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You are at:Home»Sports»Pioneer Sports Snapper to continue working at the age of 81
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Pioneer Sports Snapper to continue working at the age of 81

May 19, 2025007 Mins Read
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George Torr

BBC News, Derby

Eileen Langsley Eileen Langsle at the Barcelona Olympic Games in 1992Eileen Langsley

Eileen – Photo here at the Barcelona Olympic Games in 1992 – covered 14 summer and winter games throughout her career

For almost five decades, Eileen Langsle photographed some of the biggest sporting events in the world.

World championships in figure skating and gymnastics at the first women’s rugby world cup in 1991 with 14 Olympic games, she had a stellar career.

But he came with great challenges.

The 81 -year -old man of Bakewell, Derbyshire, told the BBC that she had faced sexism and misogyny throughout her career and regularly found herself as the only woman at sporting events when she started.

She says that her inspiration to start her career in photography in 1976 was a lack of representation for women in sports coverage.

Eileen's image was now sitting on an orange sofa. She has clear hair.

Eileen said that she had photographed all sports outside the car races

Before his Jet-Set work takes him to the four corners of the globe, Eileen, a passionate athlete and EP teacher at the King Edward VII school in Sheffield, wanted to inspire her students with photos of other professional sports.

But she was amazed to see that there was practically not to show them.

“Trying to find a woman participating in a professional sport without a sexist inclination that was few,” she said.

“I had a large wall in the locker room that I wanted to fill in photos so that girls could be inspired.”

It was from this moment that Eileen decided to do it herself.

She took a camera and learned the profession with useful advice from her husband, admitting that she knew “absolutely nothing” on photography.

Eileen Langsley A black and white image of girls playing netballEileen Langsley

Eileen started locally to try to get more women’s sport coverage – which included this netball match in Chesterfield in the late 1970s

Eileen attributes to the newspapers Sheffield Star and Sheffield Telegraph for his big break in the industry, guaranteeing his first backward advance with a photo of a gymnast of the city in the late 1970s.

“It was refreshing to make them support me at this stage when I encountered so many obstacles,” she recalls.

Eileen Langlsey Photo in black and white from Eileen firing Wimbledon from the portico photo in 1984.Eileen Langlsey

Eileen – Photo here in Wimbledon in 1984 – said that some men had accepted it because of the merit of his work when others did not do it

With the work that rolls, both in local newspapers and specialized magazines, she installed her own photo agency and exchanged the classroom in the dark room to go full time.

Although he was overthrown for accreditation for the Moscow Olympic Games in 1980, her work borne fruit and she became the official photographer of the International Gymnastics Federation in 1983 which saw her fly away in different parts of the world.

She was a founding member of Women’s Sports Foundation in the United Kingdom – now named Women in Sport – and was their photographer for several years as well as press and public relations management.

Eileen said at this stage that she worked outside the United Kingdom more than she was back home.

However, she has always been faced with challenges in an industry dominated by men.

Eileen Langsley Eileen seated on a stool with her camera. She wears an Olympic media vest.Eileen Langsley

Eileen – Photo here covering the Seoul Olympic Games in 1988 – was a pioneer for industry women

“People in Great Britain were quite reluctant to use a woman in my field at the time,” she said.

“The reaction that I have always obtained was” women do not know enough about sport “, which was really ironic because I knew more about sport than on photography at the time.

“It was not easy, the men were divided into two groups.

“A group was great and accepted very in me the work I produced, but another larger group really felt women encroaching in what they considered a man of a man.

“I wanted to join an agency from the start so that I could have this support and I remember that one told me that they would never use a woman.

“I went alone and I did well, but it was a lonely path to walk.”

Eileen Langsley An image of Olga Gontar. She wears a white leotard and has her leg extended above her head, balancing a red and black ball on the sole of her foot. Eileen Langsley

This image of the Belarusian individual rhythm gymnast Olga Gontar in the 1990s was shot by Eileen on the film

Eileen remembers an athletics event that she covered in Crystal Palace in London in the late 1970s when she noticed a group of chattering male photographers. When they spotted it, they became silent and avoided it for the rest of the event.

Eileen has also decided to change the perception and the way in which female athletes were represented on the camera – focusing on their talent and athletics rather than their appearance.

But she received requests for publications to take photos of “sexualized” female athletes.

“I did a lot of enemies at the time to refuse to do it, they thought I was less professional,” she said.

“I told a man once what he would think if it was their 14 -year -old daughter on the beam (gymnast)? They wouldn’t like him.”

Eileen also remembers an era in Dublin photographing the Women’s Hockey World Cup in 1994 when the shutters of her colleagues began to compete when a gust of wind revealed players’ underwear in their pre-match group.

Despite the sexism and misogyny she faced, she continued and won prices for her work.

Eileen Langsley three boys playing rugby. One holds the ball in dark green while two opponents in green and white hoops try to tackle it.Eileen Langsley

Eileen won the International Sports Press Association Prize for this image of three boys playing rugby in 1982

Eileen Langsley, a rhythmic gymnast, makes the divisions with a bullet in her hand holding a hoop while two other gymnasts holding their own balls through the hoop. The image is in black and white.Eileen Langsley

Eileen also won a prize for this photo of two rhythmic gymnasts in 1983

She won a joint UK Sports Photo of the Year prize for her image, “ Tight Squee ‘, which represents two rhythmic gymnasts crossing a single hoop in 1983, a photo of which she is very proud.

Eileen also won an international prize for her image of three boys playing rugby the same year.

If there is a big sporting event, it is likely that Eileen was at the center of capturing everything.

She was there for Torvill and Dean’s historical figure skating in Sarajevo in 1984.

Eileen had a lot of work from figure skating at the time and said it was “very special” to capture the famous gold of the Pair of Nottingham.

Eileen Langsley Torvill and Dean on the podium with their gold medals. They wear a matching purple number and hold a bouquet of flowersEileen Langsley

Eileen was there to capture Jane Torvill from Nottingham and Christopher Dean to win Olympic gold in Sarajevo in 1984

But it was not entirely navigated.

Behind the scenes, which Eileen said that moving to the Olympic site – in what is now the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina – was a “nightmare” and she still remembers “aggressive security” in the old Yugoslav country.

“Nowadays, you get enormous support from the British Olympic Association, but at the time, you were alone,” she said.

Eileen Langsley Eileen at work with other photographers around herEileen Langsley

Eileen represented here at the front capturing the action at the Paralympic Games in Barcelona in 1992

She then covered 13 other summer and winter games and said that Paris 2024 was “special” because she believes that it will be the last Olympic games she covers.

“I can’t see myself doing another, this work is physical and with plane trips, I think Paris is my last,” she said.

“I look back and Super Saturday in London 2012 was a highlight and when I captured winning moments with our Olympic gymnasts Olympic medals, these are great memories, incredible.”

Getty images athlete in front of the Eiffel Tower turned on at night with an Olympic brand on each side of hundreds of peopleGetty images

Eileen thinks that Paris 2024 will be her last Olympic games to photograph

However, she says that she does not intend to place her camera.

She aims at the European Championships for Figure Skating on the road in Sheffield and the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, both in 2026.

“I aim to continue as long as possible,” she said.

“There are many locally that I am looking to do, retirement is not something I look at.”

Eileen today in her to harden with her camera.

Eileen is still working and promises to continue with more local sporting events

Looking at the industry now, Eileen said it was a “completely different world” when she started.

“It has been great in recent years to see so many women go through sports photography and work at the highest level,” she said.

“Their male counterparts respect them and admire the work they do.

“There is a huge harvest of fantastic women in sports photography.”

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