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Personal information | |
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Full name: | Tara Kristen Lipinski |
Country represented: | ![]() |
Date of birth: | June 10, 1982 |
Place of birth: | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Height: | 5 ft 1 in (1.55 m) |
Former coach: | Richard Callaghan |
Choreographer: | Sandra Bezic |
Retired: | 1998 |
Olympic medal record | ||
Figure Skating | ||
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Gold | 1998 Nagano | Ladies' Singles |
Tara Kristen Lipinski (born June 10, 1982) is an American figure skater. At the age of 15, she won the Olympic gold medal in figure skating at the 1998 Winter Olympics, and remains the youngest individual gold medalist in the history of the Olympic Winter Games.[1]
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Lipinski, an only child, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Patricia (née Brozyniak), a secretary, and Jack Richard Lipinski, an oil executive and lawyer.[2] She spent her earliest years in Washington Township, Gloucester County, New Jersey.[3] The family lived in Sewell, New Jersey until 1991.[4] Lipinski began roller skating at age three and later won a number of competitions. She began figure skating at age six. Her first competition was the 1990 regional championship, where she finished second. At the 1991 United States Roller Skating Championships, she won the primary girls freestyle as a nine-year-old.[5]
In 1991 her father's job required the family to move to Sugar Land, Texas. However, training facilities were not available there. In 1993, Lipinski and her mother moved back to Delaware, where she had trained before. She later moved to Detroit, Michigan to train with Richard Callaghan.[6]
Lipinski first came to national prominence when she won the 1994 U.S. Olympic Festival competition, which at the time was a junior-level competition. She became the youngest ladies figure skating gold medalist as well as the youngest athlete in any discipline to win gold. Later that season she placed fourth at the 1995 World Junior Figure Skating Championships and second in the junior level at the 1995 United States Figure Skating Championships. By that time, Lipinski was the subject of a great deal of media attention.
After a disappointing fifth-place finish at the 1996 World Junior Championships, Lipinski changed coaches from Jeff Di Gregorio at the University of Delaware to Richard Callaghan in Detroit. Moving up to the senior level, she benefited from the withdrawal of Nicole Bobek from the 1996 U.S. Championships to place third and qualify for the World Figure Skating Championships, where she placed fifteenth.
That year, the International Skating Union voted to raise the minimum age for participating at the World Championships to 15. Lipinski, who was 13 at the time, was grandfathered into remaining eligible for future events, along with other skaters who had already competed at the World Championships before the new age requirement was introduced.
In 1997, Lipinski unexpectedly won both the U.S. and World Championships, and, at the age of 14, became the youngest person ever to win either title. At the 1996 U.S. Postal Challenge, Lipinski became the first female skater to land a triple loop/triple loop jump combination, which became her signature element. Lipinski also won the 1997 Champion Series Final, again becoming the youngest female ever to win the title.
The following season, Lipinski got off to a shaky start, finishing second to Michelle Kwan at Skate America and, while suffering from a bad head cold, to Laetitia Hubert at Trophee Lalique. With Kwan sidelined with a toe-related stress fracture injury, Lipinski successfully defended her Champion Series Final title (now known as the Grand Prix Final), skating cleanly. At the 1998 U.S. Nationals, Kwan and Lipinski met again, but after an uncharacteristic fall on the triple flip in the Short Program, Lipinski ended the night in 4th place with Kwan in 1st place. Although she rallied to land seven triples in the Long Program, she still finished second to Kwan, who had skated one of the best long programs of her life.
At the 1998 Winter Olympics, Lipinski won gold to Kwan's silver, after both skaters performed excellent short and long programs. Lipinski skated a technically stronger program with seven triples, including a triple loop triple loop combination and, at the very end of her long program, a triple toe half loop triple salchow sequence. Some people believe that Lipinski was aided by the fact that she skated near the end of the last group while Kwan had skated first, as with the scoring system used at that time it was a common practice for judges to "save room" for skaters who had yet to perform. However, Kwan was criticized for skating without the freedom, speed or joy Lipinski had displayed in her long program. Lipinski became the youngest ever ladies Olympic Figure Skating Champion and the youngest individual gold medalist in Winter Olympic history. The former record will stand forever unless the current age rules are relaxed.
