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Ice Time
Professional figure skating has become glamorous, glitzy and very lucrative.(Cover Story)
Source: |
Maclean's, v108 n15 p34(2). |
Date: |
April 10, 1995 |
Author: |
James Deacon |
Abstract: |
Figure skating, both amateur and professional, is gaining popularity and has become a major spectator sport in the US and Canada. The media hype during the 1988 and 1992 Olympic games spurred interest in the sport. The 1994 Stars on Ice tour in Canada played to sold-out audiences. |
Full Text COPYRIGHT 1995 Maclean Hunter (Canada)
Paul Wylie is no dummy. The American figure skater, who won the silver medal
at the 1992 Olympics, also has a bachelor's degree from Harvard University and
had been accepted into the institution's vaunted law school. But late last
year, forced to decide between the security of an Ivy League law degree and
the mercurial life of skating, he did not flinch. He chose skating. Since
then, asked over and over to explain his decision, the 30-year-old has
repeatedly insisted he is not suffering from a case of arrested development.
"Fiscally, I would be irresponsible to quit right now," he says. "I'm earning
10 times what I would earn if I had my law degree. It's unbelievably huge--you
can make $100,000 in two nights of competition. I don't do it for the money,
but it's pretty hard to ignore those heady numbers. You have to make a
living."
Once the repository of faded Olympians, professional skating today is glitzy,
glamorous--and highly lucrative. Its stars--from Canada's Kurt Browning and
America's Nancy Kerrigan to Germany's Katarina Witt and Ukraine's Oksana
Baiul--not only headline major theatrical shows but also compete in a dizzying
series of made-for-TV events. Fans pack arenas: last year, the Stars on Ice
tour drew 160,000 fans in 10 Canadian cities--up from 22,000 in three cities
in 1991--and is selling out again this year. The CBC television special on the
tour drew 2.4 million viewers in 1994--nearly one million more than for the
average Hockey Night in Canada broadcast. "And the ratings for the
competitions have been great," says former Canadian ice dancer Tracy Wilson,
now a CBS skating commentator. "The sport is growing and it has not topped out
yet."
But the boom has also created confusion. After the 1994 Olympics in
Lillehammer, Norway--with its attention-grabbing, Kerrigan-Tonya Harding
affair--promoters, TV networks and agents rushed to cash in on the sport's
exploding popularity. Suddenly, people who knew little about figure skating
were running competitions. The judging standards were inconsistent. Events
were often broadcast months after they were actually staged. The schedule was
disorganized: last fall, promoters shoehorned four competitions into one
two-week stretch. And there is no relief in sight. Only last week, Browning
and Elizabeth Manley, who now skates for Ice Capades, were supposed to compete
for Canada at a pro team event in West Palm Beach, but it was postponed at the
last minute because Witt and Ukraine's Viktor Petrenko pulled out due to
injuries. "I think it is going to be even less under control next season,"
says David Dore, director-general of the Canadian Figure Skating Association.
"Promoters did so well with it this year that they are coming back even
harder, and some other people want to horn in, too."
Just a decade ago, top performers went straight from the amateur ranks to big
ice shows. There, surrounded by a cast of furry creatures on skates, they
watched their skills decline under the weight of exhausting schedules. "On
some of those tours, they skate 10 to 12 shows a week," says Toronto-based
agent Kevin Albrecht, who represents Kristi Yamaguchi, Browning and Scott
Hamilton, among others. "How can you keep your skating level high under those
conditions? You can't." By the time skaters got around to the few existing
competitions, most were unable to summon the skills they had as amateurs.
Audiences were not impressed.
While Canada has long been a strong skating market, the sport, predictably,
did not become a big-bucks phenomenon until it caught on in the United States.
Skating has always had a small but devoted U.S. following, and every four
years the Olympics would make celebrities of such gold medallists as Peggy
Fleming and Dorothy Hamill. But the real boom began at the Calgary Games in
1988, when media hype--and a more athletic style of skating--sent the sport
leaping and spinning into a brighter spotlight. In the so-called Battle of the
Brians, America's Boitano narrowly defeated Canada's Orser, while Witt
outduelled Manley and American Debi Thomas--and the public was hooked. The
momentum continued into 1992, when the women's final won by America's Kristi
Yamaguchi in Albertville, France, was the second-highest-rated U.S. sports
broadcast that year, behind only the Super Bowl.
Going into Lillehammer last year, the reinstatement of such longtime stars as
Boitano and Witt again turned the Olympic focus towards skating. Then,
Kerrigan was attacked by a thug linked to another American skater, Harding.
"Figure skating was already the main course for television at the 1994
Olympics," says Wylie, who worked the games as a CBS analyst. "But that was
magnified enormously by the Tonya-Nancy thing."
As the audience has grown, so too have the skaters' options. Browning has
starred in several TV specials, including 1994's top-rated You Must Remember
This, which won five Gemini Awards. As well, skaters can now choose from a
range of major professional shows, including Stars on Ice, Disney's World on
Ice and the venerable Ice Capades. Then, there is the Tour of World Figure
Skating Champions, which annually assembles a cast of top professionals and
amateurs. This year's tour to 70 U.S. cities started on April 1 and features
two-time world champion Elvis Stojko of Richmond Hill, Ont., and Baiul, the
1994 Olympic gold-medallist. Stojko, though still technically an amateur, also
stages his own fall mini-tour. To keep fresh for amateur competition, Stojko
will only do about 40 of the World Champions shows. "We put together a
schedule that's workable," says his coach, Doug Leigh. "A lot of people want
his time these days, and we have to be selective."
There is no telling when the skate mania will end. But there is no shortage of
new competitors to meet the demand. In Canada, enrolment in figure-skating
clubs has jumped by nearly 30 per cent since 1988, spurred by the
international success of Orser, Manley, Browning and Stojko. Wylie,
ever-businesslike, says professional skating is secure as long as TV needs it.
And since it lost the rights to televise football, CBS has needed programming
for the weekend audience that remained untapped--mostly women. "Skating was
just what they wanted," Wylie says. "It is easy to watch, easy to cover, you
don't have to be an expert to enjoy it. It's athletic movement set to music.
That fusion," he adds with a smile, "is irresistible."
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