Suzanne "Suzy" Chaffee (born November 29 1946, Rutland, Vermont) is a former Olympic alpine ski racer and actress. Following her racing career, she modelled in New York with Ford Models and then became the pre-eminent freestyle ballet skier of the early 1970s. She is perhaps best known by the sobriquet, Suzy Chapstick, from the 1970s, when she was a spokesperson for ChapStick lip balm.
Chaffee's mother, who taught her to ski at the age of 3, would have been an alternate for the US ski team at the 1940 Winter Olympics. [1] At age 19, Chaffee tried out for, and won a spot on the first US Ski Team while a freshman at Denver University. [2]She finished fifth in the downhill at the 1966 World Championships. Despite a season-ending crash in 1967 at Vail in the World Cup Series, she ended the season as the highest-ranking US downhill skier, male or female. Chaffee was named captain of the US Women's team and was one of the favorites in the downhill at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. She finished 28th in the downhill, blaming her poor showing on using the wrong wax, but she made a global impression with her skin-tight silver racing suit. She retired from ski racing after the 1968 Olympics. She was also a three-time world freestyle skiing champion (1971-73). She was inducted into the National Ski Hall of Fame in 1988.[3]
As a social activist, Chaffee championed Title IX legislation (equal opportunity for women in school sports). She was the first woman to serve on the board of the U.S. Olympic Committee, and has been a member of the President's Council on Physical Fitness under four U.S. presidents. She was a co-founder in 1996 of the Native Voices Foundation, an organization that seeks to develop Olympians from among Native American tribes. [4] [5]
She was linked romantically with Bill Bradley, Ted Kennedy and Grace Kelly's brother, Jack Kelly. Chaffee denied a relationship with Ted Kennedy, but credited the rumors with helping passage of the Amateur Sports Act of 1978.[6]
Besides her long-running television ad campaign for ChapStick in the 1970s, she also endorsed Revlon cosmetics, Dannon yogurt, and Seagram spirits. She appeared in films such as Ski Lift To Death and Fire and Ice.
In 2008, she ran for a seat on the Sedona, Arizona City Council, but lost. [7]
References
External links
- FIS-ski.com - Suzy Chaffee - top ten results - alpine racing
- Vorlage:Imdb name
- Native Voices.org - Suzy Chaffee - biographical information
Vorlage:US-film-actor-1940s-stub Vorlage:US-wintersport-bio-stub Vorlage:Alpine-skiing-bio-stub
- ↑ Breslin, Catherine, "The female jocks go to Washington", New York Magazine, December 17, 1973
- ↑ "Moving up in the downhill", Sports Illustrated, January 25, 1965
- ↑ National Ski Hall of Fame
- ↑ "Where are they now?"SKI p.85 - January 2009
- ↑ "Lost + Found", Sports Illustrated July 2, 2001
- ↑ Newman, Bruce, "Hype", Sports Illustrated, January 23, 1989
- ↑ Hardy, Cyndy, "2008 Sedona mayoral race goes into overtime", Sedona.biz, March 12, 2008