Browning Grande Jetes into Marriage
Source: |
International Figure Skating |
Date: |
October-November 1996 |
Author: |
Greg Guy |
Four-time World Champion Kurt Browning remembers trying to skip out
of a cocktail reception in Alberta, Canada, in 1991. Today he's glad
he didn't. It was at that reception that he met the ballerina Sonia
Rodriguez, who was on tour, and fell in love.
"Sonia wasn't invited to the reception. I was trying to skip out
of it," Browning explains. "Another girl didn't want to go, so Sonia
borrowed her friend's dress and took her place. I sort of got seen by
people at the reception and got pulled into it. And that's when we
met."
A year later, Browning says, they started courting. "Courtin's
such a great word. I'm going courtin," he says.
On June 30, the two were married. With the Toronto skyline as the
backdrop, about 120 guests sailed to Toronto Island for the outdoor
wedding. Canadian singer Michael Burgess sang at the ceremony.
Burgess was the guy Browning sant the national anthem with at the
opening ceremonies of the World Championships in Edmonton last March.
Standing with Browning were former Canadian Men's Champion Michael
Slipchuk and former Canadian Men's medalist Norm Proft, both fellow
clubmates at the Royal Glenora Club in Edmonton. Browning's best man
was Gareth Edwards of Edmonton, who was a squash player at Royal
Glenora. "He and I just met when we were in our late teens and just
kept hangin' out together," says Browning. Other guests, included
Scott Hamilton, Brian Orser, Toller Cranston and Kristi Yamaguchi.
Rodriguez, who dances with the National Ballet of Canada, is a dual
citizen of Canada and Spain. "She was born in Canada, lived here
until she was 4 and moved to Spain until she was 17," Browning
explains. "Her parents are still in Madrid."
Several guests from Canada's ballet fraternity also attended the
wedding, including Canada's foremost ballerina Karen Kain.
Browning says the life of a professional skater and a ballerina are
similar, especially in terms of touring.
"Our schedules are so that if [Sonia's] rehearsing, she gets
weekends off so she'll come see me perform. I have trouble seeing her
perform, but I actually get to see her rehearse a lot," he says. "If
she has a nice part and I don't get to see her actually perform it, I
go in and watch practice. Watching the ballet practice is more like
watching the real thing than watching a figure skating practice. It's
the full run-through. They're very disciplined, more than us skaters
that's for sure."
Two weeks before the wedding, Browning seemed more relaxed than
ever. "We're kind of enjoying being in the same place at the same
time," he said from the couple's Toronto apartment.
Browning wrapped up a grueling touring schedule May 27. He did
both the U.S. and Canadian tours of Stars on Ice and then
skated in the Skate the Nation B-tour that landed in smaller
arenas across Canada. Of the nine professional competitions he
entered, he won four of them.
"I had a really great season," Browning says. "What a difference a
year makes. You always need a good skate and then some luck to win
something, and that happened a couple of times in a row this season.
That's what was missing from last year."
His first season as a professional was filled with bad luck and bad
timing. He recalls, "I was battling a few injuries and a bad pair of
skates, it seemed like nothing could go right. I remember competing
in Hamilton in the Canadian Pro, competing with not even my top hook
done up on the skates. Last year was a joke."
Finally good momentum started to kick in.
"It really wasn't until the first rehearsals in Stars on
Ice, before the first show last December - I went on the ice early
and did some jumps and thought 'Okay.' That was a starting-over
period, and I felt the momentum begin to pick up and was really
rolling by the end of that season," he says.
It was toward the end of the 1995 season that Browning proposed to
Rodriguez, in front of 16,000 people at Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens.
He was on the ice and she was in the audience. "It wasn't planned,"
he says. "A little girl in the audience asked me if I was married,
and I found where Sonia was sitting and got down on one knee and asked
her to marry me."
She said yes, and Browning skated off the ice with his fiancee in
his arms. It was a typical Kurt Browning moment. Spontaneous.
"I think I even surprised myself," he says with a laugh.
According to the 30-year-old skater, the happiness he is feeling in
his personal life has helped to turn things around on the ice. With
help from choreographer Sandra Bezic, he delivered two power-packed
programs, skating to the Commodores' "Brick House" and an inventive
show tunes number called "That's Entertainment III."
Browning considers professional competitions fun but says there's a
big difference between events like the Rock 'n Roll Figure Skating
Championships and Dick Button's World Professional Skating
Championships in Landover, MD.
"I can't say that I take them all seriously because I think there
are different levels of seriousness," he says. "At Landover, it's
impossible not to step on the ice and feel the amateur tension that
used to be there. And the Toyota Pro in Hamilton, there's so much
personal pride in trying to skate well in Canada's biggest
professional competition that that one I get really nervous for. I
think it's the same for all the skaters.
"If I'm not taking it seriously, then it means that I'm going to
skate absolutely fantastic, because I'm there to enjoy the event.
Like Fox' Rock 'n' Roll - I went there to make sure the audience and
panel of celebrity judges had as much fun as I could give them."
Because of the wedding, Browning took two months off from skating
in June and July. The newlyweds spent most of July moving into their
new home, near his parents' place in Caroline, Alberta. "It'll be
nice to spend our summers there; it's a future thing," he says.
Browning also enjoyed several rounds of golf during his off-season.
"I do like to golf. I got a hole in one the other day at Pine Point
in London, Ontario," he says. "I can't wait to tell Lloyd Eisler."
During the Skate the Nation tour, there were five sets of
golf clubs on the bus. Explains Browning, "We'll do the show and then
drive all night, get into the next city early the next morning and
then go golfing."
Says Browning about the new skating season, "I'm going to enjoy the
competitions that I enjoyed last year and have been invited back to a
lot of them. I think skating well last year will help me this year.
You want to try and stay up in the top as long as you can. That's
exciting."
He will continue to be an ambassador for the Muscular Dystrophy
Association of Canada and to promote Kellogg's products, his major
endorsement. Part of his Kellogg's deal goes toward the Browning Fund
for junior and novice skaters in Canada.
The Caroline Kid, as he is known, would also like to do another
television special and has hopes of including a combined
skating/ballet production. "I'm looking forward to a number of
projects, and I hope as many as possible will include Sonia," he says.
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