Micheline Ostermeyer

Micheline Ostermeyer

Gardner, Blankers-Koen and Ostermeyer – the 80 m hurdle medalists of the 1950 European Championships
Personal information
Born 23 December 1922
Rang-du-Fliers, France
Died 17 October 2001 (aged 78)
Bois-Guillaume, France
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight 73 kg (161 lb)
Sport
Sport Athletics
Club Orientale, Tunis

Micheline Ostermeyer (23 December 1922 – 17 October 2001) was a French athlete and concert pianist.[1]

Biography

A great-niece of the French author Victor Hugo, and a niece of the composer Lucien Laroche, Ostermeyer was born in Rang-du-Fliers, Pas-de-Calais. At the insistence of her mother, she began learning piano at the age of 4, and at 14 she left her family's home in Tunisia to attend the Conservatoire de Paris. After the outbreak of World War II, she moved back to Tunisia where she performed a weekly half-hour piano recital on Radio Tunis.

It was during her return stay in Tunisia that Ostermeyer began participating in sports, competing in basketball and track and field events. After the war, she continued her participation in athletics while resuming her education at the Conservatoire. She competed in a range of contests, eventually winning 13 French titles in running, throwing and jumping events. In 1946, she placed second in the shot put at the European Athletics Championship in Oslo, as well as winning the Prix Premier at the Conservatoire.[2]

The 1948 Summer Olympics were Ostermeyer's finest hour as an athlete. She won gold medals in the shot put and discus throw (despite having picked up a discus for the first time just a few weeks before the event), and a bronze medal in the high jump.[1] She thus became the first Frenchwoman to win three medals in a single summer or winter Olympic Games. Her performance was only overshadowed by that of Fanny Blankers-Koen, who won four gold medals at the same Olympics.[2] After winning the shot put, she concluded the day with an impromptu performance of a Beethoven concert at her team's headquarters and a concert at Royal Albert Hall.[3]

She retired from sports in 1950 after having won two bronze medals at that year's European Championships, and continued to pursue a career in music. Her athletic prowess damaged her reputation as a concert pianist, however, and she even avoided playing anything composed by Franz Liszt for six years because she considered him too "sportif".[2] She toured for fifteen years before personal commitments, including the death of her husband, led her to take a teaching job, a post she held until her retirement in the early 1980s. In her final years she emerged from retirement to give a series of concerts in both France and Switzerland before her death in Bois-Guillaume.

References

  1. 1 2 Paul Taylor (2004). Jews and the Olympic Games: The Clash Between Sport and Politics : with a Complete Review of Jewish Olympic Medallists. Sussex Academic Press. pp. 238–. ISBN 978-1-903900-88-8.
  2. 1 2 3 Micheline Ostermeyer. sports-reference.com
  3. 88 notes pour piano solo, Jean-Pierre Thiollet, Neva Editions, 2015, p. 90. ISBN 978 2 3505 5192 0

Bibliography

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