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[轉貼] 美花式溜冰選手譚雅Tonya Harding命盤

藍祖蔚看電影》老娘,就叫譚雅


2018-02-11

◎藍祖蔚

兵家必攻之地,才有交叉火網強攻猛打,今年奧斯卡盛會,中彈率度最高的火線人物首推《老娘叫譚雅(I, Tonya)》的本尊Tonya Harding。

  • 電影《老娘叫譚雅》中,飾演譚雅的Margot Robbie,與本尊Tonya Harding頗有幾分神似。(路透)

    電影《老娘叫譚雅》中,飾演譚雅的Margot Robbie,與本尊Tonya Harding頗有幾分神似。(路透)

  • 電影《老娘叫譚雅》中,飾演譚雅的Margot Robbie,與本尊Tonya Harding頗有幾分神似。(取自網路)

    電影《老娘叫譚雅》中,飾演譚雅的Margot Robbie,與本尊Tonya Harding頗有幾分神似。(取自網路)

《老娘叫譚雅》的中文片名確實譯得粗魯,但唯有這種粗聲粗氣的命名法,才足以襯顯譚雅.哈丁這位出身寒微、滿嘴粗話,菸癮很大,高中都沒能畢業的美國花式滑冰皇后(兩度全美冠軍)的獨特人生。

譚雅從來沒拿下奧運金牌,她的冬奧最佳成績只有第四名,一個沒能青史留名,看起來好像白忙一場的尷尬成績,然而大多數金牌選手的人生都沒有她那麼傳奇又荒誕。因為,譚雅涉嫌在冬奧前夕唆使前夫攻擊另一位可能搶走她奧運資格的美國溜冰高手。譚雅矢口否認,但是不時對她家暴的豬頭前夫,卻反咬她知情,法院因此判她緩刑,冰協則裁定終身禁賽,原本只懂溜冰的她,不想一輩子端盤子當服務生,於是改朝向女子拳擊和職業摔角發展。

是的,她生不逢辰,一輩子都在對抗命運,想要翻轉階級宿命。因為評審都知道她溜冰一級棒,但是有人嫌她衣服醜,沒氣質;有人嫌她滿口髒話,太粗俗,不符合溜冰美學,無視她是美國第一位在比賽中做出冰上三迴旋的真正高手(全球第二位),而且命運最愛嘲笑及玩弄她,每每來到臨門一腳的關鍵時刻總會橫生意外。然而,《老娘叫譚雅》卻把她碰壁再碰壁的坎坷人生拍成了另類的勵志電影,所有來自出身和階級的歧視,所有非戰之罪的跌撞挫敗,都讓她的苦拚與堅持,更為不俗,更讓苦練四個月的溜冰,就能溜得虎虎生風的澳洲女星Margot Robbie擠進了奧斯卡影后的競逐名單之中。

命運乖舛仍不卑不亢 今年最勵志

譚雅的人生際遇真的不是一般劇作家可以「編」出來的,卻是實質檢測「美國價值」的風雲角色,今年以《以你的名字呼喚我》的主題曲入圍奧斯卡的作曲家Sufjan Stevens,就特別為譚雅創作了兩首同樣名為「Tonya Harding」的歌曲,開口第一句就以「譚雅,我的星星」來歌頌她,還說「在這個冰冷的世界中,只有上帝知道妳的價值」、「女孩,這個世界太狗屎,不要死在水溝裡,我會一直陪伴你」…,當年,唐麥克林以「Vincent」一曲向梵谷致敬,Sufjan的這首歌也有了這般重量。

另外,角逐奧斯卡失利的《決勝女王》女主角Molly Bloom,原本也是想在滑雪跑道上爭取奧運資格的好手,重要時刻卻被草給絆到了腳,摔到鮮血滿面,金牌夢想就此幻滅,最後靠著私設牌局賺進千萬身家,回憶當年關鍵,不禁感慨:「誰說人生最悲慘的是奧運第四名?我被草給絆到才真衰!」她沒有點名譚雅,卻以譚雅的故事做連結,更強化了譚雅的失敗神話。

勵志電影往往從競技場上的英雄出發,《老娘叫譚雅》反其道而行,從選材到敘事都呈現了失敗者橫眉瞪眼,還要笑傲江湖的不卑不亢,堪稱是好萊塢近年最能體現弱勢心聲的志氣電影了。

 

 

http://news.ltn.com.tw/news/culture/paper/1176321

 

 

請從論壇首頁右上角進入「個人中心」,就可以編輯您個人的頭像、簽名檔及自我介紹。請用高級模式回覆,點HTML框,可有更多變化豐富版面。
不怕辛苦,就怕不公平;不怕卑微,就怕不公義。
可以哭泣,不要洩氣;可以悲傷,不要放棄!

