Gwendal Peizerat


Gwendal Peizerat is a French former competitive ice dancer. With Marina Anissina, he is the 2002 Olympic champion, the 1998 Olympic bronze medalist, the 2000 World champion, and a six-time French national champion.

Personal life

Both of Gwendal Peizerat's parents were involved in figure skating, his father serving as the general secretary of the French federation and his mother in charge of a club in Lyon. His sister is two years older.
Peizerat holds a management degree from EMLYON Business School, a DEUG in materials science, and a :fr:Maîtrise |maîtrise in :fr:Sciences et techniques des activités physiques et sportives|STAPS from Claude Bernard University Lyon 1. He has two daughters, Shanelle, and Lilas. He released a single "Baby Rock" in 2014.

Skating career

Early years

Peizerat started skating at age four when he and his sister followed their parents to the ice rink. He went into ice dancing straight away. He was coached by Muriel Boucher-Zazoui since the age of six and throughout his entire career.
Boucher-Zazoui paired seven-year-old Peizerat with his first partner, French skater Marina Morel, who was the same age as him; Morel and Peizerat skated together for fourteen years. They won bronze at the 1989 World Junior Championships and then silver in 1991. Morel retired in 1992.

Partnership with Anissina

Following the end of his partnership with Morel, Peizerat responded to a letter he had received a few months earlier from Russian World Junior champion Marina Anissina, who chose him after watching competitions on video.
Anissina arrived in Lyon in February 1993 and wanted to take him to Russia but his family objected. She settled in France, focusing intensely on skating and insisting her partner, who was dividing his time between skating and his education, be equally focused on their career. Their first year together produced many quarrels and they came close to splitting up. Their coach Muriel Boucher-Zazoui, however, immediately felt it was a promising partnership, saying "They are like fire and ice".
Anissina and Peizerat were selected for the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer but her French citizenship was granted a few weeks too late. The Olympics, unlike most skating competitions, require both partners to be citizens of the country they are representing.
Anissina and Peizerat won the 1998 Olympic bronze medal and 1998 and 1999 World silver medals behind Anjelika Krylova and Oleg Ovsyannikov. The Russians retired due to injury and Anissina and Peizerat then developed a rivalry with the Italians Barbara Fusar-Poli and Maurizio Margaglio. The French won the 2000 European and World Championships.
In 2001, Anissina and Peizerat won European and World silver behind the Italians but surged past them in 2002 to reclaim their European title and become the Olympic Champions. At the 2002 Olympics, they led after the compulsory dances and the original dance. Their free dance, "Liberty", mixed music with sections from the famed freedom speech by Martin Luther King Jr.; a 5-4 split of the judges' panel had them in first place in this segment ahead of Irina Lobacheva and Ilia Averbukh, and they became the first French ice dancers to win the Olympic gold medal.
After the Olympics, Anissina and Peizerat retired from competition but continued skating together for many years in shows around the world. During their career, they represented the club Lyon TSC. Their signature move was Anissina lifting Peizerat off the ice, switching the traditional gender roles in lifts.
Peizerat was named a Chevalier of the National Order of Merit in 1998 and a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 2003. He has done some choreography for other skaters.

Post-skating career

In 2003, Peizerat founded a consulting firm, Soléus. He has also worked for Eurosport, interviewing athletes.
In 2010, Peizerat was elected regional councillor on the list of the Socialist Party in the Rhone Alpes region and was subsequently appointed Councillor Delegate in charge of sports in the Regional Executive headed by Jean-Jack Queyranne.

Programs

With Anissina

SeasonOriginal danceFree danceExhibition
1993–1994


by Osvaldo Farrés

  • Borrasca
by Ottmar Liebert

by Hugues Le Bars
----
1994–1995
by Louis Prima

  • Tango
by Astor Piazolla

by Scorpions
----
  • J'en ai Marre
by Hugues Le Bars
1995–1996

  • Ay Mi Sombrero
by Genaro Monreal

  • Latin mix
by Xavier Cugat

1996–1997
  • Docteur Petiot
by Michel Portal

  • Ahla Leila
by Muhammad Sultan

  • Kozachok
----
performed by Brenda Lee
1997–1998

performed by Dana Gillespie
Romeo and Juliet
by Sergei Prokofiev:
  • The Montagues and the Capulets
  • Death of Juliet
  • Time To Say Goodbye
  • performed by Sarah Brightman, Andrea Bocelli
    1998–1999

    by Aram Khachaturian
    ----
    by Eugen Doga
    The Man in the Iron Mask
    by Nick Glennie-Smith:
    • Heart of a King
    • Surrounded
  • Time To Say Goodbye
  • performed by Sarah Brightman, Andrea Bocelli
    1999–2000

    • Black Machine
    by Jazz Machine
    • Feeling the Passion
    by Latin Drums
    • Tres Deseos
    by Gloria Estefan
    ----
    • Black Machine
    by Jazz Machine
    • Nostalgia de Palmeras
    by Celia Cruz
    • Tres Deseos
    by Gloria Estefan
    Carmina Burana
    by Carl Orff:
    • O Fortuna imperatrix munda
    • Fortune plango vulnera
  • Danse mon Esmeralda

  • performed by Garou
    2000–2001

    • Foxtrot: More
    by Nat King Cole
    • Quickstep: Dancing Fool
    ----
    • Quickstep: Mr Pinstripe Suit
    by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
    • Foxtrot: More
    by Nat King Cole
    • Quickstep
    Beethoven's Last Night by Trans-Siberian Orchestra:
    • Overture
    • Ode to Joy
    • Dreams of Candlelight
    • Beethoven
  • Susanna
  • by VOF de Kunst
    2001–2002

    • Flamenco: Malagua
    • Tango de Guell
    • Flamenco: Malagua
  • Non Merci

  • by Jean-Claude Petit
    • Canone Inverso
    by Ennio Morricone
    • Non Merci
  • Susanna
  • by VOF de Kunst

    With Morel

    Competitive highlights

    With Anissina

    With Morel