The Ice Capades
was a traveling entertainment show featuring theatrical performances involving ice skating. Shows often featured former Olympic
and National Champion figure skaters who had retired from amateur competition.
Started in 1940, Ice Capades grew rapidly and prospered for fifty years. A decline in popularity ensued, and the show went out of business around 1995. There have been several attempts to revive the show and its name.
Similar traditional ice-skating entertainment shows included the Ice Follies and Holiday on Ice.
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ICE CAPADES TICKETS
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History
Ice Capades was founded in February, 1940 in
Hershey, Pennsylvania by nine men who called themselves the Arena Managers Association. They met to discuss forming an ice show to play in their arenas during the 1940-1941 entertainment season. The arenas represented were all well-known venues of the day:
[1]
- Boston Garden, represented by Walter A. Brown
- Rhode Island Auditorium (Louis Pieri)
- Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (Louis Jacobs)
- Hershey Sports Arena (John Sollenberger)
- Cleveland Arena (Al Sutphin)
- Springfield Coliseum (Eddie Shore)
- Philadelphia Arena (Peter A. Tyrrell)
- New Haven Arena (Nathan Podoloff)
- Pittsburgh Gardens (John Harris)
Harris had noted the popularity of ice skating displays during the intermissions between periods of
hockey games.
The arena managers chose the name Ice Capades, and formed a group of skaters.
Early years
thumbThe group's first performance was a mere four months after its founding, on June 16, 1940 at
New Orleans Municipal Auditorium. The show closed there on June 29 and moved to
Atlantic City Convention Hall, where it played nightly from July 19 through September 2. Famous skaters in the large cast included
Belita,
Robin Lee, and
Vera Hruba. The group's first touring season under the Ice Capades name covered 24 cities between November, 1940 and May, 1941.
The show's success spawned two films from
Republic Pictures, "Ice-Capades" in 1941,
[2] [3] and "Ice Capades Revue" in 1942.
[4] [5] The films featured actors and entertainers of the day such as
James Ellison,
Ellen Drew,
Jerry Colonna and
Phil Silvers, as well as the Ice Capades skaters. They were not considered to be films of quality, and the first one was panned by
The New York Times [6]
In 1942, the show featured world champion skater
Megan Taylor, new talent Donna Atwood, and an acrobatic team from
Boston. The next year U.S. figure skating champion
Bobby Specht joined the show. He would be actively involved with Ice Capades for the next 31 years. 1943 also introduced the "Old Smoothies," Orrin Markhus, 51, and his partner Irma Thomas, 44, plus Trixie, the skating juggler. The production number "Toys for Sale" was the first story on ice with original words and music.
Later on
In the early days, Ice Capades shows were highly theatrical, with
vaudeville elements, including scantily-clad showgirls.
Ice Capades shows were extremely popular for several decades—virtually a household name—although criticized by some as
kitsch.
[7]
Harris sold the company in 1963 for $5.5 million; in 1986 then-owner
Metromedia sold Ice Capades and the
Harlem Globetrotters as a package to
International Broadcasting Corporation for $30 million. However, a decline in popularity began in the 1980s and the parent company went bankrupt in 1991. In 1993
Dorothy Hamill bought Ice Capades assets in a bankruptcy sale and attempted to revive the company with the critically acclaimed
Frozen in Time: Cinderella on Ice
, but attendance figures remained stagnant. In February 1995 she sold the company for $10 million to television evangelist
Pat Robertson's
International Family Entertainment Inc., but they announced plans to sell in August 1995, and Ice Capades went out of business a short time later.
[7]
Analysts believe that on the one hand, the increasing popularity of the sport of
figure skating meant that more sophisticated audiences came to prefer straightforward
Olympic-style ice-skating competitions, or skating shows for adults (i.e., without cartoon characters) such as
Stars on Ice; and on the other hand, shows such as
Disney on Ice (featuring
Disney cartoon characters) successfully competed for the child audience.
