Daily Mail

How have we stayed together this long? Because we’ve never got married!

from Iram Ramzan As Torvill and Dean hang up their skates after 50 years, the Mail joins them on their emotional return to Sarajevo

- IN SARAJEVO

Half a century is quite an achievemen­t for any double act. ‘Morecambe & Wise didn’t last that long,’ Christophe­r Dean tells me. ‘Even fred [astaire] and Ginger [Rogers] only did ten films together.’

He nods at his partner, Jayne Torvill: ‘She’s getting old . . .’ — Jayne feigns outrage — ‘We’re both getting old,’ he adds hastily. ‘at our age, things break.’

for skating fans worldwide, this has been a bitterswee­t week. On a visit to Sarajevo to mark the 40th anniversar­y of their landmark Valentine’s Day performanc­e of Ravel’s Bolero at the 1984 Winter Olympics — a routine that rewrote the rules for what was possible in ice dance — Jayne Torvill, 66, and Christophe­r Dean, 65, announced they are hanging up their skates for good.

a final UK tour next year to mark their Golden Jubilee and that will be it for one of sport’s most famous partnershi­ps.

‘It’s a good time to stop,’ Chris says. ‘and the tour will be a celebratio­n.’

I’m sure there will be a lump in our throat closer to the time,’ Jayne smiles.

for now, back in what was Sarajevo’s Zetra Stadium (now a concert hall), they are reminiscin­g about that day — february 14, 1984 — when they stepped out on to the ice in front of 15,000 spectators to make history.

Back home, 24 million people were glued to their TVs, making it one of the most-watched events ever broadcast.

‘This spot changed our life,’ Christophe­r says. ‘It was the launching pad for our career: it allowed us to go on skating tours and Dancing On Ice.’

Jayne adds: ‘ for us, it’s hallowed ground. We feel very privileged and honoured to be back here.’

No one who watched it that night will ever forget it. The crowd fell silent as the haunting music, slow, insistent, mesmeric, began, and two kneeling figures, dressed in flowing purple — Jayne’s favourite colour — started to sway.

Then they moved with effortless grace around the rink, picking up pace with the music as they executed perfect turns, lifts, jumps, spins and holds, towards the slowly building orchestral crescendo — and that climactic ending when both lay prone on the ice.

THEIR performanc­e was a perfect marriage of athleticis­m, skill and beauty — a self-choreograp­hed work of art to what, I discovered, had once been their ‘warm-up’ music.

To this day they can’t give a definitive answer to the question: who actually picked Bolero to dance to?

‘I think I said: “What about Bolero?”’, Chris ventures as Jayne scowls mockingly at him. The actor Michael Crawford was their ‘ secret weapon’, the man they credit with teaching them how to bring alive the passionate story of love and sex with which the music is associated.

Olympics rules stated that the dance had to be four minutes long (plus or minus ten seconds), but the shortest they could get it down to was four minutes, 28 seconds. But because a routine is timed from the moment a couple starts to dance, Torvill and Dean realised they could use Bolero if they did not place their blades on the ice for the first 18 seconds — hence that swaying introducti­on on the spot.

and what was it like to perform it?

‘It felt like we were both in our bubble at first,’ Chris says. ‘ Our hearts were pounding, but then the music kicked in and it was like we were in a trance.’

‘We were certainly ready for it,’ says Jayne. ‘at the end it felt like we had woken up from a trance. and yes, we had done it. and we made no mistakes. I felt like we had done it as good as we could.’

The judges agreed. all nine awarded them the maximum 6.0 points. The gold medal was theirs.

Back then, an Iron Curtain still divided Europe, and Bosnia and Herzegovin­a — of which Sarajevo is now the capital — was part of the former Yugoslavia. Yet Sarajevans had high hopes for their country, as athletes from around the world arrived for the Winter Olympics.

for this Balkan city, blessed with a rich Ottoman and austrian architectu­ral heritage, war seemed very far away. Yet within a decade, some 100,000 people would be killed — including the genocide of 8,000 Bosnian Muslims from Srebrenica — and much of the city would be laid to waste.

It has tried its best to heal those scars, and Torvill and Dean’s visit this week was the initiative of Sarajevo mayor Benjamina Karic and Julian Reilly, British ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, a reminder of the city’s glory days as an Olympic host. It included a children’s skating class.

‘They might be future Olympians,’ Chris says. ‘The future us.’ It was in

their East Midlands home city of Nottingham that the pair’s own journey began.

Chris first stepped on the ice aged ten after getting skates for Christmas. ‘I walked around the house in my skates at first!’

Jayne fell in love with the sport on a school trip aged eight, begging her mum for a pair of white skates.

They honed their craft separately until they were paired in 1975 by coach Janet Sawbridge. They had to combine their passion for ice dance and competitio­n with earning a living: Jayne as an insurance clerk and Chris as a police officer.

after their Olympic, Europeans and World Championsh­ip success — they won the latter profession­al title five times — Torvill and Dean retired from competitio­n in 1998, returning to the spotlight in 2006 for ITV’s Dancing On Ice.

at first they were coaches and choreograp­hers, before joining the judges in 2016 — and they continue to thrill audiences with their own skating routines.

While they praise modern athletes, they feel they had more freedom in their day. ‘When we did Bolero, the only criteria was the length of music and no more than five lifts. Now the rule book is this thick . . .’ explains Christophe­r.

He is the more extrovert of the pair, but they are very comfortabl­e together, with a tendency to finish off each other’s sentences.

No wonder there has always been speculatio­n about a romance between them. Jayne says they made a ‘conscious decision’ to put their ice-dance partnershi­p first.

Christophe­r jokes: ‘Maybe that’s why we’ve stayed together for long — because we never got married!’

Today, both are in happy relationsh­ips with other people. Jayne lives in East Sussex with her husband of 34 years, sound engineer Phil Christense­n, and their children, Kieran, 21, and Jessica, 17.

CHRISTOPHE­R has been in a relationsh­ip with Dancing On Ice star Karen Barber since 2011 and has two sons, Jack, 25, and Sam, 23, with Jill Trenary, the second of his ex-wives.

Torvill and Dean still draw crowds in Sarajevo. When we visit the apartment blocks where they stayed during the Olympics, several people run out of a cafe to take selfies with them.

Dragana Tiric was 18 when she watched their live performanc­e on TV. ‘I’m a big fan!’ she tells me.

at 37, local business owner Zahid Dzambegovi­c wasn’t even born then. But, like many in this city, he knows who they are and asks them to sign a photograph. ‘I’m so proud to see them here,’ he smiles. ‘The Olympics were so big for Bosnia.’

later, Torvill and Dean perform Bolero once more. It’s not quite the same as 40 years ago, but it still thrills the audience.

That farewell tour is destined to be a sell-out.

TorvIll & Dean: our last Dance UK Tour, april 12-May 11, 2025. Tickets available at torvilland­dean.com

 ?? ?? Anniversar­y visit: Jayne Torvill and Christophe­r Dean’s iconic Bolero in 1984 and, below, back in Sarajevo this week with Iram Ramzan
Anniversar­y visit: Jayne Torvill and Christophe­r Dean’s iconic Bolero in 1984 and, below, back in Sarajevo this week with Iram Ramzan
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom