Anne Hobbs is a company consultant at Justin Souriau-Levine Studios.

Born in Nottingham, England, Ms. Hobbs went on to compete at the highest level of women’s professional tennis.

From 1978 to 1989 she forged a stellar career on the WTA Tour, winning more than twenty doubles titles including the Canadian Open, New Zealand Open, and seven UK National Championships. As a singles player, she won the Ginny (Virginia Slims) of Indianapolis, New Zealand Open, UK National Championships, and reached the Round of 16 at least once at all four Grand Slams, attaining a career-high WTA ranking of 33 in Singles and 6 in Doubles.

In 1979 Ms. Hobbs won the BBC Superstars Competition; beating medaled Olympic athletes. During an injury break, she developed a TV career, first as a producer on the famous British celebrity quiz show “A Question of Sport” and then as a BBC commentator. She went on to work with Brad Holbrook on “A Tip from A Pro” in New York City, where she has resided for the last three decades.

Despite her promise in the commentary booth, she pursued her growing passion for studying the unconscious, after permanently settling in the states, as she went on to earn a college degree in psychological studies and built her own teaching business and private consulting practice thereafter.

She is the founder of her own teaching business, Anne Hobbs Tennis; and teaches private/group classes across New York City and the Hamptons.

For Justin Souriau-Levine Studios, Ms. Hobbs advices Mr. Souriau-Levine on matters such as business strategy and psychology, in the form of a permanent consultancy.

As an actress, she made her cinematic debut in the inaugural Justin Souriau-Levine Studios production, “The Greatest Race” (2021) as “Lucy”, a member of the unforgettable “Old Ladies” racing team.