SKIER

Annie Famose

1944 - Today

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Annie Famose (born 16 June 1944) is a French former Alpine skier. She was a member of the dominating French alpine skiing national team in the 1960s. She won two medals at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, as well as three medals (including one gold in slalom) at the 1966 World Championships in Portillo, Chile. Famose was a versatile all-event skier who was a threat to win races in any discipline, but she excelled in the slalom. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Annie Famose is the 144th most popular skier (down from 142nd in 2019), the 4,953rd most popular biography from France (up from 5,031st in 2019) and the 8th most popular French Skier.

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Among SKIERS

Among skiers, Annie Famose ranks 144 out of 817Before her are Tora Berger, Toni Nieminen, Erika Hess, Miran Tepeš, Ossi Reichert, and Edy Reinalter. After her are Rauno Miettinen, Blanca Fernández Ochoa, Olga Pall, Johann Mühlegg, Andrus Veerpalu, and Jari Puikkonen.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1944, Annie Famose ranks 611Before her are Michael Aschbacher, Miroslav Poljak, Didier Couécou, Fannie Flagg, Dieter Grahn, and Russi Taylor. After her are Booker T. Jones, Eddy Ottoz, Manuel Lapuente, Mick Avory, Nora Astorga, and Ross Collinge.

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In France

Among people born in France, Annie Famose ranks 4,953 out of 6,770Before her are Marouane Chamakh (1984), Fritz Keller (1913), Roger Gautier (1922), Benjamin Mendy (1994), Bruno Gollnisch (1950), and Patrick Fiori (1969). After her are James Lighthill (1924), Erick Mombaerts (1955), Laurent Jalabert (1968), Emmanuelle Bercot (1967), Henri Emmanuelli (1945), and Marc Bouissou (1931).

Among SKIERS In France

Among skiers born in France, Annie Famose ranks 8Before her are Marielle Goitschel (1945), Émile Allais (1912), Henri Oreiller (1925), François Bonlieu (1937), Christine Goitschel (1944), and Luc Alphand (1965). After her are Léo Lacroix (1937), Perrine Pelen (1960), Michèle Jacot (1952), Isabelle Mir (1949), Régine Cavagnoud (1970), and Carole Merle (1964).