Showing posts with label Marie-Claude Beaumont. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marie-Claude Beaumont. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 September 2020

Renault 5 Ladies' Monte Carlo Grand Prix support race, 1975

 


  1. Marie-Claude Beaumont (France)

  2. Christine Beckers (Belgium)

  3. Ivana Giustri (Italy)


Gabriel Konig (Ireland)

Yvette Fontaine (Belgium)

Martine de la Grandrive (France)

Judy Witter (South Africa)

“Biche” (Michele Petit) (France)

Susy Raganelli (Italy)

Maggie Anderson (UK)

Eeva Heinonen (Finland)

Paula Murphy (USA)


Twelve of the world’s best female drivers assembled in Monaco in 1975 for a one-make Renault 5 race, supporting the Monaco Grand Prix.


Renault used the event to promote both the Renault 5 Turbo itself and its associated one-make series held across Europe. Ladies’ races had acted as supports for the Monaco event before but this was one of the biggest and most competitive.


All of the invited women were experienced in motorsport and several had at least some involvement with Renault or the series sponsor, Elf. Eventual winner Marie-Claude Beaumont spent most of the season racing for the Ecurie Elf sportscar team and Britain’s Maggie Anderson was one of the first racewinners in the UK Renault 5 series.


Yvette Fontaine and Christine Beckers were highly accomplished touring car racers. Gabriel Konig had many years of experience in sports and saloon racing. Judy Witter had won a Formula Vee championship at home in South Africa.


Some of the others had plenty of motorsport experience but had not done much circuit racing: Ivana Giustri and Eeva Heinonen were ladies’ rally champions in their home countries and both “Biche” and Martine de la Grandrive were in-demand rally co-drivers.


Paula Murphy had been involved mainly in drag racing in the States and had held the women’s Land Speed Record. Susy Raganelli had won the World Kart Championship in 1966 but had raced little since then.


The full results of the race itself have proved hard to track down. It ran for 15 laps and Marie-Claude Beaumont won from pole position, followed by Christine Beckers and Ivana Giustri. Maggie Anderson had a good start from fourth but was passed by Yvette Fontaine and Biche, before outbraking herself at the chicane and having to take the escape road. She was then passed by Gabriel Konig and Eeva Heinonen and finished near the back. Gabriel, Eeva and Yvette continued to jostle for position, with Gabriel and Yvette prevailing. Eeva was tenth, despite setting the fastest lap.


(Image from acmanortheurope.com. For an account of the race in French, see renault-5.net)

Monday, 5 December 2016

Christine Cole (Gibson)


Christine Cole, who also raced as Christine Gibson, was an Australian touring car veteran, whose career spanned three decades.

She took part in nine Bathurst 500/1000 races between 1968 and 1984. Her team-mates included Glenn Seton, Sandra Bennett and Marie-Claude Beaumont. She drove a variety of cars, including a Nissan Pulsar, Ford Falcon, Mini and Holden Monaro. Her first try at the event was in 1968, in a Mini. She was part of an all-girl team with Midge Whiteman, whose second time at Bathurst it was. This happened in only her second year of racing: she began in 1967, with a Mini.

Christine was from a family of racers, and it was not surprising that she got into the sport. An early boyfriend raced Minis, and lent her a car. Her first season was spent in a women’s championship based at Oran Park. She won every round of the championship apart from the first one, in which she was third.

Her second Hardie-Ferodo 500 was at the wheel of a Fiat 125, in another ladies’ team with Lynne Keefe. They did not finish. Christine later described how the small, light Fiat was pulled across the track in the wake of the bigger cars.

In 1970, she used one of the bigger cars herself, a Holden Torana. She and Sandra Bennett were a more accomplished thirteenth overall, driving for the Holden Dealer Team. The same driver pairing tackled the Sandown Three Hour 250, but it is not clear whether or not they finished.

She took a break in 1971; this year, she married fellow racer, Fred Gibson, returning as Christine Gibson.

