Ekaterina Gordeeva

Ekaterina Gordeeva

Gordeeva in 2014
Personal information
Full name Ekaterina Alexandrovna Gordeeva
Country represented  Russia
Former country(ies) represented  Soviet Union
Born (1971-05-28) May 28, 1971
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Home town Moscow
Former partner Sergei Grinkov
Retired 1994

Ekaterina "Katia" Alexandrovna Gordeeva (Russian: Екатерина Александровна Гордеева) (born May 28, 1971) is a Russian (former Soviet) figure skater. Together with her partner and husband, the late Sergei Grinkov, she was the 1988 and 1994 Olympic Champion and four-time World Champion in Pair Skating. After Grinkov's death, Gordeeva continued performing as a singles skater.

Gordeeva is now married to the 1998 Olympic men's singles champion, Ilia Kulik.[1][2] Gordeeva and Kulik married in a private ceremony in San Francisco, California, USA, on June 10, 2002.[3]

Early life

Often called "Katia," Gordeeva was born in Moscow, Soviet Union (now Russia) to Elena Lvovna Gordeeva, a teletype operator for TASS, and Alexander Alexeyevich Gordeev, a dancer for the Alexandrov Song and Dance Ensemble.[4] Gordeeva said, "[My father] worked with me on movement very often when I was little."[4] Gordeeva has a younger sister, Maria Alexandrovna Gordeeva (born 1975), who lives in Moscow.[1][5] Gordeeva began skating at age four, wearing multiple pairs of socks inside skates many sizes too big, because skates small enough for her feet were unavailable in the Soviet Union.[6]

Pairs career

Gordeeva and Grinkov on an Azerbaijani stamp of 1998

Gordeeva began figure skating at age four, when she entered Children and Youth Sports School of CSKA Moscow.[7] She was not a particularly strong jumper, and in August 1981,[8] coach Vladimir Zaharov paired the 11-year-old Gordeeva with the 15-year-old Sergei Grinkov. Because Grinkov frequently missed practice, their coach eventually insisted that Gordeeva pair with someone else, but she refused. Instead, the pair changed coaches.[9]

Gordeeva and Grinkov won the 1985 World Junior Championships in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The following year they won the first of their four World Championships. They are one of the few pair teams to win back-to-back junior and senior World Championship titles. They successfully defended their World title in 1987 and then won gold at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada,[10] despite a nasty accident. In November 1987, Grinkov caught a blade on the ice during a practice session and dropped Gordeeva on her forehead.[11] She was hospitalized for a time, but they were still able to compete in, and win, the 1988 Winter Olympics which began the following February.[12] They remain the youngest pairs team ever to win Olympic gold. After a fall in their long program, they took silver at the World Championships in 1988, but reclaimed the title in 1989 and 1990. They turned professional in the fall 1990, winning their first World Professional Championship in 1991. They also won that title in 1992 and 1994.

Gordeeva and Grinkov won almost every competition they entered. In the 31 competitions whose results are known at the senior and professional levels, they finished first 24 times, and never lower than second from the time they won their first senior world title. They are one of the few pair teams in history to successfully complete a quadruple twist lift in international competition.[13] They landed the difficult element with ease at the 1987 World Championships. They also completed the element at the 1987 European Championships, but due to a problem with Grinkov's boot strap and a misunderstanding about the rules (the referee signaled them to stop, going so far as to turn off their music but they continued skating), they were disqualified from that event.[13] They stopped performing the quad twist because it made no significant improvement to their marks, making the added physical stress unnecessary. Katia states in her book, "My Sergei: A Love Story" that this element raised her heart rate and blood pressure to levels that alarmed the Soviet team's Doctors: "That summer we had learned a very difficult move called the quadruple split twist, in which Sergei threw me in the air, I did a split, then closed my legs and made four turns before he caught me. We were the only pair to do this quadruple element, and it was very exhausting—more exhausting than difficult, really. Soviet doctors had measured my pulse rate as exceeding two hundred beats per minute when I did it."[14]

By 1989, the skating partnership had grown into a romantic relationship. They shared their first kiss on New Year's Eve 1988 and were married in April 1991. Their state wedding was on April 20, and the church wedding was on April 28. From November 1991 through April 1992, they toured with Stars on Ice for the first time. On September 11, 1992, their daughter, Daria Sergeyevna Grinkova, was born in Morristown, New Jersey. Shortly after Daria's birth, Gordeeva recommenced training for the new season of Stars on Ice, which premiered in November 1992 and continued through the following April.

