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Nina Rindt
Finnish fashion model (born )
Nina Rindt | |
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Nina Madeline Rindt (néeLincoln, also formerly known as Nina Hood, Lady Bridport; born ) is a Finnish former fashion model, Formula One motor racing personality, and member (by marriage) of the British aristocracy.[1]
She is best known for being the wife, and later the widow, of German-born, Austrian-raised race car driver Jochen Rindt (–), who was posthumously awarded the World Drivers' Championship for after dying in a practice crash the day before that year's Italian Grand Prix.[1][2]
Early life and career
Rindt was born in [1][3][4] Her father, Curt Lincoln,[1][4][5][6] was a wealthy Finnish amateur race car driver[1][4][6] and tennis player,[1][4] who made one Davis Cup appearance for Finland.[7][8] Her brother, Lars, also represented Finland in tennis, more than once.[1]
After beginning her education in Finland, Rindt was sent to boarding school in Montreux, Switzerland, to complete it.[1][4] She then started a course in haute couture in Brussels, but abandoned it when her relationship with Jochen Rindt became 'official'.[9] An "extraordinary beauty",[4] she chose instead to begin a career as a fashion model in London, Paris and New York,[4] primarily to maintain her independence from Jochen Rindt.[9]
As a model, she gained a prized reputation, and posed for leading magazines such as Vogue, Life and Look.[9] Her friends in the fashion industry included Twiggy,[4][10] one of the first international supermodels and a fashion icon of the s.[11]
Relationship with Jochen Rindt
In the early s, Jochen Rindt became acquainted with Curt Lincoln, as they were both competing in Formula Junior car racing.[6] His first encounter with Lincoln's daughter Nina, however, was at Zürs, a ski resort in the Vorarlberg, Austria, in [9] He was twenty one, and she was twenty.[9] Before long, Rindt was taking a greater interest in Nina than in Curt.[6]
During Jochen Rindt's Formula One career, which began at the Austrian Grand Prix in ,[13] Nina Rindt was often seen and photographed in the pit lane at Grand Prix race meetings.[1][10]
According to Amanda McLaren, daughter of Bruce McLaren, Jochen Rindt's first Formula One teammate (at Cooper in [14]):
"In the '50s and '60s, the wives and the girlfriends were really important to the team as they made the tea and coffee, and made all the sandwiches, as there was no on-site corporate hospitality. They also did all the time keeping and lap scoring."[15]
Nina Rindt is now synonymous with the Universal Genève Compax model chronograph wristwatch she used to wear trackside on Grand Prix weekends.[2] It had a 'panda dial' (white main dial with black subdials) and a Bund-type watch strap.[2][16][17][18]
Rindt was also photographed many times in the pits with a bright orange Omega stopwatch.[2] However, she was a private person, who never posed for trackside photographs,[1][19] and seldom gave interviews.[1][19][20]
The Rindts were married in [21] As a married couple, they lived on the shores of Lake Geneva, Switzerland. They also became the parents of a daughter, Natasha (sometimes spelled Natascha[6][22]), in [4]
At the end of the Formula 1 season, when Jochen Rindt became the only posthumous World Driver's Champion, there was no official trophy to be awarded. In November of that year, however, Jackie Stewart, the champion, presented Nina Rindt with the Champion Challenge Trophy, which was always given to the champion driver.[23][24]
According to Oliver Owen of The Observer, "[t]he presentation remains one of motor racing's most poignant moments."[24]
Later life
In the s, Nina Rindt was married briefly to Phillip Martyn, and her married surname became Martyn.[5][25][26]
Born in New Zealand and raised in England, Phillip Martyn was "the world's first self-professed professional backgammon player", and a friend of Jackie Stewart's.[25] In the early s, as the ambience of the international backgammon competition circuit morphed from ‘English Country House’ to an international jet set, he moved to Lausanne in Switzerland.[26]
