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Maya Usova

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Maya Usova
Usova/Zhulin at a 1989 exhibition in West Berlin.
Full nameMaya Valentinovna Usova
Other namesMaia Usova
Born (1964-05-22) 22 May 1964 (age 60)
Gorky, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Height1.60 m (5 ft 3 in)
Figure skating career
Country Russia
Skating clubProfsoyuz Moskva / Sportsclub Moskva
Retired1994
Medal record
Figure skating
Ice dancing
Representing  Russia
Winter Olympics
Silver medal – second place 1994 Lillehammer Ice dancing
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1993 Prague Ice dancing
European Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1994 Copenhagen Ice dancing
Gold medal – first place 1993 Helsinki Ice dancing
Representing  Unified Team and  CIS
Winter Olympics
Bronze medal – third place 1992 Albertville Ice dancing
World Championships
Silver medal – second place 1992 Oakland Ice dancing
European Championships
Silver medal – second place 1992 Lausanne Ice dancing
Representing  Soviet Union
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1991 Munich Ice dancing
Bronze medal – third place 1990 Halifax Ice dancing
Silver medal – second place 1989 Paris Ice dancing
European Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1991 Sofia Ice dancing
Silver medal – second place 1990 Leningrad Ice dancing
Silver medal – second place 1989 Birmingham Ice dancing

Maya Valentinovna Usova (Russian: Майя Валентиновна Усова; born 22 May 1964) is a Russian former ice dancer. With Alexander Zhulin, she is a two-time Olympic medalist (1994 silver, 1992 bronze), the 1993 World champion, and the 1993 European champion. They also won gold medals at Skate America, NHK Trophy, Nations Cup, and Winter Universiade. They represented the Soviet Union, the Unified Team, and Russia.

Career

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Maya Usova initially competed with Alexei Batalov. At the age of nine, she moved from Gorky to Moscow to train with coach Natalia Dubova.[2] Dubova paired her with Alexander Zhulin in 1980. In 1988, they made their first appearance at the European Championships, placing fourth. The next season, they won silver at the 1989 European Championships in Birmingham, England and silver in their World Championships debut, in Paris. They maintained their silver medal standing in the world with a silver at the 1990 European Figure Skating Championships, but for the first time dropped behind the Duchesnays to third at the 1990 World Figure Skating Championships in Halifax.

After being third again at the 1991 European Figure Skating Championships, they looked poised for the big breakthrough, for the first time leading their teammates Klimova & Ponomarenko after the compulsories, then leading both the Duchesnays and Klimova & Ponomarenko into the free dance at the 1991 World Figure Skating Championships. However the top 3 teams were so close the final finish of the free dance order would determine the final results. Maya Usova & Alexander Zhulin skated a strong free dance that seemed to ensure the title, but had drawn first in the final flight, and received a wide spread of marks from the judges. Despite receiving four first place ordinals in the free dance, a strange ordinal situation caused them to place third in the free dance and drop from first to third in the end.[citation needed] They later described their 1991 free dance as "being about Paganini and his muse".[3] Usova wore a short, Empire-style beige dress and according to writer Ellyn Kestnbaum, represented both a muse and inanimate object. Kestnbaum also reported that they skated their program with "intense emotion" and created "an overall aura of Romanticism and uncanniness", using little runs and turns on their toepicks, knee slides, and "sensuous flowing and intertwining movements" that were enhanced by their billowing costumes.[3]

In the 1991–92 season, Usova/Zhulin won silver at the 1992 European Championships in Lausanne, Switzerland and then captured their first Olympic medal, bronze, at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France. Usova/Zhulin ended their season with a controversial silver at the 1992 World Championships in Oakland, California despite a fall in the free dance. They moved with Dubova from Moscow to Lake Placid, New York in September 1992.[1][4]

In the 1992–93 season, Usova/Zhulin won the 1993 European Championships in Helsinki and the 1993 World Championships in Prague. This was a commanding victory as they won all four phases of the competition at both events, and received straight first place ordinals, apart from losing two first place ordinals to the up-and-coming Russians Anjelika Krylova & Vladimir Fedorov at Worlds.

Usova and Zhulin's free skate during the 1991-1992 season, set to music from The Four Seasons by Vivaldi, centered on the theme of statues coming to life, was full of images of symmetry, parallelism, and equality. Figure skating writer Ellyn Kestnbaum described their program in this way: "It is not about sexual difference, but it does convey sexual attraction. These are passionate, eroticized statues, and the skaters' gazes are focused centripetally into the relationship, at each other's bodies and into each other's eyes".[5]

The next season, they were third at the 1994 European Championships in Copenhagen, behind Jayne Torvill / Christopher Dean and Oksana Grishuk / Evgeni Platov. They appeared to have the gold medal won as they entered the free dance tied for first with Torvill & Dean, and Grishuk & Platov were mathematically out of contention for the gold medal entering the free dance. However the free dance of Grishuk & Platov which handily won that phase changed the ordinals, and Usova & Zhulin were pushed to third in the free dance behind Torvill & Dean and dropped to third overall. They were heavily criticized for their new free program which was said by critics to lack speed and be too far a departure from their usual sensual and elegant style of dancing.

