This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2019) |
Roni is the Olympic mascot of the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, created by Don Moss. The mascot is a raccoon, which is a familiar animal from the mountainous region of the Adirondacks where Lake Placid is situated. The name Roni comes from the word racoon in Iroquoian, the language of the native people from the region of the State of New York and Lake Placid, and was chosen by Lake Placid school children.[1]
Roni | |
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Mascot of the 1980 Winter Olympics (Lake Placid) | |
Creator | Don Moss |
Significance | A raccoon |
Part of his face and the black-and-white mask around his eyes are a nod to the sunglasses and hat worn by competitors. There are different versions of Roni, practising different sports and the five colours of the Olympic rings can be found on some versions.[1]
Lake Placid had a live four-legged mascot, a raccoon called Rocky. Before the Games started he was controversially replaced by a costumed human mascot renamed Roni.[1]
Serving as the face of the XIII Olympic Winter Games, Hawaiian-American Kriss Lambert performed as Roni Raccoon attired head-to-toe inside a 2-meter (6'6") raccoon outfit. Kriss was filmed doing every event - except ski jump - prior to the Olympic Games, with the taped footage televised during the Games to introduce each event. Lambert also popularly represented the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics at major events such as the Macy's Day Parade, Super Bowl XIV, etc. in lead-up to the Olympic Games.[2] He was rinkside generating excitement during the men's ice hockey medal-round game between four-time defending gold medalists USSR and hosts USA which the USA won 4-3 (the so-called "Miracle on Ice" - an iconic highlight of the Games).
Notes
edit- ^ a b c Olympic Winter Games Mascots from Innsbruck 1976 to Sochi 2014 Olympic.org Archived 2014-06-03 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Hale, Don (February 25, 1980). [https://www.csmonitor.com/1980/0225/022526.html "Roni Raccoon wins 'gold medal' in fun". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved February 22, 2020.