Kagan McLeod for The National
Kagan McLeod for The National

Newsmaker: Vanessa-Mae



It isn’t the first time that the apparently disparate demands of downhill skiing and expert mastery of a stringed classical instrument have been tackled by one person with such flair.

After all, who can forget the scene in the 1987 film The Living Daylights, when Timothy Dalton and the Bond girl Maryam d’Abo slalomed to safety down a snowy mountainside atop her cello case, with 007 wielding the instrument as a ski pole?

Not that the one-time child violin prodigy Vanessa-Mae will be attempting both feats simultaneously when she adds another string to her bow and competes for Thailand in the women’s giant slalom at the Sochi Winter Olympics on Tuesday.

But even if the 35-year-old skier fails to steal a place on the podium – and, up against serious athletes from Austria, Switzerland and the US, she almost certainly will – few could doubt that she deserves a lifetime medal for overachievement.

Vanessa-Mae Vanakorn was born in Singapore in 1978 to a Thai father and a Chinese mother, and it serves as a warning to all pushy parents that, at various stages in her life, she has been estranged from both of them.

According to Vanessa-Mae’s own account, it was her mother, Pamela Soei Luang Tan, a lawyer and something of a frustrated concert pianist, who was the driving force behind the development of her talent.

Her parents split up when Vanessa-Mae was four and, after her mother married a British lawyer working in Singapore, the three of them moved to the UK, which Vanessa-Mae calls home to this day.

She had begun studying the piano and learning to read music when she was just three and had her first lesson on the violin at the age of five. It wasn’t all hard work, though; her parents took her skiing for the first time at the age of four.

Perhaps her mother’s determination that she would succeed was inspired by the fact that her daughter shares a birthday with Niccolò Paganini, the virtuoso 19th-century Italian violinist. Either way, she was determined that her daughter would become a star, an ambition that extended to making her skip school so she could practise violin.

Later, Vanessa-Mae would recall that her mother told her: “I love you because you are my daughter, but you’ll never be special to me unless you play the violin.”

It might not have been ideal parenting, but it did pay off. Vanessa-Mae shot to fame and fortune in her teens, though the success came at a price, as the violinist told a magazine seven years ago.

“During the second half of my teenage years and my early 20s, my life was like a treadmill,” she said. “I wasn’t enjoying it and it became too much.”

Unsurprisingly, her relationship with her mother buckled.

“My mother is, and always has been, an extremely driven person and has an unquenchable thirst for success, and that is something that can be very difficult to understand when you are a child or a teenager,” Vanessa-Mae told a British newspaper in 2008.

Pamela had always acted as her daughter’s manager – until 2000, when Vanessa-Mae sacked her in the hope, she said, that they might have a normal mother-daughter relationship. They never spoke again.

In 2008, her mother was invited to contribute to a BBC documentary examining whether the violinist’s talent was the product of nature or nurture. On camera, a clearly upset Vanessa-Mae read out her mother’s terse reply: “My daughter is nearly 30. That part of my life is well and truly over.”

Vanessa-Mae acknowledged that “I would not be here today without my mother and she has helped me have a career that I love and to follow a vocation”. Nevertheless, she remained “sad that it has been at the expense of my relationship with her”.

Vanessa-Mae’s appearance at the Sochi Winter Olympics as a contestant in the women’s giant slalom has attracted almost as much attention as her first crossover pop album did when it was released in 1995.

A child prodigy who had played her first orchestra concert at the age of 10, there was no doubting Vanessa-Mae’s talent.

But purists were aghast at The Violin Player, the product of Vanessa-Mae’s collaboration with the pop producer Mike Batt, better known as the musical force behind the children’s TV favourite The Wombles.

In addition to seven tracks composed by Batt, the album opened with a pop version of Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, which as a single sold millions of copies and gave Vanessa-Mae her first chart success. The album spent 21 weeks in the charts.

But for the classical music establishment, the album was seen not only as a shockingly trite betrayal of Vanessa-Mae’s obvious talent, but also as the cynical exploitation of a young woman’s sexuality in the pursuit of record sales.

On her first album, Violin, released in 1991 when she was 12 years old, Vanessa-Mae had brilliantly performed pieces by Sarasate, Kabalevsky and Mozart, in an acclaimed recording made with the world-renowned Mozart Players.

That same year, she also issued an album of Kids’ Classics, followed by the impressively heavyweight recording Tchaikovsky and Beethoven Violin Concertos, recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra.

Four years were to pass before Vanessa-Mae hit the charts – and the headlines – again. It was, perhaps, that long pause that triggered the artist’s embrace of what EMI, her new record company, called “violin techno-acoustic fusion”. She swapped Gizmo, her 18th-century Guadagnini violin, for a modern, electric Zeta Jazz model – and adopted a pop-video persona to match, complete with provocative clothing.

The contrast between the covers of her 1991 albums and the successor, issued in 1995, was striking. Gone was the demure, studious schoolgirl. In her place, Vanessa-Mae, still only 16, had been transformed into a disturbingly sexualised vamp.

Her birth father, after seeing his daughter’s promotional photographs, publicly – if temporarily – disowned her.

It was the start of the selling of Vanessa-Mae for her looks rather than her talent. In the eyes of some in the classical world, it was the end of her credibility.

A young woman who, as a child of 10 had stunned the musical world by making her solo debut on stage at the Royal Festival Hall in London with the Philharmonia Orchestra, was now posing for revealing photos and being “honoured” by the lads’ mag FHM as one of its World’s 100 Most Beautiful Women.