Tonya Harding

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tonya Harding
Tonya harding mac club 1994 by andrew parodi.jpeg
Harding at a Portland, Oregon, reception shortly after the 1994 Winter Olympics
Personal information
Full name Tonya Maxene Price
Country represented United States
Born Tonya Maxene Harding
November 12, 1970 (age 47)
Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Spouse(s)
  • Jeff Gillooly (m. 1990;div. 1993)
  • Michael Smith (m. 1995;div. 1996)
  • Joseph Price (m. 2010)
Height 5 ft 1 in (1.55 m)
Coach Diane Rawlinson (1973–1994)[1]
Dody Teachman (1991–92)[2]

Tonya Maxene Price (née Harding; born November 12, 1970)[3] is a retired American figure skater.

A native of Portland, Oregon, Harding was raised primarily by her mother, who enrolled her in ice skating lessons beginning at age four. Harding would spend much of her early life training, eventually dropping out of high school to devote her time to the sport. After climbing the ranks in theU.S. Figure Skating Championships between 1986 and 1989, Harding won the 1989 Skate Americacompetition. She was the 1991 and 1994 U.S. champion before being stripped of her 1994 title, and 1991 World silver medalist.[4] In 1991, she earned distinction as being the first American woman to successfully land a triple axel in competition, and only the third woman to ever do so in history (behind Midori Ito). She is also a two-time Olympian and a two-time Skate America Champion.[5]

In January 1994, Harding became embroiled in controversy when her ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly, orchestrated an attack on fellow Olympic competitor Nancy Kerrigan. After the games had ended, she ultimately pleaded guilty to hindering the prosecution and was banned for life from the U.S. Figure Skating Association as a result.[6] The criminal investigation and Harding's banning from the sport were the subject of intense media scrutiny, and it has been referred to as one of the biggest scandals in American sports history.[7]

In the aftermath of her skating career, Harding became a professional boxer, and her life and role in Kerrigan's attack have been the subject of numerous films, books, and academic studies. In 2017, an Oscar-nominated biographical motion picture, I, Tonya, was released.

Early life[edit]

Ice Chalet at Portland's Lloyd Center, where Harding began skating at age three[6]

Tonya Maxene Harding[8] was born on November 12, 1970 in Portland, Oregon, to LaVona Golden (b. 1940)[9]and Albert Gordon Harding (1933–2009).[10][11] Harding was raised in East Portland,[12] and began skating at age three,[5] training with coach Diane Rawlinson.[1] During her youth, Harding also hunted, drag raced, and learned automotive mechanics from her father.[13] LaVona struggled to support the family while working as awaitress, and hand-sewed Tonya's competition skating costumes as the family could not afford to purchase them.[14]

According to Harding, she was frequently abused by her mother.[15] She stated that by the time she was seven years old, both physical and psychological abuse had become a regular part of her life.[16][17] LaVona admitted to one instance of hitting Tonya at an ice rink.[16] Tonya dropped out of Milwaukie High School[18]during her sophomore year in order to focus on skating; she later earned a General Equivalency Diploma.[19]

Skating career[edit]

Harding trained as a professional ice skater throughout her youth with coach Diane Rawlinson.[1] In the mid-1980s, she began working her way up the competitive skating ladder. She placed sixth at the 1986 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, fifth in 1987 and 1988, and third in 1989. After winning Skate America in 1989, she was considered a strong contender at the 1990 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, but she was suffering from the flu and asthma and had a poor free skate. After the original program, she dropped from second place and finished seventh overall. She was a powerful free skater and typically had lower placements in thecompulsory figures.[citation needed]

Harding's breakthrough year came in 1991, when she landed her first triple axel at the U.S. Championships[5] and won the title with the event's first 6.0 ever given to a single female skater for technical merit.[15] At the 1991 World Championships, she again completed the triple axel—becoming the first American woman to perform it at an international event. Harding would finish second behind Kristi Yamaguchi, and in front of Nancy Kerrigan, marking the first time one country swept the ladies medal podium at the World Figure Skating Championships.[citation needed]

At the Fall 1991 Skate America, Harding recorded three more firsts:

  • The first woman to complete a triple axel in the short program;
  • The first woman to successfully execute two triple axels in a single competition;
  • The first ever to complete a triple axel combination with the double toe loop.

