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In September 2004, Goddard left ITV to join Five in a new programme titled Trisha Goddard, which made its TV debut on 24 January 2005. She launched her own independent television production company, Town House TV, with former Director of Programmes and Production for ITV Anglia, Malcolm Allsop. In 1998, after returning to the United Kingdom, Goddard became the host of an ITV flagship daytime chat show, the BAFTA-winning Trisha, produced by Anglia Television.
She was later chairperson of the Australian Government's National Community Advisory Group on Mental Health. She worked there as a television presenter, most notably on ABC's The 7.30 Report, and also as a host of the children's program Play School. Goddard's early career as an air stewardess led to travel writing for magazines and then, after settling in Australia in the mid-1980s, a new career in television. She then joined Sir William Perkins's School in Chertsey, Surrey, which was a voluntary controlled Church of England girls' grammar school at the time. As a child, she was educated at an independent school for expatriates in Tanzania, after which she returned to England to attend primary school in Heacham, Norfolk.
#Trisha h3 skin
In her late-50s, Goddard set out to find details of her biological father after a genetics expert insisted that her skin colour made it almost impossible for her to have a white father. She did not discover that the white man who raised her was not her biological father until after her mother's death, though he was the biological father of her three sisters. Patricia Gloria Goddard was born in London on 23 December 1957, the daughter of Agnes Fortune, a Windrush nurse from Dominica, and an unknown father.