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CANADIAN BROWNING GETS CLOSE TO HOME WITH SEATTLE STOP ON `ICE' TOUR.(What's Happening).

Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Date: January 3, 1997
Author: Judi Hunt
When he bounds onto the ice tomorrow at Seattle's KeyArena, four-time world champion figure skater and newlywed Kurt Browning will be about as close to his native Canada as he will get before the spring.

Married in July to Sonia Rodriguez, he hasn't had much time for family life at the couple's home in Caroline, Alberta. Shortly after their wedding, Browning began practicing for the "Discover Stars on Ice" tour with other international skating celebrities, including Kristi Yamaguchi and Scott Hamilton. The 60-city tour began on Nov. 30 in Lake Placid, N.Y.

The skaters will be fresh as new-fallen snow, however, because Seattle is only the fifth city in which they will have performed the stylishly choreographed numbers that have made "Discover Stars on Ice" popular for 11 years.

While Yamaguchi and Hamilton get a lot of the glory, many fans will be coming to see Browning, who thrust Canada into the limelight when he became the first skater ever to successfully complete a quadruple jump in world competition.

He stunned audiences with his feat during the 1988 World Championships in Budapest, Hungary, which earned him a place in the Guinness Book of Records.

He is happy he didn't pursue his other dreams of being a professional golfer or an ice hockey player.

"Thank God I didn't," he allowed to friends during the preparation for the current tour.

But he still would jump (pun intended) at the chance to spend a day aboard the starship Enterprise.

"That would be how I would spend my ideal day," he said.

Asked what talent he would have wanted if he weren't an ice skater, Browning said he would like the ability to fly. Some fans already think he has that skill, as evidenced in his dramatic, "reach-to-the-sky" jumps.

Early in his career as a brash Westerner from a tiny foothills town, his moves on the ice were described as "raw, confident and powerful." His jumps are so skillfully executed now that "raw" doesn't fit anymore, many skating fans believe. But he is still powerful and confident.

Although the production company doesn't have a theme for this show or go into any great details about the skaters' different numbers, they do reveal Browning will skate to the music of Nat King Cole.

He'll also join the full cast in opening the 7:30 p.m. show tomorrow with a modern symphonic work as yet unnamed, and again for the finale. The latter is described as a comedy character piece featuring music such as "Around the World in 80 Days" and "Love is a Many Splendored Thing."

Solo highlights will include Hamilton skating to Pavarotti's "Barber of Seville," Yamaguchi performing to Celine Dion's"Natural Woman," Paul Wylie using Bach as background music and three-time U.S. National Champion Jill Trenary whirling to a Nancy Sinatra number.

This also will be the first chance local skating fans will get to see Ekaterina Gordeeva since the death of her pairs skating partner and husband Sergei Grinkov in November 1995.

The pair skated for the former Soviet Union before joining "Discover Stars on Ice" in 1991.

Other highlights include scores from Scott Joplin, Yo-Yo Ma and Rachmaninoff. The audience also will be treated to a number choreographed by Torvill and Dean, including most of the cast in a finale to the first act.

The tour is produced by IMG, which says it is the world's largest sports marketing organization. Hamilton and Byron Allen are tour producers; Robert D. Kain and Gary V. Swain are executive producers.