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Marie-FranceDubreuil & Patrice Lauzon from Canada are one of the top dance teams in the business and a welcome addition to the Stars On Ice cast. With elegant and innovative lifts they are a joy to watch whether the music is on “Fire” or romantic like in Billy Joel’s "She's Always a Woman". Dubreuil & Lauzon have had great success in competitions but prove themselves to be most entertaining in shows as well.
Beautiful Yuka Sato is a true ice princess. In the ballad "1000 Miles Away" sung by Jewel, Yuka, dressed in white, demonstrates her grace on ice. It’s lovely and one forgets to breathe. In the second act she wears a bright red and orange dress that suits the much faster beat, and she masters it as well. Yuka won the World Championships back in 1994, but can still land a double Axel.
The Chinese pair skaters Xue Shen & Hongbo Zhao are new cast members and the IMG deserves a medal for inviting them. It’s just too bad so many in the audience don’t know to appreciate what they witness; I really hope that will change once the tour starts. Shen & Zhao are top of the line, pulling off difficult lifts and throw jumps, they have the technique and the artistry. In "Feeling Good" by Michael Buble' the beat is jazzy and fun, but in the second act the performance to Il Divo’s "Caruso" is a fairytale dream.
Kyoko Ina & John Zimmerman are one (or two) of a kind. This pair keeps getting better every year and is such a joy to watch. Their programs are far out and simply thrilling! This time the audience is taken for a stroll down memory lane with an updated version of “Shine on you Crazy Diamond”. The years with Stars On Ice have brought Ina & Zimmerman to a new and higher dimension. But most elements of their programs would not be allowed in competition, they are way too dangerous! ![]() Jennifer Robinson has had a few years now to grow into her role as a show diva and she’s done it very well. She skates and interacts with the audience with confidence and conviction, and can switch from strictly beautiful to serious comedienne at the blink of an eye. Her "Hit me with a Hot Note" is a very enjoyable piece, as are all the group numbers and transition acts she participates in.
The 2008 show is a fun filled adventure for the whole family. There’s so much going on all the time it’s sometimes hard to keep up, especially during the group numbers. There are also some highly entertaining acts where the cast members are as much actors and comedians as skaters. This shines through in little transition numbers, like where the cast “family” is presented just like the Brady bunch, featuring Todd as Alice. This would have made a great show of its own!
In “Entchantment”, Sasha is dressed lika a ballerina and put on a pedestal by John, Patrice and Michael. She is lifted and twirled around and she dances, but not on skates. This was a great and very different number.
But my favorite group number is “Hard Steel is Back”. Scott Hamilton appears on the big screen announcing that the rock group “Hard Steel” is reunited! Jennifer is Miss Salchow, the reporter who brings the news to the three little schoolgirl fans, wonderfully portrayed by Kyoko, Yuka and Xue. Axl Edge (John) is the band front runner but to me the best rocker in the bunch is Marie-France with a pink guitar. These guys have to be seen as no photos can do them justice. They must also be heard bringing the audience such 70ies nostalgia as Alice Cooper’s “School’s out” and the Sweets’ “Ballroom blitz”. Great music, great skating – what a show! ![]() Being a skater anything can happen, as Michael experiences in one of the transition numbers. He’s telling Yuka how much he’d do for his fans and she makes him give away his shirt. Lucky lady who got it! The production
The music together with the skating is part of the Stars On Ice magic. It’s a bit like attending a concert, only more varied. Most skaters have a chance to skate to two very different types of music, and they do it with ease. And among the different types of music something is likely to suit everyone in the audience.
So there you have it, the 2008 edition of Stars On Ice, the great show initiated by Scott Hamilton back in 1986. Byron Allen of the IMG and show producer explains the tour name: “When Scott started his tour it was test-marketed in five small US cities and got a very good response. But from the beginning we knew we wouldn’t have Scott and Dorothy Hamill forever, so we didn’t call it Scott Hamilton’s tour, we called it Stars On Ice and knew we’d continue on after Scott retired. We obviously have, with Scott as producer in North America. We now do 40 shows in the US, 12 in Canada, and some in Korea and Japan.” Stars On Ice is known for recruiting the best skaters, usually Olympic and World medalists. But the group numbers set the show apart. “The show as a whole is greater than all the individual talents together. So we’ve tried to gather a blend of skaters who aren’t just great individual skaters but also work well in a group. And we’ve had a number of skaters through the years who have been phenomenal within the group concept.”
How much longer will there be Stars On Ice? No one knows, but I sure like Byron’s attitude: “Skating has a strong, solid background of fans, and from a corporate perspective it’s still about as good a way to reach women in sport as there is.”
It’s over and all I want to do is watch the whole thing over again. For a complete schedule of all the tour stops check the SOI website:
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