Table of Contents - IBJ Book Publishing
Transcription
Table of Contents - IBJ Book Publishing
Table of Contents Chapter 1: Coaching in the 1930s and 1940s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 An association of professionals, the American Skaters Guild, is formed in 1938. Ice shows tour the world. Chapter 2: Coaching in the 1950s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 The Professional Skaters Guild of America is organized. Ice dance develops step by step. Chapter 3: Coaching in the 1960s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 The 1961 U.S. World Team dies in a plane crash. The PSGA begins offering annual conferences. The Ice Skating Institute of America is launched. Chapter 4: Coaching in the 1970s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Skating groups forge stronger relationships. The PSGA develops an instructor rating system. Classes keep coaches busy. Chapter 5: Coaching in the 1980s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 The PSGA moves to Minnesota and expands. Pairs perform romantic and risky pas de deux. Synchronized skating goes international. Chapter 6: Coaching in the 1990s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 Figures are taken out of figure skating. An assault on a skater shines a spotlight on figure skating. Adult skating comes of age. Chapter 7: Coaching in the 2000s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 The PSA dedicates new headquarters. Judging scandal leads to new scoring system. Scientists advance the sport. The new century brings new credentials. Chapter 1 1930s and 1940s Eugene Turner won three medals at 1941 Nationals. Cecilia Colledge, 1937 World champion. Lake Placid’s 1932 rink was the first indoor arena used for the Winter Olympics. 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 First touring cast of Ice Follies. 1936 – British Ice Teachers Association forms in London. 1937 – Sonja Henie tours U.S. 1938 – Thirteen coaches organize American Skaters Guild in Lake Placid; Willy Boeckl is president. 1939 – Willie Frick elected ASG president. 1940 – Willy Boeckl serves another year as ASG president. 1941 – Nathan Walley named president of 72-member ASG. 1942 – American Skaters Guild is inactive during World War II. 1949 – Group meeting in Colorado Springs creates plan to reactivate the guild. 1949 – Zamboni company in California puts first resurfacing machine on the ice. Gus Lussi demonstrated figures in 1943. Model A Zamboni, an early ice-resurfacing machine. 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 Chapter 1 An Association of Professionals I n August 1938, dur ing the annual Lake amateurs to turn professional for the purpose of our own, and in enabling them to contact clubs Placid summer season, 13 prominent figure skating in haphazard skating shows which failed desiring professionals,” USFSA President Joseph skating instructors gathered for a meeting. This and left them stranded as professionals without K. Savage wrote in a letter published in Skating. international group, mostly residents of the experience in teaching.” “We must remember that the law of supply and United States and Canada, decided they needed to institute standards for teaching the sport and promote the interests of professional instructors. They called themselves the American Skaters Guild. COACHING IN THE 1930s and 1940s 2 The coaches elected as their president Willy Boeckl, the former world champion from Austria, who taught most of the year in New York City. In an ar ticle in Skating magazine, Boeckl listed the guild’s goals: “The mutual protection of the instructors and of the clubs employing them, The guild members agreed on an initiation fee and annual dues of $5. They appointed temporary officers, including Willie Frick and Walter Arian as vice presidents. The U.S. Figure Skating Association welcomed the ASG. “Our own Association has always endeavored to cooperate and will continue to cooperate with the professionals in helping them solve their problems, which are closely related to demand controls both wages and employment … While the professionals’ association cannot make new jobs, it can see that such jobs as are open are satisfactorily and competently filled and raise the present standard of teaching by tests and the dissemination of proper information, and the amateurs will profit accordingly.” Theresa (Tee) Weld Blanchard motivated the top coaches to form the guild, said U.S. Figure Skating historian Benjamin T. Wright. In the 1930s, the establishment of friendly cooperation with Blanchard edited Skating magazine and acted the clubs and the United States Figure Skating as the voice of the USFSA from Boston. “There Association, the