Ski Like
Stein
By
John Skow
So
how did a pretty little Utah ski area called Deer Valley, known
for its ego-building runs, gold bathroom fixtures, and rich snow
bunnies, grab the men's and women's slalom, aerial, and mogul events
at the 2002 Winter Olympic Games? The answer may have something
to do with the presence of a grand old Olympian named Stein Eriksen,
one of the most charismatic figures in the history of skiing. Fifty
years ago, Eriksen came out of nowhere and stunned the world with
his grace, good looks, and astounding speed on the slopes, winning
gold and silver medals for Norway at the 1952 Oslo Olympic Games.
The 2002 Games have yet to begin, but Eriksen has already pocketed
a different kind of prize: a showcase for the rustic gem of a resort
he helped found almost two decades ago.
Norwegians,
it was thought in the years before and after World War II, were
sturdy cross-country skiers. Very admirable, certainly, but no threat
in what the Austrians and the Swiss tended to think of as real
ski races. These, of course, were the downhill, slalom, and giant
slalom, the legendary alpine events. Alpine racers, it was assumed,
were born and learned to ski in the Alps. Moreover, during the war,
the occupying Germans restricted skiing in Norway because Resistance
fighters were using skis to collect supply drops flown from England.
Teenage racers set up slalom gates and trained illegally, but it
wasn't enough. At the 1948 Winter Games in Saint Moritz, the inexperienced
Norwegians couldn't judge speed on the big runs; they fell.
Two years later,
things began to change when Eriksen, then a flashy Norwegian gymnast
who skied with a fluid, legs-together style that he seemed to have
invented himself, won a bronze medal in slalom at the World Championships
in Aspen.
Still, it came
as a shock to the ski worldthe races and racers that skiers
call "the white circus"when, at the 1952 Olympics in Oslo,
Eriksen won the gold in giant slalom and the silver in slalom. Two
years later, he ruled the World Championships in Åre, Sweden, winning
gold medals in slalom, giant slalom, and combined, a three-event
category that included the downhill.
And then Stein
Eriksen moved to the United States to teach Americans to ski. He
presided as celebrity skimeister at a succession of resorts, beginning
with Michigan's Boyne Mountain. He moved on to Heavenly Valley,
Calif.; Vermont's trendy Sugarbush; and Aspen and Snowmass in Colorado.
In 1981, he came to Utah's brand-new Deer Valley resort, lending
his name to its plush lodge, which opened the following year.
We Americans,
it should be said, needed his help. Ski instruction when Eriksen
arrived on the scene was in its "Bend zee knees, five dollars please"
phase. Newspapers dispatched fearless reporters to write stories
that amounted to "I went skiing and fell down a lot." Skis were
long and wooden, boots leather and squishy, technique a shaky and
hard-to-learn matter of grinding skis through turns by rotating
the hips.
To "Ski like
Stein!" as a slogan quite impossibly urged, meant to ski gracefully,
always in balance, legs together, seducing the mountain rather than
fighting it. Nothing wrong with trying to fake a little grace. But
as more than one striver with snow in his ears and lost sunglasses
grumbled: Nobody skis like Stein. Nobody looked as stylish as Eriksen
in a ski poster. For the baby boom generation, skiing began to seem
romantic, and Stein was skiingor rather, he was what
skiing should be, minus sprains, frostbite, and eggbeater falls.
A wise-guy reporter
for the Saturday Evening Post described the ski school director
at Sugarbush in 1967: "He is easily the most flamboyant figure in
U.S. skiing. . . . He has blond hair and blue eyes, and his dazzle
could not be
greater if the colors were reversed."
Of course, the
unnecessarily handsome fellow was Stein Eriksen. I was the writer,
a half-good civilian skier respectful of Eriksen's medals but thoroughly
awed by the fact that he
skied, always, in a sweater. And without a cap. And smiling. Didn't
this guy understand hypothermia?
And then there
was the flip. Every Sunday afternoon Eriksen came down the Sugarbush
exhibition slope at speed (wearing his usual 220-centimeter skis),
elevated off a small snow kicker, flew for 30 or 40 feetgood
hang timeand flipped head over heels in a beautiful forward
swan dive. This was astonishing. Teenage freestylers throw triple
backward flips these days, and other skiers had done somersaults
even then. But for us, the flip was Stein's.
