Kerrs try on for the Olympic season
By Reut Golinsky
My autumn vacation this year had two parts: the "skating part" was in Oberstdorf, and the "absolutely non-skating" part continued overseas in New York at my friend's. But there was an exception I was ready to make in my "skating-free" time, as there were two skaters I was looking forward to meeting while I was there.
The initial plan was totally different. I was supposed to visit Sinead and John at their rink, to watch their practice and to do an interview about the coming season. But things turned out differently. Firstly, I found out that without a car, it's almost impossible to get to the Igloo rink, where they are training, then John wrote that they planned to come to NY during the week, anyway. And though I was really impatient to see the new programs, it was much more convenient (and feasible too) to meet them three metro stops from the place I stayed in.
Wednesday, September 30th. Brooklyn, somewhere between a sushi bar and a flower shop, in small tailor studio. I'm waiting for the Kerrs who should come here today to try on their new costumes. In a week they fly to Finland for their first international competition of this season. The costumes for free dance? Still not ready. "It's a bit late", agrees John. "But everybody is always late with their costumes. Evan Lysacek once received his on a day of the short program. We decided about the music and the idea of our free dance in summer, but had some disagreements with our designer. That's why it took so long".
Their designer, Natella Abdulaeva, is the person who created their last season's "Muse" Free Dance program costumes - ripped costumes of survivors on their "journey from perdition" - and the unusual space aliens' costumes from season 2007/08, and the Scottish ones too. She was the author of famous Yagudin's "Winter" and "Iron Mask", she worked with Platov/Grishuk, Ando, Arakawa and Cohen, she created costumes for Tarasova's ice theater and for Igor Bobrin's shows. She has a very special vision of how things should look. For example, it was she who insisted on unusual yellow and white colors in Kulik's costume for his program to Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue. Not so easy to argue with her, I suppose.
Their costumes for original dance are ready - jeans for John, shorts for Sinead, checkered shirts - not much to do there. They chose for their folk/country original dance something more close to Canada, cowboys and western, with I've been Everywhere by Johnny Cash (as it'll be boring using something Scottish again so soon, right?). "Robert [Robert Royston, who worked with them on their swing OD last season] said that in country competitions this is what they wear - just jeans and shirts", clarified Sinead regarding their relatively simple outfits. And Robert can be trusted, as he is a four-time world country dance champion. Also, I should admit, Sinead looks great in those shorts - worth showing to the world in Vancouver.
To my question about the French pair Pechalat/Bourzat who are also doing a western-type dance this season, they answered that they are not afraid of rivalry: "They are a great team, but we think this style of music suits us better".
Actually when we talked to the Kerrs in Paris a year ago they had a different idea. They told us then that they were thinking of having a Bollywood theme. So I reminded them about this idea of theirs and asked why they didn't choose it. "Last winter 'Slumdog Millionaire' was screened and it was so popular that the Indian theme became too obvious and banal, we were sure someone would do it, so we changed our minds", answered John, "and also we had Robert in our team who is a professional in country dances, so it was much simpler than to start looking for someone who is a specialist in Indian dances", added Sinead.
While we are waiting for the tailor, Valentina, to finish with her previous clients, Dutch ice dancers, we have a chat about Michael Weiss's show, which they recently participated in and about loud Korean fans, about "Cirque du Soleil" (I planned to watch in Toronto, but in the end, missed it) and about expensive hotels in Vancouver this winter (their parents won't get any discount, and I think it's not fair), about comebacks and about the Nebelhorn Trophy. Otar Japaridze, who joined his friends and training mates on their trip to NY, competed there with his new partner Allison Reed and got a spot for Georgia in the coming Olympic Games. Valentina, by the way, made that beautiful Georgian costume he had for the original dance.
Sinead is the first for a try-on. In a few minutes the boys and I are allowed to see her. There are lots of pins all over the airy white dress, very open and quite sexy. "Just to add wings and halo and you'll be a real angel", jokes Valentina.
Angel? Yes, that's the main idea behind their FD. John is "a man who loses his grip on reality, closing off to the world" and Sinead is his guardian angel, his sub-conscious, who is trying to save him and "help him back to normality". (I wonder if it works in their off-ice life too? ;))
So Sinead's costume is pretty much decided, they only need to agree on how the cut of her dress will look - in strips, smooth or something else.
John's costume is not ready at all. At least not something they could show me and let me take pictures of (actually, I think, that the photo of John without the costume could make a real scoop, but, well, maybe next time). They agree to meet on Saturday, just few days before their departure to Europe. But according to what we saw on Finlandia Trophy fortunately they were in time.
I had a really great time chatting with Sinead, John and Otar, but on my way back I suddenly realised that I had no idea how to make an interview out of the informal talk we had. So, it won't be an interview in the end, but
Things you didn't know about the Kerrs and always wanted to ask
Published on AbsoluteSkating.com:
http://www.absoluteskating.com/articles/2009kerrscostumes.html