A second ride in the 500 in a Torana in 1972, this time with Pat Peck as a team-mate, led to a DNF. The following year, she switched allegiance to Alfa Romeo, driving a GTV 2000 in the big endurance races. Christine and Sue Ransom did not finish the Hardie-Ferodo 500 or the Phillip Island 500.

She was then absent from Bathurst for a couple of seasons, partly due to a sabbatical from motorsport, and, for 1975 at least, to concentrate on the Australian Touring Car Championship. She was still “in” with the Alfa Romeo team, and drove the GTV to fifth overall in the series, with four class wins. This was her best result in the ATCC.

Away from Bathurst, she competed on and off in Australian Touring Cars, later, often for her husband Fred Gibson’s team. Her best season for this was 1975, when she was fifth overall after winning the 2000cc class four times and remaining a regular feature in the overall top ten. Her car was an Alfa Romeo GTV 2000. 

During her absence from the Hardie-Ferodo 500, the French driver, Marie-Claude Beaumont, had stolen her place as the premier female Bathurst racer. In 1975, she was sixth in the 500, driving an Alfa Romeo GTV 2000 with John Leffler. On Christine’s return to the 500 the following year, they teamed up, in an Alfa Romeo Alfetta GTAm, but sadly did not finish.

Christine retired from active competition for the rest of the 1970s, only to return in 1981. That year, she drove a King George Tavern Ford Falcon in endurance races, with Joe Moore. In spite of her lack of current seat time, she took her “top lady” honours back from Marie-Claude Beaumont, with a sixth place. The same driver pairing was tenth in the Hang Ten 400.

In 1983 and 1984, Christine was a works Nissan driver, alongside her husband, Fred. As part of the Australian Endurance Championship, she drove a Pulsar with Bob Muir in the 1983 500, but did not finish, due to a mainshaft failure. She did not finish the Sandown round of the AEC either,

The same year, she took part in some races in the AMSCAR championship, driving a Bluebird.

She used the Pulsar for both series in 1984, and managed eleventh overall in AMSCAR. She drove in the 500 again with the experienced Glenn Seton, did not finish, due to a broken half-shaft.

1984 was her last season of competition. She has remained active in Australian motorsport, as an administrator and organiser, and is still remembered as the First Lady of Bathurst.

(Image copyright News Corp Australia)

Sunday, 17 October 2010

Women at Le Mans: 1950 - 1979



Yvette Fontaine, Christine Beckers and Marie Laurent in 1974

After the Second World War, it took a while for motor racing to get back to where it had been beforehand. The early 1950s was not the easiest time for female drivers, but a few managed to break through.
The biggest factor affecting women's participation at Le Mans during this period was the fallout from Annie Bousquet's fatal accident at the Reims 12 Hours in 1956. Due to the negative publicity this sad event triggered, French motorsport authorities were "reluctant" to accept entries from female drivers for a long time afterwards, meaning that none competed at all at Le Mans between 1955 and 1970.
During the 1970s, there was another boom in the number of female entrants, including Anny-Charlotte Verney and Lella Lombardi.

1950
Germaine Rouault/Regine Gordine (Simca Gordini TMM) - DNF
Yvonne Simon/Michel Casse (Ferrari 166MM) - DNF

1951
Yvonne Simon/Betty Haig (Ferrari 166 MM Berlinetta) - 15th

1954
Gilberte Thirion/André Pilette (Gordini T17S) - DNF

1971
Marie-Claude Beaumont/Henri Greder (Chevrolet Corvette) - DNF

1972
Marie-Claude Beaumont/Henri Greder (Chevrolet Corvette) - DNF

1973
Marie-Claude Beaumont/Henri Greder (Chevrolet Corvette) - 12th (class win)
Christine Beckers/Roger Dubos/Pierre Pagani (Chevron B21/23 Ford) - DNF

1974
Anny-Charlotte Verney/Martine Renier/Pierre Mauroy (Porsche Carrera RSR) - 13th
Christine Beckers/Marie Laurent/Yvette Fontaine (Chevron B23 Ford) - 17th (class win)
Marie-Claude Beaumont/Henri Greder (Chevrolet Corvette) - 18th

