Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Searching for ice to skate on made us aware of climate change

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“It was a moment in time – and as a 10-year-old I’d never experience­d anything like that, it just looked magical to me.”

IT was a new challenge, a new experience, and something uplifting. It didn’t feel like ‘oh, we’re going to do this project and it’s another skating project’.

This was more than that. It was more of a personal thing than anything.

IN an ice rink you skate round in circles and there’s a barrier, so the thought of being able to go to Alaska, to a lake that was miles and miles long and you could keep going one way, for me, that was mind-blowing. It was really being free.

IT was a real personal thing to be able to do it, but also, it sort of turned into ‘being aware of climate change’ at the same time. The underlying story as well – where is the ice? It’s too warm at the moment and it’s not available here, so we’ve got to go here.

Just talking to the locals and listening to them and their experience of the last five years

– things have been getting warmer. They can noticeably see and feel it, so it’s almost chasing the ice and finding it... not knowing whether we’re going to be able to complete our dream, this personal experience.

I THINK sitting on the train to Fairbanks (the town in Alaska) and meeting all the characters and certainly the conductor there, that was quite an experience. He said, ‘yeah, we can stop the train, we’ll have

a look there, see if there’s any ice’, and I said, ‘excuse me, what do you mean stop the train?’.

We looked around at all the other people that were on the train and thought ‘they’re not going to be happy with us!

But they all got off and sort of watched and gave us a little round of applause, so we were the entertainm­ent for a little bit I think.

AT the end of it, I don’t know if you could tell but it was a moment, a real emotional moment, a lump in your throat moment.

When you’re skating, just that feeling of looking out at the mountains and that sense of what we’d just done; it felt like when you climb the mountain and you look down, it’s that moment.

WE finished filming the week before lockdown. From my point of view, it hasn’t changed our schedule. It’s changed what we can do as individual­s but not our schedule.

The only thing for me was I came over here to start prepping for Dancing On Ice and then I was going to go back to America. I’d have been 16 weeks in quarantine effectivel­y, so I’ve stayed [in the UK] throughout, and we’ve been able to train, so we feel ready.

 ??  ?? Were there any memorable moments for you both?
Jayne Torvill and Christophe­r Dean experience­d the true freedom of skating in the open air
Were there any memorable moments for you both? Jayne Torvill and Christophe­r Dean experience­d the true freedom of skating in the open air
 ??  ?? What was the biggest difference between skating in Alaska and on an ice rink?
Climate change plays a key role in the show too, doesn’t it?
Torvill and
Dean in action and, left, the finale to the pair’s spectacula­r Olympic Gold-winning Bolero performanc­e in Sarajevo in 1984
Was it an emotional challenge?
Did Covid-19 impact filming or your ability to practise?
Dancing On Thin Ice is on ITV, 9pm, New Year’s Day
What was the biggest difference between skating in Alaska and on an ice rink? Climate change plays a key role in the show too, doesn’t it? Torvill and Dean in action and, left, the finale to the pair’s spectacula­r Olympic Gold-winning Bolero performanc­e in Sarajevo in 1984 Was it an emotional challenge? Did Covid-19 impact filming or your ability to practise? Dancing On Thin Ice is on ITV, 9pm, New Year’s Day
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