From movie stars to doctors, what do Olympic stars do after retirement?
The Paris 2024 Olympics, set to take place from July 26 to August 11, will be the 33rd edition of the Summer Olympics.
The quadrennial event acts as a platform for thousands of athletes across the globe to compete for the Olympic medal. However, due to the strenuous training and fitness regimens, Olympians end their sporting careers far before most people stop working.
Many who have succeeded in bagging the top prize have chosen several paths after drawing the curtain on their sporting careers.
Here’s a look at some Olympic stars who became movie actors, and had flourishing careers after their time at the Games:
Eric Heiden (Five-time speed skating Olympic gold medallist)
Eric Heiden won all five speed skating gold medals at the 1980 Games. He became a professional cyclist and raced in the 1986 Tour de France. He later attended Stanford medical school and became an orthopaedic surgeon. He was the team physician for the US Olympic Speedskating Team for three editions.
Sonja Henie (Three-time figure skating Olympic gold medallist)
Sonja Henie won three figure skating golds between 1928 and 1936. The Norwegian parlayed her success on skates into a contract with Twentieth Century Fox. Her draw was so great that during the 1940s she was earning around $2 million a year, making her one of the world’s highest earning women.
Michelle Kwan (Two Olympic medals in figure skating)
Michelle Kwan took silver in figure skating in 1998, then won bronze in 2002. Kwan penned a children’s book and an autobiography and also appeared on The Simpsons and Family Guy. Since 2006, Kwan has also served as a public diplomacy ambassador for the US State Department.
Tenley Albright (Two Olympic medals in figure skating)
Tenley Albright won a figure skating silver in 1952, then followed it up with a gold in 1956. She went to medical school and was in her undergraduate work at Radcliffe when she won her gold in 1956. She later went to Harvard Medical School, became a general surgeon in Boston and conducted blood plasma research at Harvard.
1980 US Hockey team (1980 Olympic gold)
The 1980 US Hockey team toppled the invincible Soviet squad in the ‘Miracle on Ice’ en route to a gold medal. Twelve of the 20 members of the team eventually made it to the NHL- Neal Broten won a Stanley Cup, was the first American to score 100 points in a season while Ken Morrow racked up four Stanley Cup wins.