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Catching up with Kurt Browning - The Full Interview (Pt. 1)
Source: |
The Kurt Files |
Date: |
November 30, 2006 |
Author: |
Tina Tyan |
In a year in which Kurt Browning celebrated his 40th birthday and his
induction into the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame, he finds himself
as busy as ever, in high demand both on and off the ice.
One thing you can say about Kurt Browning - he knows how to keep his
plate full. Although he no longer tours for 70+ cities or
participates in the slew of pro skating events that used to dominate
the airwaves, Kurt is still busy on the ice, and has expanded his
activities behind the scenes, working as both choreographer and
commentator. I sat down with the gregarious Canadian after the recent
Ice Wars competition to chat about the many hats he wears.
This is the first of a three-part series talking to Kurt.
Ice Wars
Kurt Browning has a long history with Ice Wars. He has been in every
Ice Wars but one since the first in 1994, and his head-to-head matchup
with Brian Boitano has become the consistent centerpiece of the
competition. Boitano and Browning have had a longtime "rivalry" in
the professional skating world, starting from the World Professional
Championships of the mid-90's. But it's been a rivalry characterized
by respect and friendship rather than one-upmanship.
Tell me about the programs you did tonight.
Easy's from the Barenaked Ladies. I just had to tweak the order
a bit because I was playing with them a lot [at Gotta Skate], so I
just fixed that. Every time he says "easy" I just wanted to fly,
which is a little unrealistic and kind of silly, but it was a
different approach to a program. It's not that the jumps were that
hard, but it was just seeing them over and over again. Just a theme I
had never tried before. But it was fun! And it went ok.
And then I was at Skate America and I tried so hard to get Easy
ready for the last two days. I was at Skate America talking so I
didn't skate for five or six days. And then I came home and I had two
days to retweak it, and I skated too much and I hurt my thighs. Not
injured, I just burnt them out, and I never made it through my country
number [Expectation and the Blues]. I was kind of disappointed
'cause that number was going so well at home. At home, it was so
precise. Everything had a note. And I didn't perform it. I performed
it about 60% of what I wanted. But, first time out, I was tired, you
know, I'll take it.
Ice Wars was originally created as a Nancy [Kerrigan] vs Oksana
[Baiul] rematch. Did you ever think it'd ever come down to you
vs. Brian [Boitano] every year?
No, no, of course not. And it didn't start with me against Brian in
the very beginning. I was always against Paul [Wylie]. [Ice Wars]
were as big as Worlds, they were as big as the World Professional
Championships. It was *huge*. And now it's a really fun tradition.
But at that time, I think because I was emotionally so close to being
a competitor, that it was like my one chance to really compete -
Canadian Pro and Ice Wars. And now I'm so far away from those days
that I'm not as attached to the competitive fire, so I think for Brian
and I, it doesn't really feel the same. It's a fun rivalry. I'm not
training to beat Brian. I'm just training to see, am I in good enough
shape? Against Brian, it's awesome, but it is not personal, in almost
any way, shape or form.
Back when you were skating World Pros against each other, did it
carry over to Ice Wars a bit more?
I don't even think so. Then, it was a shock to be competitive with
Brian. And to beat him was literally one of the most amazing things
I've ever done, in my personal list of achievements as a skater. To
beat Brian at his best was... you know, once, I thought it was a fluke
or whatever, but then I did it twice, so I thought that was, like,
*wow*. It was just like, wow, they really consider me a skater's
skater. You know, I've really actually been considered one of the
better skaters that ever skated if they allow me to be competitive
against Brian Boitano. And back then I really wore an invisible medal
on my chest with my respect for Brian. Obviously, I love Brian, and I
loved him then. He's a sweetheart of a guy, and a really good
friend. He's just so sincere, and so honest, and so nice. Such a
great pillar of the sport. He's just awesome. So to beat him was
awesome.
