Ice
Dance History
Ice dance has a
strong tradition in the United Kingdom.
Many of the compulsory dances which are still competed today were
developed by British dancers in the 1930's, and 12 of the first 16
World Championships in ice dance were won by British couples. The British team
of Jayne
Torvill and Christopher Dean
famously won the Olympic gold medal in Sarajevo in 1984 with a
dramatic free skate to Ravel's Bolero which
earned unanimous 6.0s for presentation.
Click picture for video.
Beginning in the
1970's, dance began to be dominated more by teams from the Soviet Union
and Russia.
The Russian style of ice dance typically emphasizes speed and power at
the expense of precision. For example, in the compulsory dances, the
skaters have been known to make slight alterations in the pattern and
timing of the steps that are not strictly correct according to the
rulebook, but which make the dance flow better or have more speed over
the ice, and hence appear more impressive. Russian ice dancers are also
known for theatrical and sometimes bizarre costuming and expression in
their dances.
In the 1990's,
the International
Skating Union began to try to restrain the excessive
theatricality in ice dancing, first by attempting to return it to its
ballroom roots by adding more restrictions on music and dance holds.
Later, amid complaints that ice dance had become too boring, these
restrictions were removed and replaced with requirements that dancers
include specified technical elements in the original dance and free
dance. The effect is that there is now more emphasis on technique and
athleticism in the judging, and less on dramatics. While the
requirement that dancers skate to music with a definite beat remains,
ice dancing is currently the only discipline of figure skating which
allows vocal music with lyrics in competition.
Today ice
dance remains more popular in Europe than in North
America, where it has the
reputation among many skating fans of being plagued by judging that is
at best incomprehensible and at worst completely corrupt. The Code of
Points system that recently replaced the old 6.0 scoring system is
alleged by some to eliminate much of the corruption that has plagued
the sport in the past, as judges now must score based upon more
specific guidelines and categories, while others believe that the
anonymity of the system simply further encourages judges to manipulate
the results and that the restrictiveness of the new rules have
additionally reduced creativity in dance.
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