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The Jewish tennis star banned by the Nazis who went on to play at Wimbledon

Author Felice Hardy on the extraordinary story of her grandmother, which she tells in her new book

July 6, 2023 13:44
14. Liesl tennis 2
8 min read

Wimbledon was always a special time in Felice Hardy’s home. Not only had her grandmother, Liesl, been an Austrian champion who had played several times in the tournament, but her mother Dorli was a British tennis star who also competed there.

What’s more, Liesl and Dorli even played a Wimbledon doubles match together — the first and only time a mother and daughter have ever played as a team during the world-famous grass court championship. Both Liesl and Dorli’s homes were covered with medals and awards and when the tournament was on and all the talk was of Martina Navratilova, Chrissie Evert and Billie Jean King, Liesl made sure they were at the Centre Court to see them.

“She loved Wimbledon and was always talking about tennis,” says Felice. “ She had all her cups from Austria — I have no idea how she got them out — and she particularly loved women’s tennis. My mother probably had better technique but my grandmother had this extraordinary stamina — she could outrun anyone.”

Felice always knew her grandmother was an exceptional woman. Not only had she risen to the top of a sport she only started playing properly in her twenties, she was still skipping to keep fit in her eighties.

But as travel journalist Felice reveals in The Tennis Champion Who Escaped the Nazis, published this week, all this is just the tip of her extraordinary story.

Her book tells tales of escape and death, of fortunes that rose and fell, of Nazis and survivor’s guilt, Jewish sporting prowess, Zionist freedom fighters and the precariousness of refugee life.

What’s more, almost all of it was kept secret from Felice, who was brought up as a “proper English girl”, her Jewish ancestry nothing more than a dirty secret about which she had to keep shtum.

When her grandmother died in 1989, the last of the Vienna family, Dorli having died prematurely young of cancer, Felice discovered a suitcase of photographs, letters and even newspaper cuttings full of stories she’d never been told about.