Event Preview: Skating with the Stars
Former champions hit town in the wake of Olympic fever -- and scandal
Source: |
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette |
Date: |
March 8, 2002 |
Author: |
Pohla Smith |
The Rink at PPG Plaza isn't nearly large enough to contain the
athletic feats of four-time world figure skating champion Kurt
Browning, so the kids with whom he skated had to settle for a single
axel instead of a triple.
They weren't disappointed, though, for he had plenty of other
tricks up his sleeve.
Soon he had them lined up with hands joined, whizzing around the
tight circle of the rink. "Crack the Whip!" he shouted, and a couple
of the kids went rocketing off in different directions, laughing in
delight despite a temperature in the teens and a hard wind that made
it feel like, well, nobody really wanted to know.
The kids weren't laughing as hard as Browning, though, and when one
of the Special Olympians presented him with her gold skating medal, he
just as obviously was moved.
"That's the only one I never won," said Browning, who ran into bad
luck in his trips to the Olympics in 1992 and 1994. He finished sixth
at the '92 Albertville Winter Games and fifth at Nagano,
Japan. Browning thanked the smiling girl for her gift and hugged her.
Browning, 35, was in Pittsburgh Monday to promote the Stars on Ice
show at Mellon Arena Sunday and to make the day of these Special
Olympians. He scored high on both counts. He pushed some of the kids
around the ice like a train engine, taught three of them how to glide
on one knee and posed for picture after picture and video after
video. He even skated a couple of laps "the old-fashioned way" with
this reporter, who was making her third wobbly appearance on ice since
somewhere around 1970.
"Hey, you're doing great for it being 30 years," he said. "Left
foot, right foot, what else is there?"
His talent for comedy -- he entertained the Special Olympians with
some clownish tripping and stumbling -- is just one of the attributes
that makes Browning one of the most beloved male skaters in history
and a standout in the star-laden Stars on Ice ensemble cast. He has an
uncanny gift for impressions -- anyone who has ever seen his
"Casablanca" and Philip Marlowe-style routines will attest to
that. And his athleticism -- he was the first skater to land a
quadruple jump in competition -- remains that of a far younger
man. Browning, the son of a cowboy, also was a talented hockey player
as a youngster growing up in Carolina, Alberta, Canada. But he made
what proved to be a great decision to concentrate on figure skating
when he was 15.
A four-time Canadian champion now in the Canadian Sports Hall of
Fame, Browning had time for seriousness during his visit here,
too. The controversy involving the Olympic pairs competition in Salt
Lake City upset him as much as any viewer, and he has given the
long-ingrained problems in judging much thought.
"You want people to trust your sport, and if people are talking
more about the judging than they are the skating, then something's
wrong," he said.
"You know you get used to things in your own house. You get used to
how things work and you get used to judges having opinions and
changing other judges' opinions and campaigning for their skaters. You
get used to that and you grow up with it and you live with it.
"But out-and-out cheating -- let's clean house. Let's be
respectable. You come and pay money to see Katarina Witt, Kristi
Yamaguchi because they were great champions. You want people to trust
that they're the one who won."
Browning said he has talked to a "high-up" man in the International
Skating Union who previewed serious changes to be considered at the
next meeting.
They include picking judges closer in time to the competitions,
leaving less time for pressuring other judges.
"They might not be putting in numbers any more," Browning
added. "They'll be putting in excellent, very good, good, average,
below average, mediocre and bad, and they'll just push a button so you
can pick the excellent button for the top three skaters. ... Then
they'll have to figure out some system that ranks how tough each jump
is and what factor that jump is and weight it like diving. Then the
computer will have this magic number, how hard that program is and
it'll [multiply] that number by what percentage.
"This is what I've heard."
Browning has an idea of his own.
"I've always hated that one judge gives both marks," he said. "It
should be one judge gives a technical mark; one judge gives an
artistic mark, and then you don't control the outcome so much. So why
even have two marks? Why not give just one mark like they do in
gymnastics. ...
Browning, who is married to the principal dancer of the National
Ballet of Canada, Sonia Rodriguez, also has wondered if going outside
skating to find the judges for artistry might be a good direction to
go. "A specialist panel," he said. "There's a dancer, there's a
singer, there's a musician, there's a skater."
A change in the fact that judges are allowed to attend every
practice also might be beneficial, he said. Instead, he suggests "an
open practice where you can preview your program for the judges, you
can choose to go or not and then those judges sit there and you give
it your best shot to influence them or to prepare them for what [the
skaters] are going to be doing because it's hard" for a judge to see.
Browning, who lives with his wife of five years in Toronto, noted
that the number of ice shows touring here and abroad have multiplied
despite occasional scandals or controversies like the one in Salt Lake
City. "If the Golf Channel can exist, we can do as much skating as we
want to. I'm a fan of golf, but a whole channel of it? I always stop
at golf; I always watch for a while. If [the ice show] is good,
there'll be room for it. The bad things don't stay, and the good
things do, and the people make that decision."
And Stars on Ice has always been a good show -- it's been touring
since 1986. But this is the first year without its founder, Scott
Hamilton. Potential audiences have to wonder what it's like without
him.
"It's quiet in the dressing room," Browning quipped. "He's so funny.
"It's been fine," he added. "It's always been designed as a show
that didn't rely on one person to be there. We can have an injury and
the show will still go on. That's why his name was never put on it. It
never was Scott Hamilton's Stars on Ice."