Despite these record-breaking performances, she was never able to successfully perform the triple axel in a competition after 1991, and her competitive results began to decline as a result. Harding trained under Dody Teachman for the upcoming 1992 season,[2] she placed third in the U.S. Championships after twisting her ankle in practice. She finished fourth in the 1992 Winter Olympics, and in the 1992 World Championships, she placed sixth. In the 1993 season, she skated poorly in the U.S. Championships and failed to qualify for the World Championship team.[citation needed]

Following legal controversy, Harding was permitted to remain a member of the U.S. ice skating team at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway.[20] After an issue with her laces, she was given a re-skate in the long program and finished in eighth place, far behind Oksana Baiul(gold) and Nancy Kerrigan (silver).[20]

Figure skating record[edit]

International
Event[21] 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94
Winter Olympics 4th 8th
World Championships[15] 2nd 6th
Skate America 2nd 1st 1st 3rd
Skate Canada International 4th
Nations Cup 1st
NHK Trophy 3rd 2nd 4th
U.S. Olympic Festival 2nd
Prize of Moscow News[22] 1st
National
U.S. Championships[23][citation needed] 6th 5th 5th 3rd 7th 1st 3rd 4th 1st

^† In June 1994, Claire Ferguson—the President of the U.S. Figure Skating Association—voted to strip Harding of her 1994 title. However, the competition results were not changed and the title was left vacant rather than moving all the other competitors up one position.[24][4]

Attack on Nancy Kerrigan and aftermath[edit]

Harding's practice sessions atClackamas Town Center, in preparation for the 1994 Winter Olympics, were attended by thousands of spectators and dozens of reporters and film crews

On January 6, 1994, Harding's main team competitorNancy Kerrigan was attacked after a practice session at the 1994 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit by an assailant, later identified as Shane Stant.[25]Harding's ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly, and her self-appointed bodyguard, Shawn Eckhardt,[26] hired Stant to break Kerrigan's right leg so that she would be unable to compete at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer. After failing to find Kerrigan at her training rink in Massachusetts, Stant followed her to Detroit. When she stepped off the ice after a practice session at Cobo Arena and walked behind a nearby curtain into a corridor, Stant struck her leg about 1 inch (3 cm) above the knee[27] with a 21-inch (53 cm) ASP telescopic baton.[28] Her leg was only bruised, not broken, but the injury forced her to withdraw from the national championship. Harding won that event, and she and Kerrigan were both selected for the 1994 Olympic team.[29] Harding finished eighth in Lillehammer, while Kerrigan, by then recovered from the injury, won the silver medal behind Oksana Baiul from Ukraine.[30]

The attack on Kerrigan and the news of Harding's alleged involvement led to a media frenzy, with The New York Times later characterizing it as "one of the biggest scandals in American sports history."[7] Kerrigan appeared on the cover of both TIME and Newsweek magazines in January 1994. Reporters and TV news crews attended Harding's practices in Portland and camped out in front of Kerrigan's home. CBS assigned Connie Chung to follow her every move in Lillehammer. Four hundred members of the press jammed into the practice rink in Norway.Scott Hamilton complained that "the world press was turning the Olympics into just another sensational tabloid event."[31] The tape-delayed broadcast of the women's short program at the Olympics remains one of the most watched telecasts in American history.[32]

On February 1, 1994, Gillooly accepted a plea offer in exchange for his testimony against Harding. Gillooly, Stant, Eckhardt, and getaway car driver Derrick Smith all served time in prison for the attack.[33] Eckhardt was sentenced to 18 months in prison for racketeering but was released four months early in September 1995.[26]

Harding arriving at Portland International Airport amid a crush of reporters after the 1994 Olympics

Harding was charged in Multnomah County, Oregon but avoided further prosecution and a possible jail sentence by pleading guilty on March 16 to conspiring to hinder prosecution of the attackers.[34] She received three years' probation, 500 hours of community service, and a $100,000 fine.[35] As part of the plea bargain, she was also forced to withdraw from the 1994 World Figure Skating Championships and resign from the United States Figure Skating Association.[36] The USFSA conducted its own investigation of the attack. On June 30, 1994, the association stripped her of her 1994 U.S. Championships title and banned her for life from participating in USFSA-run events as either a skater or a coach.[4] The USFSA concluded that she knew about the attack before it happened and displayed "a clear disregard for fairness, good sportsmanship, and ethical behavior". Although the USFSA has no control over non-competitive professional skating events, she was also persona non grata on the pro circuit because few skaters and promoters would work with her. Consequently, she failed to benefit from the boom in professional skating that ensued in the aftermath of the scandal.[37]

