
The FIS paid a large amount for the damage to its reputation, which it donated. The International Sports Court did not follow up on these allegations and lifted the ban in June 2015. The FIS saw it as proven that the races in which they won the FIS points necessary for Olympic qualification were manipulated in their favor. In November 2014 Vanessa-Mae was banned from the International Ski Federation (FIS) for four years. She finished in 67th place, around 50 seconds behind Olympic champion Tina Maze. She competed under the name of her father Vanakorn, but only started in the giant slalom. She qualified for the slalom and the giant slalom. In alpine skiing she was the first Thai woman to take part in the Winter Olympics. In January 2014 it was announced that Vanessa-Mae was successful with her project.
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Countries that do not have a driver in the top 500 of the ranking are allowed to send one representative per gender according to the regulations, provided the runner achieves the required 140 FIS points in the relevant discipline. In Zermatt, she pursued her goal of qualifying for the 2014 Winter Olympics in slalom and giant slalom for Thailand, her father's home country. She has had her first residence there since September 2009. In the following years she regularly visited the Swiss mountain village in summer. In 2006 she was in Zermatt for the first time. Vanessa-Mae started skiing when she was four. Vanessa-Mae at the Olympic Torch Relay in London (2008)
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She plays both classical (among others, by Giovanni Battista Guadagnini ) and on electric violins, such as on the Download - Instrumental album Xpectation (2003) by Prince at that time she worked as a guest musician with the US singer. On June 30, 1997, she was the only foreign artist allowed to perform at the Unification Ceremony of Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China. In Germany she first gained fame through her 1995 album The Violin Player, which includes the piece Toccata and Fugue in D minor BWV 565. A year later she was accepted into the Royal College of Music in London. In 1988, when she was ten, she played with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. At the age of eight she took violin lessons in China for six months. Vanessa-Mae began playing the piano at the age of three and the violin at the age of five. In 1982 she moved to London and received in addition to their Thai nor the British citizenship.

She was adopted by her stepfather, British Graham Nicholson, after her parents separated. Vanessa-Mae is the child of a Thai father and a Chinese mother.
