Skating to the top
Blue-chip names. Ice shows are big business with focus on marketing entertainment
Source: |
Ottawa Citizen |
Date: |
April 19, 2003 |
Author: |
James Careless and Susan Trott |
It's billed as a skating show, featuring the sport's blue chip
names: Kurt Browning, Alexei Yagudin, Jamie Sale and David
Pelletier. But HSBC Stars On Ice, opening at the Corel Centre today,
is less about spins, triple lutzes and jumps than it is about skaters
being savvy businesspeople and marketers.
A case in point: In 1984, Olympic and world figure-skating champion Scott Hamilton won Olympic Gold in Sarajevo, then turned pro with the Ice Capades show. However, "after I had spent two years with Ice Capades, the show was bought by another company," Hamilton said.
"The new owners felt that a man doesn't sell tickets, and so they
didn't renew my contract. So I had no other choice but to create my
own way of making a living, and Stars on Ice came out of that."
Hamilton hit pay dirt. Today, HSBC Stars on Ice "is one of the
single largest annual tours in Canada," said Byron Allen, who's been
producing the Canadian Stars on Ice tour since it started in 1989.
It is also part of the U.S. Smucker's Stars On Ice tour, which
covers 72 cities across North America and boasts a complete cast and
crew, including equipment trucks, lighting, and roadies. Stars On Ice
is reminiscent of the Rolling Stones on tour, Allen said.
Other stars are also skating up income. Olympic medalist and World
champion Elvis Stojko is with Chevy Champions On Ice, a 27-city
U.S. tour that follows on the heels of last fall's 11-city Canadian
tour Canon SK8 with Elvis Stojko.
Billed as "so hot it will melt the ice," Stojko himself programmed
SK8 to grab the youth market. He hired well-known deejay Chris
Shepherd to spin hip-hop tunes, creating a "dance club" feel to the
show.
"We wanted to add something fresh and new to the scene," Stojko
explained, "because the same exhibition style's been going on for a
long time."
Kurt Browning recalled the initial office meeting between his
family and agent Michael Barnett. "I fell asleep on the couch during
the meeting, that's how interested I was," Browning said. "During one
of the times when I was awake, I heard Barnett say, 'you're going to
make $50,000 next year.' That's when I turned to my parents and said,
'this guy doesn't have a clue what he's talking about.' "
As it turned out, he did. Over the years, Kurt Browning has
prospered as a pro skater, and learned how to sell Stars On Ice
tickets in the process.
"We market it on the ability of stars like Sale and Pelletier to
attract people to the show," Browning said. "Once we've got them in
the door, we want the overall quality of the show itself to bring them
back again next year."
The bottom line is that today's pro skaters know about the bottom
line. When it comes to making money, they're not asleep on the couch.
|