kurtfiles

 
Home
Profile
Record
Articles
News
Photo
Stars on Ice
Music
References
Miscellaneous
 
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2017
2018
2019
2020
2022
2023



From the Ice Rink to Neverland

Skating champ Kurt Browning plays Peter Pan on stage

Source: Tandem Magazine
Date: November 18, 2007
Author: Sarah B. Hood
Of all the fairytale plays in the beloved English tradition of the Christmas “panto,” probably none is better loved than Peter Pan. Not only does it have every ingredient of a perfect child’s adventure, from pirates to fairies to mermaids, its lead character can fly! According to tradition, a woman plays Peter, and the last time the show played Toronto, the feisty Sheila McCarthy (Little Mosque on the Prairie) donned the requisite leaf-green tunic.

This time, producer Ross Petty (who always reserves the juicy villain’ s part for himself; Captain Hook, in this case), has taken a daring step. Not only is Peter Pan being played by a grownup man, but one who’ s never acted in a play before. However, neither flying nor putting together a winning performance should be much of a stretch for this Peter Pan: Canadian skating champion Kurt Browning.

Although he was the first man ever to achieve a quadruple jump in figure skating – which must be about as close to flying as most of us could ever hope to come – Browning admits he’s a little overwhelmed by finding himself onstage in the middle of creating a show.

“I feel as though I’m watching a TV show about how these things are put together... except I have to participate,” says the extremely modest star. He does concede that dancing on solid ground is simpler than doing it on a frozen rink. “With certain moves I’ve worked with choreographers first off-ice, without skates. Then, when I’ve taken them to the ice, I couldn’t do them,” he says. “Things are easier on feet.”

However, he says, there are exceptions to the general rule. “Certain things are easier on skates, because the blades move you. Now, I have to keep getting my speed back every time.” On the other hand, learning the script isn’t a big challenge. “The lines themselves are not going to be as much of a problem as I thought. Except I have a newborn baby boy and a four-year-old son, so I have a hard time finding quiet time to study,” he says.

“This is, as far as I’m concerned, related to skating in a way, because I’m working with an audience like I do when I skate, and over the years I’ve been handed a microphone over and over, so talking in front of an audience is something I’ve grown into and I enjoy,” Browning continues.

It did take him a little while to understand the character of Peter Pan, though. “I do a lot of comedy stuff in my skating,” he says. “Although Peter Pan is a young boy, he’s also a leader. I kept playing a lot with the Lost Boys, and they had to pull me aside and say, ‘No, you’re the leader. Clearly I wanted to be one of the Lost Boys.”

And clearly, Browning has no regrets about taking this chance. “I’m actually getting this wild chance,” he says. “Every day I’m learning. And I’m loving it.”

Ross Petty Productions presents Peter Pan from November 22 to January 6 at the Elgin Theatre. For tickets, call 416-872-5555 or visit www.ticketmaster.ca.