We're both older and our priorities are different, and I think now we
both bring different things to the table. It's kind of like, you know
what? This year I have a really good program. If I can land my
jumps, I'm probably going to win. If my program isn't as good...oh,
Brian's got a really good choreography this year. Hits his triple
lutz, triple toe-triple toe this week, oh then he's got it. So we
just kind of take turns being the guy who's most prepared this time of
year. It's fun. ....Brian and I, we want to do a good show. We both
want to skate well and we want it to be a good competition. Neither
of us wants to just give it to the other guy because that's not our
job, right? Our job is to fight, and to skate well, and to make
people go "ooh". That's the best. That's what we want as
professionals.
Why do you keep coming back to Ice Wars?
It's the only chance to flex your competitive muscle. It's that one
last chance to, you know, no retakes, someone skates after you, and
there's marks. [Those] old nerves, and do you still have it, and can
you do it. Those little things that happen in your brain on the way
into a jump that matters...it's fun, to go back in time a little
bit.
If they did it again next year, would you come back?
<thinks for a while> Yeah, probably I would. I don't want to do it if
I'm not looking that good out there. I can do shows, probably, you
can get away with stuff. But to compete in prime time when people are
giving you marks, you want to look healthy, you want to look good. So
if I still think that I can be competitive, then I'll do
it. Absolutely.
What jumps do you still train?
This year I didn't [train a triple-triple]. I usually try and do it,
and this year I was just too busy. Too busy being a dad. .... I was
trying to do [the] loop. I had the blade wrong [on my new skates].
And I didn't have the patience to either change the blade or train it
hard enough and I just went screw it, this year I'm not doing it. So
I train up to loop. I was doing triple axel this year, landing
them. I landed three. One really nice one, for my coach in Edmonton on
warmup for Stars on Ice. Do I do the triple axel on a regular basis?
No. I do them just to see if I can still do it. The axels were just
flying so well. It was like, just throw in the other revolution, and
I was in the air going "this feels like my old triple axel." And I
saw it on the little handicam, and I went, that looked good! I did
lutz and flip too. Those were all beer bets with Pelletier.
Halloween on Ice
In addition to Ice Wars, Kurt performed in three Disson skating
specials this fall. His first event of the season was Halloween on
Ice, in which all the skaters played Halloween-themed characters
(devil, witch, zombie, etc), and stayed in character throughout the
show. Charismatic skater that he is, Browning is no stranger to
playing and maintaining characters. His Rag-GIDON-Time program
developed into a full-blown clown character that started well before
the program began, and lasted well after. One year in Stars on Ice,
"Raggy" provided the throughline through the show, with Kurt virtually
never breaking character as he interacted with the other skaters and
the audience. At Halloween on Ice, Kurt played the character of
"Scarecrow" from The Wizard of Oz, a character he's not quite
ready to let go of yet.
What goes into developing a character like that?
Music. Music-driven. I didn't watch a tape of the show or anything. I
was going to. I was going to watch Wizard of Oz and then I just
got on the ice and I just went, "Hmmm. Something's happening, and I'll
just keep going with it." And I realized I was barely skating [but] I
was like, screw it, who cares. I'll move around more on the ice on
the next one. And this one I'm having so much fun with this music.
The music so different. It changed all the time. Kept changing, kept
changing, and I kept having to change with it. I loved it. It was so
much fun. The costume helped. I mean, the costume was ridiculously
perfect and really nice. So everything you do looks even
better.
The costuming for that show in general was really good.
Denis! He's my guy! I got Denis all the Steve Disson gigs. He's very
professional, he's been working for CBC television for years and years
and years. So he's done everything once, and most things twice. He
knows how to do everything. He's a very professional guy, Denis
Pizzacalla. Awesome. Awesome. Phone him up everyone, he's good. Just
don't make him too busy so he can get my stuff done <laughs>.
How does having a character like that change how you approach a
program? Does it change how you skate the program?
Of course. Spins and jumps were out the window. I kept thinking
about trying to make sure that there was never a moment where a kid
would all of a sudden see me start skating. I just had to stay the
Scarecrow the whole time. Never once become a skater. The other one
was a little more scary Scarecrow. They asked me to do that.
