Thrilled by Chills
Source: |
The Oregonian |
Date: |
December 29, 2000 |
Author: |
Ted Mahar |
Copyright 2000 The Oregonian
Scott Hamilton loves ice and entertaining folks with his skating
The ice has been Scott Hamilton's pastime, bread and butter --
perhaps even his salvation.
He is leading his own "Stars on Ice" show on national tour for the
15th -- and last -- time, hitting the Rose Garden on Saturday, Jan. 6.
Earlier he skated for the "Ice Capades." He had become a star in
competitive skating, winning national and international titles,
including a gold medal in the 1984 Sarajevo Olympics followed a month
later by top honors in the World Championships.
His love for the ice came when he was an undersize, very sick
8-year-old whose doctors guessed his life span at about another six
months after his illness was misdiagnosed.
He discovered skating and, to everyone's amazement, the youngster
not only showed speed, skill and control but also started gaining
weight, height and strength. Hamilton began serious training at 13 and
was on the 1980 U.S. Olympic team at 21.
And, even though this is his farewell tour with his show, now the
"Target Stars on Ice" show, he has no thought of giving up skating.
"I'm just heading in another direction," Hamilton said. "The show
has become everything I hoped it would be. It's time for me to move on,
let others take the show to its next levels and take on new challenges
for myself."
Hamilton admits that after 21 years of touring with ice shows, he is
ready for a change of pace. But he stresses that he will not quit
skating. He will continue his regimen of skating two hours a day -- an
example of what it takes to keep natural talent at its peak.
"I just won't do it on tour," he said. "But eventually I want to try
something in a theater setting on Broadway. I haven't thought of myself
as a professional skater for many years. I'm an entertainer. I get one
thrill from skating because I love the ice. But thrilling an audience is
an even bigger kick. When I'm on the ice, I feel them, and it's the
greatest feeling in the world."
Sharing the spotlight will be some of the biggest names in skating:
Olympic champions Tara Lipinski, Kristi Yamaguchi and Ilia Kulik, as
well as four-time World champion Kurt Browning, Yuka Sato, Denis Petrov,
Steven Cousins, pairs champions Jenni Meno and Todd Sand, and dance
champions Renee Roca and Gorsha Sur.
This show will not be like "Disney on Ice" or "Ice Capades," costume
extravaganzas with fanciful creatures, but it is still a family show,
Hamilton said.
"One of the most fun nights of my life was when I saw my first ice
show when I was 8," Hamilton said. "I want any number I put together to
be memorable for children. I do a couple of comedy numbers. And I
honestly can't think of a show I've liked more than this, and I've been
at this for a very long time.
"There are no better skaters in the world than the stars of this
show, and they really look a lot better here than they do when they have
to go through all the compulsory moves that they have to do in
competition. Here, you get to see world champions having fun."
But there is more than fun to this show. Hamilton returned to it in
October 1997 after surviving testicular cancer. Last year, the show
donated $250,000 to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis,
Tenn.
"This year we will give a big share of proceeds to Target House at
St. Jude," Hamilton said. "The kids in the hospital have serious
long-term illnesses, including cancer. Target House gives families a
chance to be together on long-term visits. Not in hotels or motels, not
sleeping on chairs or couches in the hospital.
"Target House gives them a chance to be a family in suites with
bedrooms, kitchens and living rooms. The one they have now is at
capacity, so they have started building phase two. Families can give a
lot more love and support to the children who are patients when they
aren't stressed by uncomfortable or makeshift living conditions."
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