Attendance is down some this season, Browning said, but he blames
the Sept. 11 terrorist attack -- "it was a terrible blow to all sorts
of things" -- and the Olympics.
"Before the Olympics there's always a down," he said. "We've seen
it every year, and after the Olympics it goes back up."
With Hamilton gone from the show, Browning said he's had to assume
a little more responsibility. "I get the microphone a little more
often [on ice]," he said. "They give me some choreographic
responsibilities as well."
But Browning said he and the rest of the men are just supporting
actors to Tara Lipinski, Yamaguchi and Witt.
"The show's all about the girls," he said. To that extent, the men
have a number where they stage a sort of panty raid in protest. "It's
more of a fishnet raid," he said.
But Browning is wrong if he thinks the show is just about "the
girls." Last year one of the most popular numbers featured the men
skating on chairs. This year, they skate on tables, a routine
choreographed by Olympic ice dance champion Christopher Dean.
"It's very playful and very physical. We're over the tables, under
the tables, flinging them around," Browning said. "We're sliding on
them, rolling on them while they spin. They're wood and they're
heavy. I fall back on it and land on it. I spin it around me ... so
that's fun."
For skaters and audience alike. Remember, there are no judges.
Event Preview: The rest of the Team
TARA LIPINSKI -- Skating fans best remember Lipinski as the
15-year-old sprite who upset heavily favored Michele Kwan to win the
gold medal at the 1998 Nagano Olympics and become the youngest athlete
to win a championship in any Winter Olympic sport. But Lipinski has
become much more than an engaging jumping jack in the four years since
her stunning victory. She has developed her artistry so that it
matches, perhaps even surpasses, her on-ice athleticism. Still only 19
years old, she also has become a commercial spokeswoman for a long
list of companies ranging from McDonald's to Charles Schwab and
launched a promising acting career. Among her acting gigs are a
recurring role on the soap opera "The Young and the Restless" and a
spot in the new Tom Cruise film "Vanilla Sky."
KRISTI YAMAGUCHI -- Stars on Ice co-star Kurt Browning says
Yamaguchi is skating even better now than she did when she joined the
tour as the reigning Olympic champion 10 years ago. "I don't know how
she does it," he said of Yamaguchi, 30. Along with two amateur senior
world championships, she has won all of the major pro competitions at
least once and remains one of the most popular female athletes in any
sport. One of the few women to reach the highest levels of amateur
skating both in singles and pairs -- she was world junior champion in
both events -- her multiple talents make her a perfect fit for the
ensemble-style numbers in Stars on Ice. Yamaguchi is married to Bret
Hedican, a player with the NHL's Carolina Hurricanes in the National
Hockey League.
KATARINA WITT -- Who will ever forget her "Dueling Carmens" with
American Debi Thomas at the 1988 Calgary Olympics? Or her moving
interpretation of Pete Seeger's "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?,"
which she dedicated to war-torn Sarajevo at the 1994 Lillehammer
Winter Games? It is no wonder this two-time Olympic, four-time world
champion was voted No. 1 living female Winter Olympic athlete of the
century by the Associated Press in 1999. Witt, 36, has gone on to have
an acting career, with roles in "Jerry Maguire," "Ronin" and in the
HBO comedy series "Arli$$." She returns to Stars on Ice for the first
time since 1997.
ILIA KULIK -- Kulik, 24, a native of Moscow, won the 1998 Olympic
championship in Nagano, Japan, and then turned professional. He is in
his fourth season with Stars on Ice. Now a resident of Los Angeles,
Kulik also has begun acting and last year was in the Nicholas Hytner
film "Center Stage." He and his partner, Olympic pairs champion
Ekaterina Gordeeva, became the parents of a baby girl, Elizaveta, last
June 15.
ANJELIKA KRYLOVA and OLEG OUSIANNIKOV -- Russians Krylova, 28, and
Ousiannikov, 32, began ice dancing together in 1994 after years of
skating with other partners. Two years later they won the world silver
medal and two years after that they won the Olympic silver medal in
Nagano, Japan. New this year to Stars on Ice, they live, train and
teach at the University of Delaware.
JENNI MENO and TODD SAND -- This married couple is the most
successful pairs skaters in American history: they are three-time
national champions, 1998 world silver medalists and two-time world
bronze medalists. They also represented the United States at three
Olympics. Former singles skaters, each had different pairs partners
before they teamed in 1992. Their first year they were fifth at
worlds. They finished fifth -- and got engaged -- at the 1994 Olympics
and married the following year. Meno, 31, and Sand, 38, have their own
training rink in Costa Mesa, Calif.
DENIS PETROV -- Petrov, 33, is former pairs partner of Elena
Bechke, with whom he won the Olympic silver medal in 1992. He is
skating alone for the second consecutive year in Stars on Ice. Elena
and Denis teach skaters of all levels in Richmond, Va.
STEVEN COUSINS -- Cousins, 29, is an eight-time British champion
who now trains in Barrie, Ontario. Known for his fun-loving style on
and off the ice, he also is developing an acting career. Cousins
skated at three Olympic Games. He was sixth in 1998 at Nagano, Japan.
LUCINDA RUH -- Ruh, 22, was 1996 Swiss champion but she has lived
and trained all over the world, including Japan, China and Canada. A
magnificent spinner, Ruh is skating with Stars on Ice for the first
time.
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