Anne Pashley (5 June 1935 – 7 October 2016) was a British track and field sprinter, who represented Great Britain at the 1956 Summer Olympics.
Following her track and field career, she made a second career as a soprano singer.
Pashley was born on 5 June 1935 in Skegness, Lincolnshire, the younger of two daughters of Roy Pashley, an English teacher, and his wife Milly Pashley, who ran a holiday camp.
She attended school in Great Yarmouth, where her athletic skills came to attention.
In 1953, at the AAA championships in White City, Pashley equalled the British women's 100-yard record of 10.8 seconds.
She took the bronze medal at the 1954 European Championships in Berne, Switzerland in the women's individual 100 metres, behind Irina Turova (Soviet Union) and Bertha van Duyne (Netherlands).
At the 1956 summer Olympics, she and her teammates Jean Scrivens, June Foulds and Heather Armitage won the silver medal in the women's 4 Ă— 100 m relay.
Pashley retired from athletic competition soon after the Melbourne Olympics.Pashley them embarked on a second career as an opera singer, as a soprano.
She studied at the Guildhall School of Music, and made her stage debut in 1959.
She also appeared at the Aldeburgh and Edinburgh festivals.
In 1969 she sang the Second niece in the BBC video of Peter Grimes, recorded in the Maltings and took the same role in the 1978 Philips recording under Colin Davis and the 1981 video, also with Davis.
She appeared in a television version of The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny on the BBC in 1965, as Jenny.Pashley married fellow opera singer Jack Irons, a fellow Guildhall student, in 1959.
The marriage produced a son, Leon, and a daughter, Cleo.