kurtfiles

 
Home
Profile
Record
Articles
News
Photo
Stars on Ice
Music
References
Miscellaneous
 
News
History
Articles
Photos
Reviews
Merchandise
Skaters
Retrospective
Kurt in SOI
Creative Team
FAQ
Links
 
SOI Pre-2000
SOI 2000-01
SOI 2001-02
SOI 2002-03
SOI 2003-04
SOI 2004-05
SOI 2005-06
SOI 2010-11
SOI 2011-12
SOI 2012-13
SOI 2021
SOI 2023
CSOI Pre-2000
CSOI 2001
CSOI 2002
CSOI 2003
CSOI 2004
CSOI 2005
CSOI 2006
CSOI 2008
CSOI 2009
CSOI 2010
CSOI 2012
CSOI 2013
CSOI 2015
CSOI 2017
CSOI 2019
CSOI 2020
CSOI 2022
CSOI 2023



Review: New Stars on Ice showcases Canadian, Russian pairs who tied

Source: Omaha World-Herald
Date: February 6, 2003
Author: Jan DeKnock

Usually in a post-Olympic year, the headliner in a prestigious skating show like Smucker's Stars on Ice is the woman who just won the gold medal - especially if she is an American woman.

In past shows, those stars have been Tara Lipinski, who turned professional immediately after grabbing the gold in 1998, and Kristi Yamaguchi, who won the big prize in 1992.

But something strange happened after the Salt Lake City games of 2002. All of the top women, including golden girl Sarah Hughes and bronze medalist Michelle Kwan, decided to stay in the competitive ranks.

What's an ice show to do for new star power? In the case of Stars on Ice, which visited Omaha's Civic Auditorium Arena Wednesday night, the answer was easy: Bring together the two gold-medal pairs who made headlines during last year's ugly judging scandal.

Luckily for skating fans, the convenient casting was not just a show-biz device.

Throughout Wednesday's show, the two pairs - Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze of Russia and Jamie Sale and David Pelletier of Canada - showed, in very different ways, why both set the standard for gold-medal quality.

The Canadians were in the spotlight early in the first act, using effortless lifts and a soaring throw triple jump to punctuate the hep-cat rhythms of the pop classic "Come Fly With Me." The Russians' solo turn came in the second act, in an Elvis Presley/Marilyn Monroe medley that showcased Berezhnaya's impressive grace and flexibility.

And what of the singles stars? With Lipinski still out with an injury and Yamaguchi now retired, the role of diva again belonged to Katarina Witt of Germany, who won her gold medals back in 1984 and 1988. The veteran skater, performing a soulful solo to Barbra Streisand's "The Rest of Your Life," showed she still can command the ice with her style.

Despite the array of fine skating talent, the Arena was only half full, possibly because the ticket prices ($34 to $82) made this one of the more pricey shows to play in Omaha.

However, the enthusiastic audience made up in noise what it lacked it numbers. And these fans were knowledgeable, with many cheering just as loudly for the inventive footwork of Kurt Browning and the virtuoso spins of Todd Eldredge as they did for showy triple jumps.