LOS ANGELES, Calif. --
News
Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch has filed for divorce from Wendi Deng Murdoch,
his wife since 1999, citing a breakdown in the relationship. The matter
doesn’t alter the succession plan for the media company, which the
82-year-old founder controls through a family trust.
Murdoch
filed a one-page document Thursday indicating that he was opening a
divorce case in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan.
A News Corp. spokesperson confirmed the filing.
A
sealed document with the filing says, “the relationship between the
husband and wife has broken down irretrievably,” according to a person
familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
the matter was personal.
The
couple are parents to two daughters, Grace and Chloe, ages 11 and 9. The
girls have no voting stake in the company, but they are beneficiaries
of 8.7 million non-voting shares that are held in a trust. Wendi Deng
Murdoch, 44, also has non-voting shares.
Murdoch
controls nearly 40 percent of the voting shares of News Corp. through a
separate family trust. He has four other children from two previous
marriages, including three who have active roles within the company:
James, Lachlan and Elisabeth.
All
four children, including Prudence, his child from his first marriage,
have equal votes in electing trustees. That means that upon Murdoch’s
death, his four eldest children will continue to have the most say in
who controls News Corp.
Rupert Murdoch’s lawyer, Ira Garr, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The
divorce filing comes just a week before the company begins the process
to split in two. One company will contain a publishing division and
Australian TV assets. A separate company will house global TV and movie
businesses.
Markets
appeared to be unfazed by the announcement. After starting the day in
negative territory, News Corp.‘s widely traded non-voting shares were up
1.4 percent at $31.37 by late afternoon.
Born
in China, Wendi Deng Murdoch is a Yale graduate who went on to work as a
junior executive at News Corp.‘s subsidiary Star TV in Hong Kong. Deng
was introduced to Murdoch at a Hong Kong cocktail party in 1997. She
left Star TV before marrying the media mogul in June 1999 aboard
Murdoch’s private yacht, in New York.
She
produced the movie “Snow Flower and the Secret Fan,” which was released
in 2011 by News Corp.‘s Fox Searchlight. According to entertainment
website IMDb, The movie did not recoup its $6 million budget.
Wendi
Deng Murdoch leapt into the spotlight during a July 2011 British
parliamentary hearing into phone hacking by News Corp. newspapers. She
jumped up to smack a protester who was throwing a cream pie at her
husband.
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