formulation of methods of was no other place to turn to. She was the ascer taining the competency of figure skating person who found jobs for many of the coaches, instructors by giving them tests, based not merely particularly the foreign coaches who came during on the standard of the instructor’s own skating but the 1920s and 1930s. So she recommended that on their actual teaching ability, and the awarding to they form an organization which could provide instructors of competency certificates.” that support. It was her initiative that got the top coaches, in the East particularly, to join together,” Boeckl also wrote that some promoters of the he said. new ice shows were not treating skaters fairly: “Action should be taken to put an end to the practice of professional show promoters inducing During the ASG’s early years, Blanchard Editor Theresa Weld Blanchard worked in a Boston office. continued to help match instructors and clubs. In Summer Skating Mecca In a Skating article inviting skaters to Lake Placid for the 1938 summer season, arena manager H.L. Garren described the New York resort’s amenities, beautiful mountain scenery and sunsets, and extensive skating and social programs: The Lake Placid arena attracted summer skaters. 1939, she reported to the USFSA Governing Council that the professionals committee had more than 500 names on file. days of World War II, while I was in college,” when Skating operated from an apar tment near the Skating Club of Boston, Wright recalled. His first job was to organize some files, which were stored in a bathtub. “I found a form Tee used for résumes, filled out in handwriting. I remember seeing the résumes of Pierre Brunet and his wife, Andree Joly, and Karl Schafer, a World and Olympic champion who came over.” At the August 1939 meeting of the ASG in Lake Placid, the professionals elected as president Willie Frick, a German teaching at The Skating Club of Boston since 1920. They approved resolutions on themes they would discuss repeatedly over the years. “It was resolved that the closest possible cooperation with the USFSA should be a major aim,” Boeckl wrote in a Skating article. Also, “A motion was passed to conduct strict tests for all new skaters entering “A staff of professionals will be available at all times… The staff will consist of Walter Arian, Willy Boeckl, Joseph Carroll, William Chase, Willie Frick, Cathleen Frick, and Gustave Lussi. Lessons will be on a half-hour basis and instruction rates will range from $3.50 to $5.00 per half-hour. “Interspersed with serious skating will be the Ice Mardi Gras on July 2 which is open to all skaters in costume. … Then there are the Friday night parties, by The Skating “It is truly a common meeting ground, the melting pot of skating, where thoughts and ideas pertaining to the betterment and advancement of figure skating may be exchanged — where you meet old and new friends — the skater’s paradise. “Patch skating which was inaugurated at Lake Placid two summers ago has proven very popular and beneficial to skaters. … The demand for season patches has been so great that a schedule of four season patch sessions per day has been scheduled. The increased interest shown this year (in dancing) has resulted in a session of dancing being included in each evening’s schedule of skating. During the last week of the dance period music will be provided by an orchestra in afternoon and evening. The Dance Conference and Dance Judges School proved so successful last year that it is being repeated again this summer. Dance Competitions will again be included in the four dances, viz.: waltz, fourteenstep, foxtrot and tango, under USFSA rules.” 3 The Joy of Coaching “I went to work for Tee as an unpaid assistant in the early “There will be the same wellrounded daily schedule of skating that makes Lake Placid the ideal skating center. The daily program will include patch, figure, dance and public sessions. … In the morning, afternoon and evening figure skating sessions only figure skates will be allowed on the ice. Only those desiring to dance will be allowed on the ice during the dance sessions. Club of Lake Placid, where everyone forgets their dignity and has a real good time. The Annual Mid-Summer Operetta will be held on August 4, 5, and 6. the field of instruction.” The group also resolved Blanchard and Boeckl, honorary presidents; and that “all professional instructors must conduct Howard Nicholson, vice president. Others on the themselves with circumspection, so that they list of officers and committee chairs were Elizabeth will be a credit to the club with which they are Chase, Janson, Gustave Lussi, Willie Frick, Joseph associated.” Carroll and Maribel Vinson Owen. The