Obituary for Mabel Fairbanks
Mabel Fairbanks
- First African-American woman inducted into the US Figure
Skating Hall of Fame
From a huge living room window overlooking New York's
Central Park, Mabel Fairbanks, a baby-sitter young enough to
need a baby-sitter of her own, would look out at the skaters
twirling, jumping and gliding on the frozen lake. Just days
before, the girl--too young to get a job and homeless-- had
been sleeping in the park when a woman spotted her and
offered her the work.
But Fairbanks ached to skate with the other children. When
she had the time, she took to the ice at the park's free
skating sessions in used skates, two sizes too big, that she
bought for $1 at a pawn shop.
She couldn't afford lessons. And even if she could have, the
rinks wouldn't have allowed her in. It was the 1930s and
Fairbanks, an African American, was repeatedly told she had
no business wearing skates in an era when the words "Colored
Trade Is Not Solicited" were prominently displayed at many
ice rinks. But that didn't stop Fairbanks from teaching
herself--and later, as a young adult, from overcoming
barriers to become a pioneer in the skating world for people
of color, a top coach and, in 1997, the first African
American woman inducted into the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of
Fame in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Fairbanks died Saturday at Providence St. Joseph's Medical
Center in Burbank after a long illness. She was 85. In the
last few weeks, she had been diagnosed as having acute
leukemia. Four years ago she was diagnosed as having
myasthenia gravis, a muscle-wasting disease that limited her
movement.
Fairbanks, who was
born Nov. 14, 1915 in the Florida Everglades of African
American and Seminole ancestry, according to her birth
records, never was accepted into competitive skating and was
denied a shot at the Olympics because of the color of her
skin. But she still had the moxie to make her own moves on
ice.
That caught the attention of others, including figure skater
and coach Maribel Vinson (nine times U.S. Ladies Champion)
who recognized Fairbanks' talent and offered advice on
technique. Howard Nicholson, another well-known coach of the
era, joined Vinson in contributing to Fairbanks'
development. Fairbanks also benefited from watching and
listening while the white children received formal
instruction. She copied and practiced their moves.
Undaunted by racism, Fairbanks continued to practice at
various rinks in New York, earning money by skating for
black community benefits and charities. Soon, she was
producing her own programs and presenting them at the Gay
Blades Ice Arena in Manhattan to a mixed but mostly black
audience.
She also earned income by being the only black skater in
some of the many small ice shows that performed in
nightclubs.
She was always billed as the "extra added attraction" but
was never allowed to dazzle the audience with her skill and
amazing jumps and spins because "none of the white skaters
wanted to be outshone by someone black," she recalled in a
1998 interview.
She traveled with ice shows to Mexico and other countries
where there was greater acceptance of mixed races in such
productions.
Later, after coming to Los Angeles in the 1940s, she gained
fame and respect as a coach focused on young competitive
skaters of all races and backgrounds.
She is credited with pairing up Tai Babilonia with Randy
Gardner, who later became five-time national pairs champions
in the 1970s. She also worked with the future champions Atoy
Wilson, Scott Hamilton, Kristi Yamaguchi, Rudy Galindo,
Tiffany Chin, Debi Thomas, Leslie Robinson and Michelle
McCladdie.
Fairbanks also continued to knock down barriers and fight
the politics of skating. Her own exclusion from skating
clubs propelled her to petition the Culver City skating club
in 1965 to admit Richard Ewell III, which it did. Ewell is
thought to be the first black to gain admission to a U.S.
skating club.
A year later, she coached Wilson to become the first African
American national champion with his U.S. Novice Men's
division title.
Wilson, now 50, met Fairbanks when he was 8. He was skating
at the Polar Palace Ice Skating Rink, which today is the
home of Raleigh Studios on Melrose Avenue in Hollywood, when
Fairbanks spotted the youngster and began working with him.
"Her death is a tremendous loss to the African American
community, the skating community, and to people who didn't
know her as well because she was a gracious woman, classy,
effervescent and full of integrity," Wilson said.
"I and everyone else who was ever coached by her knew that
she was coaching her students not only to become great
skaters but, more than anything, to become great human
beings.
"Her students have gone on to become lawyers, doctors,
teachers, writers. She coached them to stand on all those
podiums even though she never got to stand on one herself.
That's what made her a human champion."
On Oct. 15, Fairbanks will be honored by the Women's Sports
Foundation when she is posthumously inducted into the
International Women's Sports Hall of Fame in a ceremony at
the Waldorf Astoria in New York City. Wilson and Babilonia
will remember their coach at the event.
Fairbanks, who never married, is survived by her sister of
Jacksonville, Fla. Services are pending.
Submitted by L. Kemp
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