In February 1998, the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, the younger brother of the composer Andrew, gave a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos in which he bemoaned the decline of classical music and launched a thinly veiled attack on Vanessa-Mae. Modern audiences and the media, he said, were interested in classical music only if it were played by “semi-naked bimbo violinists”.

But while her transformation may not have pleased everyone, it did work. Between 1995 and 2003, Vanessa-Mae made 13 albums. By 2006, she was featuring on The Sunday Times Rich List as the wealthiest performer under 30, worth in excess of £32 million (Dh195.6m).

Later, Vanessa-Mae shrugged off the criticisms. “I didn’t give two hoots what they thought,” she said. “I wasn’t frightened to be the first to do something new. When I first came onto the scene, what I did was unheard of. Now crossover has established itself as a genre and I’m very proud of that.”

And it’s the success – and the money – generated by Vanessa-Mae’s “violin techno-acoustic fusion”, rather than pure skiing talent, that has put her on the start line in Sochi, where she will be competing for Thailand, a nation not known for its winter sports scene.

“Before I started ski training, I thought my music career was tough – the constant treadmill of touring and promoting and the hours of practice,” she told a British newspaper recently. “But it’s nothing like as hard as being an athlete. In music, raw talent and luck can get you a long way, but in sport you can’t cut any corners.”

To achieve her dream of competing in the Winter Olympics, Vanessa-Mae has spent the past four years training in Zermatt, Switzerland, where, since 2009, she has shared a home with her boyfriend, the French wine dealer Lionel Catalan. Though she’s a British citizen, there was no way that she could have won a place on the British team. Instead, she has embraced the Thai roots of her father, Vorapong Vanakorn.

She almost didn’t make it, failing in a series of nine races in four countries to notch up the necessary qualifying points, which she finally bagged last month in a weekend of four races in Slovenia. “For much of the winter,” one commentator observed, “she had looked unlikely to make the cut.”

Now that she has, she will race as Vanessa Vanakorn.

“I wanted to compete for Thailand because there is a part of me which I have never celebrated – being Thai,” Vanessa-Mae told a newspaper last year. “My father, like most Thais, has never skied, but he’s really excited about me doing this, as is the Thai Olympic Committee.”

Let’s hope that she remembers to dress appropriately. It’s chilly out on those Russian slopes.

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The biog

Name: Atheja Ali Busaibah

Date of birth: 15 November, 1951

Favourite books: Ihsan Abdel Quddous books, such as “The Sun will Never Set”

Hobbies: Reading and writing poetry

The specs

Engine: 1.5-litre turbo

Power: 181hp

Torque: 230Nm

Transmission: 6-speed automatic

Starting price: Dh79,000

On sale: Now

Tonight's Chat on The National

Tonight's Chat is a series of online conversations on The National. The series features a diverse range of celebrities, politicians and business leaders from around the Arab world.

Tonight’s Chat host Ricardo Karam is a renowned author and broadcaster who has previously interviewed Bill Gates, Carlos Ghosn, Andre Agassi and the late Zaha Hadid, among others.

Intellectually curious and thought-provoking, Tonight’s Chat moves the conversation forward.

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'Outclassed in Kuwait'
Taleb Alrefai, 
HBKU Press 

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box

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Company name: Letstango.com

Started: June 2013

Founder: Alex Tchablakian

Based: Dubai

Industry: e-commerce

Initial investment: Dh10 million

Investors: Self-funded

Total customers: 300,000 unique customers every month

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How to protect yourself when air quality drops

Install an air filter in your home.

Close your windows and turn on the AC.

Shower or bath after being outside.

Wear a face mask.

Stay indoors when conditions are particularly poor.

If driving, turn your engine off when stationary.

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If you go
Where to stay: Courtyard by Marriott Titusville Kennedy Space Centre has unparalleled views of the Indian River. Alligators can be spotted from hotel room balconies, as can several rocket launch sites. The hotel also boasts cool space-themed decor.

When to go: Florida is best experienced during the winter months, from November to May, before the humidity kicks in.

How to get there: Emirates currently flies from Dubai to Orlando five times a week.
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Stars: Suriya, Bobby Deol, Disha Patani, Yogi Babu, Redin Kingsley
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Started: August 2020
Founder: Areej Selmi
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Sectors: Internet, e-commerce
Investments: Grants/private funding
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Name: HyperSpace
 
Started: 2020
 
Founders: Alexander Heller, Rama Allen and Desi Gonzalez
 
Based: Dubai, UAE
 
Sector: Entertainment 
 
Number of staff: 210 
 
Investment raised: $75 million from investors including Galaxy Interactive, Riyadh Season, Sega Ventures and Apis Venture Partners
MATCH INFO

Uefa Champions League semi-final:

First leg: Liverpool 5 Roma 2

Second leg: Wednesday, May 2, Stadio Olimpico, Rome

TV: BeIN Sports, 10.45pm (UAE)

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Engine: Direct injection 4-cylinder 1.4-litre
Power: 150hp
Torque: 250Nm
Price: From Dh139,000
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Scorecard

Scotland 220

K Coetzer 95, J Siddique 3-49, R Mustafa 3-35

UAE 224-3 in 43,5 overs

C Suri 67, B Hameed 63 not out

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1. Black holes are objects whose gravity is so strong not even light can escape their pull

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3. Large black holes can also be formed when smaller ones collide and merge

4. The biggest black holes lurk at the centre of many galaxies, including our own

5. Astronomers believe that when the universe was very young, black holes affected how galaxies formed

The specs

Engine: 1.6-litre 4-cyl turbo and dual electric motors

Power: 300hp at 6,000rpm

Torque: 520Nm at 1,500-3,000rpm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 8.0L/100km

Price: from Dh199,900

On sale: now


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