Eleanor Mondale Poling, a former radio and television personality and the daughter of former Vice President Walter F. Mondale, died early Saturday at his farm in Prior Lake, Minn. She was 51. The cause was brain cancer, who had been fighting since 2005, his family said. “She was a wonderful daughter,” Mr. Mondale said in a telephone interview from his daughter’s home, where relatives and friends had gathered. “A great spirit, a lot of courage. She fought this stuff almost six years now, and never a whimper.”
She also appeared on the campaign trail, campaigning for his father in 1984 during his campaign not to overthrow President Ronald Reagan.
Ms. Mondale told Newsweek in 1985 that having a famous father was a double-edged sword in Hollywood. “The exposure didn’t hurt,” she said. “But being Walter Mondale’s daughter doesn’t make me a good actress. I have to prove myself five times over. I have to overcompensate.” Ms. Mondale began her broadcasting career in the late 1980s as a radio D.J. in Chicago. In 1989, she became an entertainment reporter at WCCO-TV in Minneapolis. She later worked as a D.J. at WLOL-FM, a Minneapolis radio station, and as an on-air personality at the E! Online cable channel, ESPN and “This Morning” on CBS.
In March 2009, gave up those rights, announcing that the cancer had returned. He underwent surgery to remove a tumor that August.
Mrs. Mondale found its way into the gossip columns at an early age. In 1977, when he was 17, attracted the attention of photographers when she wore a tuxedo for an inaugural ball of President Jimmy Carter.
Over the years, she was linked romantically with several celebrities, including Arnold Schwarzenegger, Warren Zevon and Don Henley, and the financier Ronald O. Perelman. She was married three times, first to Keith Van Horne, a previous entry of the Chicago Bears in 1988, and then Greg Malba, a DJ known as Greg Thunder, in 1991. In 2005 she married Chan Poling, a musician and composer, and took his surname.
The couple lived on a small farm, where he kept a menagerie of animals, including horses, dogs, cats, chickens and a cockatoo, according to a photo spread in a 2005 edition of Country Living magazine. The chickens were kept in a corner of the barn, decorated with an antique lamp. Ms. Poling called the cooperative "Cluckingham Palace".
In addition to Mr. Poling and her parents, Ms. Poling is survived by his brothers, Ted Mondale, former Minnesota state senator, and William H. Mondale, a former assistant attorney general of Minnesota.