In her 2008 autobiography, The Tonya Tapes, Harding stated that she wanted to call the FBI to reveal what she knew, but decided not to when Gillooly allegedly threatened her with death following a gunpoint gang rape by him and two other men she did not know. He subsequently changed his name to Jeff Stone and called the accusations of gang rape "utterly ridiculous."[17]Eckhardt, who legally changed his name to Brian Sean Griffith following his release from jail, died at age 40 on December 12, 2007.[26]

Later celebrity[edit]

An explicit video showing Harding having sex with her then-husband, Jeff Gillooly was sold by Gillooly to a tabloid TV show after he was implicated as a conspirator in the Kerrigan attack. Stills from the tape were published by Penthouse in September 1994 and the tape itself[38] was released at about the same time.

Harding in 2006

On June 22, 1994, in Portland, Oregon, Harding appeared on an AAA professional wrestling show as the manager for wrestling stable Los Gringos Locos. The night's performance included Art Barr, Eddie Guerrero, and Brian Cox.[39] A promotional musical event was unsuccessful when Harding and her band, the Golden Blades, were booed off the stage at their only performance, in 1995 in Portland, Oregon.[40][41]

In 1994 Harding was cast in a low-budget action film,Breakaway.[42] The film was released in 1996.[43] On October 29, 1996, Harding received media attention after using mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to help revive an 81-year-old woman, Alice Olson, who collapsed at a bar in Portland while playing video poker.[44]

Harding has also appeared on television, on the game show The Weakest Link: "15 Minutes of Fame Edition" in 2002 along with Kato Kaelin,[45] and in March 2008 became a commentator for TruTV's The Smoking Gun Presents: World's Dumbest....[46]

Boxing career[edit]

Tonya Harding
Statistics
Real name Tonya Maxene Harding
Nickname(s) Bad Girl
Weight(s) Lightweight
Height 5 ft 1 in (1.55 m)
Nationality American
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 6
Wins 3
Wins by KO 0
Losses 3

In 2002 she boxed against Paula Jones on the Fox TV network Celebrity Boxing event, winning the fight. On February 22, 2003, she made her officialwomen's professional boxing debut, losing a four-round decision in the undercard of the Mike Tyson-Clifford Etienne bout, amid rumors that she was having financial difficulties and needed to fight in the ring to earn money.[47] She did another celebrity boxing match, on The Man Show, and won against co-host Doug Stanhope. Stanhope later claimed on his podcast that the fight was fixed because Tonya Harding refused to "fight a man".[48]

On March 23, 2004, it was reported that she canceled a planned boxing match against Tracy Carlton in Oakland, California, because of an alleged death threat against her.[49]

On June 24, 2004, after reportedly not having boxed for over a year, she was beaten in a match in Edmonton, Alberta, by Amy Johnson. Fans reportedly booed her as she entered the ring and cheered wildly for Johnson when she won in the third round.[50][51]

Her boxing career was cut short by a physical condition that she attributed to asthma.[52] Her overall record was 3 wins and 3 losses.[53]

Professional record[edit]

3 Wins (3 decisions), 3 Losses (2 knockouts, 1 decision), 0 Draws[53]
Date Opponent Result Type Round, Time Location
2004-06-25 Amy Johnson Loss TKO 3 (4), 1:04 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
2003-08-02 Melissa Yanas Loss TKO 1 (4), 1:13 Dallas, Texas, U.S.
2003-06-13 Emily Gosa Win Decision (unanimous) 4 (4) Lincoln City, Oregon, U.S.
2003-03-28 Alejandra Lopez Win Decision (unanimous) 4 (4) Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S.
2003-03-15 Shannon Birmingham Win Decision (unanimous) 4 (4) Gulfport, Mississippi, U.S.
2003-02-22 Samantha Browning Loss Decision (split) 4 (4) Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Automobile racing land speed record[edit]

On August 12, 2010 Harding set a new land speed record for a vintage gas coupe with a speed of 97.177 mph (156.391 km/h; 43.442 m/s) driving a 1931 Ford Model A, named Lickity-Split, on the Bonneville Salt Flats.[54][55]

Personal life[edit]

