2004–2005) on Antena 3. She was also a correspondent of Venevisión (Venezuela) and Noticiero TV Hoy (Colombia). From August 2007 to 2012 she wrote for the Telecinco program , presented by Jordi González.
Until June 2012, she was a correspondent for the COPE network in Rome and the Vatican, commenting from there on the religious events of the Catholic Church broadcast on Cadena COPE and . In 2012 she contributed to the Ventana al mundo radio program for Latin America and the US, from Italy and the Vatican, and was a correspondent in Italy for .
On 15 August 2013, Gómez Borrero planted and nurtured a tree with her name in the Communication Park of Boiro, the only one in Spain created by journalists.[4]
She studied palmistry applied to psychology.[5]
She was a proclaimer of in 1992, in Valladolid in 2000, and in Cuenca in 2014.[6]
On 12 October 2014 she premiered the recital Una Castellana Vieja y Recia de nombre Teresa in Toledo, along with the baritone Luis Santana and the pianist Antonio López. It portrayed the acts of the 5th Centennial of Saint Teresa of Ávila, running throughout the Teresian Year for more than seventy performances related to the poet. The concert was based on music composed by Francisco Palazón, Ángel Barja, Amadeu Vives, Juan del Encina, Federico Mompou, and .[7] [8]
Gómez Borrero wrote for numerous Spanish media outlets such as TVE, Telemadrid, 13TV, ABCs Alfa y Omega, and COPE. She had extensive knowledge of the Holy See, and accompanied Pope John Paul II on his 104 trips (five of them to Spain) visiting 160 countries, some 29 times around the world in kilometers traveled.
In November 2016, during the presentation of the Iris Awards, she explained: "The first trip I made was with Paul VI and the last thing I did was the closing of the Holy Door with Pope Francis. I am still in the breach". She also thanked Italy for the prize, "who has been very generous with her," and her family: "they have been my support and much of what I am in this profession I owe to the holy patience of my husband and my children. For times that I have left them eating at the table to go to send a chronicle."[9]
Paloma Gómez Borrero died on 24 March 2017 at age 82 due to liver cancer, which had been diagnosed a few weeks earlier.[9]