On March 9, 1998, Lipinski announced her decision to withdraw from the 1998 World Figure Skating Championships, citing a serious glandular infection that required her to have two molars extracted, constant fatigue, and possible mononucleosis.[7]
On April 7, 1998, Lipinski announced her intention to turn professional in an interview with Katie Couric on the Today Show. She cited a desire to spend more time with her family, to have time for school, and to compete professionally against other Olympic champions. However, given the opportunities available to a newly crowned Olympic Champion, Lipinski took on full schedule of touring, publicity appearances, and acting engagements, albeit that they required constant travel.[8] She was also heavily criticized by some for her decision to retire from competition at such a young age; for example, Christine Brennan, writing in USA Today, compared the pro skating circuit to "joining the circus".[9] However, the criticism aimed at Lipinski was labelled by one commentator as "petty backlash" following her defeat of the expected-winner Kwan at the Nagano Olympics.[10]
In the spring and summer of 1998, Lipinski toured with Champions on Ice. She then toured with Stars on Ice for four seasons. Lipinski appealed to a younger audience, attracting new fans to what had traditionally been an adult-oriented show. Her signing to Stars on Ice was reported as a coup for the tour[11], which at that time was doing well, with some performances routinely selling out months in advance[12][13]. Choreographic Sandra Bezic commented, "Tara reminds us why we're doing this - the idealism, the genuine love of skating. There's a real sweetness there that makes us all go, 'Yeah, I remember' "[14]. Lipinski generally received favorable reviews and was popular with fans, sometimes signing autographs for hours after each show[15].
Lipinski's decision to turn pro coincided with a change in the business climate for the skating industry. After the 1998 Olympics, many of the pro skating competitions that had sprung up in the aftermath of the 1994 Tonya Harding spectacle were converted to a pro-am format or discontinued entirely as audiences lost interest.[16] Lipinski did not want to compete in the new pro-am events, and not long after she turned professional, she broke an existing $1.2 million contract to appear in made-for-TV events sponsored by the USFSA.[17] Instead, she skated only in the remaining all-pro competitions, which were primarily team events such as Ice Wars. Her most notable individual victory came at the 1999 World Professional Figure Skating Championships; at age 17, she became the youngest person to win that event.[18].
Lipinski's professional skating career was hampered by a series of hip injuries. In August 1998, Lipinski suffered a hip injury in practice for Stars On Ice. After a string of other injuries, she underwent surgery to repair torn cartilage in her hip in September 2000.[19] Lipinski suffered another hip injury in 2002 during a Stars on Ice show in St. Louis, when she fell hard on her right hip during a jump, and then tore muscles around the bruised area the next day.[20]
Many people have pointed to the repetitive stress of practicing the triple loop combinations Lipinski performed during her competitive days as the primary cause of her hip problems. In an August 2001 article in Blades on Ice magazine, Lipinski stated that the real reason she turned professional was that she had originally incurred the injury to her hip in the summer of 1997 and that she had skated the entire Olympic season in terrible pain. It was never explained why she never mentioned this injury at the time, or why all of her previous statements (including those on her official web site) regarding her hip problems referred to the original injury as happening in the summer of 1998 rather than in 1997.
Lipinski participated in rehearsals for a fifth season of the Stars on Ice tour in the fall of 2002, but withdrew from the tour before it began. She had been increasingly unhappy with life on the tour, and her injuries caused friction with the show's producers and other cast members. She later wrote on her official web site, "It was really hard those last two years of touring for me. Emotionally I was drained and hurt. I have never been treated like that in my whole life."[21] In later interviews she also expressed frustration with the artistic direction of the show at that time.[22] For example, reviewers had particularly panned the rap ensemble performed by Lipinski with Kristi Yamaguchi and Katarina Witt in the 2001-2002 tour.[23][24]
Although Lipinski did not make any formal announcement of her retirement from skating, she has not skated since, and has instead concentrated on acting.