Harding married Jeff Gillooly in 1990,[5] when she was 19 years old. Their tumultuous marriage ended in divorce in 1993, but they continued seeing each other heading into the 1994 Winter Olympics.[56] She married her second husband, Michael Smith, in 1995; the couple divorced in 1996.[57] She married 42-year-old Joseph Price on June 23, 2010, whom she met at a local restaurant called Timbers, when she was 39 years old and took his surname.[58][59] She gave birth to her only child, a son named Gordon, on February 19, 2011.[60]

Since leaving skating and boxing, Harding has worked as a welder, a painter at a metal fabrication company, and a hardware sales clerk at Sears.[58] As of 2017, she stated that she worked as a painter and deck builder.[61] She resides in Washington state, north of her hometown of Portland, Oregon. Residing in Vancouver Washington.[62]

Cultural significance[edit]

Harding's life, career, and role in the Kerrigan attack have been widely referenced in popular culture,[7] appearing in television, film, music, as well as a primary campaign speech by former President Barack Obama.[63] In 2014, Matt Harkins and Viviana Olen created the Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding Museum in their Brooklyn, New York apartment, dedicated to collecting and archiving memorabilia related to Harding and the incident.[64] Harkins and Olen stated in a 2017 interview that they had been captivated by Harding's life for years, citing it as "the most American story ever told."[65] A contemporaneous article published in Vogue also noted that Harding had developed a "cult following" in the years since her notoriety.[66]

Representation in other media[edit]

  • Harding was referred to in the Seinfeld episode "The Understudy": When Jerry’s girlfriend, a Broadway performer, takes the stage, she has a problem with the laces on her boot (as Harding encountered in the 1994 Olympics). Jerry’s girlfriend got to perform only because the lead actress had an injury said to be caused by hitman, George.[69][70]
  • Harding is the subject of the song "Tonya's Twirls" (1996) by Loudon Wainwright III,[73] and the track "Tonya Harding" by singer-songwriter Sufjan Stevens. Upon releasing the track in 2017, Stevens included an accompanying essay, saying that he tried to write the song "with dignity and grace, to pull back the ridiculous tabloid fodder and take stock of the real story of this strange and magnificent American hero."[74]
  • In May 2006, Elizabeth Searle collaborated with composer Abigail Al-Doory to create Tonya and Nancy: The Rock Opera, a chamber opera produced by Tufts University and directed by Meron Langsner.[78] Described as a dark comedy, it premiered in Portland, Oregon in 2008. It was produced also in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago.[79]
  • THE PRICE OF GOLD, Part of ESPN’s “30 for 30” series, is a 2014 documentary that is mostly about Harding, who agreed to be interviewed. Kerrigan refused.[79]
  • In June 2017, a play T, written by Dan Aibel, premiered in Chicago at the American Theater Company. Harding is portrayed by Leah Raidt.[79]

Academic assessment[edit]

Harding's role in women's ice skating culture and Kerrigan's 1994 attack have been the subject of numerous academic essays.[6] In 1995, the book Women on Ice: Feminist Essays on the Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan Spectacle was released, which contained numerous essays analyzing Harding's public image in the context of the sport of figure skating.[81]

In a 2014 essay, academic Sarah Marshall noted the pervasive role of the media in the 1994 Kerrigan attack, particularly the manner in which Harding's life outside the realm of skating became publicly scrutinized: "Somehow, in the scandal’s aftermath, the form of the Tonya-bash was able to alchemize even the most chilling details of Tonya’s life into tabloid gold."[6] Marshall also examines the role of Harding's "tomboy" persona in the context of figure skating.[6]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonya_Harding

 

 

請從論壇首頁右上角進入「個人中心」,就可以編輯您個人的頭像、簽名檔及自我介紹。請用高級模式回覆,點HTML框,可有更多變化豐富版面。
不怕辛苦,就怕不公平;不怕卑微,就怕不公義。
可以哭泣,不要洩氣;可以悲傷,不要放棄!

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譚雅·哈丁[編輯]

維基百科,自由的百科全書
譚雅·哈丁
Tonya Harding with fan.jpg
個人資料
全名 譚雅·麥欣·哈丁
Tonya Maxene Harding
代表國家  美國
出生日期 1970年11月12日(47歲)
出生地 美國奧勒岡州波特蘭
居住地 美國華盛頓州克拉克市
身高 1.55米(5英尺1英寸)
教練 黛安·羅林森

