Gabriela Grillo (19 August 1952 – 25 February 2024) was a German businesswoman, equestrian and Olympic champion. She won a gold medal in team dressage and placed fourth in individual dressage at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal. She achieved gold medals with the team at three European championships.
She also worked as a journalist and book author for riding topics. From 1993, she held leading positions in the family business, as CEO and then as member of the supervisory board. She supported the training of young talents. She served voluntarily several foundations supporting a hospital in Duisburg, citizens of Duisburg and Mülheim, and the University of Duisburg.
Life and career
Grillo was born in Duisburg on 19 August 1952, the daughter of Herbert and Marita Grillo. Her father traded metals, running the Grillo-Handelshaus and the Grillo-Werke AG. She had a brother, Rainer. The parents loved horses, and she had riding lessons from age six.[1] She completed school with the Abitur at the Frau-Rath-Goethe-Gymnasium in Duisburg in 1971, and then studied musicology, German studies and theatre studies at the University of Cologne.[2][3] She trained riding from 1960 to 1966 with Otto Fuhrmann, then until 1973 with Walter Günther, and from 1974 with Albert Stecken. She achieved the Goldenes Reiterabzeichen qualification in 1969.[1]
She was German champion three times, with different horses: Ultimo, Galapagos and Grandison. In world championships, she won gold twice, also with the team, and two victories at the Deutsches Dressur Derby, again with Ultimo. In the 1981 European competition, she won bronze single and gold with the team, riding Galapagos. She belonged to the German dressage team until 1982.[5][6]
She also worked as a journalist and for charity. From 1980, she was a regular contributor of the trade magazine Reiten und Fahren (later part of St.GEORG [de]), and wrote books such as 60 Worte Reiterdeutsch, about riding terms, in 1979.[5]
Grillo was elected to the board of the department of dressage in the Deutscher Reiter- und Fahrerverband (DRFV) association in 1981.[5] She became CEO of the Wilhelm Grillo Handelsgesellschaft in 1993 and, in 1995, also the speaker of the board of the Grillo-Werke AG. Since 2004, she was a member of the supervisory board of the Grillo-Werke AG, serving as its president until 2021.[5][3] Since 2015, in cooperation with Grillo, the Familie Herbert Grillo foundation and the Stiftung Deutscher Pferdesport sponsored the training of young talents in dressage through scholarships.[5][6]
She held voluntary positions, including as member of the board of trustees of the Stiftung zur Förderung evangelischer Krankenhäuser from 2010. The foundation began as an initiative of her father and others to sponsor the building of the present Protestant hospital in Duisburg-Nord. She was also member of the supervisory board of the Bürgerstiftung Duisburg, a citizen's foundation, president of the supervisory board of the Bürgerstiftung Mülheim, and member of the board of the Förderverein Duisburger Universitäts-Gesellschaft, supporting the University of Duisburg.[3]
Grillo died in Mülheim, where she lived,[6] on 25 February 2024, at the age of 71.[5][7]
^"Empfang der deutschen Olympiamannschaft im Oktober beim Bundeskanzler Helmut Schmidt in Bonn und Auszeichnung mit dem Silbernen Lorbeerblatt". Sportchronik 1974–76 (in German). City of Landshut. 1976.