The Oklahoman

Competitiv­e EDGE

Dancing duo puts age on ice

- BY JIM KILLACKEY | For The Oklahoman

As the Winter Olympics near, a local ice-dancing duo is working diligently on their own intricate lifts, twists and turns — all at an older age.

Dr. Keith Clark, 65, and banker Cindy Tipton, 56, are training for the U.S. Adult Figure Skating Championsh­ips from April 10-14 in Marlboroug­h, Massachuse­tts. An estimated 400 individual­s are expected to compete in separate ice dancing and skating categories, competitio­n Chairwoman Donna J. Wunder said.

Competitor­s are as old as 85, she said.

Like the Olympics, the adult event includes gold, silver and bronze medals.

Friends Clark and Tipton plan to ice dance a fox trot and a flamenco in the competitio­n.

There’s also a dance called the ”Killian.” It’s a set-pattern dance and music like a march with certain steps and beats per minute. The two are using the music “Uptown Funk” by Bruno Mars.

At the national competitio­n, judges will decide which team performs the best ice dances with power, deep edges, synchronic­ity and expression, Tipton said.

“I like the speed, control of forces, sensitivit­y of movement, and the complexity and difficulty” of ice dancing, said Clark, an ear, nose and throat surgeon at St. Anthony Hospital. “Mostly, I like the sensation of continued accomplish­ment with practice. It’s satisfying to continue to make progress, and with two people, it’s more fun,” he said.

“We are both experienci­ng it together so it adds to the enjoyment.”

Tipton says her love of ice dancing comes from “the power, flow and freedom of movement. It is thrilling!”

She works for MidFirst Bank in credit risk management.

They have been an on-ice twosome for eight years.

Currently, the pair mostly trains for a few hours five days a week during the early mornings at Arctic Edge Skating Rink and sometimes at Blazers Ice Centre in Moore.

“When we are finished practicing, we feel inspired, warmed up, flexible and ready to tackle the day,” noted Tipton, of Edmond.

Their partnershi­p happened because “we have been the only adults consistent­ly skating in our age group and at the same skating-skill level,” Clark said.

The two both skated in the mornings before becoming a pair.

“We are compatible, good friends, and have our spouses’ encouragem­ent because they understand the enjoyment it brings,” Clark said.

Making a comeback

Originally from the Detroit area, Clark went to medical school at the University of Michigan.

“Some of the medical students would skate at noon, and so I joined them for four years,” he said.

However, after a 20-year hiatus from skating to become a surgeon in Oklahoma City, get married to wife, Debbie, and have two children, he began skating again at the age of 45.

During his life, he has enjoyed swimming, diving, snow skiing and now ice dancing.

He tries to encourage other adults to try skating.

His wife is an attorney for the Oklahoma Civil Court of Appeals. Their oldest son, Nick, is a third-year, medical-school student.

Alex, their youngest son, is working in the manufactur­ing business and focusing on mixed martial arts.

Clark and Tipton also have hopes of using a computeriz­ed skate-sharpening machine, as well as a computeriz­ed balance-assessment tool to monitor their skating.

Dance, discipline

Tipton was born in Tulsa, and went to Sand Springs High School and Oklahoma State University. She became an accountant in 1985. Her oldest daughter, Lauren, is a former ice skater, and now works in Houston.

Her youngest daughter, Renee, was a competitiv­e soccer player and is now a nurse at the University of Oklahoma

Health

Sciences

Center hospital.

 ??  ??
 ?? [PHOTO ?? During competitio­n from five years ago, the ice dancing team of Keith Clark and Cindy Tipton slides to a halt at the end of a dance routine.
[PHOTO During competitio­n from five years ago, the ice dancing team of Keith Clark and Cindy Tipton slides to a halt at the end of a dance routine.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States