譚雅·哈丁英語:Tonya Maxene Harding,1970年11月12日),美國女子花式滑冰運動員。她在1991年世界花式滑冰錦標賽得到女子單人花式滑冰的銀牌,1992年和1994年得到美國花式滑冰錦標賽女子單人花式滑冰的金牌。她也是女子滑冰史上第二位,美國第一位在比賽中完成三周半跳的運動員。在1994年冬季奧林匹克運動會前夕,因她的前夫傑夫·葛路里涉嫌攻擊另外一位美國滑冰選手南茜·克里根而喧騰一時。哈丁最後被依包庇罪犯的罪名被法院處以3年緩刑、500小時社區服務與16萬美元的罰款,並被取消1994年美國花式滑冰錦標賽女子單人花式滑冰金牌的資格[1]。由於此事件,美國滑冰協會對哈丁繼出終身禁賽的處分。被迫放棄花式滑冰之後,轉往女子拳擊職業摔角和演藝界發展。


賽事成績[編輯]

國際
賽事[2][3][4] 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94
冬奧 4th 8th
世錦賽 2nd 6th
美國盃 2nd 1st 1st 3rd
加拿大盃 4th
國際盃 1st
NHK盃 3rd 2nd 4th
美國奧運節 1st
莫斯科新聞盃 1st
國內
美錦賽 6th 5th 5th 3rd 8th 1st 3rd 4th 1st
^† 1994年六月美國花式滑冰協會投票剝奪哈丁的1994年美國錦標賽冠軍頭銜,但只是將該屆比賽結果改成冠軍從缺,並沒有變動名次[5][6]

大眾文化[編輯]

譚雅·哈丁的成長經歷以及南茜·克里根襲擊事件被改編為電影《老娘叫譚雅》,譚雅一角由瑪格·羅比飾演。

https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%9D%A6%E9%9B%85%C2%B7%E5%93%88%E5%AE%9A

 

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不怕辛苦,就怕不公平;不怕卑微,就怕不公義。
可以哭泣,不要洩氣;可以悲傷,不要放棄!

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譚雅·哈丁[編輯]

維基百科,自由的百科全書
譚雅·哈丁
Tonya Harding with fan.jpg
個人資料
全名 譚雅·麥欣·哈丁
Tonya Maxene Harding
代表國家  美國
出生日期 1970年11月12日(47歲)
出生地 美國奧勒岡州波特蘭
居住地 美國華盛頓州克拉克市
身高 1.55米(5英尺1英寸)
教練 黛安·羅林森

譚雅·哈丁英語:Tonya Maxene Harding,1970年11月12日),美國女子花式滑冰運動員。她在1991年世界花式滑冰錦標賽得到女子單人花式滑冰的銀牌,1992年和1994年得到美國花式滑冰錦標賽女子單人花式滑冰的金牌。她也是女子滑冰史上第二位,美國第一位在比賽中完成三周半跳的運動員。在1994年冬季奧林匹克運動會前夕,因她的前夫傑夫·葛路里涉嫌攻擊另外一位美國滑冰選手南茜·克里根而喧騰一時。哈丁最後被依包庇罪犯的罪名被法院處以3年緩刑、500小時社區服務與16萬美元的罰款,並被取消1994年美國花式滑冰錦標賽女子單人花式滑冰金牌的資格[1]。由於此事件,美國滑冰協會對哈丁繼出終身禁賽的處分。被迫放棄花式滑冰之後,轉往女子拳擊職業摔角和演藝界發展。

賽事成績[編輯]

國際
賽事[2][3][4] 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94
冬奧 4th 8th
世錦賽 2nd 6th
美國盃 2nd 1st 1st 3rd
加拿大盃 4th
國際盃 1st
NHK盃 3rd 2nd 4th
美國奧運節 1st
莫斯科新聞盃 1st
國內
美錦賽 6th 5th 5th 3rd 8th 1st 3rd 4th 1st
^† 1994年六月美國花式滑冰協會投票剝奪哈丁的1994年美國錦標賽冠軍頭銜,但只是將該屆比賽結果改成冠軍從缺,並沒有變動名次[5][6]

大眾文化[編輯]

譚雅·哈丁的成長經歷以及南茜·克里根襲擊事件被改編為電影《老娘叫譚雅》,譚雅一角由瑪格·羅比飾演。

https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%9D%A6%E9%9B%85%C2%B7%E5%93%88%E5%AE%9A

 

請從論壇首頁右上角進入「個人中心」,就可以編輯您個人的頭像、簽名檔及自我介紹。請用高級模式回覆,點HTML框,可有更多變化豐富版面。
不怕辛苦,就怕不公平;不怕卑微,就怕不公義。
可以哭泣,不要洩氣;可以悲傷,不要放棄!

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