One of My Favorite Free Dance Programs of All Time | Golden Skate

One of My Favorite Free Dance Programs of All Time

Ladskater

~ Figure Skating Is My Passion ~
Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 28, 2003
In 1990 Paul and Isabelle Duchesnay won the free dance portion of the World Figure skating championships held in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Their outstanding performance garnered them five 6.0 perfect marks under the old judging system and brought the audience to it's feet. Of course, this program was the creation of the brilliant Christopher Dean. I always thought that Paul and Isabelle was Canada's loss as a wonderful dance team because they chose to represent France instead of Canada. However on that day one would never know with the amount of proud Canadians cheering for them on home ice that they were actually skating for France. Paul and Isabelle both have duo citizenships with Canada and France, they figured they would always be in the shadows of the champions Tracy Wilson and her partner Rob McCall and it would take too long for them to be recognized in Canada. Too bad. Anyway, check the performance out here. It still has me on the edge of my seat and glued to my screen just as I first saw it after all these years. It's still thrilling to watch. Oh yeah, I also get a kick out of the way Scott Hamilton mispronounces the Duchesnay's name at the end!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=coM4d1CQZfs

You might also want to check out more World championship performances that were held in Canada at CBC Bold:
http://www.cbc.ca/sports/figureskat...rom-figure-skating-worlds-held-in-canada.html
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
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That was a wonderful, electrifying performance by the Duchesnays :love:

I heard they left to skate for France because they felt they would never get ahead in Canada. Lad, do you have any idea why they would have felt that way, and whether they were just being unnecessarily pessimistic?
 

Skater Boy

Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 24, 2012
My research = my mom says there was a Canadian brother and sister team which were like the shibutanis but not as hghly regarded They were around so it was hard for the Duchesney's to qualify for world's and they didn't wnt to wait until Canada got three spots or whatever.
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
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I remember them; Karyn & Rod Garossino. They were in second when the Duchesnays were in third in 1985.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ice_dancing

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabelle_Duchesnay

It's interesting that Isabelle's bio does not show their 1985 Canadians results.

At the time, the commentators on Canadian TV told that story, that Isabelle & Paul left because they thought in Canada they would never pass the Garossinos.

I do wonder why they would have thought that, because looking at the list of top Canadian dance teams, there are cases where a younger team passed a more experienced team, although it didn't happen particularly often

And frankly, the Garossinos were not massively impressive or anything like that. Their highest finish at Worlds was 8th, in 1989, at which the Duchesnays were third.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_World_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ice_Dancing
 
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CAS

On the Ice
Joined
Aug 24, 2010
In short they weren't great ice dancers. I know, bold statement, but they weren't. They were innovators. THey had interesting programs but they were not highly skilled in the qualities that made a top ice dancer. They didn't get the results they wanted fast enough in Canada and were apparently told they lack the technical skill they needed. Instead of working on that France made an offer to skate for them and they took it. It was the faster route to international competition. Even international judges didn't know what to do with them the first few years they skated for France but with the political bonus of being the #1 team for France and the fact they did produce very fan friendly programmes with the Dean name attached they were finally getting the results they wanted in the last few years competing.

Don't get me wrong. I LOVE some of their programmes. "Missing" being their best imo. But Canada had their standards for judging ice dance and the Duschenay's didn't meet them at the time they wanted. Just have to look at this video to see why:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9B0tmaPaGo
 

Osmond4gold

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 27, 2013
A great moment this was and here is another clip featuring their parents in the crowd. What a moment for Mr. & Mrs. Duschenay.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lgo5-w7smSM


I am also proud of the warmth of the crowd...my hometown, Halifax. These were quite the Worlds!
 
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Joined
Aug 16, 2009
I knew even before I opened the link that it would be "Missing." What an astonishing program on all counts: the gorgeous music, Christopher Dean's genius choreography, the Duchesnays' execution. Those lifts! The emotional projection. Even the costumes work perfectly. One revealing moment is when Klimova and Ponomarenko stand ready to skate next, and they're wearing some typical matching satiny concoctions. (Mind you, K and P are one of my top five favorite couples.) This program of the Duchesnays is something new and splendid; it's modern but not off-putting, and it actually says something. Thanks for linking to it; it's a great way to start a workday.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
In short they weren't great ice dancers. I know, bold statement, but they weren't. They were innovators. THey had interesting programs but they were not highly skilled in the qualities that made a top ice dancer. They didn't get the results they wanted fast enough in Canada and were apparently told they lack the technical skill they needed. Instead of working on that France made an offer to skate for them and they took it. It was the faster route to international competition. Even international judges didn't know what to do with them the first few years they skated for France but with the political bonus of being the #1 team for France and the fact they did produce very fan friendly programmes with the Dean name attached they were finally getting the results they wanted in the last few years competing.

