World Famous skaters take over HCA
Source: |
HuntingtonNews.net |
Date: |
December 29, 2002 |
Author: |
Brandon Woolum |
The ice was smooth, the Huntington Civic Arena was set up and the
"Stars of the Ice" were ready to get their first of 61 shows
underway. The national traveling ice skating extravaganza, "Stars on
Ice", made a stop in Huntington on Friday evening. The tour, sponsored
by Smucker's, brought some of the best skaters in the world to
Huntington.
The show got underway as the entire cast skated around the ice
doing various stunts with Ozzy Osbourne's "The Great and Powerful Oz"
playing over the sound system. As soon as the cast got off the ice,
2002 Olympic gold medallist Alexei Yagudin took to the ice to give the
Huntington fans a taste of his phenomenal performance in Salt Lake
City, in which he received the highest marks of any single skater in
Olympic history. Yagudin skated to Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild
while wearing a black leather jacket.
After World Bronze medallists Kyoko Ina & John Zimmerman completed
their first performance on the Civic Arena ice, the Canadian duo of
Jamie Sale and David Pelletier took their turn. The pair came away
with a gold medal at the 2002 Olympics after a controversy with
judges. Russians Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharurlidze also emerged
out of the ordeal with gold metals and were also in Huntington last
night. All four skaters showed no hard feelings and even skated during
one song together. The four performed while fellow Olympic skater,
Todd Eldredge, a 6 time United States Champion, narrated. They all met
at center ice and shook hands to finish their portion of the first
half of the show.
"I really liked seeing the Canadian and Russian pairs," said Anita
Grey. "You saw them on TV all the time when all that Olympic
controversy was going on. It was really neat to see them live and
skating together."
Katarina Witt, who owns more medals than any other skater in
history, is also part of the tour, which is in it's 17th year. Witt's
first performance of the night was with Gorsha Sur and John
Zimmerman. The two men fought over Katarina during the skit the 3
performed on ice.
After an hour worth of nonstop ice skating action there was a
20-minute intermission. When the arena lights went back off and the
spot lights came on Elena Berezhnaya, Kyoko Ina, Jenni Meno, Renee
Roca and Jamie Sale appeared on the outside of the ice, dancing with
cowboy hats for the crowd. Minutes later the "gals" stepped onto the
ice and here came the guys dressed in western wear. Kurt Browning,
David Pelletier, Todd Sand, Gorsha Sur, Alexia Yagudin and John
Zimmerman then escorted the women off the ice and they took back their
cowboy hats. The 6 guys then did a dance together on the ice much to
the delight of the females in the audience. The men then proceeded to
skate very close to the fans, at times even jumping off the ice inches
from the fans. They finished with their hands on their heads and their
hats covering their crotches as the lights dimmed.
"I was in heaven with all those studs out there on the ice shakin'
their booties," said Erin Smith, a 19-year-old fan from
Chesepeake. "That was worth all the money I paid for these tickets
right there."
Katarina Witt then took to the ice for her first solo performance
of the evening. She skated to the slow Barbra Streisand song, "The
Rest of Your Life". Fellow World Champion Todd Eldredge followed up
Witt's performance with his second and final solo performance of the
night.
As the lights slowly came back on Kurt Browning was spot lighted
standing off ice in the East corner of the arena wearing a white
t-shirt, baggy blue jeans and suspenders. He then proceeded to step
onto the ice with his blade covers still on his skates. He acted like
he did not know what was wrong as he slowly pushed him self to a
section of fans sitting a few feet from the ice. Browning talked with
the fans a few seconds before sitting on one of the female fans laps
and taking the covers off his blades. He then got back on the ice and
still acted like he did not know what to do. Kurt continued this type
of behavior during his whole set and involved the fans a lot. The
performance provided several laughs and got some of the loudest cheers
of the night.
"That guy (Browning) was crazy," said 11-year-old Ben Adkins. "He
acted like a clown you see at the circus."
Three pairs changed the tone back to a serious one as they followed
up Browning by skating to the romantic number, "Love on the Rocks",
sang by Robbie Williams and Nicole Kidman.
The controversial Canadian and Russian pairs then hit the ice for
back-to-back performances to cap off their incredible night in
Huntington. The Russian pair skated to a combination of Elvis Presley
and Marilyn Monroe songs, as they were both dressed as the two late
singers. Alexei Yagudin was the last individual performer of the
evening.
The entire "Stars on Ice" cast skated and did a dance rendition to
Will Smith's "Can't Stop" to finish the Huntington show off. The small
crowd of about 1,500 gave the world famous skaters a standing ovation
as the skaters shook hands and hugged fans who were in the front row.
The Huntington Civic Arena will now be busy melting the ice and
filling the arena floor up with tons of dirt as the Arena Cross comes
to the Civic Arena on January 3rd. HCA employees will be very busy
this next week making this transformation happen. We here at HNN are
working on putting pictures of this transformation up on our website
as it happens for you to view. Check back frequently and see what's
going on at the HCA main floor starting Monday.
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