first instructors’ tests were given in The American Skaters Guild held a special December 1939 at Iceland Rink in New York City meeting during the 1942 U.S. Championships in to Roland Janson, a former national junior pair Chicago in February 1942. With Chairman Walley champion, and Werner Groebli, “Mr. Frick” of the presiding, the ASG voted unanimously to invest half famous comedy duo Frick and Frack. They took the of the guild’s funds in defense bonds silver tests, designed to “ascertain whether new COACHING IN THE 1930s and 1940s 4 figure skating instructors and those without known Members of the ASG did not meet again until ability are competent to teach,” wrote Savage in after World War II. Then, in early 1946, instructors a Skating article. Those who passed the silver test in the East Bay area of northern California and would be recommended as instructors of school others in Southern California voted to form the figures and free skating up through the junior competitive level. “Some of the judges would execute (and I mean ‘execute’) school figures, intentionally making some mistakes in tracing position, footwork, arms, shoulder or head movements,” Savage added. “The candidates were then required to point out the faults and explain how to correct them, and were asked various questions … to test their knowledge and ability to instruct in a competent, Walter Arian served as an officer of the American Skaters Guild. had an interesting and instructive session. Guild of Pacific Coast Instructors. They sent a letter detailing a structure for a national guild to a group meeting in Chicago to discuss the “These tests were an excellent innovation and revival of the ASG. The Chicago meeting resulted should result in better instructors and be beneficial in a reorganization plan. They decided to form a to the Guild members, the USFSA, the clubs and nominating committee, hold meetings at Lake pupils, by setting a definite standard and helping to Placid in August and at sectional competitions eliminate any uncertainty as to the ability of new in the winter, and invite all instructors to join. or little known instructors.” Professionals were directed to contact Eugene understandable manner. The candidates were also In 1940, Boeckl again took the helm of the ASG, Turner in Hollywood, Calif., for information. Finally required to … illustrate various jumps and spins which was growing rapidly. Blanchard was named in 1949, some original members of the ASG met and to criticize and correct faults exhibited by the honorary president, and Arian was vice president at the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs and elected judges intentionally or unintentionally in performing for Canada and Nathan Walley was vice president a committee to draft a constitution and bylaws, these. Both candidates were successful in passing for the U.S. By the 1941 meeting, the guild had 72 including a proposal to change the name to the the test and all concerned, including the judges, members. In 1941, Walley was named president; Professional Skaters Guild of America. Willy Boeckl a LogiCaL and exaCt SyStem By Willy Boeckl Stats: 1893 – 1975. Titles: World champion 1925 – 28; Olympic silver medalist 1924, 1928; six-time European champion; fourtime Austrian champion. ASG President: 1938 and 1940. Halls of Fame: PSA 2013, World 1977. Coached: At Skating Club of New York and Lake Placid. After retiring, became a judge. Cutting Edge: Invented Boeckl jump, similar to inside Axel. Quote: “Axel Paulsen is a continuous forward three and loop jump, and requires athletic ability and courage. It is seldom executed properly, most skaters being content to ‘fake’ the jump by leaping more or less from the toe of the skating foot and doing the first half of the turn on the ice, or else they land forward inside and turn quickly on the ice to back outside. Strive to do a correct Paulsen and avoid both the three turn or the toe turn.” as much and as fast as you can, to learn to turn quickly, to stop at will and to skate backward with ease and sureness; in other words learn to control your body while skating. These accidental curves and turns soon become more directed and the pupil is ready for instruction in the art of figure skating. The reason why people get discouraged and abandon figure skating is because they make no effort to grasp the fundamentals, the four edges. They try to learn changes, turns, jumps and meanwhile they are struggling with the edges upon which all balance is based. From the introduction and preface of Willy Boeckl’s book Willy Boeckl on Figure Skating (Moore Press, 1937). 