Skating tour leaves Witt homesick for laundry
Source: |
Green Bay Press-Gazette |
Date: |
March 20, 2003 |
Author: |
Kendra Meinert |
Two-time Olympic champion Katarina Witt knows exactly what she's
going to do as soon as she gets back home to Germany after 15 weeks on
the road with Smucker
"Believe it or not, I love to do laundry and folding," Witt said by
phone from a tour stop in Cincinnati. "So I can't wait to do all my
laundry and fold my clothes and hang it up on a hanger after it has
been in a suitcase for four months."
Witt and her fellow athletes in the 17th annual Stars on Ice are a
more than two-thirds through the 61 dates on the tour, which kicked
off after Christmas and wraps up April 12.
While she knows that the trade-off for getting to skate in front of
a live audience is nonstop traveling, Witt said she's starting to miss
her family, friends and picture frames.
"I just felt like, who knows how many years I have left, and I just
wanted to spend as much as I have on the ice."
At 37, Witt is one of the more experienced skaters in the
cast. "She's enjoying the spirit and energy that young skaters like
2002 Olympic men's champion Alexei Yagudin and 2002 Olympic pair
champions Jamie Sale & David Pelletier of Canada and Elena Berezhnaya
& Anton Sikharulidze of Russia bring to the production.
In addition to ensemble numbers for the opening and closing, Witt
skates a solo program to Barbra Streisand music and a blues program
with John Zimmerman and Gorsha Sur. She describes the latter as
"flirtatious" - something she knows a thing or two about.
Witt has long been a fan favorite, generating on-ice heat with
playful and sometimes seductive programs that have particularly
endeared her to men. But the one-time Playboy model modestly shrugs
off all the sexy talk.
"I just go out and perform. It's not consciously that I'm trying to
be sexy or whatever it is. I just love eing in front of an audience
and just performing. That's my nature."
Skating remains Witt's primary focus, but her career spans far
beyond the ice. Her German production company, Witt Sports and
Entertainment, has produced several European skating events for
TV. The Emmy Award-wining actress (for HBO's "Carmen on Ice") also has
a movie/skating project of her own in the works, and her jewelry line,
Katarina Witt Feelings, is in its fourth year.
"I love being busy. I keep saying, 'I want a break, I want a
break.' And I have two days and then I'm getting restless."
Future plans call for Witt's fitness book, written in German and
already a European best-seller, to hit the U.S. market.
"It's not a bible on how to be a world-class athlete. It's more
about being a woman and being able to stay healthy and stay in shape
and feel good about yourself, even with the little flaws maybe
everybody has," she said. "I'm not a health guru. I love chocolate. I
like a glass of red wine once a while."
A skater since she was 5, Witt dominated the figure skating world
in the 1980s as an amateur. She won the World Championships four times
and the European Championships six. Her greatest accomplishment is
winning back-to-back Olympic gold medals (in 1984 and 1988) - a feat
equaled only by one other figure skater, Sonja Henie in 1936.
"I think now when you get older and everything gets a little more
difficult you get more and more proud of it," Witt said of the
honor. "When I hear it every night when they announce it ... it really
makes me proud that I stayed in for so many years and that I was able
to conquer the figure skating world two times at the Olympics."
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