Browning's going to be a dad
World champ skater in town for annual Stars On Ice tour
Source: |
Halifax Herald |
Date: |
April 15, 2003 |
Author: |
Andrea Nemetz |
Kurt Browning isn't ready to write a sequel to his 1992
autobiography, Kurt Browning: Forcing the Edge.
"I've had offers, but my story is too happy, you need more angst,"
laughs the four-time world figure skating champion.
And life will soon be even happier for Browning and wife Sonia
Rodriguez, a principal dancer with the National Ballet of Canada. The
Toronto-based couple, married in July 1996, are expecting a baby boy
in July.
While he has a name picked out, Browning, who notes he's never been
in a house with a baby before, is keeping it a secret.
And the 36-year-old says he would rather see his son take up
skating than ballet. "I'd let him skate if he wants to. Skating is
hard, but dance is even harder."
Because of busy touring schedules, Browning and Rodriguez are used
to not seeing each other for long periods of time, but a recent visit
by Rodriguez to the U.S. Stars On Ice tour was especially welcome. She
was in the audience along with Tracie Hamilton, wife of 1984 Olympic
Gold medallist Scott Hamilton, who made guest appearances on the
U.S. version of the all-star skating spectacular. Newlywed Hamilton is
also expecting and Browning says, "to have the two girls watching the
show, while Scott and I were skating, knowing our babies were in their
bellies, was very special."
Browning and Hamilton are good friends, having spent most of their
competitive careers together, as well as eight seasons with Stars On
Ice. For the Canadian version of the tour, Browning and 1993 World
Pairs Champions Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler, will be the only
remaining original cast members.
Brasseur and Eisler, two-time Olympic bronze medallists, will be
one of four pairs gliding onto the ice when HSBC Stars On Ice hits
Halifax Metro Centre Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Making their Halifax debut as a pairs team are 2002 Olympic
champions Jamie Sali and David Pelletier, their co-Olympic champions
Anton Sikharulidze and Elena Berezhnaya, and 2002 World bronze
medallists Kyoka Ina and John Zimmerman.
Also in the cast are 2002 Olympic gold medallist Alexei Yagudin,
six-time U.S. national champion Todd Eldredge, eight-time British
champion Steven Cousins and five-time Canadian champion Jennifer
Robinson, making her Stars On Ice debut.
"Halifax is going to freak out," says Browning, on the phone from
Pittsburgh, stop 41 on the 61-date U.S. tour.
"Halifax is a great skating town and we get a good ego boost
starting the tour there (the 11-city Canadian tour wraps up in
Vancouver May 4). We got the most standing ovations ever there at
Stars On Ice in the early '90s - 16. It felt like a rock show on ice."
In this year's show, Browning skates two very different solos. The
first is to Tony Bennett's How Do You Keep The Music Playing.
"It's a great tune about how to keep a relationship alive that's
really special this year," he says, alluding to his relationship with
Rodriguez. "It's also about the audience, the program says thank you
to the audience. I have to stop after the first 30 seconds - it's so
special it makes my eyes water."
Browning's eyes also water in his second number to James Cotton's
Slippery Side Up, but for a different reason - it's painful,
physically. "It's a comedy about a guy trying to get across the ice
and he falls and falls. I do part of it with my guards on. It's mostly
for the kids."
While it's hard for Browning to choose a preference for performing
comedic or dramatic numbers, he says right now comedy has the edge.
Browning actually discussed the difficulty of doing comedy with
Queen Elizabeth II on the Queen's Golden Jubilee tour of Canada last
summer.
"I did a clown number with a red foam nose and after the
performance she laughed and said she'd enjoyed it, then said it must
be much more difficult to infuse humour than to do something
serious. She's a very kind lady."
Skating for the Queen was much less nerve-wracking than skating in
the closing ceremonies at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City.
"I was more nervous for that than when I was competing in the
Olympics. KISS was on right after me and it was surreal. There were
65,000 people there and how many millions more watching it on TV?"
While this year's Stars On Ice tour opens with an medley of Ozzy
Osbourne tunes, Browning says he would more likely have been playing
tunes by the Rolling Stones and the Doors than Osbourne when he was
growing up.
These days, Browning enjoys listening to the Barenaked Ladies and
the Tragically Hip.
"I listen to the Hip almost every day. They are really fun people,
they've done some solos for me and I golf with them.
"I'm also listening to Michael Buble - he's going to be a big star
- he's got a Harry Connick Jr. thing going on and he's going to be my
musical guest star on my next TV skating special.
"This guy, this voice, this sound is a really good match for Gotta
Skate. Gotta Skate will be simpler this year, he's my only
guest. We'll have a more sophisticated look. It's for the moms."
Browning will also be on the small screen all this week when he
debuts as host on the Biography Channel. He'll introduce spots on
Leslie Nielsen tonight, Lance Armstrong Wednesday, Ben Stiller
Thursday and Cal Ripken Jr. Friday, all at 9 p.m.
Tickets for Stars On Ice ($35 to $60) are available at the Metro
Centre box office, 451-1221.
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