Rebecca de Ruvo

Rebecca Anna de Ruvo (born 6 December 1969 in Stockholm), is a Swedish TV presenter, actress, artist and model who is best known as host of the then new MTV Europe during the early 1990s. De Ruvo became known as the first Swedish VJ on MTV.[1]

Career

Rebecca De Ruvo started in 1981 as a voice-over artist in the Swedish Christmas series Stjärnhuset. In 1986 she appeared in an episode of the family series Julpussar och Stjärnsmällar.

De Ruvo began her television career at age nineteen as a reporter in the youth program Druvan in 1988, as her mother Annika de Ruvo was a producer for Swedish Television SVT. De Ruvo then started on MTV in 1990 and presented the chart show MTV's Braun European Top 20. In 1991 she hosted MTV Prime. Beginning on 6 April 1992, she led the daily MTV Europe morning show Awake on the Wilde Side as well as the daily viewers voted charts Dial MTV. She also appeared as a guest hostess and cook on MTV's Most Wanted.

In addition, she founded the music group Breaker in London who published a few single discs on Coalition Records. In 1992 she hosted together with Staffan Ling TV4's program Ringling where among other celebrities took part in various competitions. After leaving MTV, in 1995-1996, she was the host of the daily music competition Music match on TV3 with Max Lorentz as a judge but has since not been active in the Swedish media again.

In 1999 she had a guest appearance in the TV series Fråga Olle.

Personal life

Ruvo is the daughter of TV producer Annika de Ruvo, who for many years worked as a TV producer at SVT's children editorial. De Ruvo has five children and describes herself as a full-time parent.

In 1994, De Ruvo had a relationship with Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher.[2]

gollark: C is an actual language.
gollark: I think the more powerful ones can run stuff like stripped-down Node.js or MicroPython.
gollark: You use C for those mostly.
gollark: It would probably have a microcontroller in it, and those typically run C.
gollark: There's probably some way to rewrite them as a bunch of equations, say, then solve those - you know the amount of X atom/ion on the left is equal to the amount on the right, and you know the amount on the left is equal to (moles of reactant A * 3 + moles of reactant B * 2) and so on.

References

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