1975
Anny-Charlotte Verney/Corinne Tarnaud/Yvette Fontaine (Porsche Carrera RS) - 11th
Marianne Hoepfner/Michèle Mouton/Christine Dacremont (Moynet LM75 JRD) - 21st (class win)
Marie-Claude Beaumont/Lella Lombardi (Alpine-Renault A441C) - DNF

1976
Anny-Charlotte Verney/Hubert Streibig/Hugues Kirschoffer (Porsche 934) - 11th
Martine Renier/Thierry Perrier/Guy de Saint-Pierre (Porsche Carrera RSR) - 18th
Marie-Claude Beaumont/Didier Pironi/Bob Wollek (Porsche 934) - 19th
Lella Lombardi/Christine Dacremont (Lancia Stratos Turbo) - 20th
Christine Beckers/Jean Rondeau/Jean-Pierre Jaussaud (Inaltera Ford) - 21st

1977
Lella Lombardi/Christine Beckers (Inaltera Ford) - 11th
Anny-Charlotte Verney/Rene Metge/Dany Snobeck/Hubert Streibig (Porsche Carrera RSR) - 18th
Anna Cambiaghi/Raymond Touroul/Alain Cudini (Osella PA5 BMW) - DNF
Christine Dacremont/Marianne Hoepfner (Lancia Stratos Turbo) - DNF

1978
Anny-Charlotte Verney/Xavier Lapeyre/Francois Servanin (Porsche Carrera RSR) - 12th (class win)
Marianne Hoepfner/Christine Dacremont (WM P76 Peugeot) - DNF
Juliette Slaughter/Ian Harrower/Brian Joscelyne (Lola T294S Ford) - DNF

1979
Anny-Charlotte Verney/Rene Metge/Patrick Bardinon (Posche 934) - 19th

Post 1979 results here

(Image copyright Corbis Images)

Saturday, 31 July 2010

Marie-Claude Beaumont



Frenchwoman Marie-Claude was involved with cars and motorsport from a young age, as her father was a rally mechanic and occasional competitor. In her teens and early twenties, she accompanied him in his service van on the Monte Carlo Rally, which ran through her hometown, Gap. She also acted as an English-French interpreter and guide to visiting drivers, having spent time in England. Later, she drove a recce car on the stages and reported back on weather conditions.

When her own competition career began, Marie-Claude changed her family name of Charmasson to Beaumont, to avoid any suggestion of nepotism on her father's part.

It was while she was helping out at the Monte Carlo Rally that she got her start in motorsport. In 1963 she was befriended by Claudine Vanson-Bouchet, the French rally champion of the time. Claudine was impressed by her driving and navigational skills and when she needed to recruit a new co-driver in 1964, she asked 23-year-old Marie-Claude. They were a good team, driving first for Citroen in a DS19 and later in a Lancia Flavia. The partnership lasted until 1965, when Claudine switched back to the navigator's seat with her husband.

Mid-1965, Marie-Claude was again hired as a navigator, this time by Henri Greder, another French champion. His car was a Ford Mustang, and the pair rallied it throughout Europe once again. Although she enjoyed being part of a rally team, she longed to drive herself. Eventually, she got her wish. Pierre Ferry, a member of the NSU team, offered her a seat in an NSU 1000 for the Critérium des Cévennes rally that year. After a battling finish through a blizzard, winning the Coupe des Dames, she was taken on as a works driver by the team. The following season, she competed in fifteen rallies, picking up Coupes des Dames and class awards regularly.

1967 continued in a similar vein, although as well as rallying for the NSU team, Marie-Claude took her first serious steps into circuit racing. Along with Christine Beckers, another all-rounder, she drove through heavy rain and thick fog to win the Production class of the Spa 24 Hours. They were the first female finishers. It not the best time to be a woman in the upper echelons of circuit racing; organisers were still wary of accepting their entries after the negative publicity surrounding Annie Bousquet's death more than ten years previously. There were no such problems in rallying, however, despite Marie-Claude’s coming-together with another car on the Monte.

