Browning can't wait to skate at home
Source: |
Globe and Mail |
Date: |
November 29, 2000 |
Author: |
Beverley Smith |
Turn up the lights. Kurt Browning is at home.
The 34-year-old Canadian figure skating star is making a rare
appearance in Canada this week at the Sears Open in Hamilton. But
these days, home is where the heart is.
Browning has survived an emotional year, after the death of his
mother, Neva, in June, and he knew what he had to do: cut back on
competitions, stay home and spend time with his family, including his
wife, Sonia Rodriguez, now a principal dancer with the National Ballet
of Canada.
His father, Dewey, and former coach Michael Jiranek and his wife
are coming from Alberta to spend 10 days with Browning.
"It's just a quieter year," Browning said. "I'm healthy and skating
fine, and we'll see what happens."
Browning had a list of eight events he could have competed in. He
chose to do only three. He has a contract to do the Ice Wars
competition in the United States for the next three years. He has
done every Ice Wars since the made-for-television professional
competition started. "I'm emotionally attached to it," he said.
The others he chose because they were close to home: the Sears Open
and the Hershey's Kisses Figure Skating Challenge, another open event,
in Auburn Hills, Mich., on Dec. 10. He's not doing the world
professional championships in Landover, Md. He's already won three of
those.
That doesn't mean that Browning has turned into a couch
potato. He's still a major player in the Stars on Ice tour and
delights fans in 66 U.S. cities. "You can kill yourself," he realized.
For four years in a row, Browning did a Stars on Ice tour that
included 78 to 85 cities without a break, both in the United States
and back and forth across Canada.
That wasn't counting all of the competitions he did, as well.
Sometimes, Browning would have to juggle eight routines because
competition organizers and broadcasters demanded new material. It
wasn't easy to stay on top of it all.
On top of living out of a suitcase and in a different hotel every
night, Browning would have to attend three rehearsal periods for the
tours - one for a month and two others for a week each.
"Just do the math," he said, thinking of the tiring schedule. "I
learned so much in four years, having to do it, four months straight,
85 times, injured or not, tired or not.
"But my goodness gracious. I'm just trying to get my tires retread
a little bit, here."
Browning has just finished a month-long rehearsal in Lake Placid,
N.Y. He drove home to Toronto in the wee hours of Monday. But now he's
taking time to kick back a little. "With what happened with my family
this year, it just sort of changed my priorities," he said.
Browning said he and his father received hundreds of letters from
his mother's friends after her death. They were friends she had met
through skating and they had memories.
"Mom had a lot of skating fans," Browning said. "She was very vocal
on a personal level with skating fans. She wasn't prominent on
television. People knew her, but it was always on a personal level. It
was never because she got her face on TV.
"She kept in touch [with her fans.] She wrote personal letters. I
think a lot of people were Kurt Browning fans, and then kept in touch
with Neva. That's the kind of lady she was.
"Mom was always very straightforward with what she had to
say. People kind of laughed at that. There was no fluff when you met
her. She didn't know any other way. We realized that she had touched a
lot of people, but we didn't realize how much."
It seems to run in the family.
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