Since turning professional, Lipinski has made several television appearances, which have included guest roles on a number of primetime shows (Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, Malcolm in the Middle, Veronica's Closet, Early Edition, 7th Heaven and Still Standing), as well as a cameo in the theatrical film Vanilla Sky. Lipinski also played a brief supporting role on The Young and the Restless in 1999, starred in the TV movie Ice Angel in 2000, and was cast in the independent film The Metro Chase. Additionally, she has been a celebrity guest on VH-1's The List, Fox's Beach Party, several Nickelodeon productions, Girls Behaving Badly, and has appeared on numerous magazine covers as well as every major talk show. In 1999, CBS aired a primetime special, Tara Lipinski: From This Moment On.
Lipinski now spends most of her time in Los Angeles.
The year before her Olympic win, the U.S. Olympic Committee named Lipinski the 1997 Female Athlete of the Year. Lipinski is particularly proud of the recognition she has received from fans. In 1999 and 2000 she was voted Best Female Athlete at the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards. In 1999, she won Best Female Athlete at the inaugural Fox Teen Choice Awards. She received similar awards from Teen People and Teen magazine. She has been recognized by the American Academy of Achievement, the Hugh O'Brien Youth Leadership Foundation, and many other organizations. In 2006, Lipinski was the youngest ever inductee into the United States Figure Skating Hall of Fame.
With Shaquille O'Neal and Denzel Washington, Lipinski is a national spokesperson for the Boys and Girls Clubs of America. She is also a spokesperson for the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids[25] and the Childhood Leukemia Foundation. Lipinski is also involved with the Office of National Drug Control Policy's anti-drug campaign. Her anti-drug public service announcement aired nationwide on TV and in theaters in 2000.
She is also dedicated to helping children in need, through the Make-A-Wish Foundation and the Children's Circle of Care, the philanthropic organization for children's hospitals nationwide. She has also supported St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital[26], and numerous cancer research efforts.
Her portfolio of endorsements includes McDonald's, Charles Schwab, Chevrolet, Snapple, DKNY, Minute Maid, Capezio, Mattel, Campbell's Soup, Autoweb.com, Kellogg's, Coca Cola, Kleenex, Kodak, Hallmark, McDonald's, Office Depot, Smuckers, Target and others. Lipinski has also been on the runway for Limited Too!. Lipinski has two offcial books in print: Totally Tara - An Olympic Journey and Triumph On Ice. In additional there are numerous unofficial biographies, including: 'Tara Lipinski: Queen of the Ice', Bill Gutman, 'Tara Lipinski: Superstar Ice-Skater', Stasia Ward Kehoe, 'Tara Lipinski (Sports Superstars)', Richard Rambeck, 'On Ice with Tara Lipinski', Matt Christopher, 'Tara Lipinski (Champion Sports Biographies)', Annis Karpenko, 'Tara the Road to Gold', Wendy Daly, 'Tara Lipinski (Awesome Athletes)', Jill Wheeler, 'Tara Lipinski (Female Skating Legends)', Veda Boyd Jones. - Tara Lipinski (Jam Session), Terri Dougherty - Tara Lipinski: Star Figure Skater, Barry Wilner
Event | 1993-1994 | 1994-1995 | 1995-1996 | 1996-1997 | 1997-1998 |
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Winter Olympics | 1st | ||||
World Championships | 15th | 1st | |||
World Junior Championships | 4th | 5th | |||
U.S. Championships | 2nd N. | 2nd J. | 3rd | 1st | 2nd |
Champions Series Final | 1st | 1st | |||
Skate America | 2nd | ||||
Skate Canada International | 2nd | ||||
Trophee Lalique | 3rd | 2nd | |||
Nations Cup | 2nd | ||||
Nebelhorn Trophy | 4th |
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