1968 saw something of a breakthrough for Marie-Claude. Driving the little 1000cc NSU, she scored her first top-ten overall rally result, a tenth on the Tour de Corse. She and Christine Beckers were then sixth in class on the Tulip Rally. She also found time to co-drive for Henri Greder in Monte Carlo. Nevertheless, she was not resting on her laurels. Henri Greder had nicknamed her "Jamais Contente" (never satisfied) and his teasing held more than a grain of truth. She wanted to drive more powerful cars and challenge for outright wins, of which she believed she was capable. She was also getting tired of her subordinate position within the NSU team, and resented her car being cannibalised for parts when team-mate Gérard Larrousse's vehicle suffered a breakdown.

Henri Greder, who always supported Marie-Claude in her racing activities, ended up being the answer. He started up his own team for the 1969 season, with support from General Motors. His erstwhile navigator was his lead driver, using a series of Chevrolet and Opel models for rallying and racing. Although she was not quite challenging for the overall lead yet, she made do with the French Ladies' Rally Championship. In the main standings, she was eleventh. Among her achievements was the Coupe des Dames in Corsica, in an Opel Kadett, and a 17th in Monte Carlo, driving a Commodore. Driving a Chevrolet Camaro with Michèle Dubosc, she was eleventh in the Tour de France too, with a 2000cc Touring class win.

On the rally side, she did even better in 1970. She held on to her French Ladies' title and improved her overall ranking to fourth, after a series of good places. Her car this year was an Opel Commodore or GT. She and Martine de la Grandrive were 22nd on the Monte, tenth on the Stuttgart-Solitude-Lyons-Charbonnières event and eighth on the Rallye de Lorraine. With Marie-Madeleine Fouquet, she was fifth on the Tulip Rally and eighth on the Rallye de Génève.

Her main car in 1971 was an Opel Ascona. Martine de la Grandrive co-drove her to class and Ladies' wins on the Mont Blanc rally, a Coupe des Dames on the RAC Rally, and a somewhat disappointing 25th on the Monte, in an Opel Commodore this time. In the Ascona, they were ninth on the Alpine Rally. The same pairing were eighteenth in the Tour de France and won the class for Touring cars over 3000cc, driving a Chevrolet Camaro. They finished the year with a third French Ladies' title, and sixth overall.

Marie-Claude's track career took another leap forward during that season. The French motorsport authorities finally relaxed their position on female competitiors, and accepted Greder Racing's entry for Le Mans. Henri and Marie-Claude were to drive a Corvette, and finished fifteenth in the early-season 3-hour race at the Sarthe track. It was the first time a woman driver had taken part since Gilberte Thirion in 1954 and blonde, glamorous Marie-Claude attracted her fair share of publicity. In the race itself, the Corvette lasted until the fifteenth hour before giving up with engine trouble.

A similar car developed oil pressure problems during the Paris 1000km race later on in the season. Both Greder drivers fared better at the Opel GP at the Nürburgring; Marie-Claude was sixth in the three-litre class in a Commodore and Henri won the Group One class in a smaller version of the same car.

Her adventures in endurance racing continued in 1972. Again, she and Henri qualified and were accepted for Le Mans in a Greder Corvette. They lasted until the 21st hour this time, before an accident put them out. Driving with Rosadele Facetti this time, Marie-Claude was invited to take part in the legendary Targa Florio. Frustratingly, an engine failure put the Opel GT out of the running part-way through. Marie-Claude had more luck at the Tour de France, where she was fifth overall in a Corvette with Christine Giganot. During the year, she also drove in a number of European GT races for Greder, including one at Estoril which she did not finish.

The rally side of her career was flourishing. Her first event of the year was the Monte. Driving an Ascona, she was twelfth in slippery conditions which accounted for over two hundred of the original entrants. She did even better in Corsica, matching her highest finish in tenth. The RAC Rally was not as big a result, but she and Christine Giganot still came away with a respectable 27th. In the Spanish RACE Rally, the same pair were fifth in the Commodore. With a co-driver named Pignard, Marie-Claude was sixth in the Lyon-Charbonnières event, in an Ascona.

