Suzy Chaffee came into the world in Rutland, Vermont, in late November of 1946, the sort of date that promises winter will always be close at hand. Her mother strapped skis to her feet at age three, an initiation with the inevitability of heredity: the woman teaching her had nearly made the 1940 Olympic team. Her brother Rick would grow into an Olympian, too. But Suzy was the one the cameras couldn’t forget—because she didn’t just ski fast; she skied like she was cutting a signature into the side of the mountain.
As a teenager she went west to the University of Denver, and at nineteen tried out for—then made—the first U.S. Ski Team. No long audition, no warming up to destiny: she slipped into the role like a born contrarian wearing speed and risk as accessories. She finished fourth in the downhill at the 1966 World Championships, smashed herself up at Vail in ’67 but still ended that season ranked tenth in the world at her discipline, sixteenth overall. By the winter of ’68 she was captain of the U.S. women—the anointed one, the favorite headed into Grenoble.
She finished 28th, blamed the wrong wax, and still walked away a global sensation. That silver skin-tight racing suit didn’t just hug her—it introduced her. She retired from alpine racing that same year, but she didn’t retire from movement; she simply changed languages. The mountains became a stage and Chaffee became the queen of freestyle ballet skiing, twirling through the early ’70s as a three-time world champion, turning athleticism into choreography and rebellion into grace.
New York found her next: Ford Models snapped her up. Then Madison Avenue crowned her “Suzy Chapstick,” a nickname that fused itself to pop culture so tightly that even now you can hear the echo of those commercials. She sold lip balm, yes—but really she sold possibility. A woman flying down a hill, hair back, eyes forward, alive to her own velocity.
And off the slopes? Another mountain to climb. Chaffee became the first woman to sit on the board of the U.S. Olympic Committee—no small intrusion into an old boys’ kingdom. She fought for Title IX, hammering open doors for girls who would one day race faster and dream bigger because she’d muscled the hinges loose. She served on the President’s Council on Physical Fitness under four presidents, a rare athlete who learned how to bend policy the way she once bent her knees into a carved turn.
She even helped co-found the Native Voices Foundation in 1996, pushing to create Olympic opportunities for Native American athletes. It wasn’t charity; it was a correction.
In the late ’70s, gossip swirled about an affair with Ted Kennedy. Suzy claimed the rumors helped the Amateur Sports Act of 1978 get through Congress—another example of her sliding into chaos and somehow converting it into forward motion. Public heat never stopped her; it simply melted more space.
Hollywood called too, as it does for women who look both athletic and mythic. Ski Lift to Death, Fire and Ice, endorsement deals with Revlon, Dannon, and Seagram’s—Chaffee moved through the media the way she moved through gates: quick, precise, utterly herself. She showed up on the game show Bullseye in 1982, showing once again that she’d wander into any arena if it looked interesting enough.
By 2008 she was running for city council in Sedona, Arizona. She lost, but losing has never been the punctuation mark of her life. She’s spent decades inventing new versions of herself, each one slipping out of the old like snow falling off a roof: racer, model, activist, performer, politician, evergreen icon.
She will always be “Suzy Chapstick” to some, but the truth is far larger. She was a woman who took the narrow line down a mountain and widened it. She turned skiing into story, advocacy into motion, life into a series of descents that left the air trembling behind her.