5 The Joy of Coaching First Coach: His mother. Although I had a fair measure of success as an amateur contender for figure skating laurels, and have taught figure skating for over nine years, it was not until recently that I felt equipped to set down the knowledge and experience acquired in my skating career. These theories have been tried in actual practice with my pupils over a long period and have been embodied in a logical and exact system in the following pages. I wanted to get away from the accidental method of those amateurs or professionals whose only rule is that they found it easy to do a certain figure a certain way, notwithstanding the fact that they skated similar figures of identical principles in an entirely different manner or position. I determined to put off writing my book until I had carefully noted the elements of a natural, simple method which followed physical laws as closely as possible, that is to say, a system which permits the body to travel along the line of least resistance. This, and only this, can make skating easy, and permits the maintenance of even pace, which is the problem for novice and expert alike. The ardent defenders of the old school of skating eights … seemed unaware of the fact that the movement of travel of a body can be influenced by an outside force, which modifies the initial path of movement. In the description of every figure, I will outline and illustrate the method of bringing those forces into play which cause the skate to travel along the proper path, with the body in an easy and graceful position. Into this book I have put all I learned as an amateur, a professional teacher and now and again perhaps the engineer crept into it as well. My advice on straight or plain skating is to race around PROfiles Willy Boeckl created the Boeckl jump. He leaped from a forward inside edge, turned one and a half times in the air and landed on the same foot. PROfiles Willie Frick deepLy Bent KneeS and neat Feet By Christie Allan-Piper Stats: 1896 – 1964. Born in Germany. Married partner and fellow coach Cathleen Pope. ASG President: 1939. Halls of Fame: PSA 2013, World 1981. COACHING IN THE 1930s and 1940s 6 Tests: In one day in 1933, passed all of the figure tests of the National Skating Association of Great Britain. Coached: At The Skating Club of Boston 1920-60; champions included Theresa Weld Blanchard, Gretchen Merrill, Joan Tozzer and Bernard Fox, George Hill, Maribel Vinson, Roger Turner, Tenley Albright. Willie Frick was approaching retirement when he skated to the boards to meet his new student. Glancing at my skates, he frowned. “The first thing you need is a pair of decent skates,” he said, eying my proudly purchased, new, $12 skates. A diminutive, formal gentleman, he wore a banker’s suit and tie and taught by leading us around circles or dance patterns on unerring edges. He sat firmly over his skate, back erect, free leg pointed, feet touching with every step. He always stepped rising from a deep knee. “Neat feet,” he said. Almost at once, I sensed in him a sadness that a reckless focus on jumps was coming at the expense of skating form and function. He’d taught generations of champions: Suzanne Davis, Joan Tozzer, Maribel Vinson Owen and Tenley Albright. We stopped to watch whenever Tenley stepped on the ice. His face glowed and his shoulders straightened proudly as she paused to greet her old teacher. She exemplified all he believed skating should be, combining form, musicality, invention and outward and inner grace. Another of his students, Maribel Vinson Owen, coached nearby. She taught his principles with abandon and gusto. “Hip in, weight over the skate,” she shouted, pounding her own hip with her fist. Though her boisterous teaching style contrasted with quiet Mr. Frick’s, she was his most significant heir, demanding the same straight back, deep knee, pointed toe, neat feet and spor tsmanship. Like Mr. Frick, she insisted on principled conduct. She usually bellowed, her voice chronically hoarse, but she never spoke ill of competitors. Christie Allan-Piper coaches in Massachusetts. Cutting Edge: Encouraged summer training and took Boston skaters to England in the 1930s. Claims to Fame: Known as “Boy Wonder of Berlin” for exhibitions in Europe; performed “candle dance,” skating patterns around lit candles on the ice. Willie Frick performed his candle dance in many ice shows. The Skating Scene: 1938 • W hen the American Skaters Guild formed in 1938, Summer skating in North America skating instructors and teachers called themselves was in its infancy. The first summer professionals or pros. The U.S. Figure Skating Association’s session at Lake Placid was in 1932 Professionals Committee had a list of 500 names. in the arena built for the Winter Olympics. Schumacher and a few Here are some