While married to Martyn, Rindt gave birth to a second daughter, Tamara, but the marriage did not last.[26]
On 5 December , Rindt was married a third time, to Alexander Nelson Hood, 4th Viscount Bridport of Cricket St. Thomas,[5] a British investment banker,[27] and her married surname became Hood.[5] She was styled Viscountess Bridport of Cricket St. Thomas,[5] and, less formally, Nina Hood, Lady Bridport.[1] In , she gave birth to a third child, the Hon Anthony Nelson Hood.[5] She and Viscount Bridport were divorced in [5]
Since that divorce, Rindt has generally avoided the public eye.[1] In , however, she and Natasha were present when the city of Graz, Jochen Rindt's home town, unveiled a bronze plaque at his childhood home in remembrance of him, on the 30th anniversary of his death.[6] A decade later, in , she attended the opening in Vienna of a photo exhibition about Jochen Rindt, entitled "Formula 1's first rock star".[28]
More recently, on 7 October , Rindt, her daughter Natasha and granddaughter Sophia, and Jochen Rindt's half brother Uwe Eisleben, represented the Rindt family at the unveiling of a plaque at the inauguration of Jochen-Rindt-Platz (transl.Jochen Rindt Place (or Square)), in the newly developing district of Reininghaus in Graz.[22][29][30] The ceremony was part of a commemorative event, "Jochen Rindt - The World Champion from Graz", which included a reception at an exhibition, "Jochen Rindt, Mythos, Graz" at the Graz Museum[de], also attended by the guests of honour.[29]
Tributes
In , La Gazzetta dello Sport, an Italian sports newspaper, named Rindt as the most beautiful Formula One wife of all time.[1]
As of ,[28] and also ,[31] the dessert menu at Kosmos[fi], a highly regarded traditional Finnish restaurant in Helsinki,[32][33] included "Chilled Chocolate Cheesecake Nina Lincoln’s style".[28][31] The cheesecake's recipe had previously been included in Suuressa leivontakirja (transl.The Big Baking Book) published in by Kotiliesi, a Finnish family and women's magazine.[34]
In the s and s, Rindt has been described in English language publications as a "secret", "underrated", and "forgotten" style icon.[1][20] She has also been praised as having a "cool chic avant-garde look",[35] and as being " kind of too cool for words."[20] According to one admiring observer:
"You could easily recognize Nina by her hats! She had the art of pairing her famous green Fedora capeline, a Greek sailor's cap or a scarf, with a mini skirt, flared trousers with simple tops: rolled-up shirts, graphic T-shirts or Tunisian tops. Flanked by wide glasses and a few jewels, we easily spy out her slender silhouette and her super elegant look. A cool chic style that hasn't aged a bit, quite the contrary!"[35]
Additionally, the now-classic Universal Genève Compax model of chronograph that Rindt used to wear trackside has come to be nicknamed the 'Nina Rindt watch' in her honour.[2][16][17][18] Soon after that nickname had caught on (and had led to a surge in demand for the chronograph), its 'reverse panda' counterpart (black main dial with white subdials) was given, in the lexicon of watch collectors, the corresponding nickname 'Evil Nina'.[17][36][37]
As of , Rindt still had her Compax chronograph in her possession; at least at that time, its main hands were non-standard.[38]
References
- ^ abcdefghijklmnoO, Darcy (6 October ). "Nina Rindt (Lincoln) - Formula One's Forgotten Style Icon | Revised ". Rocks Off Magazine. Retrieved 7 April
- ^ abcdeRiche, Rhonda (24 July ). "Woman Of Substance: Five Ways In Which Nina Rindt Is The Original Watch Influencer". Watchonista. Retrieved 7 April
- ^Kärkkäinen, Juha (). "Lincoln, Curt (–)". Suomen kansallisbiografia (in Finnish). Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura. ISSN
- ^ abcdefghiFabbri, Federico M. (11 April ). "Vintage Formula 1 WAGs". Car&vintage | Land | Sea | Air. Retrieved 29 September
- ^ abcdefgHammond, Peter W.; Cokayne, George E. (). The Complete Peerage or a History of the House of Lords and All its Members From the Earliest Times. Vol.XIV: Addenda & Corrigenda (Rev. and enl.ed.). Stroud, Glos: Sutton Publishing. p. ISBN.
