Before Torvill and Dean there was John Curry. In 1976, he won the European, World and Olympic gold medals as well as being voted the BBC Sports Personality of the Year. In so doing, he transformed his sport by seeking to more deeply interpret the music used in his programmes and utilise balletic techniques in his performances, both of which were in contrast to the established methodology of clinical, technical precision. But even as he triumphed in Innsbruck at the Winter Olympics, Curry broke cover and in a newspaper interview, admitted to his homosexually. He next gave up being an amateur, going on the professional circuit, where he could collaborate with the best choreographers and employ the cream of the available skating talent to realise his dream of raising ice-skating to the level of ballet and yet achieve commercial success at the same time. It's probably fair to say that while he certainly achieved the former, as contemporary reviews make clear, the financial strain of maintaining a core group of skaters and musicians meant that his ambitious productions weren't profitable, despite sell-out shows at the New York Met and the Royal Albert Hall.
A picture is painted here of a lonely, restless man, unable it seems to find lasting love in any personal relationship. Drawn to New York it seems as much for its openly gay scene as well as being a cultural hub, it was his misfortune to contract AIDS as the epidemic took hold there and he returned to England to die in his mother's care, aged only 44, penniless and alone.
He was clearly a turbulent individual, obsessed with perfectionism in his chosen profession but incapable of committing and settling down with one partner in his personal life. There is a fair bit of pretentious twaddle spoken here about his lofty artistic aims and how he lived out his inner turmoil when performing on the ice. In interviews, he comes across as shy but brittle.
There's no question however that he took professional ice-skating to a different level and I would imagine that even as he drew towards his own end, as we see in the photographs of his emaciated state taken just before his too-early death, he hopefully took some kind of comfort from his achievements both as an amateur and professional skater.
It seems that Curry was too much of a non-conformist to adapt to his celebrity and become the money-spinning national treasures that his successors Robin Cousins and Torvill and Dean did. I guess it's often the way of trailblazers that they suffer the slings and arrows so that their followers can pass through in relative ease.
While I was surprised not to see contributions from Cousins, Torvill and Dean, even if only to acknowledge their own debt to Curry, this documentary brought to life an undeservedly forgotten figure who deserves this belated, sympathetic but honest recognition of not only the achievements in his professional life but also the travails of his difficult personal life.
The Ice King
2018
Action / Documentary
The Ice King
2018
Action / Documentary
Plot summary
THE ICE KING is the searing documentary of a lost cultural icon, a story of art, sport, sexuality, and rebellion. Including incredible unseen footage of some of his mort remarkable performances and with access to Curry's letters, archive interviews, and interviews with his family, friends and collaborators, this is a portrait of the man who turned ice-skating from a dated sport into an exalted art form. Watch any figure skating and it falls into two possible camps: before and after John Curry. From what was a macho, technical sport whose judges punished deviation blossomed - through John Curry's stubborn beauty - ice-dancing. This was no Holiday on Ice, but a new artistic medium. After winning gold at the Winter Olympics for a rebelliously balletic routine, Curry saw the world's stages sheeted with ice. Audiences and reviewers alike were enthralled by his genius. But Curry's story is about more than skating. On the night of the final, Curry became the first openly gay Olympian at a time when homosexuality was barely legal. From bullying and prejudice, to relief in the gay underworld, to his untimely death from AIDS, Curry's story dovetails with the experiences of a generation. Tortured by demons, Curry was forever on the run. Never owning a home, he lived on the favours of those who loved him. The only place he found true freedom was the ice. This is the story of a man whose body was a battleground. From love affairs, to violence in sex clubs, to its 'unmanly' elegance on the ice, every act was rebellion. John Curry was no activist, but an artist expressing his authentic self - yet in a world where his existence was taboo, his life was unavoidably political.
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Breaking the Ice
Amazing Story
I was only 6 years old when John Curry won Gold so I didn't remember him that well but am so glad I saw this. It's a shame he's never mentioned at skating competitions (including the Olympics) because every figure skater from 1976 - present owes a debt to him for revolutionizing the sport.
Originality We Will Never See The Likes Of Again!
Everything that was about how John changed the sport of figure skating, that made it a pleasure to watch, was said in this video; I therefore have no need to say my pennyworth. There has never been, and will not ever be, such a artistically gifted skater such as John (Curry). I remember watching a skating competition as a youngster and I thought it was utterly lifeless and boring. Years later I watched him on TV and was astounded at his ballet like performance; I was a fan evermore after that evening. When his competition days ended so did the artistry of men's figure skating (Robin Cousins was old school technical style and nowhere near as gifted as John was). Even Torvill and Dean, though pleasant to watch, did not have the gently strong balletic movement on the ice. Neither has anyone else since!
John Curry was to ice figure skating what Bruce Lee was to Martial Art and, neither will ever be surpassed! It wasn't what these two men did but rather how they did it and therefore they can never be equaled.
A very touching (but also very sad) documentary and I hope he found his peace in the oneness of the afterlife.