Possessed, scary Scarecrow. And so that was a little more like, it's
just a skating number. Still fun! I like the first 10 seconds,
melting and coming back up again, all scary <laughs>. It was really
fun! So I really, really enjoy it.
You know, I think I'm going to do it in Stars! I really liked it, and
I thought it was unusual, and I didn't want to see it go away.
Kurt Browning's Gotta Skate 6.0
Kurt Browning's Gotta Skate show is in its sixth year.
It has always been a creative and fun show, but this year, it was
particularly special since Kurt's good friends, popular Canadian band
the Barenaked Ladies, were the musical guests.
How was it having Barenaked Ladies as the musical guests at Gotta
Skate?
I'll be honest. I felt really important. <laughs> I felt kind of
powerful. I mean, I had Bocelli, I've had a lot of amazing
artists. But if I wanted to have a party, I would invite the Barenaked
Ladies. Or the Tragically Hip. But if it was a skating party,
probably the Barenaked Ladies would work better. So I'm like, this is
my party!
I was very involved with the concept and design of the stage, and the
interaction of the skaters with the band. And I almost got everything
I wanted. My team made it happen. And I *really*, *really* worked
hard to make sure that the Ladies knew that they were allowed to be
themselves. "This is your show, you're not just coming out and
playing music while we skate. Don't want you to feel that way." I
got e-mails from two of the band members saying that they felt
inspired and reinvigorated and motivated, and they had so much fun. It
was awesome to get that feedback. So I really hope when the show
comes out that it comes across as interactive, friendship, a rock show
with skaters skating. I hope that it comes across the way it
felt.
It was a great live show.
It was a good live show. Great crowd. It was..like I said to the
crowd, it was, "man, what is it with figure skating?" You know,
here's the skater <makes half-hearted cheer>. Ok, they're just
gonna play a song <makes a deep excited roar>. The reaction was
totally different.
I think you're expected to react different. Skating's
more..refined.
Yeah, I know. It's like, awwww they look so cute out there. But I
wanted to be a rock star too! <laughs> Pretty fun. It was a good
night.
Gretchen Wilson Country on Ice
Born and raised in Alberta, Kurt Browning has never had problems
revisiting his Western roots. Cowboy-themed programs such as the
tongue-in-cheek 'Hollywood stripper' Don't Fence Me In or the
fast-moving Blues Berry Hill have cropped up from time to time
in his repertoire, and he skated in the original StarSkates Goes
Country special in 1999. The new Disson Country on Ice special thus
seems a perfect fit. At the time of the Ice Wars competition, Kurt
had not yet skated in Country on Ice yet, but he was looking forward
to the show with anticipation. One of the programs he was to perform
was the one he did at Ice Wars - Expectation and the Blues by
Albertan singer Corb Lund. Kurt met Lund while filming "Alberta
Bound" last summer, a special spotlighting Albertan musicians and
artists in celebration of Alberta's Centennial, and loved his
music. The other program was to Gretchen Wilson performing Rebel
Child live.
Tell me about your other program for Country on Ice
This one feels good. I mean, I'll probably do it one day and then
never do it again, but she [Gretchen Wilson] is rockin'! That's good,
I'm looking forward to it. I'm hoping I can jump on the stage with
her just to stand there and be cool for a second, and then get the
hell off, but we'll see. Rebel [Child], right. She's rockin',
it should be a fun show.
Ice Wars airs Friday, Dec. 1, 2006 from 8-10PM EST on
CBS. Kurt Browning's Gotta Skate 6.0 airs Sunday, Dec. 17, 2006 from
4-6PM EST on NBC. Gretchen Wilson Country on Ice airs Saturday,
Dec. 23, 2006 from 4-6PM EST on NBC.
Part two of this three part interview is up here. In it, Kurt Browning
talks choreography and commentating. Part three, in which Kurt talks
about his own skating and career is up here.
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