Black & blue on ice
Find out who gets roughed up tonight in premiere of Skating with Celebrities
Source: |
Edmonton Sun |
Date: |
January 18, 2006 |
Author: |
Yuri Wuensch |
Four-time world champion figure skater and Alberta native Kurt
Browning has seen his share of gold over the years.
Now, thanks to Skating with Celebrities, he's gotten a glimpse of
black and blue, and even a little blood red.
"Oh yeah," says Browning, "there's blood - stitches, too."
Just who gets roughed up? Tune into the new series starting tonight
at 10 on Fox (Cable 16) to find out.
Not that the stars and the skaters came to blows, of course. But
when you pair pros with people who, by comparison, really can't skate,
explains Browning, accidents are bound to happen.
The pairings include Full House's Dave Coulier teaming with
two-time Olympic medallist Nancy Kerrigan; Olympic decathlon gold
medallist Bruce Jenner and world pairs skating champion Tai Babilonia;
Diff'rent Strokes's Todd Bridges and U.S. national pairs champion
Jenni Meno; actress Kristy Swanson and Canada's Lloyd Eisler, a pairs
Olympic medallist and world champion; and Fox NFL Sunday's Jillian
Barberie and three-time U.S. pairs champion John Zimmerman.
Like a lot of people who haven't skated in a while, Browning's
partner, former teen pop star Debbie Gibson, said getting going wasn't
the problem. Stopping, on the other hand ...
"She had a tiny bit of experience," Browning said during a recent
phone interview from his home in Toronto. "The way she put it was she
had rented skates around Christmas and had gone skating with her
family. She'd never actually owned her own pair of skates."
However, Browning said Gibson's skating was among the most improved
of any celebrity in the elimination format show, an ice-skating
spinoff of Dancing with the Stars.
Reluctant at first to give the show a chance, Browning was won over
by Dancing with the Stars last year, thanks to his wife.
"She's with the National Ballet of Canada and at first I was like,
'You don't want to watch this - these guys aren't going to be any
good.' But she loved it.
"About halfway through (the season) we realized why we liked it -
the celebrities were really trying."
When Browning was contacted about taking part in the Skating with
Celebrities show last summer, he hoped the stars would demonstrate the
same work ethic.
However, he was still hesitant about signing on because of his own
work-related commitments.
Hitting more than 50 cities a year with Stars on Ice, the three
months required to film Skating with Celebrities in L.A. was too much
for Browning. Fortunately, Gibson, busy herself with a career that's
taken her to Broadway, agreed to train with him in Toronto.
Gibson's perseverance was inspiring, says Browning. But in spite of
his champion skater status, he can't say he was necessarily the best
teacher.
"If (2006 BMO Canadian championships winner and 2005 world silver
medallist) Jeffrey Buttle comes to me and needs help with his triple
Axel, I can help him. But if Debbie Gibson comes to me and says, 'How
do I turn from frontwards to backwards?' well ... it's such an obvious
thing to me, but I had trouble explaining it to her.
"I actually hired somebody to help us who has a dance background on
and off the ice. He also works with kids, so I thought he was a good
choice."
Each star-skater pairing also had their own choreographer, which
was another relief for Browning. Unaccustomed as he is to teaching and
training, he says the stars are the ones who really put their
reputations on the line.
"Week after week, you'll see the celebrities really putting the
effort in. It's not one of those reality shows where people try to
make each other look bad. Here, they've put themselves out there in
something that can make them look quite foolish, which I think is
quite brave."
Speaking of guts, at 39, can Browning still pull off one of his
famous quads?
"In 2000, I was still able to do a triple Axel. Optimistically, I
still tell myself I may land a triple Axel again, but I'm not sure
I'll ever get around to it," he says with a laugh.
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