Don't get me wrong. I LOVE some of their programmes. "Missing" being their best imo. But Canada had their standards for judging ice dance and the Duschenay's didn't meet them at the time they wanted. Just have to look at this video to see why:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9B0tmaPaGo

I don't know enough about technique to say yea or nay to your argument, but all I can say is I'm glad they were here. That program, along with others, added a dimension to skating that no one else was able to give it.

By the way, Torvill and Dean themselves performed this piece, on a pro tour. I'd love to hear people's comparisons of it and Paul and Isabelle's version, so I know more what to look for. Please discuss!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTCktwVMcsc
 

noskates

Record Breaker
Joined
Jun 11, 2012
I don't know enough about technique either but I think Lad is on to something. I remember the Duchesnay's as really going against the grain when they competed. The Russians had a stronghold on IceDance and along came this wonderfully talented and original pair that kind of raised eyebrows with their dances and their costumes. Paul always seemed like the angry young man but was so exciting to watch. I couldn't take my eyes off of him. They were innovative and fresh but didn't fit in with the rest of the competitors. I didn't know at the time they had started out in Canada. But Missing is my favorite.....
 

KKonas

Medalist
Joined
Oct 31, 2009
The Duchesnays created a sensation at the 1988 OWG in Calgary with their "tango" OD and then their jungle FD, but only placed 8th there because they did a lot of two-footed skating, which was frowned upon by dance judges. But they certainly made a name for themselves using Dean's innovative choreo and also improved their basic skating skills by the time they won the world title. They certainly were great fun to watch. Their tango OD remains one of my favorite ice dance programs to watch.
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
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And it wasn't like the Duchesnay's didn't feel particularly Canadian; they moved back to Canada when they retired, and I have heard that one of the problems in the Dean-Duchesnay marriage was that Isabelle wanted Chris to devote himself to working for the Canadian teams only.

So it's clear to me that CAS's point of view that the Duchesnays were horrible ice dancers must have been fairly prevalent in ice dance circles in Canada, because The question is not how the Duchesnay's compared to the Russians, but how they compared to the Garossinos, who frankly, were not wonderful even a little bit.

So have a look for yourselves and see what you think:

At the 1988 Olympics, the Duchesnay's were 8th in all 3 segments of the competition (CD's, OSP, FD)
The Garossinos were 12th in all 3 segments.

At the 1988 Worlds, The Duchesnays were 6th & the Garossinos were 11th.

Here's what the the Killian should look like: Bestemianova & Bukin at the Olympics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3y3do9T5SoI

Here is the Garossino's 1988 Olympic CD1 (Killian)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYTXQh6u1e8

Garossino's 1988 OSP Tango Olympics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiGNDUCv-B4

Garossino's 1988 FD from Worlds (Canadian commentary)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtuCC8u5pps

Duchesnay's 1988 Olympic CD1 (Killian)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVV_44_rPXo

Duchesnay's OSP Argentine Tango Olympics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jMFxoLjFJr0

Duchesnay's FD Savage Rites Olympics (Canadian commentary)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAMObOa1cZk

Why I'm beating this dead horse over the head is that there seems to have been a disconnect between what the scoring rules really were for ice dance in 1988, as perceived by the Canadian ice dance establishment, and as they were perceived by pretty much every group of international judges who ever saw the Garossinos skate.

And if any team needed some advice about how to improve their performance at Worlds, it would be the Garossinos, who were
1985 tenth
1986 ninth
1987 tenth
1988 eleventh (twelfth at Olympics)
1989 eighth (once Wilson & McCall, Semanick & Gregory, and Bestemianova & Bukin had all retired)

Basically, stalled for their entire career.
 
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gkelly

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
For what it's worth, at the 1988 Olympics the Canadian judge (Ann Shaw) had the Duchesnays 9th and Garossino's 8th in the compulsories, but the Duchesnays 6th in both the OSP and free dance and the Garossinos 9th and 10th respectively. (I.e., she had both teams higher than the consensus of the panel in all phases except for the Duchesnays in the CDs.)

http://winter-olympic-memories.com/html/results/jp_3d/15_calgary/15_figure/15_figure_d_ex.htm

So it's hard to say how Canadian judges would have judged the two teams against each other domestically if the Duchesnays had continued competing for Canada but still made the technical and especially the artistic improvements that they did make after 1985. Judging just by that one judge at that one event, it seems that for the 1988 performances the thought was the Garossinos were slightly better at some important aspect(s) of compulsory dances (precision of edges and/or timing??) but not as strong either technically or artistically in the more creative portions of the event.
 

