Gladys Chai von der Laage
Gladys Chai von der Laage (born Chai Ng Mei on 22 February 1953) is a German sports photographer of Malaysian Chinese origin. She has previously competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics as a Malaysian pentathlete.[1]
Early life
Chai Ng Mei was born on 22 February 1953 to Chinese parents.[1]
Career
When she was 14 years old, Chai won a silver in the high jump event of the 1967 Southeast Asian Games. She trained in West Germany in 1971.[2] The following year, she represented Malaysia in the women's pentathlon event of 1972 Summer Olympics but was forced to retire because of an injury.[1] Chai won four golds at the 1973 and 1975 SEA games; 2 each in high jump and pentathlon.[2] She finished in the ninth place at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games's women's high jump event and bagged another gold medal in the high jump event of 1979 Southeast Asian Games.[2][3]
Later she became a sports photographer and was awarded the German Athletics Association's Media Prize in 2016 after more than twenty years of her work in this profession.[4] The website Sports Reference cites her as "one of the world's best-known sports photographers".[1]
Personal life
Chai married a West German sports journalist Rolf von der Laage [de].[1] Together the couple established their own agency ASVOM. Laage died in 2006.[5]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Gladys Chai". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
- ^ a b c Teo, Aikman (3 June 2015). "Blazing a Golden Trail in the SEA Games". The Borneo Post. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
- ^ "Sean Yee ready for Commonwealth Games". The Star. 7 February 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
- ^ "Fotografin Gladys Chai von der Laage erhält DLV-Medienpreis 2016" [Photographer Gladys Chai von der Laage receives DLV Media Prize 2016] (in German). German Athletics Association. 18 February 2017. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
- ^ "Rolf von der Laage verstorben" [Rolf von der Laage died] (in German). German Athletics Association. 16 January 2006. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
External links
- Official website
- v
- t
- e
- 1966: Mary Rajamani
- 1967: Mary Rajamani
- 1968: Annie Goh Koon Gee
- 1969: Ong Mei Lin
- 1970: Radhika Menon
- 1971: Junaidah Aman
- 1972: Junaidah Aman
- 1973: Gladys Chai Ng Mei
- 1974: Rani Kaur
- 1975: Sylvia Ng Meow Eng
- 1976: Marina Chin Leng Sim
- 1977: Marina Chin Leng Sim
- 1978: Sylvia Ng Meow Eng
- 1979: Shirley Chow Chew Chun
- 1980: Katerina Ong Su Mei
- 1981: Helen Chow
- 1982: Zaiton Othman
- 1983: Norsham Yoon
- 1984: none awarded
- 1985: Nurul Huda Abdullah
- 1986: Nurul Huda Abdullah
- 1987: Nurul Huda Abdullah
- 1988: Nurul Huda Abdullah
- 1989: Nurul Huda Abdullah
- 1990: Lydia Kwah Poh Ling
- 1991: Lisa Kwan
- 1992: Lim Ai Lian
- 1993: Lisa Kwan
- 1994: Shalin Zulkifli
- 1995: Sharon Low Su Lin
- 1996: Shalin Zulkifli
- 1997: Shalin Zulkifli
- 1998: Shanti Govindasamy
- 1999: Nicol David
- 2000: Noraseela Mohd Khalid
- 2001: Shalin Zulkifli
- 2002: Shalin Zulkifli
- 2003: Nicol David
- 2004: Elaine Teo
- 2005: Nicol David
- 2006: Nicol David
- 2007: Nicol David
- 2008: Nicol David
- 2009: Nicol David
- 2010: Nicol David
- 2011: Pandelela Rinong
- 2012: Pandelela Rinong
- 2013: Nicol David
- 2014: Nicol David
- 2015: Pandelela Rinong
- 2016: Siti Rahmah Mohamed Nasir
- 2017: Cheong Jun Hoong
- 2018: Amy Kwan
- 2019/2020: Tan Cheong Min
- 2021: Pandelela Rinong
- 2022: Ng Joe Ee