Marie-Claude's rallying career hit somewhat of a rut in 1973. She failed to finish most of the major rallies she entered, due to a series of technical faults with her Ascona, and the Opel Commodore for which it was sometimes substituted. These included the Tour de Corse and the RAC Rally. Her only real highlight, on this side, was her class win in the Commodore on the Tour de France.

Circuit racing was a different matter though; Henri and Marie-Claude recorded their first Le Mans finish in their Corvette that year. In addition to their maiden chequered flag, they were twelfth overall and first in the class for GT cars over 5000cc. That year, Marie-Claude also raced in a series of national events in a Lola T290 prototype, eager to make progress in her sportscar career. Her best result seems to have been an eighth place at Magny-Cours.

After 1973, circuit racing became the main part of her motoring activities. Still with Greder Racing, she and Henri entered the French Group 1 Championship for touring cars in Opel Commodore GSEs. After wins at Croix-en-Ternois, Paul Ricard and Montlhéry, Marie-Claude was runner-up to Henri in the final standings. She finished in the top three of all but one of the races she entered. Away from the Greder setup, she raced an Alpine A440 prototype around France for Ecurie Elf Switzerland. Her best result was a win at Montlhéry, which helped her on her way to the French Ladies' Circuit Racing Champion's title that year.

Rallying had not been forgotten either. A Renault 16 TS was her mount for the East African Safari in 1974. The engine gave out before the end of the event and Marie-Claude joined a host of others on the lengthy DNF list.

1975 saw her switch completely to the circuits and move away from Greder Racing. She was a member of the Ecurie Elf Ladies' team for the European rounds of the World Sportscar Championship and was piloting an Alpine A441 prototype, the next evolution from the one she had campaigned previously. The Elf managers had paired her with Lella Lombardi, the Italian Formula One hopeful and sportscar expert. Their partnership was difficult at first; Lella came from a single-seater background and had vastly more experience of the circuits and of powerful sports prototypes than Marie-Claude, who was principally a rally driver. Their personal outlooks also clashed to start with. Marie-Claude, although very serious about her motor racing, was perhaps more of an "adventuress" and general sportswoman than Lella, who ate, drank and slept motorsport. Despite her ambitiousness during the NSU and early Greder years, Marie-Claude was not always certain that she was the exact equal of a male driver. Lella, on the other hand, believed this passionately and was a strong feminist.


Marie-Claude and Lella Lombardi with the Alpine (copyright Jean-Jacques Mancel)

Once the duo put their differences to one side, they worked well as a team. The 1000km event at Mugello was their first together, and gave them a sixth place. Their best performance came at the Monza 1000km, where they were fourth and winners of the 2000cc class. Mechanical problems put them out of the Dijon, Pergusa and Zeltweg races. Le Mans was another disappointment; they ran out of fuel during the eighth hour.

A long-distance excursion to the Bathurst 1000 in Australia proved very worthwhile that year; Marie-Claude won her class with John Leffler, driving an Alfa Romeo 2000 GTI. Her sixth place remains the joint highest female finish in the classic Australian race.

At the end of the season, Marie-Claude showed signs of emulating her Italian team-mate. She tested an Elf Formula Two car at Vallelunga, despite having no previous single-seater experience.

She did not take up Formula Two in 1976. Instead, she raced a BMW3.5 CSI in the French production car championship. She fared well and came away with two wins, at Paul Ricard and Dijon. After her 1975 success, she made the trip Down Under again for Bathurst. Sadly, she and Christine Gibson did not finish in their Alfetta GTAM. Her sixth and final stab at Le Mans led to a finish, however. She, Bob Wollek and Didier Pironi were nineteenth overall in their Kremer Porsche 934, fourth in the GT class and one position ahead of Marie-Claude's former team-mate Lella Lombardi.

1976 was her last full year of competition. Marie-Claude did some rallycross for Alpine-Renault and tested some other cars in 1977, but by now she had thrown herself into her new career in PR for Renault. She stayed at the Renault press office for a time, before making another career change and starting work as a freelance race photographer. She is still an F1 photographer to this day, or was until very recently.