At the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, they won the silver medal behind Grishuk/Platov. They entered the free dance tied for first with Torvill & Dean, with Grishuk & Platov in third, but with all 3 teams in contention for the gold by winning the free dance. They lost gold by the majority rule, Grishuk & Platov having the five first place ordinals they needed to win the free dance. After the loss Usova & Zhulin withdrew from the 1994 World Figure Skating Championships, where they had planned to end their amateur career and immediately went professional.[citation needed] Usova and Zhulin were known for excelling technically and artistically and according to writer Ellyn Kestnbaum, "leaned toward drama and passion".[3]

Usova/Zhulin skated together professionally from 1994 to 1997. They toured with Champions on Ice and won the World Professional Championships. From 1998 to 2000, Usova performed with former rival, Evgeni Platov. Coach Tatiana Tarasova discussed the challenges of pairing Platov, in prime competitive shape, with Usova, a long-time smoker who was nearing retirement. She designed their programs to include many lifts, where Platov was carrying Usova around the ice. Their career started out with mixed results, with marks as low as 4.5 at the Canadian Open, but also an upset win at the World Professional Championships. After last-place finishes in nearly all events in 1999 and 2000, Usova & Platov ceased competing.

From 2002 to 2004, Usova was an assistant coach to Tatiana Tarasova and Platov, working with Galit Chait / Sergei Sakhnovsky and Shizuka Arakawa. She has coached at the Igloo in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey and Odintsovo, near Moscow. She is an International Technical Specialist for Russia.[6]

Personal life

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Usova and Zhulin were married in 1986[4] but later divorced.[7] Zhulin claimed that their marriage was a sham to get a free apartment from the Soviet government, though Usova denied this claim. Zhulin apologized in a subsequent article. [8]

In 1992, Usova grabbed Grishuk by her hair and smashed her head against the counter at a Spago restaurant in Los Angeles.[9]

Usova is remarried to a Russian professor in medicine, Anatoly Orletsky.[10] In 2010, she gave birth to their daughter, Anastasia. Off the ice, she has appeared in several Marlboro advertisements in Russia.

Programs

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With Zhulin

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Usova/Zhulin in 1994
Usova/Zhulin in 1989
Season Original dance Free dance[11] Exhibition[12]
1993–1994
  • A Day In The Life Of A Fool
1992–1993
  • Ausencias


  • Autumn Leaves
1991–1992
  • A Paris
1990–1991
  • Autumn Leaves
1989–1990
  • Samba
1988–1989
  • Black Bottom
    by Ray Henderson
  • A Paris
1987–1988
  • Tango
  • Oriental Nights
    by Kai Warner
Post-1994[12]

  • La Belle Dame Sans Regret
    by Sting



  • L'Oiseau (from Cirque du Soleil)


  • The Hunchback



  • Blues For Klook

With Platov

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Season Programs[11][12][13]
2000–2001

1999–2000
  • Copa de la Vida
  • Historia de un Amor

1998–1999
  • When You Came Into My Life

Results

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Amateur career

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With Zhulin for the Soviet Union (URS), Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Unified Team at the Olympics (EUN), and Russia (RUS):

International
Event 1982–83
(URS)
1983–84
(URS)
1984–85
(URS)
1985–86
(URS)
1986–87
(URS)
1987–88
(URS)
1988–89
(URS)
1989–90
(URS)
1990–91
(URS)
1991–92
(CIS, EUN)
1992–93
(RUS)
1993–94
(RUS)
Olympics 3rd 2nd
Worlds 2nd 3rd 3rd 2nd 1st
Europeans 4th 2nd 2nd 3rd 2nd 1st 3rd
Skate America 1st 1st
Nations Cup 1st
NHK Trophy 2nd 1st 1st 1st
Moscow News 6th 4th 3rd 2nd
Goodwill Games 2nd
Nebelhorn 1st
St. Gervais 1st
St. Ivel / Electric 1st 1st
Universiade 1st 2nd
National
Soviet Champ. 2nd 5th 3rd 3rd 3rd 3rd 2nd 1st
Spartakiada 1st
USSR Cup 3rd

Post-eligible career

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Event 1994–95 1998–99
World Professional Champ. 1st 1st

References

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  1. ^ a b Reiter, Susan (1 March 1995). "Ice dancing: a dance form frozen in place by hostile rules". Dance Magazine. The Free Library. (FindArticles)
  2. ^ Harvey, Randy (22 February 1994). "'94 WINTER LILLEHAMMER OLYMPICS : Torvill and Dean Must Face Music as Russians Win : Ice dancing: British routine doesn't go over with judges. Gritschuk and Platov get gold". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 8 October 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Kestnbaum, Ellyn (2003). Culture on Ice: Figure Skating and Cultural Meaning. Middleton, Connecticut: Wesleyan Publishing Press. p. 234. ISBN 0-8195-6641-1.
  4. ^ a b Hersh, Phil (22 February 1994). "Love Triangle (plus 1) Tops Torvill And Dean". The Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 9 September 2011.
  5. ^ Kestnbaum, p. 237
  6. ^ "ISU Communication No. 1467". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 3 February 2009.
  7. ^ Sports-reference: Maiya Usova
  8. ^ Shipley, Amy (11 December 1998). "PLAYING MUSICAL CHAIRS ON ICE". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  9. ^ Longman, Jere (2 January 1998). "SKATING; Dancing on the Sharp Edge of Her Skates". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  10. ^ Vaytsekhovskaya, Elena (24 January 2009). Майя Усова: "Тем, кто не уехал, надо ставить памятники". Sport Express (in Russian). (Translation - Maya Usova: “Those who remained are real heroes”)
  11. ^ a b Skate Music List Archived 2 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ a b c World Professional Figure Skating Championships – Landover, MD
  13. ^ Japan Open
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Media related to Maya Usova at Wikimedia Commons

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