Time to Skate On
Hamilton's gliding to his Stars on Ice swan song
Source: |
Newsday.com |
Date: |
March 2, 2001 |
Author: |
Susan Reiter |
Copyright Newsday, Inc. Produced by Newsday Electronic Publishing.
WHEN Scott Hamilton first arranged a five-city touring skating
show 15 years ago, the determined, personable Olympic gold medalist
could not have known Stars on Ice would grow into an enormously
successful annual venture reaching 65 cities. This year the show he
nurtured, co-produced and headlined as leading performer is saying
thanks and farewell to Hamilton as he skates his final season before
moving on to expand his horizons.
"I've been touring since 1980. It's really tough to do year
after year and stay fresh. Now I want to change the rules, come up
with something different," Hamilton said during a brief
mid-December visit to New York. He returns to the metropolitan area
this weekend with Target Stars on Ice skating at Nassau Coliseum
Friday night and Madison Square Garden Saturday night.
Hamilton leads an emotional, music-driven show that includes
fellow Olympic gold medalists Kristi Yamaguchi, Ilia Kulik and Tara
Lipinski, as well as such other figure skating luminaries as
Ekaterina Gordeeva, Kurt Browning and Yuka Sato.
At 42, the feisty Hamilton is certainly not stinting in his
performing energy: He skates three demanding solos and provides the
heartfelt center of the program, which incorporates reflective,
retrospective elements amid a buoyant, upbeat tone. "The thread this
year is my life experiences," Hamilton said, "and the development
and growth of Stars on Ice."
The music for the mix of inventive solos, duets and ensemble
numbers ranges from Marvin Gaye to Sting, from Joni Mitchell to
Isaac Hayes' theme from "Shaft." Soul music figures prominently
this year, with Hamilton setting the tone early in the program with
a high-flying solo to James Brown's "I Got You (I Feel Good)."
Back in December, as he finished his lunch at Essex House before
heading to Washington for an event at the White House, Hamilton was
feeling good as he contemplated the future. Nearly four years
removed from his frightening encounter with testicular cancer, he is
considering many options once the heavy time demands of Stars on Ice
are behind him.
"After this year I want to close this chapter and open something
new. There are some things I'd like to experience, and some things I
can only do while I have the legs to do them. It's just time to do
them now," said Hamilton. High on the list is a possible
theatrical venture, although he's still mulling over what form it
might take. "Everything's been discussed, from taking a book musical
and putting it on ice, to doing a one-man show -- and everything in
between.
"The one-man-show idea really fascinates me. That would be the
ultimate. It could be anything. The possibility is really exciting
to me, because of the enormity and the challenge of it. That would
really be making a major statement. But I have to be sensible as
well.
"I was also thinking about putting a company together and doing
a phenomenal show of movement to music. To do something on ice with
a company of killer skaters -- most of whom wouldn't be well-known
at all, but just so talented -- is also very appealing."
So should we expect to see his name in lights on the Great White
Way sometime soon? "Broadway would be the ultimate goal," he
said. "When you start skating, you aim for the Olympics, and when
you go into theater, you hope to end up someday in New York. So I
would say I want to develop something that would be worthy of
Broadway."
Hamilton, who was world champion for four years and won Olympic
gold in 1984, founded Stars on Ice to create his own post-Olympic
performance arena when Ice Capades let him go. "They said only
female skaters sell tickets," he said.
The 12 Stars on Ice skaters are on the road from late December
through early April. They function very much like a dance company,
convening in September for an intensive three-week rehearsal
period. Each year the Stars on Ice program is conceived by a creative
team headed by director Sandra Bezic, and its ambitions extend well
beyond simply being a showcase for stellar skaters in their
specialty numbers.
While each of them certainly has a moment in the spotlight, the
show features sophisticated ensemble numbers for the full company as
well as novel combinations. This year's program, for example,
includes a duet for Lipinski and Kulik, and Hamilton skates with Denis
Petrov to "Shaft." "Chairs," an unusual number choreographed by
Christopher Dean (best known as part of the stellar Torvill and Dean
ice-dance duo), propels Renee Roca, four men and five chairs
around the ice to a techno beat. An extended section called "Tunnel
Vision" is, according to Hamilton, "a comedic look backstage. It's
all about what everybody's goofy tendencies are, and I kind of host
it.
"The rehearsal period this year was the happiest one we've ever
had," he said. The dynamic dozen have become a tight ensemble;
Sato is the one newcomer this year, but many of the skaters have
been part of the tour for many seasons. The choreographers -- who
also include Michael Siebert and Lea Ann Miller -- and design team
also are stalwarts.
It's a measure of the high regard in which Stars on Ice is held
that after winning Olympic gold in 1998, Lipinski and Kulik made
joining the show their first move. "Everyone gets to really develop
as a performer, to learn something new or experience something on
the ice they've never experienced before," Hamilton said. "There's
a sense of teamwork that exists in a company like this that's hard to
find anywhere else."
He admitted to slightly paternal feelings about Stars on
Ice. "It's my child, but it's reached its adolescence now, and it
needs to be independent. In order for the tour to get to the next
level, the next generation, it needs to be passed on. There needs to
be a sense of ownership and responsibility that they can't feel as
long as I'm in the company and they look to me as being the founder,
the dad. I think it will be wonderful and invigorating for them."
Although he'll maintain an involvement with Stars on Ice, he'll
become more active as a television skating commentator, a position
he's filled often in the past but has put on the back burner in
recent years. He'll plunge back in just in time for the buildup
toward the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. "I have to become
more familiar with the current crop of skaters in order to tell
their stories the way they'd want it to be told. I'll be working for
NBC for the first time, and I'll probably do some events before the
Olympics, to get to know their strengths and weaknesses."
Hamilton skates his final five-minute solo on his final Stars on
Ice program ("the hardest number I've ever done for the tour") to
"My Way," but with a twist. This special arrangement of the song
allows him to blend heartfelt emotion with the goofy charm and
ebullient playfulness that have endeared him to skating audiences
for two decades -- and to showcase fast, sharp footwork that should be
the envy of skaters half his age.
It's both a tongue-in-cheek play on a show-biz cliche and a very
personal way of saying farewell. He has shaped his career very much
his way for more than two decades, and will no doubt make his
upcoming moves with the same flair and distinctive style.
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