Ladret was born on November 13, 1961, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He is the fifth child of Alfred Arnold Ladret, a fisherman and logger, and Ellen Hannah Ladret, a baker and housemaker. He grew up between the fishing town of Powell River and the logging camp at Boswell in Smith Inlet, British Columbia. He developed a deep interest in music spurred on by his oldest brother's band (Alfred Spencer a.k.a. Snuffy) rehearsing in the basement of their house.
Ladret married Canadian figure skater Lara Carscadden. Their son, Nigel Hayden, was born on November 30, 2005.
Hough/Ladret received the bronze medal at the 1989 NHK Trophy, silver at the 1990 Nations Cup, and gold at the 1990 Skate Electric. Following their third consecutive national silver medal, they were sent to the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France, where they finished 9th.[1] Concluding their ISU-eligible career, the two placed 9th at the 1992 World Championships. That final performance from their '92 Worlds was used as a model in training sessions for judging Program Components when the International Skating Union did a major overhaul of their judging system after the Salt Lake Olympic scandal of 2002.
Post competitive career - Hough & Ladret were signed to perform with Stars on Ice from 1992 through 1997 touring across North America with World & Olympic Champions. They appeared as Russian skaters, Smilkov & Brushkin, in the 1992 movie The Cutting Edge. 1997 Ladret was hired as the first Performance Director in Stars on Ice history.
1998 Ladret moved to Scottsdale, Arizona to coach at the Phoenix Coyotes practice facility with his wife, Lara.[2] From 1999 through 2016 they produced numerous international skaters including International Champion Douglas Razzano.[3] as well as the first pair team in ISU competition history to land a throw Quadruple jump, Tiffany Vise & Derek Trent. Ladret served as the Director of Figure Skating Development at the Ice Den in Scottsdale, Arizona and worked as a power skating specialist for ice hockey teams in the Phoenix area. 2016 through 2020, Ladret coached at the Monument Skating Academy in Colorado.[4] He continues to work with hockey players and teams as a consultant skating coach.