Slavka Kohout

{{Short description|American figure skating coach (1932–2024)}}

Slavka Kohout Button (December 14, 1932 – March 17, 2024) was an American figure skating coach and former competitor, best known for coaching five-time U.S. Champion Janet Lynn throughout her entire competitive career.

Early life

Kohout was born in Chicago to Czech parents. Her first coach was her father, a successful florist, who learned to skate from a book. Her mother was an artist.{{cite news |title=Slavka Button Obituary - Greenwich, CT |url=https://www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/greenwich-ct/slavka-button-11748000 |access-date=31 January 2025 |work=Dignity Memorial |language=en-us}}

Career

As a skater, Kohout was twice the Midwestern sectional senior ladies champion, and she won the bronze medal in the 1950 U.S. junior ladies championships. After turning professional, she was manager and head coach at the Wagon Wheel Ice Palace in Rockton, Illinois for 17 years. During that period, the Wagon Wheel rink—part of a larger resort complex—was one of the top figure skating training centers in the United States. Kohout coached not only Lynn but also 3-time U.S. champion Gordon McKellen, several other international competitors, and other skaters who have gone on to become prominent coaches or skating judges, such as Shepherd Clark, The 2017, 2018, 2019 World Figure & Fancy Skating Champion of World Figure Sport / "WFS", at which Kohout was an official, an honoree, and a 2015 World Figure Sport Hall of Fame inductee in Lake Placid, NY.

Slavka Kohout was inducted into the United States Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 2002.

Personal life

Kohout left Wagon Wheel when she married Dick Button in 1973. They had children Emily and Edward together, but subsequently divorced{{cite book |first=Scott |last=Hamilton |author-link=Scott Hamilton (figure skater) |title=Landing It |url=https://archive.org/details/landingitmylifeo00hami |url-access=registration |isbn=1-57566-466-6 |year=1999|publisher=Kensington Books }} in part because of Button's then-closeted homosexuality.{{cite news |title=Olympic figure skater, commentator Dick Button dies at 95 |url=https://www.espn.com/olympics/figureskating/story/_/id/43631465/olympic-figure-skater-commentator-dick-button-dies-95 |access-date=31 January 2025 |agency=The Associated Press |publisher=ESPN |date=30 January 2025|quote=Button is survived by his longtime partner, Dennis Grimaldi...}} In later years, Kohout continued to coach in the New York City area.

References