John Curry
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Olympic medal record | |||
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Figure skating | |||
Gold | 1976 Innsbruck | Men's singles |
John Curry (1949-1994) was a British figure skater who won the Olympic and World Championships in 1976. He was famous for combining ballet and modern dance influences into his skating.
Curry was born on 9 September 1949 in Birmingham, England. As a child, Curry wanted to become a dancer, but his father disapproved of dance as an activity for boys, so instead at the age of 7 he began to take figure skating lessons. For the first several years, Curry's involvement with skating was rather casual. Curry's father died when he was 16; he then moved to London to study with Arnold Gerschwiler, who coached him to his first British title in 1971. In 1972, Curry found an American sponsor who enabled him to study in the United States with Gus Lussi and Carlo Fassi. Fassi coached him to European, World, and Olympic titles in 1976.
Curry was the flag bearer at the 1976 Winter Olympics for Great Britain. He also was voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year in 1976.
As an amateur competitor, Curry was noted for his ballet-like posture and extension, and his superb body control. Along with Canadian skater Toller Cranston, Curry was responsible for bringing the artistic and presentation aspects of men's figure skating to a new level. At the peak of his competitive career, Curry was also accomplished both at compulsory figures and the athletic (jumping) aspects of free skating.
Following the 1976 World Championships, Curry turned professional and founded a touring skating company along the same lines as a traditional dance company. Besides choreographing routines for the company himself, Curry commissioned works from such noted dance choreographers as Peter Martins and Twyla Tharp. Curry was reportedly a difficult person to get along with, and a dispute with the business managers of his company forced it to suspend operations in the mid-1980s. After that, Curry performed only rarely in public.
Prior to the 1976 World Championships, Curry was outed as gay by a German tabloid newspaper, Bild-Zeitung. It caused a brief scandal in Europe at the time, but Curry's sexual orientation was generally ignored by the press and public for many years afterwards.
In 1987, Curry was diagnosed with HIV. He was diagnosed with AIDS in 1991. Prior to his death, he spoke openly to the press about both his disease and his sexual orientation. He spent the last years of his life with his mother. He died of an AIDS-related heart attack on on 15 April 1994 in Binton. He was 44 years old.
[edit] Competitive highlights
Event | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975 | 1976 |
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Olympic Games | 11th | 1st | ||||
Worlds | 14th | 9th | 4th | 7th | 3rd | 1st |
Europeans | 7th | 2nd | 4th | 3rd | 2nd | 1st |
[edit] References
- The Real John Curry
- Upholding the Tradition of Excellence
- On this day - 1976: John Curry skates to Olympic gold
[edit] Navigation
Preceded by: David Steele |
BBC Sports Personality of the Year 1976 |
Succeeded by: Virginia Wade |
1908: Ulrich Salchow | 1920: Gillis Grafström | 1924: Gillis Grafström | 1928: Gillis Grafström | 1932: Karl Schäfer | 1936: Karl Schäfer | 1948: Dick Button | 1952: Dick Button | 1956: Hayes Alan Jenkins | 1960: David Jenkins | 1964: Manfred Schnelldorfer | 1968: Wolfgang Schwarz | 1972: Ondrej Nepela | 1976: John Curry | 1980: Robin Cousins | 1984: Scott Hamilton | 1988: Brian Boitano | 1992: Viktor Petrenko | 1994: Alexei Urmanov | 1998: Ilia Kulik | 2002: Alexei Yagudin | 2006: Evgeni Plushenko |
1891: Oskar Uhlig | 1892-1894: Eduard Engelmann jr. | 1895: Tibor von Foldvary | 1898-1900: Ulrich Salchow | 1901: Gustav Hügel | 1904: Ulrich Salchow | 1905: Max Bohatsch | 1906-1907: Ulrich Salchow | 1908: Ernst Herz | 1909-1910: Ulrich Salchow | 1911: Per Thoren | 1912: Gosta Sandahl | 1913: Ulrich Salchow | 1914: Fritz Kachler | 1922-1923: Willy Böckl | 1924: Fritz Kachler | 1925-1928: Willy Böckl | 1929-1936: Karl Schäfer | 1937-1938: Felix Kaspar | 1939: Graham Sharp | 1947: Hans Gerschwiler | 1948: Richard Button | 1949: Edi Rada | 1950: Ede Király | 1951-1952: Helmut Seibt | 1953-1954: Carlo Fassi | 1955-1957: Alain Giletti | 1958-1959: Karol Divin | 1960-1961: Alain Giletti | 1962-1964: Alain Calmat | 1965-1968: Emmerich Danzer | 1969-1973: Ondrej Nepela | 1974: Jan Hoffmann | 1975: Vladimir Kovalev | 1976: John Curry | 1977-1979: Jan Hoffmann | 1980: Robin Cousins | 1981: Igor Bobrin | 1982-1983: Norbert Schramm | 1984: Alexander Fadeev | 1985-1986: Jozef Sabovcik | 1987-1989: Alexander Fadeev | 1990-1991: Viktor Petrenko | 1992: Petr Barna | 1993: Dmitri Dmitrenko | 1994: Viktor Petrenko | 1995: Ilia Kulik | 1996: Viacheslav Zagorodniuk | 1997: Alexei Urmanov | 1998-1999: Alexei Yagudin | 2000-2001: Evgeny Plushenko | 2002: Alexei Yagudin | 2003: Evgeny Plushenko | 2004: Brian Joubert | 2005-2006: Evgeny Plushenko |
SPOTY winners · (1954) Christopher Chataway · (1955) Gordon Pirie · (1956) Jim Laker · (1957) Dai Rees · (1958) Ian Black · (1959) John Surtees · (1960) David Broome · (1961) Stirling Moss · (1962) Anita Lonsborough · (1963) Dorothy Hyman · (1964) Mary Rand · (1965) Tom Simpson · (1966) Bobby Moore · (1967) Henry Cooper · (1968) David Hemery · (1969) Ann Jones · (1970) Henry Cooper · (1971) HRH The Princess Anne · (1972) Mary Peters · (1973) Jackie Stewart · (1974) Brendan Foster · (1975) David Steele · (1976) John Curry · (1977) Virginia Wade · (1978) Steve Ovett · (1979) Sebastian Coe · (1980) Robin Cousins · (1981) Ian Botham · (1982]) Daley Thompson · (1983) Steve Cram · (1984) Torvill & Dean · (1985) Barry McGuigan · (1986) Nigel Mansell · (1987) Fatima Whitbread · (1988) Steve Davis · (1989) Nick Faldo · (1990) Paul Gascoigne · (1991) Liz McColgan · (1992) Nigel Mansell · (1993) Linford Christie · (1994) Damon Hill · (1995) Jonathan Edwards · (1996) Damon Hill · (1997) Greg Rusedski · (1998) Michael Owen · (1999) Lennox Lewis · (2000) Steve Redgrave · (2001) David Beckham · (2002) Paula Radcliffe · (2003) Jonny Wilkinson · (2004) Kelly Holmes · (2005) Andrew Flintoff · (2006) Zara Phillips
Persondata | |
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NAME | Curry, John |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | British figure skater |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 9, 1949 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Birmingham, England |
DATE OF DEATH | April 15, 1994 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Binton, England |
Categories: 1949 births | 1994 deaths | AIDS-related deaths | BBC Sports Personality of the Year winners | British figure skaters | Figure skaters at the 1972 Winter Olympics | Figure skaters at the 1976 Winter Olympics | Olympic competitors for Great Britain | Olympic gold medalists for Great Britain | Gay sportspeople