When a new ISU rule allowed professional skaters to regain their Olympic eligibility, the pair decided to return to amateur competition for the 1993–94 season and skate in the Olympics. In 1994, the couple won their second Olympic gold medal in Lillehammer, Oppland, Norway.[10] Arguably the most influential, celebrated, and highly decorated pair team in the history of the sport, many consider them to be the greatest pair team ever to take the ice.[15] They are often referred to simply as "G&G".[16] They were known for the quality of their basic skating technique: "Grinkov and Gordeeva had something special that was more easily appreciated in person. They didn't make noise when they skated. They moved so fluidly that their blades whispered over the ice rather than scratching at it."[17]

After the Olympics, the pair returned to professional skating and moved to Simsbury, Connecticut.[10][18] During the 1994–95 season, they toured with Stars on Ice, this time as headliners. That year, Gordeeva was named one of the "50 Most Beautiful People" by People Magazine.[19] That summer, Gordeeva and Grinkov were chosen for induction into the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame and the pair planned to return to Stars on Ice for their fourth season with the tour.

On November 20, 1995, Sergei Grinkov collapsed on the ice during a practice session and died at age 28 from a massive heart attack.[20] The pair was on the ice in Lake Placid, New York rehearsing for opening night of the upcoming tour. Doctors later discovered that Grinkov had a congenital heart condition which caused his death.[10]

Solo career

In February 1996, Gordeeva returned to the ice, this time as a solo performer.[21] Her first solo performance was a tribute to her late husband,[10] skated to the 'Adagietto' section of Gustav Mahler's 'Symphony No. 5'. The number was publicly performed only twice, first at a preview performance at the Minto Skating Club in Ontario, and then on February 27, 1996, in a televised tribute to Grinkov, called "Celebration of a Life",[15] in which numerous skating luminaries took part. Gordeeva has said that she felt as if she skated with Sergei that night, that she was "double strong" because she felt him with her.[9] The same year, with the aid of author E. M. Swift, she told her story in a book titled My Sergei: A Love Story.[6] In February 1998, CBS aired an eponymous docudrama based on the book. She published a second book in April 1998, titled A Letter for Daria. In 1998, she told an interviewer that "My life of great skating, and skating with him, is over, ... I don't try to go now for Olympics. I take skating for a job."[22]

Gordeeva returned to Stars on Ice as a solo skater in 1996 and toured with the show every year until 2000, when she took time off to give birth to another daughter in June 2001. She has returned to the tour as a guest star many times, but has never returned to full-time touring. In addition to tours and shows, Gordeeva competed successfully as a professional solo skater, finishing as high as second place at the World Professional Championships (in 1997).[23] She stopped competing in 2000, but continues to skate in professional skating tours, shows and competitions. While she has never returned to pair skating as a full-time endeavor, she has performed pair elements in many shows through the years with partners including Artur Dmitriev, Anton Sikharulidze, David Pelletier, and John Zimmerman. For the 1998–99 season of Stars on Ice, she and fellow Russians Ilia Kulik, Elena Bechke, and Denis Petrov performed a quartet which showcased her pair skills, and in 1999–2000, she and Kulik skated a romantic duet during the tour. She also briefly returned to pairs skating during the 2008–09 season when she participated in a Russian reality television show called "Ice Age 2", a figure skating version of Dancing with the Stars. She was paired with Russian actor Egor Beroev, and together they won the show.

Ekaterina Gordeeva has signed several endorsement contracts, the most notable of which was with Target and led to two perfumes ("Katia" and "Katia Sport") which were sold through Target stores.[24] Gordeeva and her daughter Daria appeared in the 1997 holiday movie "Snowden on Ice" and Gordeeva appeared in the 1998 sequel, "Snowden's Raggedy Ann and Andy Holiday Show". She has represented Rolex and also appeared with her daughter Daria in a "Got Milk?" ad.[25]

Gordeeva performs solo in Smucker's Stars on Ice at the Arena at Harbor Yard in Bridgeport in 2007

In 2001, she was the subject of a Lenox figurine called "Katia's Celebration of Life", which depicts her performing a layback spin in the tribute she skated for Grinkov.[26] She also appeared in the 2003 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue as a featured athlete.[27] In 2003, she appeared on the ice for the first time with Daria. The pair performed a duet during a Mother's Day show and have taken the ice together several times since then, including two different versions of Amy Grant's "Children of the World" at Kristi Yamaguchi's "Family & Friends" shows in 2005 and 2006. During that show in 2007, the mother-daughter duo became a trio when they were joined by Gordeeva's younger daughter, Liza, and all three skated together to "Homesick" performed live by The Cheetah Girls. Daria gave up figure skating in 2007.[28]

