Scottish Daily Mail

Ice to see you back!

Torvill and Dean skate in the wild for the first time – and recreate the iconic Bolero

- By Izzy Ferris Showbusine­ss Editor

ALMOST four decades ago they unveiled their Bolero to the world at the Winter Olympics.

But Jayne Torvill and Christophe­r Dean had always harboured a dream of performing in a more remote arena – the wilderness.

The gold-medal winning duo have now made that wish come true by recreating the iconic dance on a frozen lake in Alaska.

It was filmed for last night’s ITV documentar­y Dancing On Thin Ice, in which the pair investigat­ed the impact of climate change on the region.

All the while, they were looking for the perfect place to wild skate and perform a special version of the routine that won them gold – and perfect scores – at the 1984 games in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.

Racing against the elements, they eventually found a perfect lake that hadn’t yet thawed too much, and the film crew set about moving several feet of snow with ploughs and shovels and smoothing the surface.

Miss Torvill, 63, and Dean, 62, then recreated the f amous dance, though some of the more daring moves were taken out.

And they were unable to wear their purple chiffon Renaissanc­e- i nspired costumes in minus 25C (minus 13F) cold, but the duo compromise­d with indigo jumpers.

Miss Torvill said: ‘It’s always been a dream for Chris and I to be able to skate the Bolero outside on a frozen lake in beautiful surroundin­gs.’ After completing the routine she joked she was ‘out of breath’.

Dean said that he was ‘humbled’ to have been able to do the dance in the ‘wilderness’ alongside his skating partner of more than 45 years.

‘That was once in a lifetime, so inspiring, so at one with nature,’ he said. ‘ To be here in the wilderness with my best friend… it’s been quite the journey.’

Dean has previously said that skating in the wild had long been a dream of his – inspired by a mural on the ceiling of his boyhood t r ai ning r i nk in Nottingham. He told the Daily Mail’s Weekend magazine: ‘ There were s katers and mountains in the background ... . I still remember how atmospheri­c it was ... I was transfixed by the people on the ice, like e they were flying.’

More than 24million Britons s watched in 1984 as the pair were e awarded nine sixes for Bolero.

Ravel’s music had been n deemed too long for their routine, but they got round the rules by kneeling and swaying g on the ice for the opening bars.

‘So at one with nature’

 ??  ?? Going for gold: At the Sarajevo Olympics
Walking in the air: Torvill and Dean perform on the Alaskan lake in purple jumpers, a reference to their original costumes
Going for gold: At the Sarajevo Olympics Walking in the air: Torvill and Dean perform on the Alaskan lake in purple jumpers, a reference to their original costumes

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