Scott Hamilton performs in "Stars on Ice"
Source: |
St. Louis Post-Dispatch |
Date: |
February 1, 2001 |
Author: |
Christian C. Rix |
America loves a success story. But even more than that, America
loves a story of adversity surmounted - with a humanitarian
subtext.
Small wonder, then, that Olympic champion Scott Hamilton - who
comes to Savvis Center on Friday as part of the "Target Stars on
Ice" show - is near and dear to the hearts of sports lovers in general
and figure-skating enthusiasts in particular. In an era when some
sports figures seem more likely to be associated with drunken
driving or murder raps, Hamilton offers a contrast as stark as that
between the humid vapors of July and the clear, brisk air of
January.
"Every young skater comes out of the Olympics, but you realize
that what you bring is unique," Hamilton said in a recent telephone
interview. "You are not going to change the world, but you need to
do what you can in your time."
Twice in his life, Hamilton has faced daunting medical problems,
and both times has overcome them to experience further triumphs
inside and outside the skating rink.
As a child, he was at one time given six months to live.
Concerted exercise and proper diet pulled him back from the brink and
set him on the path to Olympic stardom. As he approached middle age,
Hamilton was stricken with cancer, but he has again bounced back and
has a clean bill of health. He has continued with his performance
schedule and charitable activities, and he's brimming with plans for
the future.
The current "Stars on Ice" tour is Hamilton's 15th and final
season with the show he helped create and produce. The current version
features a bevy of great skating athletes, including Tara Lipinski,
Kristi Yamaguchi, Ilia Kulik, Kurt Browning, Yuka Sato and Denis
Petrov. The grueling schedule for the show takes the stars to 65
cities in a little more than four months. The end of Hamilton's
participation in the revue, however, represents not retirement from
skating for the athlete, but rather a desire to move on to new
challenges.
America's love affair with glamorous and attractive figure
skaters goes back to Sonja Henie, the Norwegian skater and actress who
won three Olympic gold medals and starred in Hollywood musicals in
the '30s and '40s. Such musicals are largely a thing of the past,
but high-profile skating careers continue to hinge upon Olympic
success, Hamilton observed.
Henie first broke ground for skaters, he said, and Olympians
Peggy Fleming and Dorothy Hamill advanced the state of skating. "I've
tried to do the same."
The tour's daunting schedule makes one wonder how much the
42-year-old performer has to strain to keep up with the pace. It's a
question about which Hamilton is rather blase.
"You get into a kind of rhythm. But when you are in your 40s you
take longer to recover. It comes down to what you are trying to
accomplish.
"Would I like to compete again? No. But over the years I have
tried to build an audience. I do everything that I would do in the
Olympic competition, but spread through the evening. No more of the
'do or die' in 5 minutes. This allows me to develop beyond simple
competitive abilities. The nine judges for an Olympic event just don't
exist for me anymore."
Instead, Hamilton works to connect with the whole audience.
Not just an athlete, Hamilton has earned his stripes as a show
producer and idea man. In addition to his ice spectacles, he has
produced shows for television and off-Broadway. In a cutthroat world
that sometimes prizes success above all else, Hamilton has a
refreshing philosophy.
"I want to feel good about trying to be the right person. I've
prided myself on never hurting a promoter. In my producer role, I
try to pay the performers as well as - or better than - they have been
paid before."
Hamilton's fame is only partly linked to his showmanship. Never
far from his thoughts is the charitable aspect of "Stars on Ice."
"We tour with a heart. A portion of the house receipts goes to
Target House, a new approach for families whose children are
undergoing treatment at the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in
Memphis, Tenn." Last season, "Stars on Ice" was able to generate
$250,000 for the facility.
When selecting new skaters for the revue, "generally the show
chooses the highest level of marquee, the highest level of talent."
As a skater you "try to play roles you haven't played before. New
skaters find themselves free to grow by doing something different."
When "Stars on Ice" comes to St. Louis, it will be a regular
arena-style revue, but Hamilton has also produced a number of ice
shows for the proscenium stage. The difference is a significant one,
he said.
In an arena, audience members look at one another as well as the
skaters. But the conventional proscenium setting adds another,
exhilarating dimension.
"You can take over the senses of the audience," he said. "I like
it."
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