In 2007, Ekaterina Gordeeva starred in Skate for the Heart, a show designed to raise awareness of heart disease. She skated in honor of Sergei. In 2008, she flew to the United States from Russia during the taping of Ice Age 2 in order to headline Skate for the Heart a second time. This time, she dedicated a number to the memory of her own father, Alexander Gordeev, who died of an unexpected heart attack in 2008. In addition to her skating, Gordeeva has ventured into coaching and choreography.[28]

In 2010 Gordeeva competed with hockey player Valeri Bure in the figure skating reality show Battle of the Blades. In the November 22, 2010 finale, she and Bure won the competition.[29] Gordeeva rejoined Stars on Ice in November 2010 for the 25th Anniversary Tour.

Personal life

Gordeeva and Grinkov had a state wedding on April 20, 1991, and a church wedding on April 28. Their daughter, Daria Sergeyevna Gordeeva-Grinkova,[30] was born on September 11, 1992, in Morristown, New Jersey. On November 20, 1995, Sergei Grinkov died of a heart attack during the rink practice in Lake Placid.

On June 15, 2001, Gordeeva gave birth to her second daughter, Elizaveta (or the diminutive "Liza," pronounced LEE-za) Ilinichna Kulik. Her father is 1998 Olympic men's singles champion Ilia Kulik.[1][2] Gordeeva and Kulik married in a private ceremony in San Francisco on June 10, 2002.[3]

Gordeeva and her family resided in California for several years before moving to Avon, Connecticut, in 2003.[31] They returned to the Los Angeles area in 2007 and currently reside in Newport Beach, California.[30] Gordeeva, Kulik, Daria, and Elizaveta made their first televised appearance as a family for Kristi Yamaguchi's Friends and Family in 2005 and they also appeared in the 2006 and 2007 versions of the show.[21] Gordeeva and her family speak Russian at home and travel to Russia frequently.[28][32]

In 2012, Kulik and Gordeeva opened Kulik's Skating, an ice rink and figure skating training environment in Lake Forest, California.[33]

Programs

With Sergei Grinkov[34][35]

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
1994–1995

From Requiem:






1993–1994
1990–1993




1989–1990

  • Cha Cha Cha
1988–1989
1987–1988 From Carmen:
1986–1987
  • Jazz medley
1985–1986
1984–1985
1983–1984

Results

Paired with Sergei Grinkov.

International
Event 1983–84 1984–85 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94
Olympics 1st 1st
Worlds 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st
Europeans 2nd WD 1st 1st 1st
Goodwill Games 1st
Skate Canada 1st 2nd 1st
NHK Trophy 1st
Moscow News 4th 1st
International: Junior
Junior Worlds 5th 1st
National
Russian Champ. 1st
Soviet Champ. 6th 2nd 1st
Other
World Pro. 2nd 1st 1st 1st
WD = Withdrew

Publications

My Sergei: A Love Story

Book cover

My Sergei: A Love Story, written by Ekaterina Gordeeva with Sports Illustrated writer E. M. Swift and published in 1996, recounts the story of one of figure skating's most recognized pair teams.

Gordeeva's account of their years together topped the New York Times Best Seller list[36] and includes many black and white and color photos from Gordeeva and Grinkov's personal collection as well as publicity photos from their various touring groups, such as Stars On Ice. A made-for-television movie version of My Sergei was also made. Starring the Russian pair Elena Berezhnaya / Anton Sikhuralidze, it included interviews with family and friends, and archival skating footage.[37][38]

A Letter for Daria

The children's book, A Letter for Daria, was written by figure skater Ekaterina Gordeeva for her daughter (by deceased Russian pair skater Sergei Grinkov), Daria Sergeievna Grinkova.

