Shopping With: Sonia Rodriguez
Source: |
The Globe and Mail |
Date: |
November 16, 2002 |
Author: |
Tralee Pearce |
Ballerina Sonia Rodriguez has a gift list as long as her arm and it
isn't even shopping season yet. No, the generous National Ballet
principal dancer is in the habit of gifting her co-stars.
"My husband and I did this for a show last year," she says as we
take a cab to Bloor Street in Toronto. The husband is figure skater
Kurt Browning and they've just collaborating on Gotta Skate, a
television special that airs later this month and in December. "We
like to give a little token."
That means a little something for Lu Chen, Josee Chouinard,
Isabelle Brasseur and Elena Berezhnaya. On the ballet front,
Aleksandar Antonijevic and Keiichi Hirano are in line.
So, with this much to do, the Toronto-born, Madrid-raised Rodriguez
resorts to trusty habit: shopping with her baby sister. Only this
time, Vanessa Rodriguez has just emigrated to Canada and landed a
sales job at Club Monaco. "I love shopping with her. We're both the
same size," she says as we enter. That would be that mythic size zero
most of us sneer at. But it's hard to sneer at the two brunette
beauties in a sisterly hug. It's remarkable that Sonia has time to see
her sister, let alone shop.
In addition on Gotta Skate, which was filmed Nov. 1, the 12-year
National Ballet star (she was made principal dancer in 2000) performs
at the Hummingbird Centre in The Firebird tonight and Nov. 30, La
Bayadere tomorrow, Nov. 28 and Nov. 30, and in La Fille Mal Garde on
Nov. 23. Then there's the Nutcracker next month.
No wonder the tiny perfect dancer moves fast, zeroing in on cozy
scarves for her skating posse. Practical, yet at $70, quite
luxurious. Rodriguez is known for this kind of balance. Adept at the
acting side of ballet, critics praise her for bringing a strong
emotional quality to her technical proficiency.
I ask her to name the best gift she ever received. Despite her
chunky diamond ring and the heart-shaped diamond pendant that blinded
me when she removed her pink pashmina, Rodriguez's choice is pure
romance. For their sixth anniversary, Browning gave her a framed
animation cel of Bambi doing the splits on ice.
"When we first met, it was at the Glenore Club in Edmonton. I had
gone there for a reception and I asked if I could watch a skate. He
asked if any of us wanted to try. I said yes, but being from Spain, I
told him I never skated. He thought I meant I never skated much. He
had to hold me the whole time. He let go of me once and I went into
the splits. He said, 'You're just like Bambi.' That's our first memory
together."
While hopping from display to display, the sisters decide to widen
the shopping net and shop for their parents' anniversary. They fondle
a large black purse. "She might think it's too big. But the bigger the
purse, the more things you put in it, right?" Vanessa says of the $129
bag.
Sonia moves on to the next gift, a red-brown bag for Gotta Skate
choreographer LeAnn Miller. "I'll get another from the showroom,"
Vanessa says. She's already noticed that her sis has spotted a scratch
and wants a fresh one.
Back to the scarves for Rodriguez. "These are fun to have around
the rink" -- they're there for five or six hours a day. "The white one
for Elena -- she's quieter, more reserved. Josee is the red -- she's
bubbly. Lulu gets the two-toned -- she has two sides to her. Before
the party and when the party starts," she says, laughing at her pop
psychology.
Her cellphone rings from inside her chic little Prada black
purse. "It's my hubby!" she squeals, her feet actually leaving the
floor. "Are you going to come over?"
Seems Browning has been out of town for a whole four days. "This is
me getting used to the winter tour season, which starts Dec. 26. He'll
be gone for five months!"
We head over to the men's area. Oh, and if Rodriguez's Fille Mal
Gardee partner Keiichi Hirano is reading this, stop. We don't want to
ruin your surprise. You're the only one who won't have received your
gift at press time.
Browning often takes Vanessa out shopping behind Sonia's back. The
latest triumph: a black leather coat from Gucci. "He's really good at
buying me clothes," Sonia says.
The siblings search for stuff for dad in the hats and scarves
area. And they consider something striped for Hirano before heading
back to the women's section.
Vanessa shows us the Sonia sweater, not named for this Sonia, but
cool nonetheless. She doesn't bite. I pull out a pretty T-shirt with
chiffon cap sleeves and ribbon at the waist. "That's called the ballet
top," Vanessa reports. Sonia, the real deal, gets enough ribbon and
tulle at work. "I need a bigger closet," she says. "My husband takes
up more than half!"
As if on cue, Browning himself bounds through the store and scoops
up his delicate bride in a squishy bear hug. "Hey, cute shirt," he
says.
"I bought it in Spain. I don't tell you everything," she says, her
eyes playing the flirt.
"It keeps the relationship fresh," Browning says to me, playing the
comic. He flings Vanessa's chunky scarf around his neck and drags her
away to try on a few things.
I mention the Gucci coup. "That was her fault," he says, motioning
to Vanessa. "She found the James Bond chick coat. Her finder's fee was
a pair of Gucci glasses. We also got Brian Orser see-through Gucci
underwear for his 40th birthday."
After three slapstick attempts at leaving -- it's as though the
charmed cashier has built in three encores by leaving beeper tags on
-- the bag-laden duo heads into the night.
Me? I head to cash and buy the $39 ballet top.
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