Debi Thomas: The Comeback (A TSL Interview with Debi Thomas and Shepard Clark, Compulsory Figures)
Debi Thomas is a trailblazer in figure skating. Debi is the 1986 World champion, the 1988 Olympic bronze medalist, and a two-time U.S. national champion. She is also a physician and a member of the 'Battle of the Carmens'. Debi faced struggles after her skating career ended. She was diagnosed with bipolar disorder by April 2012 and was featured in a 2015 episode of the television series, Iyanla: Fix My Life, on the Oprah Winfrey Network.Shepard Clark has helped Debi rediscover her love of figure skating by encouraging her to train to compete at the 2023 World Figure and Fancy Skating Championships. In this interview, we discuss compulsory figures, Shepard's Rolls Royce named Sonia Henie, finding purpose on the ice, the glamorous Carlo Fassi skaters, Katarina Witt, Dick Button, phone calls from Dorothy Hamill, the wonders of JoJo Starbuck, why Trixi Schuba is the human scribe, and whether Kira Ivanova really deserved to win the figures at the Calgary Games.
Debi Thomas is a trailblazer in figure skating. Debi is the 1986 World champion, the 1988 Olympic bronze medalist, and a two-time U.S. national champion. She is also a physician and a member of the 'Battle of the Carmens'. Debi faced struggles after her skating career ended. She was diagnosed with bipolar disorder by April 2012 and was featured in a 2015 episode of the television series, Iyanla: Fix My Life, on the Oprah Winfrey Network.Shepard Clark has helped Debi rediscover her love of figure skating by encouraging her to train to compete at the 2023 World Figure and Fancy Skating Championships. In this interview, we discuss compulsory figures, Shepard's Rolls Royce named Sonia Henie, finding purpose on the ice, the glamorous Carlo Fassi skaters, Katarina Witt, Dick Button, phone calls from Dorothy Hamill, the wonders of JoJo Starbuck, why Trixi Schuba is the human scribe, and whether Kira Ivanova really deserved to win the figures at the Calgary Games.
Didn't have time to watch all of this, but will have to get back to it just for the encouragement, to know that I'm certainly not 22 anymore, but I can still skate and still look good on the ice. Not as good as these people because I never was, but not looking as if I should bring two supporting attendants onto the ice with me to hold me up. I always had trouble with power in figures, making it all the way around a circle on one push, so I did tiny ones. Nowadays I don't try to do complete figures in my three or four sessions a week at the rink. I do what was being shown when I had to cut off the video, spend the first half hour on the ice going back and forth on one of the blue lines doing half circles with turns and loops while my equally elderly partner does laps with a weight jacket on. So happy to watch this (but I still don't see how Debi practises figures in a pool?) 