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Julie Heldman

b. December 8, 1945

by JWA Staff
Our work to expand the Encyclopedia is ongoing. We are providing this brief biography for Julie Heldman until we are able to commission a full entry.

From left to right: the United States national team tenniswomen Carole Caldwell Graebner, Julie Heldman and Billie Jean King in Turin, Italy, holding the Federations Cup in 1966.

Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Julie Heldman won 22 professional tennis titles in her stunning career. The daughter of tennis player and World Tennis Magazine founder Gladys Heldman, Julie Heldman began playing at age eight and won her first national title at twelve. She played the collegiate singles and doubles finals before graduating from Stanford in 1968, going on to perform masterfully at the Olympic demonstration tournament that year, where she won gold in mixed doubles, silver in women’s doubles, and bronze in women’s singles. (At the time, tennis was only allowed as a demonstration sport at the Olympics.) The following year, she won gold for all three events at the Maccabiah Games in Israel and was ranked the fifth best player in the world. She was ranked in the US Tennis Association’s Top Ten for eight years between 1963 and 1975 and the World Top Ten in 1969, 1970, 1973, and 1974. Heldman worked as a journalist and commentator for various magazines and television networks at the US Open and Wimbledon from 1973 to 1978, and in 1976 she became the first female journalist to cover a men’s tennis event, the Avis Challenge Cup. In 1985 she became president of Signature Eyewear. Heldman was inducted to five Halls of Fame: Stanford Athletics Hall of Fame (1978), National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame (1989), ITA Women’s Hall of Fame (1998), International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame (2001), and USTA Eastern Tennis Hall of Fame (2006). Her memoir, Driven, A Daughter’s Odyssey, was published in 2018.  

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How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Julie Heldman." (Viewed on December 24, 2024) <https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/heldman-julie>.