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Line Haddad | |
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Height | 1.58 m (5 ft 2 in) |
Figure skating career | |
Country |
France Israel |
Skating club | Skating club of Ny |
Line Haddad is a World and Olympic pair skater and was the youngest athlete to compete at the Olympics at Albertville. She is also an international choreographer and a performer with the Ice theatre of Ny company. [1] Former student of Oleg Vassiliev, she is two time French National Champion, one-time Israeli National Champion. As a dancer, she graduated from the Paris Conservatoire in ballet and has also trained and performed in modern dance and Argentine Tango (NY City Center, Google, [2] NY Live Arts, and The Madison Theatre).
She is known for her choreographies and work with various world and Olympic skaters, among them are:
She also coached skaters at ISU Grand Prix events ( Skate America, Trophee de France).
After touring with Philippe Candeloro and the French team, she joined the Ice theatre of New York as a Performer and worked with choreographers such as David Parson, Doug Webster, and David Liu. She was also featured in Dance Visions on Ice on NBC starring Nancy Kerrigan and Evgeni Plushenko and well as in a TV show Glee Episode. Academically, she received her Master of Arts in translation and linguistics in Paris, majoring in French, English, and Spanish.
Her most recent choreographies includes Milongon [8] performed at Rockefeller center with Ice dancer Brent Bommentre and composition by world renowned bandoneon player JP Jofre. Line Haddad contemporary piece 11h11 with 6 solo skaters and one couple was also featured at the ITNY home season [9] honoring Evgeni Plushenko and Tai Babilonia and Randy Gardner in Chelsea Piers in October 2017.
International | |||||||
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Event | 1991–92 | 1992–93 | 1993–94 | 1994–95 | 1995–96 | 1996–97 | 1997–98 |
Olympics | 16th | ||||||
Worlds | 19th | 19th | 18th | ||||
Europeans | 12th | 9th | |||||
CS Skate Canada | 6th | ||||||
CS Trophée Lalique | 9th | 6th | 9th | ||||
CS Nations Cup | 10th | WD | |||||
Nebelhorn Trophy | 2nd | ||||||
National | |||||||
French Champ. | 1st | 2nd | 2nd | 2nd | 2nd | ||
CS = Became part of
Champions Series in 1995 WD = Withdrew |
International | |
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Event | 1999–2000 |
Europeans | 18th |
Golden Spin of Zagreb | 6th |
Skate Israel | 4th |
National | |
Israeli Champ. | 1st |
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