kurtfiles

 
Home
Profile
Record
Articles
News
Photo
Stars on Ice
Music
References
Miscellaneous
 
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2017
2018
2019
2020
2022
2023



From ice to stage, Kurt Browning can't sit still

Forget the sequined outfits. Now he's really letting loose

Source: Globe and Mail
Date: December 7, 2007
Author: R.M. Vaughan
After a few minutes in a quiet room with the too-energetic Kurt Browning, one surmises that he must have been a lemur, or maybe a distressed squirrel, in a previous life. The champion figure skater and professional ice dancer turned television skating commentator (and now actor) cannot and will not sit still. I wonder: Does he sleep, or just hang upside down and twitch?

Browning, of course, is best known as the four-time world champion figure skater who represented Canada in three Olympic Games. He was also the first skater to land a quadruple jump in competition (see squirrel theory, above). Since he turned pro, Browning has appeared in dozens of ice dancing shows, live and televised, and now lends his quirky wit to ABC, CBC and ESPN as a competition commentator.

With all this going on, why would Mr. Browning want to put himself in front of the most merciless audience in the world - preteen children? Worse yet, he's doing it during the Christmas season, when the kids are all hopped up on candy and off-gassing toys. Taking on the lead role in Peter Pan: The Family Musical That's Silly. Very Silly! (currently playing the Elgin Theatre in Toronto), Browning is expected to roller-skate, fly, sing and, heaven help him, act.

So, you're playing Peter Pan's older brother.

Yes. Ha! Much older! No, I'm playing Peter.

But Peter Pan is the boy who never grew up.

And?

Um, well, you're obviously grown-up.

[Rubs bald head] You can see that, huh? I'm playing Peter, but a Peter who is young inside. He just looks older outside because, in the play, Neverland has become a really boring place and people are starting to age. I take a lot of hits, jokes at me, in this show, because Peter thinks he's getting younger-looking and he's not.

Who has the best skater booty, you or Josée Chouinard?

Depends on what you're looking for, doesn't it? Josée is cute in every pore. She totally beats me in that category.

Why do you want to be an actor at this stage in your profession? It's not an easy life.

I'm not sure I want to "be an actor." I mean, people train years for this, and I've just walked into this role because I can work a pair of roller skates - but the real actors are being very nice to me. Ross [Petty, the producer and co-star of Peter Pan] is a friend of mine, and after a night in Halifax when we became acquainted with every bartender in town, he asked me to be in one of his pantomimes. I knew a bit about pantomime and how much room there is for a performer to let loose. I don't know if I want to keep doing this; it's not like I'm telling the world this is my "acting debut." It's enormous fun, and I'll let everyone else decide if I should continue.

Any figure skating costumes you regret?

Are you kidding? There are many, many outfits I regret!

Feathers?

Not too many feathers, no, but now it's like looking at pictures of yourself from high school: What was I thinking? I once did a Casablanca-for-the-nineties routine. I wore a low-cut tuxedo shirt and a big chain around my neck. I've had lots of oversequined outfits too - but, you know, it is figure skating.

You're known for your plain speaking when you do skating commentaries.

I can be cranky, sure. I take it personally when I feel a skater is not giving the audience everything, when they're being technically perfect but aren't showing the people their personality. Then, I get a little snippy.

I thought it was you in Blades of Glory, but it was Scott Hamilton. Does it bug you that people confuse you two?

I don't mind being confused with Scott when I'm in the U.S., because the man is a god down there. But it makes the hairs on my neck stand up when people do it here.

Sorry! Everyone's talking about that poor Maple Leafs rookie who posted naked pictures of himself on the Internet. Sports celebrity sure has changed since your heyday.

There's a new style of media scrutiny, because anyone can use a camera phone and now everyone has one. I don't even check my own website.

But there are things I did when I was younger that I would never do now.

Particulars

BORN

June 18, 1966, Rocky Mountain House, Alta.

STAR ON ICE

Having won four world figure-skating championships (but placed a disappointing fifth at the Lillehammer Olympics), Browning retired from the amateur ranks in 1994. Through events such as the Stars on Ice tours, he became a crucial member of the nineties pro skating crowd that included Brian Orser, Brian Boitano and Victor Petrenko. Browning also competed in the world professional championships, winning three times.

FAMILY LIFE

In 1995, Browning proposed - at centre ice in Maple Leaf Gardens, while taping a TV special - to ballerina Sonia Rodriguez. The couple were married in 1996. (Then a dancer with the National Ballet, Rodriguez became one of the company's principal dancers in 2000.) They now have two sons: Gabriel, 4, and newborn Dillon.