It is an autobiographical letter from mother to daughter about childhood memories, skating, differences between Russian and American culture, and the importance of family. This book includes several pictures from Ekaterina Gordeeva's personal collection.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Ekaterina Gordeeva and Sergei Grinkov, Biography" (in Russian). gordeeva.com. Retrieved 2008-11-30.
  2. 1 2 Екатерина Гордеева: "Связь с родиной стараюсь не терять" [Ekaterina Gordeeva: I don't want to lose ties with my homeland] (in Russian). sports.ru. Retrieved 2008-01-28.
  3. 1 2 "Ekaterina Gordeeva", People, January 13, 2003, retrieved 2007-11-12
  4. 1 2 Swift, E.M. (1988-02-29). "1988 Flashback: A Magical Twosome". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22.
  5. Voznesyuh, Dmitriy. "Ekaterina Gordeeva is going to spend a vacation in Moscow" (in Russian). Sportcom. Archived from the original on September 13, 2007. Retrieved January 28, 2008.
  6. 1 2 "Love of her life". People. March 25, 1996. Retrieved November 12, 2007.
  7. "Tatiana Tarasov and students". RIA Novosti (in Russian). February 13, 2007.
  8. Yu, Sylvia (Winter 1999). "Marina's Muse". Grace & Gold Newsletter: The Official Publication of the Gordeeva & Grinkov Fan Club. pp. 1, 4.
  9. 1 2 "Love on Ice". AMI Specials. April 11, 2000. Retrieved November 12, 2007.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 "Then & Now: Ekaterina Gordeeva". CNN. June 22, 2005. Retrieved November 12, 2007.
  11. Gordeeva, Ekaterina. My Sergei: A Love Story. Warner Books Inc., 1996. ISBN 0-446-52087-X.
  12. Dadygin, S. (1988). "A secret of success" (in Russian). Soviet Sports. Retrieved December 7, 2008.
  13. 1 2 Sheluhin, A. (1988-02-28). Улыбка Катюши [Ekaterina's Smile] (in Russian). Soviet Sports. Retrieved 2008-12-07.
  14. Gordeeva, Ekaterina. My Sergei: A Love Story. Warner Book. p. 64. ISBN 044652087X.
  15. 1 2 "Right on Target". International Figure Skating. July–August 1996. Retrieved November 12, 2007.
  16. Kantrowitz, Barbara (December 11, 1995). "Beyond the Tears". People (magazine). Retrieved 2007-11-12.
  17. Knapp, Gwen (February 25, 2006). "A golden princess: Quiet deserving winner". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 21, 2010.
  18. Rabinovitz, Jonathan (February 2, 1997). "When Olympic Champions Moved In, They Put Simsbury on the World Map". The New York Times. Retrieved January 4, 2011.
  19. "Ekaterina Gordeeva". People (magazine). May 4, 1994. Retrieved 2007-11-12.
  20. Kennedy, Helen (November 22, 1995). "Old Man's Heart Killed Skater". New York Daily News.
  21. 1 2 Vaytsekhovskaya, Elena (2003-10-14). ЗНАТЬ БЫ ТОЧНО, ЧТО ТРЕТЬИМ БУДЕТ МАЛЬЧИК... [Interview with Ekaterina Gordeeva]. Sport Express (in Russian). Retrieved 2008-11-30.
  22. Lopez, Steve (January 26, 1998). "Life After The Glory". Time (magazine). Retrieved 2007-11-12.
  23. "World Professional Figure Skating Championships- Landover, MD". Golden Skate. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
  24. "Right on Target". International Figure Skating. March–April 2000. Retrieved November 12, 2007.
  25. "Got Milk Ad - Grinkova Gordeeva". Flickr. June 24, 2005. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
  26. "Seen and Heard". International Figure Skating. October 2002. Retrieved November 12, 2007.
  27. "Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Collection – Ekaterina Gordeeva". Sportsillustrated.cnn.com. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
  28. 1 2 3 Korobatov, Yaroslav (2007-11-01). Двукратная олимпийская чемпионка Екатерина ГОРДЕЕВА: Мы не хотели афишировать в прессе роман с Ильей Куликом [Ilia Kulik and I didn't want to advertise our romance]. Komsomolskaja Pravda (in Russian). Retrieved 2008-01-28.
  29. Smith, Beverley (September 8, 2010). "Gordeeva crosses skate paths with Bure again". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved September 14, 2010.
  30. 1 2 Virgen, Steve (April 1, 2009). "Q&a With Daria Gordeeva-Grinkova: Stick replaces skates". Daily Pilot.
  31. "Balancing Act", International Figure Skating, January–February 2004, retrieved 2007-11-12
  32. "Interview with Ekaterina Gordeeva" (in Russian). sports.ru. Retrieved 2008-01-28.
  33. Elfman, Lois (September 13, 2012). "Figure skating only at Kulik, Gordeeva's new rink". Ice Network.
  34. Programs. Gordeeva.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-02.
  35. Music. Gg-corner.de. Retrieved on 2011-11-02.
  36. "BEST SELLERS: December 22, 1996". The New York Times. December 22, 1996.
  37. Sandomir, Richard (1998-01-09). "TV SPORTS; CBS Use of Gordeyeva Goes Way Beyond Ice". The New York Times.
  38. James, Caryn (1998-05-10). "TELEVISION; Using the Art of Fiction to Enliven Truth". The New York Times.
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