The Niagara Falls Review

There’s nothing like seeing it live

Figure skating fans get close enough to hear the blade, feel speed of champs

- LORI EWING

SAINT JOHN, N.B. — Mary McKay fell in love with figure skating watching Karen Magnussen capture gold at the 1973 world championsh­ips in Bratislava. With her cropped blond hair and understate­d rose-coloured dress, Magnussen laid down scores so high the event was all but over before most of the field had even skated.

Then McKay saw skating live for the first time at the 1996 world championsh­ips in Edmonton.

The sheer speed. The size of the jumps. The sound of steel blades slicing the ice. McKay was hooked.

“I’m sitting there thinking ‘I’m in trouble, because this is way better live than on TV,’ ” McKay said with a laugh.

As Olympic ice dance champion Scott Moir once said about watching three-time world champion Patrick Chan skate, figure skating is best enjoyed live.

“On TV, you can’t feel your hair blow back when you are close to him on the ice ... he has so much speed and command,” Moir said.

Some 50 trips later, McKay continues to combine her love of skating with her passion for travel. She was among a tour group at the recent Canadian figure skating championsh­ips in Saint John, N.B., with Uniworld Travel.

Cathie Leak started the business in 1984 when she took a group of women from the

Toronto Cricket Club to the world championsh­ips in Ottawa.

Angela Hildebrand­t first joined the tour group in 1988 for the world championsh­ips in Budapest, Hungary, and was a regular client until Leak retired in 2010 and Hildebrand­t took over the business.

“Luckily I enjoy skating, and I’ve made it into a career,” Hildebrand­t said.

The hook for Hildebrand­t was Brian Orser’s dramatic victory — finally, after three silvers — at the 1987 world championsh­ips in Cincinnati, Ohio, which she saw live.

A close-up of Orser during the medal ceremony captured him shedding a single tear — a moment of accomplish­ment that Hildebrand­t found truly moving.

“That’s really what started me into travelling internatio­nally. After Cincinnati, I said, ‘I’ve got to go to the Olympics.’ That was my push to go to Calgary and I managed to get a ticket to the men’s free skate, so I was there,” she said.

“I remember clutching this ticket, like ‘Oh my god.’ And it was so exciting to see (Orser). That was sort of the push that ‘Yeah, I want to go see this again, that program was so exciting.’”

Uniworld traditiona­lly travels to three events per season: Skate Canada Internatio­nal, the Canadian championsh­ips and the world championsh­ips.

Hildebrand­t will add the Grand Prix Final, if it’s in an interestin­g location — as was the case in December when Hildebrand­t took a tour group of more than 150 fans to Vancouver.

She had a group of 38 in Saint John, and she’ll take 58 to Saitama, Japan, for the worlds March 18-24. The biggest group to date was 400-plus fans for the 1996 Edmonton world championsh­ips.

Hildebrand­t has numerous repeat clients. “People build a relationsh­ip, and they turn into friends. They’re clients but so many come to every single thing,” she said. “If I have four events, they come to all four. It’s amazing. I have quite a handful who do everything.”

A typical internatio­nal world championsh­ip trip costs about $5,000, and includes a four-plus star hotel, a prime all-event ticket — which can cost as much as $3,000 on its own — plus breakfasts, transfers, and welcome and farewell functions. Airfare is not included.

Hildebrand­t also organizes pre- and post-tours clients can add to their trip. For last year’s world championsh­ips in Milan, she took a group on a pre-tour to northern Italy’s wine country.

“That was awesome ... did some beautiful wine tasting, saw some beautiful private estates, did all private touring, which is nice, so you’re not on a bus with a whole bunch of strangers,” Hildebrand­t said. “And people get to know each other over the years.”

The post-tour saw a group spend four days on the Amalfi Coast.

“It’s just a nice experience.

One of the things I like about the job — I get to travel too, which isn’t a bad thing — but I really enjoy the friendship­s I’ve built with my clients. That’s really nice,” Hildebrand­t said.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? From left, gold-medallists Michael Marinaro and Kirsten Moore-Towers, pairs; Andrew Poje and Kaitlyn Weaver, ice dance; Nam Nguyen, senior men; and Alaine Chartrand, senior women, jump for a photo at the exhibition gala event at the 2019 National Skating Championsh­ips at Harbour Station in Saint John, N.B., on Jan. 20.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO From left, gold-medallists Michael Marinaro and Kirsten Moore-Towers, pairs; Andrew Poje and Kaitlyn Weaver, ice dance; Nam Nguyen, senior men; and Alaine Chartrand, senior women, jump for a photo at the exhibition gala event at the 2019 National Skating Championsh­ips at Harbour Station in Saint John, N.B., on Jan. 20.
 ?? JEFF GOODE TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? McKay saw Brian Orser win the 1987 world championsh­ips, live, in Cincinnati.
JEFF GOODE TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO McKay saw Brian Orser win the 1987 world championsh­ips, live, in Cincinnati.
 ?? HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? Mary McKay’s love of figure skating began in 1973, thanks to Karen Magnussen, pictured.
HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO Mary McKay’s love of figure skating began in 1973, thanks to Karen Magnussen, pictured.

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