Rachel Parsons (figure skater)


Rachel Marie Parsons is an American former competitive ice dancer. With her brother Michael Parsons, she is the 2018 NHK Trophy bronze medalist and a four-time silver medalist on the ISU Challenger Series. Earlier in their career together, the Parsons won gold at the 2017 World Junior Championships, the 2016 Junior Grand Prix Final, and in the junior event at the 2017 U.S. Championships. They placed 4th at the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics.

Personal life

Rachel Parsons was born November 19, 1997 in Rockville, Maryland. She has two siblings – Michael and Katie. In 2016, she graduated from Magruder High School in Rockville, Maryland and currently attends Flagler College in St. Augustine, Florida. In August 2019, she came out as bisexual.
Parsons participated in the June 1, 2020 protests in Lafayette Square, after concluding that "sitting at home and being angry wasn’t doing enough. I wanted to protest. I wanted to physically be there." She was hit by a rubber bullet when federal security services opened fire. A photograph of Parsons was featured on the June 2, 2020 edition of the Washington Post.

Career

Early years

Rachel Parsons started skating at age six because she wanted to learn how to stand up on the ice. After joining the Wheaton Ice Skating Academy in June 2006, she started focusing solely on ice dance. With Kyle MacMillan, she won gold on the juvenile level at the 2009 U.S. Championships and then gold on the intermediate level at the 2010 U.S. Championships.
She teamed up with her older brother, Michael, in February 2010. They won gold on the novice level at the 2011 U.S. Championships and debuted on the Junior Grand Prix series in September 2011, placing 9th in Gdańsk, Poland. After taking the junior pewter medal at the 2012 U.S. Championships, they represented the United States at the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics, placing 4th. They were also selected for the 2012 World Junior Championships in Minsk, Belarus, where they finished 15th.
Competing in the 2012–13 JGP series, the Parsons placed 6th in Linz, Austria, before taking bronze in Zagreb, Croatia.

2013–14 season

The Parsons obtained silver at both of their 2013–14 JGP assignments, which took place in Košice, Slovakia, and Ostrava, Czech Republic. They qualified for the JGP Final in Fukuoka, Japan, where they placed sixth. The duo won bronze at the junior level at the 2014 U.S. Championships and capped off their season with an 8th-place finish at the 2014 World Junior Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria.

2014–15 season

The Parsons medaled at both their 2014–15 JGP assignments, receiving bronze in Aichi, Japan, and silver in Zagreb, Croatia. They finished as the first alternates for the JGP Final and won silver on the junior level at the 2015 U.S. Championships. Concluding their season, they placed fourth at the 2015 World Junior Championships in Tallinn, Estonia.

2015–16 season: Junior World silver

During the 2015–16 JGP series, the Parsons were awarded gold in Bratislava, Slovakia, and Zagreb, Croatia. Competing in Barcelona, Spain, at their second JGP Final, the siblings took the bronze medal behind Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter and Alla Loboda / Pavel Drozd, having placed second in the short dance and fifth in the free. At the 2016 World Junior Championships in Debrecen, Hungary, they placed first in the short and second in the free, winning the silver medal behind McNamara/Carpenter.

2016–17 season: Junior World gold

Competing in their sixth JGP season, the Parsons were awarded gold in Yokohama, Japan, and Dresden, Germany, both times ahead of Russia's Anastasia Shpilevaya / Grigory Smirnov. In December 2016, they competed at the JGP Final in Marseille, France; ranked second in the short and first in the free, they won the title by a margin of 0.63 over Loboda/Drozd.
The following month, the Parsons would win their first junior national title at the 2017 U.S. Championships, over 11 points clear of the field. The siblings would cap off their undefeated season by winning the 2017 World Junior Championships; similar to the 2016–17 JGP Final, the Parsons won the event overall after placing second in the short and first in the free, earning an even narrower victory of 0.56 ahead of Loboda/Drozd. The Parsons earned personal bests in their combined total and free dance scores at their fifth trip to the Junior Championships.

2017–18 season: International senior debut

Moving to the senior level, the Parsons debuted at the Lake Placid Ice Dance International, winning the silver medal behind longtime rivals McNamara/Carpenter, who were also making their senior debut. They then took the silver medal at the 2017 CS Ondrej Nepela Trophy, their debut on the ISU Challenger series. Assigned to two Grand Prix events, they finished ninth at Skate America and seventh at the Rostelecom Cup. They then competed at a second Challenger event, the Golden Spin of Zagreb, where they finished eighth.
Competing at the senior level at the 2018 U.S. Championships, they placed fifth, and thus did not qualify for the U.S. Olympic team. They were instead sent to the 2018 Four Continents Championships, where they finished sixth.

2018–19 season: Final season

After a second straight silver medal at Lake Placid's summer ice dance event, the siblings competed in three straight Challenger events, winning consecutive silver medals at the Asian Open, Nebelhorn Trophy and Nepela Trophy. At their first Grand Prix event in Japan, the 2018 NHK Trophy, they won their first and only Grand Prix medal, a bronze. At the 2018 Internationaux de France, their second Grand Prix, they finished fifth. At the 2019 U.S. Championships, the Parsons placed sixth.
On April 2, 2019, Rachel announced on Instagram that she was retiring from figure skating following a lengthy struggle with an eating disorder. Her brother Michael intended to continue skating, and subsequently formed a new partnership with Caroline Green.

Programs

SeasonShort danceFree danceExhibition
2018–2019

  • Tango: Vuelvo al Sur
by Medialuna Tango Project
  • Tango: Tango Cha
by Sergio Belem

by The Cinematic Orchestra & Patrick Watson
2017–2018

  • Rhumba: Mambo Molly
by Mambo Molly
by Zucchero
  • Mambo: Congo Crazed
by Mambo Molly

  • Ghost Dances
  • * La Partida
by Victor Jara
  • * Sikuriadas
by Inti Illimani
  • * Quiaquenpita
by Inti Illimani
2016–2017

by Fergie, Q-Tip, GoonRock
by Lana Del Rey
  • Hip hop
  • Singing in the Rain
  • arranged by Sophia Sin, Alexander Goldstein

    by Selig
    by The Trammps
    with McNamara/Carpenter
    2015–2016

    • Waltz: Cinderella's Departure for the Ball

    by Sergei Prokofiev

    • La Malamada
    • Palabras y Vientoby
    by Medialuna Tango Project

    by U2
    2014–2015

    by Carlos Vives
    • Samba: Heart of the Wind
    by Robert Tree Cody

    by Riccardo Cocciante, Bruno Pelletier
    2013–2014

    by Jule Styne
    • Foxtrot: Funny Girl Overture
    • Quickstep: Funny Girl Overture
  • by Alexandre Desplat
    • Time Back
    by Bad Style
    2012–2013

    by Justin Timberlake, Madonna
    • Blues: Cyber Shanty Town Blues
    by Christian HipHop Factory
    • Hip hop: 4 Minutes
    by Justin Timberlake, Madonna

    by Charles Gounod
    • * Walpurgis Night
    • * Three Nymphs
    2011–2012
    • Psychedelic Sally
    by Eddie Jefferson

    by Thomas J. Bergersen
    • Enigmatic Soul
    by Thomas J. Bergersen
    2010–2011

    by Igor Stravinsky

    Competitive highlights

    GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix