Last winter, Angel Collinson was deep in Alaska鈥檚 Neacola Mountains, a jagged subrange of the Aleutian Mountains about 120 miles southwest of Anchorage, in a zone that rarely sees skiers or climbers due to its rugged remoteness. For four weeks, Collinson lived out of a glorified tent city, population 13鈥攁ll athletes and filmmakers鈥攚ho鈥檇 been dropped there by bush plane to film , the latest ski flick from Teton Gravity Research.
On good days, Collinson and fellow skiers Ian McIntosh and Sage Cattabriga-Alosa would ride towering spines in glowing sunlight for the cameras. When the weather didn鈥檛 cooperate, they鈥檇 pass the time playing dice games in the tent.聽
On the last day of the trip, with the weather and snow conditions prime for filming, the TGR team settled on skiing a zone the skiers called the Magic Kingdom. It was a toothy, shark fin of a peak with only a couple of high-consequence skiable lines that dropped over a blind rollover from the summit. 鈥淚 knew I was capable of skiing it,鈥 says Collinson, who鈥檚 25. 鈥淏ut it would be at the height of anything I鈥檇 ever done.鈥
鈥淗er approach to the mountains is calm and calculated.鈥
During a mellow warm-up run that morning, Collinson felt off鈥攎entally tired, a little slow to react. The weeks of high intensity skiing had set in, and she knew instinctually that it wasn鈥檛 the day to try something big. 鈥淚t was one of those situations where I didn鈥檛 want to talk myself into it,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ometimes there鈥檚 just that gut feeling you have to listen to and I did that day. I was worried I鈥檇 regret not stepping up to the plate, but instead I discovered this deep sense of trust in myself.鈥
Bowing out of what could be the film鈥檚 best shot wasn鈥檛 an easy decision. TGR is one of the premier action sports video companies in the world and the king of ski porn, and has launched the career of many budding pro skiers like Todd Ligare聽and Ian McIntosh. Inclusion in the studio鈥檚 films can secure an athlete鈥檚 reputation and livelihood and help attract mega sponsorship deals. That day in Alaska, Collinson told the filmmakers she wasn鈥檛 up for the challenge and instead skied an easier line on another face. Opting out took the courage of a pro鈥攁 skier with less self-confidence might have gone for it in spite of the danger鈥攁nd cemented Collinson鈥檚 status as an A-lister with TGR.
鈥淗er approach to the mountains is calm and calculated,鈥 says TGR co-founder Todd Jones. 鈥淪he鈥檚 not out there forcing it. When the mountains speak, she listens.鈥
It turned out that Collinson didn鈥檛 even need that final day to turn in a staggering performance in Paradise Waits. She already had enough footage in the can from the previous weeks, flashing elevator-shaft steeps and airing cliffs with graceful fierceness, to create what the Ski Journal 鈥渢he burliest鈥攁nd most entertaining鈥攆emale film segment of all time.鈥 Her footage ended up earning her the coveted closing segment in Paradise Waits, marking the first time a woman has been selected for a TGR finale. The year prior, Collinson also broke barriers with the first female opening segment of a TGR film, in 2014鈥檚 . In fact, until Collinson showed up on the scene three years ago, the studio hadn鈥檛 featured a woman in a film in years.
That segment for Best Female Performance and Best Line (the first time a woman has won that, too) at the Powder Awards, at the International Freeski Film Festival, and she was named Freeskier 尘补驳补锄颈苍别鈥檚 for 2015.聽
All that attention鈥攖he film segments, the awards, the media interviews鈥攕till feels a little foreign, Collinson says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to be recognized for something you鈥檙e good at, but I honestly don鈥檛 like being in the limelight.鈥
Collinson would certainly be entitled to an ego after the past couple of years she鈥檚 had: ski movie stardom, major awards, lucrative endorsement offers. But, according to those closest to her, that鈥檚 not her style. 鈥淔or Angel, it almost works the other way. The more success she has, the more humble she seems to get,鈥 says her brother, 23-year-old fellow pro skier John Collinson. 鈥淪he has always been, and I think always will be, grounded. Now she鈥檚 just learning how to deal with the stresses that come with success.鈥

Collinson and her brother were bred into skiing. They grew up sharing a bunkbed in a closet-sized room in employee housing at the base of Snowbird, Utah, where their dad, Jimmy, was a ski patroller and snow-safety director for over 30 years. They were one of few families living in the dorm-style apartments.
Collinson鈥檚 mom, Deb, homeschooled her two children (and a couple other ski kids as well) inside a tiny schoolroom in the canyon. Each summer the family would pile into a 1979 blue Ford Econoline van and travel the west, climbing mountains like Whitney, Shasta, and Hood, and backpack for weeks on end. The Collinson kids took strongly to the outdoors. As a teenager, Angel, who鈥檚 two years older than her brother, was a world-class junior ski racer. At 17, John became the youngest person to climb the seven summits.聽
鈥淚聽know I can use my voice in meaningful ways. But sometimes I want to be that 16-year-old nobody with my headphones on doing Snowbird tram laps and not talking to anybody.鈥
When Collinson was 18, she narrowly missed the cut for the U.S. Ski Team, and as a result decided to pull the plug on gates. She earned a full academic scholarship at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City with the intention of pursuing a double major in environmental studies and philosophy. Shortly after enrolling, she signed up for her first big-mountain freeskiing contest.
In her聽rookie year on the Freeskiing World Tour, in 2010, at age 19, Collinson won the overall women鈥檚 title. She won again in 2011.聽In 2012聽she聽decided, as a sophomore, to put college on hold so that she could really focus on skiing. She doubled up and competed on both the American Freeskiing World Tour and the European Freeride World Tour, earning second place overall on both tours. She was known for her consistency in steep terrain鈥攕he鈥檇 pick a line nobody else would even see, then plunge in at top speed with utter confidence as the slope dropped away beneath her.
Her results were strong enough to catch the eyes of TGR鈥檚 filmmakers and, in 2013, while waiting in the tram line at Snowbird, she got the call inviting her to join the crew for her first major聽foray in Alaska鈥攖o聽Knik Glacier, a remote part of the Chugach Mountains. She has since been featured in three TGR films.聽
Rather than focus on promoting herself on social media, which has become an essential part of making a living as a pro athlete, Collinson would rather that her ski style鈥攃omposed, calculated, fast鈥攕peaks for itself. 鈥淪kiing has always been my freedom and my happy place. Now all of a sudden, people are paying attention to it,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 that quote? 鈥榃ith great power comes great responsibility.鈥 I know I can use my voice in meaningful ways. But sometimes I want to be that 16-year-old nobody with my headphones on doing Snowbird tram laps and not talking to anybody.鈥
But while Collinson has the attention, she intends to use it. Applying her notoriety to environmental causes is her latest focus. She鈥檚 teamed up with the non-profit organization to lobby for climate change policy on the streets of Washington, D.C. She penned a November 2015 op-ed for 国产吃瓜黑料 about the impact of Utah鈥檚 power plants on the state鈥檚 air quality. She also works with the Sierra Club on various climate change and clean air projects.聽
This winter, Collinson says her primary goal is simply to film another quality segment with TGR. Eventually, she wants to go back to school and focus on environmental policy. But for now, she鈥檚 working to improve on the slopes. 鈥淲hen I see my footage, I always see the things I could have done better,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 always feel like I have more in the tank.鈥澛