[7]
Notable skaters
These are some of the many notable skaters who have appeared in Ice Capades shows or been involved in other aspects of the company:
[10]
- Donna Atwood
- Tai Babilonia
- Belita
- Dick Button
- Linda Carbonetto
- Robin Cousins
- Wolfgang Danne
- Christopher Dean
- Jacqueline du Bief
- Randy Gardner
- Margot Glockshuber
- Michel Grandjean
- Silvia Grandjean
- Dorothy Hamill
- Scott Hamilton
- Vera Hruba
- Maria Jelinek
- Otto Jelinek
- David Jenkins
- Michael Kirby
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- Sonya Klopfer
- Donald Knight
- Robin Lee
- Karen Magnussen
- John Nicks
- Robert Paul
- Edi Rada
- Guy Revell
- Barbara Roles
- Wolfgang Schwarz
- Barbara Ann Scott
- Ken Shelley
- Bobby Specht
- JoJo Starbuck
- Megan Taylor
- Jayne Torvill
- Gary Visconti
- Aja Vrzanova
- Barbara Wagner
- Ingrid Wendl
- Tim Wood
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Portable ice rinks
In the early 1950s, the group started using portable ice rinks, called "tanks." This let them perform in arenas that did not have their own ice surface, greatly expanding the number of venues where the show could operate. It took several days and 30-40 workers to install the tanks. In the late 1960s, Ice Capades designed and patented a new portable ice rink system that could be installed in less than 10 hours on most arena basketball floors or other surfaces.
Chalet skating rinks
In 1966, Ice Capades bought an ice skating rink in
Topanga Plaza shopping center,
Canoga Park, California. The success of this venture let to the establishment of the Ice Capades Chalet Division, which owned and operated about ten rinks, ran ice skating schools, and developed a curriculum that could develop a skater from beginner to competitive skater. Most of the Chalets were in
California and
Texas, with others in
Georgia,
Arizona and
North Carolina.
Hall of Fame ice skating coach
John Nicks ran the Chalet division.
Revivals
In the fall of 2000, Ice Capades was resurrected by Garden Entertainment in its original format with a large cast of skaters. The new show was conceived, directed and choreographed by the former German pair skating champion
Almut Lehmann Peyper. The show was not a financial success and closed in November 2000, canceling the remaining tour dates.
Another attempt to revive Ice Capades was made in the spring of 2008 with plans for a tent show production called "Mystika", billed as "Cirque Meets Ice".
In mid-August 2008, auditions were held in Lake Placid, New York for the all new Ice Capades. Developed by Entertainment Holdings and Red Brick Entertainment, Ice Capades was announced for production as live skating shows, television specials, episodic series, and web content. Three-time U.S. pairs champion and two-time Olympian JoJo Starbuck was named as Artistic Director.
[11]
However, in April 2009, the tour was canceled by its organizers, Garden Family Shows, stranding many of the performers without pay and leaving suppliers unpaid.
[12] [13]
Ice Capades in popular culture
Curiously,
sitcom episodes with a plot involving tickets to the Ice Capades were still being written years after the demise of the company, including episodes of
The Drew Carey Show
,
Friends
,
Everybody Loves Raymond
, and
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
. The show has also been widely parodied, for example by cartoonist
Gary Larson with comics captioned "Ice Crusades" and "Dirt Capades". In the cartoon series,
Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends it is spoofed as the "Ice Charades".
The Ice Capades were also lampooned in the
Robot Chicken Star Wars special, appearing as the fictitious "Empire On Ice!" (June 2007)
The Ice Capades franchise was also successfully used for a while to manage ice rinks around North America, starting in Santa Monica in a converted bowing alley and in other venues such as the Galleria Mall in Houston, Texas; Costa Mesa California; Topanga Plaza (Los Angeles area) and San Diego among others.
Among the executives who ran the chalet franchise were Michael Kirby, and Ron Priestley, (both former ice show stars) and George Eby. Acclaimed U.S. Olympic trainer, John Nicks, was their National Figure Skating director.
The concept of using ice rinks in the center of shopping malls was successfully applied by Ice Capades. The rinks were developed and funded by the real estate developer with Ice Capades working on a monthly management fee plus a percentage of takings.
Ice Capades Chalets also sold the concept of professional ice rink management to a major shopping mall in Johannesburg, South Africa (Carlton Center), and trained staff. It was to be their only international franchise.
South African ice skating champion, Terry Meyer, was among those trained by Ice Capades at their Santa Monica Boulevard headquarters where costumes for the ice shows were also manufactured. With its expertise in making ice show costumes, Ice Capades were also tasked with making costumes for some of the top entertainers such as Elvis Presley and Liberace.
References
- Ice Capades "years of entertainment"
- Ice-Capades (1941)
- Ice-Capades film summary from All Movie Guide
- Ice-Capades Revue (1942)
- Ice-Capades Revue film summary from All Movie Guide
- ' Ice-Capades,' a Slow Comedy (With Incidental Skating), at Loew's Criterion
- Slate.com: The Ice Capades: Requiem for the ice carnival
- Slate.com: The Ice Capades: Requiem for the ice carnival
- Slate.com: The Ice Capades: Requiem for the ice carnival
- Figure Skating: A History
- IceCapades.tv, August 16, 2008
- Ice Capades owner skips town
- Ice Capades scraps international tour