Wendi Deng Murdoch (Chinese: 邓文迪; pinyin: Dèng Wéndí; born Deng Wen'ge; December 5, 1968) is a Chinese-born American entrepreneur and socialite. She was the third wife of media mogul Rupert Murdoch from 1999 until 2013.
She attended Xuzhou First Secondary School (a.k.a. Xuzhou No.1 Middle School). She became a competitive volleyball player.[9][10] While she was in high school, her father relocated to Guangzhou, where he was a factory director[5] at the People's Machinery Works; she and her family remained in Xuzhou until they joined their father a short time later.[1] In 1985, she was enrolled at the Guangzhou Medical College.[5]
In 1988, she left medical school and went to the United States on a study permit. She enrolled at California State University, Northridge,[11] where she studied economics and was among the top scoring students.[12][13] She obtained a BA in Economics from California State University at Northridge and an MBA from Yale University.[6]
Career and public profile
Upon graduation from Yale in 1996,[14] Deng met Bruce Churchill. At that time, Churchill oversaw finance and corporate development at the Fox TV branch in Los Angeles. He offered Deng an internship at News Corp subsidiary Star TV in Hong Kong, which developed into a full-time junior executive position. Though a junior employee, she took a role in working to plan Star TV's operations in Hong Kong and China and helped to build up Chinese distribution for Star's Channel V music channel.[5] Within one year, she became a vice president.[6] Additionally, she investigated interactive TV opportunities for News Digital Systems.[5]
Deng was an advisor for MySpace's China operation, prior to the company's sale to Specific Media in June 2011.[15][16][17] She led the Murdoch family's Chinese internet investments and helped form business links with China for high-speed video and internet access.[18]
Jake and Joyce Cherry hosted Deng in their home during her studies in the United States. Later, Jake Cherry left his wife,[12] and married Deng in 1990.[34] While married to Cherry, Wendi obtained a green card.[12][34] They divorced after 2 years and 7 months of marriage.[35][12] Jake later said that they stayed together for only four to five months when he learned that Deng was spending time with David Wolf, a man closer to her age.[34]
In 1997, she met media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who is 37 years her senior, while working as an executive at the Murdoch-owned Star TV in Hong Kong.[6] They married in 1999[36] on board his yacht Morning Glory,[37] less than three weeks after the finalization of his divorce from his second wife, Anna Murdoch (née Torv).[35][38][39][40] The couple had two daughters: Grace (born 2001) and Chloe (born 2003). Tony Blair is Grace Murdoch's godfather.[41] In June 2013, Rupert Murdoch filed for divorce from Deng, citing irreconcilable differences.[35][42]
In February 2014, The Daily Telegraph and Vanity Fair alleged that Deng might have had an affair with former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair.[45][39] An article in The Economist claimed that as a result of Rupert Murdoch's suspicion that Blair had an affair with his wife, he ended his long-standing association with Blair in 2014.[46]
In early 2018, The Wall Street Journal published a story suggesting that Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump,[47] longtime friends of Deng, were warned by US intelligence agencies that she may be using her relationship with them to further the goals of the Chinese government.[48]Michael Wolff, author of Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, posited that the article was an attempt by Rupert Murdoch, owner of The Wall Street Journal, to spread the idea that "Wendi is a Chinese spy" in the aftermath of their acrimonious divorce.[49]
As of 2016[update], Deng was living in New York City with her two daughters.[6] Grace attends Yale University (class of 2025), and Chloe studies at Stanford (2026).[50][51][52] Grace and Chloe are due to inherit shares in their father's business interests, but they do not have voting rights, and are not involved in the September 2024 court case in which their half-siblings are challenging their father about changing the terms of a family trust which was set up as part of the divorce settlement between Rupert and his second wife Anna.[53][54]
^Hillman, Sir William Arbuthnot and Charles. "Murdoch family genealogy". Kittybrewster.com. Archived from the original on July 3, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
Song Jianglong (2018). 谜一样的女人:邓文迪传 [Mysterious Woman: the Biography of Deng Wendi] (in Chinese). Beijing: China Business Publishing House. ISBN9787520802505.
"Spiked!". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. May 7, 2007. Retrieved September 5, 2010.
"Stain Removal". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. August 27, 2007. Retrieved September 5, 2010. (discusses the WikiScanner data in the editing of this Wikipedia article on Wendi )