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Skating stars coming to S.J.
Source: |
San Jose Mercury News |
Date: |
January 9, 2004 |
Author: |
Andrew Gilbert |
qThe talent-stuffed Stars on Ice tour arrives at HP Pavilion on
Sunday afternoon with a flashy new production, ``Time: A Theatrical
Adventure,'' a title that suggests more than was probably intended.
The theme of time might seem amorphous, even for an event with as
little need for an animating topic as this premier skating
showcase. But for figure skaters who face amateur competitive careers
that often end before they're fully grown, time can be cruel.
Of course, that's not a reality explored in the show, but the
ticking clock faced by these athletic fireflies is an unavoidable
subtext, particularly with the eagerly awaited reappearance after a
two-year performance hiatus of 1994 Olympic champion Oksana Baiul, who
recently noted during an online chat with fans that ``at the last
three Olympics no girl over the age of 16 has won, and by the time
they're 18, they have difficulty landing the same jumps that won them
the medals.''
Produced by Scott Hamilton and conceived and directed by
Christopher Dean, both Olympic champions, ``Stars on Ice'' boasts a
roster of skaters so medal-bedecked that it's a wonder they can make
it through airport security. The headliners include 2002 Olympic gold
medalist Alexei Yagudin; world champion and six-time U.S. national
champion Todd Eldredge; and both gold-medal pairs from the 2002
Olympic judging controversy, Canada's Jamie Sale and David Pelletier
and Russia's Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Anton Sikharulidze.
Combining choreography, words and music with state-of-the-art
lighting and sound effects, the production is designed as a series of
emotional epiphanies with a streak of broad humor running throughout.
``There's one serious moment where the passing of time is quite
eloquently touched upon,'' says four-time world champion Kurt
Browning, 37, who along with Baiul is a featured guest star. He's
speaking from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, where the skaters
are stranded briefly by bad weather. ``But generally Christopher Dean
has a very quirky sense of humor, and we all know Scott Hamilton loves
to have a good time, no pun intended.''
Browning, the first person to land a quadruple jump in world
competition, performs two jazzy numbers, one to fellow Canadian
Michael Buble's swinging version of Van Morrison's ``Moondance'' and
the other to the jump blues ``Ding Dong Daddy.'' Baiul is also
featured in two numbers, one that uses a Jennifer Lopez tune and the
other a balletic routine to Tchaikovsky's ``Swan Lake,'' music that
she used for her 1994 triumph at Lillehammer.
Only 16 at the time, Baiul seized the gold medal while the media
fixated on Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan. Once Baiul's story became
known, her brave performance seemed even more compelling. Born in
Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine, she was the only child of parents who
divorced when she was 2. Raised by her mother and grandparents, Baiul
had lost them all by age 13 and was then left alone when her coach
moved to Canada.
In the years following her Olympic victory, she seemed to fall
apart in public as a bout with heavy drinking made her tabloid fodder,
a period that culminated in a serious car crash. She credits her
fiance, Gene Sunik, for helping her gain control over her life and
career.
She's back on the road after a two-year break. ``I've been working
constantly since I was 4 or 5 years old, constantly touring,
constantly doing television shows, and I thought to myself it's a
wonderful time for me to get a little break,'' says Baiul, 26, from
Seattle. ``Before, I really wasn't in control of my own decisions, but
now I am 100 percent. So now I'm trying to come across with good
skating, good costumes, good makeup and a good show. I am a very
competitive person and a very big perfectionist, and if I do
something, I'd rather do it the right way.''
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