Ice entertainers light up Saddledome: Ovations galore for some of skating's best
Source: |
Calgary Herald |
Date: |
May 12, 2002 |
Author: |
Bob Blakey |
Copyright 2002 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest Global
Communications Corp. All Rights Reserved
For lovers of figure skating, it doesn't get much better than this.
Kurt Browning jumping and clowning, Shae-Lynn Bourne and Victor
Kraatz moving in near-flawless harmony and Kristi Yamaguchi swirling
with exquisite grace.
Throughout the Stars on Ice evening at the Pengrowth Saddledome
Saturday, figure-skating lovers were treated to some of the sport's
finest practitioners, choreographed for entertainment value and
dressed for fun.
Audience shouts of "We love you, Kurt," were repeated with name
changes for many of the skaters, and standing ovations became routine
after the first three numbers got fans on their feet.
Their years of competing against each other behind them, a dozen
former Olympic skaters demonstrated just how dazzling they can be when
there are no cold stares from judges, just the cheers and gratitude of
thousands of people who know the sport well.
Besides those mentioned above, the show presented Alexei Yagudin,
Brian Orser, Isabelle Brasseur, Lloyd Eisler, Todd Eldredge, Jenni
Meno, Todd Sand and Lucinda Ruh.
Between frequent costume changes, they skated to a wide variety of
music from Christine Aguilera, U2, FatBoy Slim, Michael Jackson,
Roberta Flack, Enigma and others.
Only a can-can dance from the movie Moulin Rouge proved too
challenging for the women. OK, you try kicking your legs high while
wearing skates.
The rest of the numbers were slick and sophisticated, with the
theme of romance threading through the entire show.
Moulin Rouge influences kept popping up, and not just in the
score. It's as if the film's wide success has inspired a new interest
in flashy, colourful, extravagant showmanship -- an exuberant
come-and-get vitality that works in an ice show as well as anywhere.
The flash never got in the way of the skating art, however, and
there was plenty of room for individual performers to serve up
trademark moves. Yagudin gave us his familiar tap-dancing
footwork. Browning injected plenty of physical humour. Ruh showed off
her spins.
And the muscular, lofty Eisler and diminutive Brasseur gave us the
evening's funniest number, a cross-dressing routine that had him in a
mini-skirt and her in biker colours and a mustache.
That's entertainment!
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