The flip and
the flash carried Stein a long way, and in his unmarried days he
had a reputation common to ski instructors. "It was a different
time," he recalls somewhat mistily, not exactly addressing the issue,
not exactly not. "To be a ski instructor then, ah, that was
it . . ." He rolls his eyes upward.
He guesses that
he has taught some half-million Americans to ski. Many of these,
one gathers, have been adoring women. As the developer of Boyne
Mountain told Harper's in 1966: "This business is built on
sex, sex, sex. It's sex that brings young men and women up here
and sex that brings them back. Stein knew what they wanted; they
wanted him bareheaded in a bright sweater."
He also just
happened to be, the story noted, "the best skier in the world."
Eriksen
is showing
a visitor around his big new house near Deer Valley. On a wall of
mementos is a photo of a young flier at the cockpit of a World War
II Spitfire. Ten swastikas, for German planes shot down, are painted
on the fuselage. Eriksen explains that the airman is his older brother
Marius, who escaped from Norway in a fishing boat at the outset
of the war and at 17 enlisted in the Royal Air Force. He was shot
down over Holland and survived two years in a prison camp. "He is
the hero," Stein says.
Eriksen is
72, with wavy, silver yellow hairno, don't askand his
eyes are the same startling blue. At a guess, he is a bit lighter
than when he raced, pared down by time. As Deer Valley's ski director,
he's on the slopes 80 or 90 days a year. Not all day, only two or
three hours, but still with grace, still flattering guests at his
namesake lodge by saying, "Come on, let's take a run, let's run
some gates."
The Stein Eriksen
Lodge, which is adding 40 new rooms for the 2002 Games, is comfortably
luxurious, tucked into a valley a few feet from Deer Valley's lifts.
Rates run from $500 to forget it. A one-bedroom suite cossets guests
within addition to the gold knobs in the two loosa Jacuzzi,
a kitchen, two fireplaces, and, for those unexpected guests, a bed
that swings down out of what looks like a 16th-century armoire.
The Glitretind restaurant is a short toddle through the lobby. Order
buffalo steak with foie gras. Bring money.
If you want
to work the shine off your credit card and can swing reservations
during the Games, you can sit in a private hot tub with a view that
lets you ogle Olympians training for the slalom, recalling, as you
do, that Steinyou call him Stein by nowwas talking wistfully
the day before about the harsh nature of today's slalom racing,
as skiers bash pop-up gates flat with armored forearms.
"The way we
did it was more graceful," he says. "We had to turn around those
old bamboo poles, not ski through them. But we were breaking too
many." He remembers one year"thank goodness, only one"when
racers used rigid aluminum gates. "We were all black and blue,"
Stein says.
The
Salt Lake
Organizing Committee denies that Eriksen's stature influenced its
decision to bring high-profile Olympic events to Deer Valley. But
his presence there will give the races uncommon historical resonance.
Eriksen will almost certainly be what is called an "Olympic Ambassador,"
waving at all his friends in the white circus and talking a half
century's ski history with the overwhelming array of officials,
unofficials, and VIPs that the Games collect. Schmoozing like Stein.
Some of the
talk will be about the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway,
where Eriksen helped carry the Olympic flag at the opening ceremonies.
Most of us who were there thought the Lillehammer Games were close
to perfect. Meters of snow fell before the Games and the sun shone
every day during the competition. Norway, being small, could not
afford a monstrous Olympic spread. Corporate logo plastering was
minimal. The little town of Lillehammer did not metastasize.
Best of all,
the Norwegians seemed to have a great time at their own party. Fans
without car permits hiked to the racecourses singing songs, hurrahed
until the last straggler crossed the finish line, then hiked back
down to town, some even sliding on plastic garbage bags. Flash-frozen
cops directing traffic waved cheerfully.
How much of
this felicity can be repeated in 2002 is a question. A big country
probably can't have a small Olympics. Park City, the sprawling resort
town of which Deer Valley is a satellite, is already swollen by
new construction.
But Deer Valley
will still be a village. And unlike big resorts and their ultraserious
skiers, who may not welcome the disruption that an Olympics brings,
Deer Valley's customers tend to be prosperous and less than hard-core.
They probably won't mind interrupting their skiing to sit in their
hot tubs and watch.
After half a
century, Eriksen is about to win another Olympics.
John Skow
covered the 1994 Olympics at Lillehammer for Time, where
he was a contributor for 43 years. He lives in New Hampshire.
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