other facts about the skating scene in 1938: other cities in Canada offered • The USFSA was founded in 1921 with seven charter clubs: summer sessions. In the 1940s, some Beaver Dam Winter Sports Club (Mill Neck, N.Y.), The California rinks would stay open all Skating Club of Boston, Chicago Figure Skating Club, New York Skating Club, Philadelphia Skating Club and Humane Skating Club (which soon became Figure Skating Club of Minneapolis). By 1938, USFSA had grown to 25 clubs and Skating magazine had 3,000 subscribers. • Some skating clubs provided a vibrant social schedule for members with social dance sessions accompanied by live orchestras, exhibitions, carnivals, and junior clubs with group lessons. The USFSA sanctioned • Many clubs offered sessions only outdoors.The Philadelphia 34 club carnivals in 1938. Some of the big clubs Skating Club and Humane Society was the first privately presented their carnivals to full houses in major arenas. owned skating club to build its own indoor rink, which • The USFSA adopted the eight figure and freestyle test opened in January 1938. The Skating Club of Boston soon followed suit. structure in 1925, but high-level tests were rare and only 10 skaters had passed the gold test. A dance “According to a recent poll of USFSA members by the editors of Skating, the great majority of them are more interested in dancing than in the other types of skating. Our few competitors who are interested in advanced school figures, free skating and pairs belong to the younger generation.” — USFSA President Joseph K. Savage 7 The Joy of Coaching Society, Sno Birds of Lake Placid (N.Y.), and Twin City Figure summer. PROfiles eugene turner SonJa henie a FUn partner By Eugene Turner Stats: 1920 – 2010. Halls of Fame: PSA 2012, U.S. 1983. Coached by: Himself and his mother, a skating judge, in Los Angeles. COACHING IN THE 1930s and 1940s 20 Titles: U.S. champion 1940, 1941; U.S. pairs champion with Donna Atwood 1941; dance silver medalist with Elizabeth Kennedy in 1941. Only skater to medal in three disciplines in one U.S. Championships. Show Biz: Partnered Sonja Henie in Hollywood Ice Revue. Appeared in movies with Henie and Belita JepsonTurner. Doubled in movies for Cary Grant and Patrick Knowles. Coached or Choreographed: Tenley Albright, Richard Dwyer, Cathy Machado, Karol and Peter Kennedy, Tim Brown and Allen Schramm. Worked mainly in California until age 80. Family: Seven children, three daughters skated seriously. Mary Jo competed. Terry and Lisa skated in ice shows. Lisa coached 15 years. direct. They even learned the choreography faster than the skaters. The term skaters is used loosely here. Today the Ice Follies has gold medalists in its kick-line. Back then few knew even what a first test was. They weren’t bad, but the quality of skating in Sonja’s shows left something to be desired, even in those years. It mattered little. Sonja was the star; all else was to be a backdrop. She seemed to have a different partner every year. It became my turn in 1941. I’d turned professional that year to teach but upon being asked I gladly accepted because I thought it would be an interesting experience. She seemed to have an honest respect for good skating, she knew her limitations and she never in any way resented help or correcting. I liked her, she was fun to work with and she never gave me any problems. We were talking about glamour and Sonja Henie. But the glamour wasn’t only on the ice. The audience for Sonja’s debut was star-studded with all the great names of that era: Gable, Shearer, Crawford,Tracy, Hepburn, a very young Jimmy Stewart, in fact everyone but Garbo, appearing partly through curiosity, partly through fear of incurring Hearst’s wrath and Marion Davies’ pique. The old Polar Palace had never seen anything like it before or since. I’d go along with the hordes to see her movies. People went in droves… When you realize that this was an ice skater, with an accent you could cut with a knife, and in movies with plots that hurt, then you knew she had something pretty special. The second phase of Sonja’s professional life came when she joined forces with a Chicago businessman, Arthur Wirtz, to produce a touring show. The success of the Ice Follies probably gave Wirtz the idea. Wirtz owned several arenas in the Midwest. To Hollywood skaters this opportunity appeared golden: It meant a shor t trip, like a paid vacation, and right back onto a Hollywood movie lot for the next picture. But it didn’t quite work out that way. Studio dancers were as eager to go as skaters and the studio dancers were not only picking up the skating easily but were better trained and easier to Eugene Turner taught at Iceland in Berkeley, Calif., circa 1960.