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Cover story: a profile of Kurt Browning
Source: |
Village Post |
Date: |
November 2013 |
Author: |
Jared Lindzon |
Looking back at his illustrious career, Kurt Browning is still amazed
at the incredible opportunities that figure skating has afforded him
over the years.
From skating for Queen Elizabeth II to being named Canada's athlete of
the year, winning four titles at the World Figure Skating
Championships and carrying the Canadian flag at the 1994 Olympics, the
figure skater, father, Guinness World Record holder and TV personality
is preparing for his next great adventure, as a judge on the upcoming
season of CBC's Battle of the Blades.
Sometimes my career confuses me," says the 47-year-old, from his home
in Forest Hill. "I just think to myself, 'Holy crap, that guy has done
a lot,' and then I go, 'Wait a minute, that's you. All you've done is
skate.' "
When Browning first began figure skating, he never dreamed of
competing on the world stage. Instead, he and his parents saw it as a
way to improve his hockey skills as a kid growing up on a 360-acre
farm in the foothills of central Alberta. Practising at the nearest
arena in Caroline, a sleepy town of around 500 people, Browning
describes what he remembers of his childhood with a single word:
"freedom."
"I was on a horse or skating on a pond or sledding on a big hill, and
I didn't have a lot of restrictions," he says.
Browning's first skating competition came at the age of 12 in Lacombe,
Alta., where the young athlete found himself completely unprepared,
his coach having given him less than a day to learn his 90-second long
program.
"I started the competition, and after about 15 seconds, I completely
forgot (the program), so I just made it up as it went," he says. "I
came third out of six, so I got a medal. To this day it's still one of
my nicest, coolest medals."
At the age of 16, Browning's family moved to Edmonton, forcing him to
leave his hockey bag behind, instead dedicating his time on the ice to
honing his figure skating skills. After that, it wasn't long before
Browning was lacing up with some of the best skaters in the country
and competing internationally.
Six years later, in 1989, Browning won his first World Championship at
age 22.
"The first one kind of came out of nowhere," he says. "I think I was
the only one that thought I could win, and when it happened it was a
surprise to the world."
Browning says he "barely won" his second world title in 1990 while
battling through an injury, but by his third world title in 1991 he
knew there was nothing stopping him.
"That was the most confident moment of my career," he says.
After tucking his third world title under his belt, Browning decided
to take part in the Canadian adaptation of Stars on Ice in 1991 and
has been an institution for the show ever since. In its 23 years in
Canada, Browning has appeared in all 240 performances, and
approximately 850 Stars on Ice shows internationally throughout his
career.
"I missed half of one of those shows due to the plane being delayed,
and that's it," he says. "I kind of feel a sense of ownership of that
brand that I don't deserve on paper."
Browning's next major international competition came at the 1992
Winter Olympic Games, where he placed sixth while competing with a
back injury. After failing to reach the podium, Browning returned to
the World Figure Skating Championships with a renewed sense of
determination.
"I stayed competing just to win Worlds one more time, so that I could
prove to myself that I would have won the Olympics if I had been
healthy," Browning notes.
After winning his fourth world title in '93, Browning competed at the
Winter Olympic Games again in 1994, finishing fifth.
Though not a Torontonian by birth, Browning decided to move to the big
city in '92 when he started dating his now-wife, Sonia Rodriguez, a
principal dancer with the National Ballet of Canada. The couple now
lives in Forest Hill with their two sons, Gabriel and Dillon,
surrounded by neighbours who provided a backbone of support when times
got tough.
In August 2010, over 80 firefighters were called to the home to
extinguish a three-alarm blaze. It all started when a rainstorm left
several inches of water in Browning's Porsche.
Browning used a leaf blower in an attempt to dry his car out and
prevent it from getting mouldy. However, things swiftly spiralled out
of control.
"I was in the garage, and my phone rang, and I couldn't hear the
person who was talking to me [over the leaf blower], so I went back
inside the house. While I was in the house, something went wrong and
the fire started."
The fire quickly spread through the garage, and by the time the fire
department arrived 18 minutes later, the house was fully engulfed in
flames. It was over two and a half years before Browning was able to
re-enter his home, but through that devastating experience many of
Browning's Forest Hill neighbours came to the aid of him and his
family.
One neighbour in particular, who had lost her home in a fire years
earlier, provided the Browning family with clothing and food and
helped them find a place to stay.
"She knew exactly what we were going through, she knew exactly what we
needed, and she was simply awesome," he says. "So now she gets tickets
to every skating thing I ever do."
Now that they've settled back into their home, Browning says he and
his family can often be found at Tokyo Sushi and Ferraro restaurants
on Eglinton Avenue West, strolling through Forest Hill on sunny days
for a frozen yogourt, and skating at the Granite Club on Bayview
Avenue.
Browning made his return to the small screen a year before the fire
broke out in 2009, as part of the CBC TV show Battle of the Blades,
which pairs professional hockey players with female figure skaters in
a skating competition.
After three seasons co-hosting the show with Ron MacLean, Browning is
now both hosting and judging in season four. He's joined by fellow
figure skater Jamie Sale and former NHL player and CBC hockey
commentator P. J. Stock on the panel.
"I have been so intimately involved with the whole thing for three
years," Browning says of the show. His new duo role sees him giving
his two cents on the performances, requiring him to step back and
adopt a more impartial attitude. "I think I'm a bigger part of the
show now, but a smaller part of the family, and I already miss
that."
In the meantime, Browning just looks at the transition as yet another
twist in his ever-evolving career as a professional skater.
"I have the weirdest job - I never know what I'll be doing next," he
says. "But I come home, and being papa is the best job that I really
have."
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