CAS

On the Ice
Joined
Aug 24, 2010
So it's clear to me that CAS's point of view that the Duchesnays were horrible ice dancers must have been fairly prevalent in ice dance circles in Canada, because The question is not how the Duchesnay's compared to the Russians, but how they compared to the Garossinos, who frankly, were not wonderful even a little bit.


Why I'm beating this dead horse over the head is that there seems to have been a disconnect between what the scoring rules really were for ice dance in 1988, as perceived by the Canadian ice dance establishment, and as they were perceived by pretty much every group of international judges who ever saw the Garossinos skate.

First. I never said they were horrible.
Second. Look at gkelly's link to see the Canadian judge in 1988 actually judged them quite fairly in terms of the other judges. It was the Russian, German, Austrian and Hungarian judges who were much harsher on them. Canadian judge had them ninth in the CD and sixth in both the OSP and FD. They averaged eight in each of the sections so I'd say she was on par with the International judges and in fact more generous than the majority in the later two events.

They left Canada. They may have overtaken the Garrosinos had they stayed but they got the offer from France and took it. But for them I think it was the right decision. They were not going to be better than Wilson and McCall so better going into it as France #1 than Canada #2 or #3. And I think they knew that which is why they went.
 

colleen o'neill

Medalist
Joined
Nov 3, 2006
Ah, well...I just remember being very bored by the Garosinos. they were just sort of bland and..adequate , to me.. nothing really distinctive about them .

OTOH , if they were shown on Canadian TV, I must have seen the Duschenays , but the first time I really took note of them was that Tango OSP. ( And by really taking note I mean leaping out of my chair and screaming over the perfection of the parody ) I still love it ..and still particularly Paul. He remains one of my all time favourite male ice dancers.

There was a lot more "wait your turn" in all skating federations in those days , so I've always been glad things worked out as they did.
 

KKonas

Medalist
Joined
Oct 31, 2009
The Garossinos were thought to have better compulsories at that time and movement in dance was glacial because there was a lot of "waiting your turn" as colleen o'neill said, but had the Duchesnay's stayed in Canada they would have probably bypassed the Garossinos eventually, but France was a good option for them at that time. Ann Shaw was on the Ice Dance Tech Committee for years and often held the ice dance meeting after Worlds when Gorshkov was the head of the committee since his English was so bad.
 

Dragonlady

Final Flight
Joined
Aug 23, 2003
I have always heard it said the the Duschenays were terrible skaters, compared to the rest of the field, and some who have said their winning Worlds was a totally political decision, and they were the most unworthy dance champions in history because of the weakness of their basic skating.

I loved them when they skated, and completely ignored these criticisms. I didn't have the technical knowledge of ice-dance that I to know if these criticisms were valid or not, I just knew these two were magic together.
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
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Country
United-States
I'm thinking that the interesting thing is not how the Canadian judge judged the Duchesnays; it's how the rest of the judges judged the Garossinos.

And that's why I deliberately used the word "horrible;" because if the D's were worse than the Garossino's, who were really not good, the D's must have been spectacularly bad in the view of the PTB that advised them.

And I'm thinking that it was already clear in 1988 that the rest of the world was operating on a different standard for dance than Canada was. Dragonlady, I've heard the same thing, and it has always puzzled me.

I think it is true that it's the CD's that were bugging the Canadian dance folk. And again, I invite you to look at how everyone else judged the Garossino's-from gkelly's link (thank you gkelly).

The only judge who put the Garossinos ahead of the Duchesnays was the Canadian judge.

Garossinos:

COMPULSORY DANCESURSCANUSAFRGITAAUTGBRHUNFRAMajorityTotRkFPTFP

Dance 1 -
Kilian
Dance 2 - Paso
Doble
Dance 3 - Viennese
Waltz
5.05.24.94.94.64.85.25.04.9 127.224.0
4.95.14.94.94.94.85.14.94.9
4.95.04.95.04.84.85.25.04.9
Points14.815.314.714.814.314.415.514.914.7
Places1281210131281012


Duchesnays:
COMPULSORY DANCESURSCANUSAFRGITAAUTGBRHUNFRAMajorityTotRkFPTFP

Dance 1 -
Kilian
Dance 2 - Paso
Doble
Dance 3 - Viennese
Waltz
5.15.25.24.95.24.95.45.15.4 84.816.0
5.24.95.25.05.34.95.15.05.2
5.15.15.25.15.34.95.15.15.2
Points15.415.215.615.015.814.715.615.215.8
Places9979710797
 
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