Emi Watanabe
Emi Watanabe | |||||||||||||||
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Full name | Emi Kathleen Watanabe | ||||||||||||||
Born | Tokyo, Japan | August 27, 1959||||||||||||||
Height | 1.52 m (5 ft 0 in) | ||||||||||||||
Figure skating career | |||||||||||||||
Country | Japan | ||||||||||||||
Retired | June 23, 1980 | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Japanese name | |||||
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Kanji | 渡部絵美 | ||||
Kana | わたなべ えみ | ||||
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Emi Kathleen Watanabe (渡部 絵美, Watanabe Emi, born August 27, 1959), is a Japanese former competitive figure skater who is the 1979 World bronze medalist and an eight-time Japanese national champion. She was the first skater to medal for Japan in ladies' singles at the World Championships.
Personal life
[edit]Watanabe's mother is Filipino and father is Japanese.[1] She graduated from Golden Valley High School in Minnesota.
Marriage
[edit]She married a man nine years older than her who was an Olympic ice hockey representative in 1989. They had a son in 1991, but later divorced in 1992. Watanabe had custody of the child and raised her son alone for 30 years without financial support.[2]
Watabe remarried in September 2020 to an ordinary man six years her junior. According to reports, the man is an employee of a broadcasting company.[2]
Skating career
[edit]In the 1972–73 season, Watanabe won Japanese national titles on both the junior and senior levels. She then made her World Championship debut, finishing 17th.
In the 1975–76 season, Watanabe took bronze at the 1975 Skate Canada International and then won her fourth national title. She was assigned to the 1976 Winter Olympics and finished 13th. She was 17th in her final event of the season, the 1976 World Championships.
Watanabe broke into the World top ten at the 1978 World Championships, placing 8th. The next season, she won the bronze medal at 1979 Worlds, becoming the first Japanese lady to medal at the event.
In her final competitive season, Watanabe won gold at the 1979 NHK Trophy and then won her eighth national title. She placed 6th at the 1980 Winter Olympics. She ended her competitive career at the 1980 World Championships, where she placed 4th.
Later career
[edit]After retiring from competitive skating, Watanabe went into show business and helped to popularize figure skating in Japan while becoming a national celebrity through her numerous appearances on television and in magazines and newspapers. She continues to run figure skating camps in Japan and currently hosts a podcast on TBS radio.[3]
Watanabe ran for The House of Councilors election in 2001 from Liberal League, but lost.[4]
Results
[edit]International | ||||||||
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Event | 72–73 | 73–74 | 74–75 | 75–76 | 76–77 | 77–78 | 78–79 | 79–80 |
Winter Olympics | 13th | 6th | ||||||
World Champ. | 17th | 15th | 13th | 17th | 12th | 8th | 3rd | 4th |
Skate Canada | 3rd | |||||||
NHK Trophy | 1st | |||||||
National | ||||||||
Japan Champ. | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st |
Japan Jr. Champ. | 1st |
References
[edit]- ^ "渡部絵美の出演時間". Archived from the original on 2009-09-25.
- ^ a b "元フィギュアスケート五輪代表・渡部絵美(63)が熟年再婚していた! パートナーに選んだお相手は" [Former Olympic figure skater Emi Watanabe (63) has remarried in her later years! The person she chose as her partner is]. NEWSポストセブン (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2023-02-05. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
- ^ "渡部絵美のトピックス".
- ^ Her election poster
External links
[edit]Navigation
[edit]
- 1959 births
- Living people
- Figure skaters at the 1976 Winter Olympics
- Figure skaters at the 1980 Winter Olympics
- Figure skating commentators
- Japanese expatriate sportspeople in the United States
- Japanese female single skaters
- Japanese people of Filipino descent
- Liberal League (Japan) politicians
- Olympic figure skaters for Japan
- Figure skaters from Tokyo
- World Figure Skating Championships medalists
- 20th-century Japanese sportswomen
- Japanese figure skating biography stubs