- ^ abcdefDiepraam, Mattijs (17 March ). "THE CHAMPIONS / Jochen Rindt Fearless until the end". . Retrieved 29 September
- ^"Davis Cup - Players - Curt Lincoln - Finland". . Retrieved 29 September
- ^"Davis Cup - Players". . Retrieved 6 May
- ^ abcdeMénard, Pierre (28 June ). "Cœurs Brisés (3): Nina et Jochen Rindt" [Broken Hearts (3): Nina and Jochen Rindt]. Classic Courses (in French). Retrieved 7 October
- ^ abMessynessy (6 September ). "Forgotten Vintage Style Icon du Jour: Nina Rindt". Messy Nessy Chic. Retrieved 29 September
- ^"The face of '66". BBC News. 29 July Retrieved 1 May
- ^Jenkinson, Denis (7 July ). "Austrian Grand Prix". Motor Sport (October ): Archived from the original on 16 January Retrieved 16 January
- ^David, Dennis (5 May ). "Jochen Rindt". Sports Car Digest. Retrieved 4 October
- ^Turner, Mandy (8 August ). "Interview: McLaren ambassador, Amanda McLaren". Drive. Retrieved 4 October
- ^ ab"Found: Tropical Universal Genève "Nina Rindt" Compax Chronograph". Hodinkee. 7 February Retrieved 7 April
- ^ abcStockton, Michael (7 May ). "#TBT Universal Geneve Compax "Evil Nina"". Fratello Watches. Retrieved 30 September
- ^ abM, Alessandro (28 March ). "Is The Universal Geneve Nina Rindt Better Than A Paul Newman Rolex Daytona?". Italian Watch Spotter. Retrieved 7 April
- ^ abDuisberg, Rich (11 February ). "Formula One WAGS - the Seventies had it". MotorPunk. Retrieved 29 September
- ^ abcDuggan, Leeann (22 August ). "Secret Style Icon: Nina Rindt". Rookie magazine. Retrieved 7 April
- ^Eronen, Leena (). "Ira Lincoln: Jochen Rindt on mukava vävypoika" [Ira Lincoln: Jochen Rindt is a nice son-in-law]. Hymy (in Finnish) (5): 2–4.
- ^ abOsten, Phillip van (8 October ). "Graz inaugurates its 'Jochen Rindt-Platz' with family and friends". . Retrieved 29 September
- ^Stewart, Jackie (). Winning Is Not Enough. London: Headline Publishing. p. ISBN.
- ^ abOwen, Oliver (7 January ). "The widow of F1 star Jochen Rindt receives his champion's trophy". The Observer. Retrieved 28 September
- ^ ab"Martyn, Philip Vivian (h 56)". The Old Shirburnian Society. 31 July Retrieved 29 September
- ^ abcDeyong, Lewis (6 August ). "Phillip Vyvian Martyn, ". The Gammon Press. Retrieved 29 September
- ^Kidd, Charles (). Debrett's Peerage & Baronetage (ed.). London: Debrett's. p. ISBN.
- ^ abcKiviniemi, Kirsikka (26 June ). "Miltä näyttää mystinen F1-kaunotar Nina Rindt nykyään?" [What does the mysterious F1 beauty Nina Rindt look like today?]. Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish). Retrieved 29 September
- ^ ab"Erster Platz für den Weltmeister" [First place for the world champion]. City of Graz (in German). 7 October Retrieved 30 September
- ^"Jochen Rindt Remembered". . Retrieved 30 September
- ^ ab"Our food". Ravintola Kosmos. Retrieved 4 October
- ^"Kosmos". World of Mouth. Retrieved 29 September
- ^"Kosmos". My Helsinki. Retrieved 29 September
- ^"[Article in Finnish]". Uudenkaupungin Sanomat[fi] (a Finnish newspaper) (in Finnish). 18 December Retrieved 29 September [Nina Rindt The recipe was published in in Kotilieden's Suuressa leivontakirja and it made it onto the restaurant Kosmos's dessert menu.]
- ^ ab"Shop the look: Viva Nina Rindt". Mastic Lifestyle. 28 April Retrieved 29 September
- ^Traina, Anthony (28 November ). "Hands-On: The Zenith Chronomaster Original Adds An 'Evil' El Primero With A New Black Dial". Hodinkee. Retrieved 30 September
- ^Gustafson, Erik (11 February ). "'Evil Nina' /01 Universal Genève Compax". Hairspring. Retrieved 30 September
- ^Kazan, Zach (8 September ). "It's in the Details: A Look Inside Alpha Hands, and the Discovery of Nina Rindt's "Nina Rindt" –". . Retrieved 4 October
Film sources
- Reuß, Eberhard (Director) (). Jochen Rindts letzter Sommer [Jochen Rindt's Last Summer] (Documentary) (in German). SWR.
External links
Media related to Nina Rindt at Wikimedia Commons