Tai Babilonia, a U.S. Winter Olympic original, credits figure skating trailblazer Mabel Fairbanks

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By Nick Zaccardi:
Excerpts:
Fairbanks was a trailblazer. In the 1930s, she wasn’t allowed to join a figure skating club because she was Black, and thus barred from competition. Yet Fairbanks still ended up in the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame, having skated in international shows and coached future Olympic and world champions.
“She always told me and her other students of color, when you get out there to perform and compete, it doesn’t matter what color you are, you still have to go out and give it your best,” Babilonia said in a recent interview. “Pearls of wisdom I use to this day.”
Fairbanks first matched Babilonia, then 8 years old, and Randy Gardner, then 10, as a pairs’ team for a small skating show at their club.
Babilonia and Gardner remained skating partners — “soulmate,” Babilonia calls Gardner now. Gardner remembered appearing on the cover of Jet magazine with Babilonia, but that she didn’t care for the attention and didn’t want to identify as one race.
“I just don’t think Tai got the recognition she deserved, if she wanted it,” as a pioneer, he said. “I don’t really think she really cared that much about it, though, to be honest.”
Babilonia was asked if she considered herself a pioneer. She paused, then answered.
“In a multiracial way, yes,” she said. “I think I am the first multiracial Olympic figure skater with the Black, Filipino, Hopi Indian makeup. Is that a pioneer? I don’t know.”

ABC piece reported by Donna de Varona that aired during 2003 U.S. Nationals (includes on camera interview clips of Babilonia, Atoy Wilson, Debi Thomas, Tiffany Chin, Kristi Yamaguchi, Rudy Galindo):
 
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There's a possible TV miniseries about Mabel Fairbanks in the works, and Tai Babilonia and Atoy Wilson are helping with it!
USFS' Skater Spotlight has an update on the project: https://www.usfigureskating.org/news/article/babilonia-wilson-work-bring-fairbanks-life-screen
History-making skaters Atoy Wilson, the first African American to win a U.S. figure skating title, and Tai Babilonia, five-time U.S. pairs champion and World champion, are one step closer to bringing the life story of coach Mabel Fairbanks to the screen. After seven years of conversations, the project is now in development with the production company of a high profile celebrity (who they decline to name).
“We envision it as a probably three-part television series that dramatizes her life,” said Wilson, the executor of Fairbanks’ estate. “Her life in the early stages of coming to New York, then becoming the professional skating personality that she was along with developing her skills as a coach.”
“This is not going to be a documentary,” Babilonia said.
 

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USFS' Skater Spotlight article by Amy Rosewater about how Frank Carroll was impacted by the life of Mabel Fairbanks through his coach and mentor, Maribel Vinson Owen: https://www.usfigureskating.org/news/article/passion-and-persistence
Editors Note: In the February issue of SKATING magazine, former students of Mabel Fairbanks remember their beloved coach with first-hand accounts of her talent, kindness, friendship and passion. Fairbanks, who was inducted into the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 1997, broke down racial barriers and created opportunities for her pupils of all races and diverse backgrounds. Maribel Vinson Owen, a hall of fame athlete and coach who mentored such legends as Frank Carroll, instructed Fairbanks behind the scenes, encouraging her to become a show performer when racism closed the doors on her competitive aspirations. Vinson Owen would go on to share stories with Carroll about Fairbanks and the racism of the times.
Vinson Owen was one of the only skating coaches who would provide lessons to Fairbanks, a Black and Indigenous athlete. At the time, the top rinks in the country were not open to Black skaters, nor were the top coaches. But Vinson Owen would let Fairbanks enter rinks through the back door and sneak in private lessons free of charge.
“She couldn’t do it out in the open,” Carroll said. “It’s unbelievable that this could’ve occurred, but this was the 1930s.”
Years later, Carroll and Fairbanks would cross paths in California. One week, Carroll, Fairbanks and Richard Garrett, a former Ice Capades star from Canada, trained together in Van Nuys, California.
“I had just been in Ice Follies and was feeling pretty hotsy totsy about myself,” Carroll said. “And then I saw Mabel, and she was so acrobatic, doing butterflies and I was just very impressed.”

The Fairbanks section of stories in the February 2021 issue of SKATING magazine (pages 24-30 online; pp. 22-28 in the print edition) includes reminiscences by Atoy Wilson, Michelle McCladdie, Richard Ewell & Tai Babilonia and currently can be read here: https://www.usfigureskating.org/about/skating-magazine

Information about the newly created Mabel Fairbanks Skatingly Yours Fund that "financially assists and supports the training and development of promising Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) figure skaters with the goal of helping them realize and achieve their maximum athletic potential": https://www.usfigureskating.org/support/donate/mabel-fairbanks-skatingly-yours-fund

Starr Andrews is the first beneficiary of the Fund (eta link to watch Babilonia announce the award to Starr & her mom: https://www.instagram.com/tv/CKHV9cOgQz0/) and has been featured in several articles this month:

By Karen Rosen:

By Brandon Penny:

By Jason Lewis:
 
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The February 26th edition of the "Ice Talk" podcast featured Tai Babilonia and Starr Andrews talking "about the impact of Fairbanks and other BIPOC athletes, as well as the continuing efforts to confront the issues of race and inequality on and off the ice":
Starr chats with Mirai for about 10 minutes, starting around the 24-minute mark, following Tai's interview.

ETA:

Tai Babilonia re-tweeted the recent CBS This Morning video segment about Figure Skating in Harlem and mentioned Mabel Fairbanks and Atoy Wilson will both be honored by FS in Harlem next month: https://twitter.com/taiskates/status/1370036428437004289

Fairbanks & Wilson will be honored at FS in Harlem's Champions in Life Virtual Benefit Gala on April 22, 2021: https://figureskatinginharlem.org/calendar/2021-champions-in-life-virtual-benefit-gala/
 
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Congratulations to Lindsay Thorngren (whose mother is Black) and Samuel Eckenroed on being named today as the two additional recipients of the Mabel Fairbanks Skatingly Yours Fund - press release:
USFS' post includes their photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/CNqCrHpg3C5/

Tai Babilonia re-tweeted the recent CBS This Morning video segment about Figure Skating in Harlem and mentioned Mabel Fairbanks and Atoy Wilson will both be honored by FS in Harlem next month: https://twitter.com/taiskates/status/1370036428437004289

Fairbanks & Wilson will be honored at FS in Harlem's Champions in Life Virtual Benefit Gala on April 22, 2021: https://figureskatinginharlem.org/calendar/2021-champions-in-life-virtual-benefit-gala/
Free registration to attend virtually: https://www.fshchampions.org/
 
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Bumping up this thread almost 2 years later...

U.S. Figure Skating announced earlier this month that Alexa Gasparotto, Jessica Jurka, Cyrus McSwain, Ria Basu, Nathaniel Chapple and Athena Huang are the recipients of the 2023 Mabel Fairbanks Skatingly Yours Fund scholarships (February 7, 2023):
Alexa Gasparotto was presented with her Elite Award at Nationals in San Jose, alongside her coach, Rohene Ward - ETA a photo of them afterwards :): https://twitter.com/SylviaUnseen/status/1630698218689376259

Andrews and Gasparotto Reflect on History made in San Jose (Feb. 23):
 
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