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Dorothy Hamill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dorothy Hamill
Laura Bush and Dorothy Hamill.jpg
Hamill (right) presents Laura Bush the Academy of Achievement Golden Plate Award, June 22, 2007.
Personal information
Country represented United States
BornDorothy Stuart Hamill
July 26, 1956 (age 59)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Height5 ft 5 in (165 cm)
Former coachOtto GoldGustave LussiSonya DunfieldCarlo FassiPeter Burrows
Retired1976
Olympic medal record
Women's figure skating
Competitor for  United States
Gold medal – first place1976 InnsbruckSingles
Dorothy Stuart Hamill (born July 26, 1956) is a retired American figure skater. She was the ladies' singles 1976 Olympic championand World champion in 1976.

Early life[edit]

Hamill was born in ChicagoIllinois, to Chalmers and Carol Hamill. Her father was a mechanical engineer.[1] Shortly after her birth, her family moved to the Riverside neighborhood of Greenwich, Connecticut, where Hamill spent the rest of her childhood. She has two older siblings, a brother, Sandy, and a sister, Marcia.[1]
Hamill first started skating in early 1965 at the age of 8, taking once-a-week group lessons. She became more serious about the sport the next season, taking regular private lessons and passing her preliminary and first figure test before the seasonal rink closed in March. She would wake early in the morning to go to the rink for practice at 4:30 am.[1] Hamill was first coached by Otto Gold andGustave Lussi. Ice time was limited in her area, so she eventually began training at Sky Rink in New York City, staying overnight in the city with friends when possible. In the summers, Hamill trained in Lake Placid, New York and later in Toronto with her coach at the time, Sonya Dunfield.[2] During her career, her father would spend up to $20,000 a year on her skating expenses, including skating lessons, travel, living expenses, and costumes.[1]
Until the spring of 1970, Hamill attended public schools in Riverside, but at that point she switched to a small school with flexible tutoring to accommodate her skating schedule. She attended and graduated from Colorado Academy high school.[2]

Career[edit]

Hamill's first national success came in 1969, when she won the novice ladies' title at the U.S. Championships at the age of 12. Later that spring, Hamill was invited to perform inMadison Square Garden with the exhibition tour (in later years known as Champions on Ice) that followed the 1969 World Figure Skating Championships. She placed second at the junior level at the 1970 Championships, and made her senior debut in 1971.[2] The U.S. Figure Skating Association arranged for her to be coached by Carlo Fassi when she began to compete internationally.[1]
Hamill was U.S. champion from 1974 to 1976. At the 1974 World Championships in Munich, Germany, she was in 3rd place after the compulsory figures and the short program. She was set to skate directly after the German skater Gerti Schanderl, whose marks were booed while Hamill was already on the ice. Visibly upset, Hamill left the ice and burst into tears. After the crowd settled down, she returned to the ice and won the silver medal behind Christine Errath of East Germany. Hamill won silver again at the World Championships in 1975 at Colorado Springs, Colorado behind Dianne de Leeuw of the Netherlands and ahead of Errath.
Hamill was disappointed by her performance at the 1976 U.S. Championships, admitting that she was outskated by Linda Fratianne because she had not trained properly. Immediately after the national championships, her coach Carlo Fassi left the U.S. to accompany his other star pupil, John Curry, to the European Championships, leaving Hamill coachless with the Olympics only a few weeks away. She began training with Peter Burrows instead. She was pleased with their work together and wanted to bring him to the Olympics as her coach of record.[1] However, the USFSA refused her request and she was reunited with Fassi for a brief period of training in Germany before the Olympics.[1][3]
At the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, Hamill came in second in the figures and then won the short and long programs, taking the gold medal. She was the last single skater to win the Olympics without a triple jump.[1] Hamill also won the 1976 World Championships and then turned professional.
Hamill is credited with developing a new skating move — a camel spin that turns into a sit spin - which became known as the "Hamill camel."[4] The bobbed hairstyle that she wore during her Olympic performance was created by stylist Yusuke Suga [1] and started a fad.[5] Her glasses with oversized frames also started a trend in the 1970s.[1] The media dubbed her "America's sweetheart."[6]
Hamill was an Ice Capades headliner from 1977–1984. She was asked to join Ice Capades by Donna Atwood, who had been its star for years and who had eventually acquired financial control of the Ice Capades. Hamill was asked to be Atwood's successor as its new star.[7] After Ice Capades folded due to competition and changing tastes, Hamill and her husband bought the financially strapped company's assets in 1993 in an effort to revive its earlier success, but they declared bankruptcy in 1994 and sold it to Pat Robertson's International Family Entertainment, Inc. in 1995.[8]
In 1993, the Associated Press released results of a national sports study, showing that Hamill was statistically tied for first place with fellow OlympianMary Lou Retton as the most popular athlete in America ranking far ahead of other major sports stars such as Michael JordanMagic JohnsonTroy AikmanDan MarinoWayne GretzkyJoe Montana,Nolan Ryan and 800 other athletes.[9]
Hamill has continued to skate in shows, including a regular principal role with Broadway on Ice. She was a special guest in the Brian Boitano-Barry Manilow skating extravaganza at AT&T Park in San Francisco in 2007.
In February 2013, it was revealed that Hamill would take part in the sixteenth season of Dancing with the Stars, partnering with Tristan MacManus. After only two dances, on March 26, 2013 she was forced to withdraw from the competition upon advice from her spine surgeon due to a severe strain on her lower back which was caused during practice.[10][11]

Personal life[edit]

Hamill wrote an autobiography titled On and Off the Ice. She was married and divorced twice: to singer/actor Dean Paul Martin (1982–1984), and then to Kenneth Forsythe (1987–1995), with whom she had a daughter named Alexandra. Hamill married her third husband, John MacColl, in 2009.[12] Her second autobiography A Skating Life: My Story, was published in 2007.
For much of her adult life, Hamill has experienced chronic depression, which is controlled though medication and therapy. Her daughter also suffers from the condition.[13] In 2008, Hamill announced that she was being treated for breast cancer.[14]
Hamill was a mentor to two-time U.S. Championship silver medalist Rachael Flatt.[6] Flatt, like Hamill, trained in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Competition highlights[edit]

Event1968–691969–701970–711971–721972–731973–741974–751975–76
Winter Olympics1st
World Championships7th4th2nd2nd1st
U.S. Championships1st N.2nd J.5th4th2nd1st1st1st
Nebelhorn Trophy1st
St. Gervais1st
Richmond Trophy1st

Records and achievements[edit]

Amateur[edit]

  • Olympic Champion (1976)
  • World Champion (1976)
  • Three-time United States National Champion (1974–1976)
  • Invented the Hamill camel, a camel spin followed by a sit spin

Professional[edit]

Awards[edit]

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