Discover The History Of Figure Skating!

Learn all about the fascinating world of figure skating history with Skate Guard Blog. Explore a treasure trove of articles on the history of figure skating, highlighting Olympic Medallists, World and National Champions and dazzling competitions, shows and tours. Written by former skater and judge Ryan Stevens, Skate Guard Blog also offers intriguing insights into the evolution of the sport over the decades. Delve into Stevens' five books for even more riveting stories and information about the history of everyone's favourite winter Olympic sport.

A Skating Surgeon: The Arthur Gaetano Keane Story


"The... modern skating figures are all interesting in conception, daring in performance, and beautiful in successful accomplishment. To gain proficiency in them one must be strong of ankle, fairly muscular, with a well developed sense of balance. Without constant practice over a prolonged period, no man may hope to enter the championship class in skating. To excel, one's physical tone must be perfect as a juggler's." - Arthur Gaetano Keane, "Munsey's Magazine", 1902

Arthur Gaetano Keane was born March 16, 1876 in New York City. He grew up in a brownstone on East 142nd Street in the Bronx. His mother Josephine passed away when he was quite young, and his three siblings (Paul, Edwin and Adele) helped raise him while his father John, an enterprising Irish immigrant, brought in the bacon. John - or M.J.A. - Keane manufactured scrubbing and blacking brushes and actually patented a brush and mop holder and combined soap-holder and cleaning brush. Through John's sales of brushes and brush holders to the city, the Keane's lived quite comfortably.


As a teenager, Arthur joined the New York Athletic Club. His brother Edwin, an oarsman for the club's unbeaten 'chippy' crew, was at the time one of the club's most popular members. 'Fancy' skating was a popular winter pastime of many of the New York Athletic Club's members, and soon Arthur found his way to the St. Nicholas Rink.


Arthur started skating 'for his health' in February 1895 at the age of eighteen, finding it "as natural to skate as it was... to walk". After two weeks of practice, he entered the Championships Of America, organized by National Amateur Skating Association of America and Amateur Skating Association Of Canada, on a whim... and placed third. He earned the most points for the grapevine twist, a figure that he didn't even know how to perform. He just watched his competitors, gave it a go, and came out on top. It was clear to the throngs of avid skating fans in attendance that he had something special.


After placing fourth and second at the 1896 and 1897 Championships Of America, Arthur was victorious at the 1898 event, with a score of one hundred and eleven out of a possible one hundred and fourteen points. In winning, he defeated Irving Brokaw - the man who would go on to popularize the Continental or International Style of skating in New York.

Arthur Keane and his competitors at the 1898 Championships Of America

Arthur also earned the praise of 1879 Champion James B. Story, who said his performance "was the finest exhibition of the kind [he] had ever seen" and offered him instruction. Perhaps most impressive about Arthur's 1898 win was the fact that "for some time prior to the competition, he had been confined to his home with an abscess on his face, and disregarding the orders of his physician, competed with his face bandaged."



Arthur retained his title as the Champion of America for the next four years. At the 1900 event, he won by over twenty points... in a blinding snowstorm. The January 26, 1901 issue of "The World" raved, "Keane's movements were as graceful as those of a swan, and the most difficult figures looked to be little more than child's play when executed by him. There was an ease and balance about everything he did that was somewhat lacking in the other contestants."


In 1902, the New York Athletic Club's journal noted, "Keane's performances conclusively proved that he has no peer on this side of the water... Keane's demonstration.. was marked by energy and accuracy, while his figures were considerably larger than those of his rivals. At the same time, his action was graceful, especially in managing his unemployed legs and hands."

The Championships Of America weren't held in 1902 or 1903, and the following year when they resumed, Arthur was in Arizona "for his health". However, he returned in 1905 to win the competition for a sixth time, again defeating Irving Brokaw. Arthur's 'specialities' as a 'fancy' skater were his toe-spins and pirouettes and his Achilles heel was the spread eagle, which he claimed he couldn't perform well because he "wasn't built right".


Arthur's successes as a figure skater weren't his only athletic accomplishments. In 1906, he won the New York Athletic Club's fall handicap tennis tournament on the club's courts on Travers Island as well as a four-man Quadruple Scull race in the club's annual regatta. The following year, he won two matches in the second round of the New York State Tennis Tournament, only to lose to a young man from the Kings County Lawn Tennis Club in the finals.


Perhaps most impressively, Arthur earned his medical degree from the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College in 1900, interning at Bellevue Hospital while he was actively competing as a figure skater. He went on to serve as Chief of Clinic and Assistant in Operative Surgery at Bellevue Hospital before opening his own private practice on West 87th Street.


Arthur never married and lived with his brother Paul and sister Adele at the family home on East 142nd Street in the Bronx his entire life, passing away on November 25, 1949 at the age of seventy-three. At the time of his death, he was one of the New York Athletic Club's oldest surviving members.


Paul Armitage discussed Arthur's impact on the sport in "Skating" magazine in 1949, just months before both Arthur's death and his own: "I knew him well. Many a day I gazed, in speechless wonder, on his performances at St. Nicholas Rink in New York. To my untutored gaze that saw not "the vision of the world and all the wonder that would be" Keane's skating was the Ultima Thule. He was a pond skater, glorified in excelsis. Keane's great contribution to figure skating was precision, exactitude and complete control. He was an ice draughtsman. To him, the tracings on the surface were the ultimate index of efficiency and skill. Grace, beauty of attitude or form, rhythm, or harmony to him were naught. There was an absence of all spiritual, aesthetic, and ethereal elements. His favorite costume was a derby hat and tweed business suit; in competitions, he conceded knickerbockers. In iteration and reiteration of simple and compound figures lay his art. Among these were loops, cross-cuts, bell-stars, kicked one foot eights, forward and backward, with embellishments at the apex, trefoils, hatchments, escutcheons, arabesques, heel, toe and cross-foot spins and spread eagles in bewildering repetition. These original designs, by endless retracing, stood out in grooves on the ice. The spectre of this repetitious dexterity haunts skating today in the requirement of triple tracings of the school figures. On two feet Keane developed an end-less variety of grapevines, effortless, without pushes, stops or runs. It produced the mysterious illusion of perpetual motion. Keane's was a studied art, 'cabin'd, cribb'd, confined.' It lacked joy and spontaneity. It had too much cerebration. I don't recall he ever 'let go' in a long spiral or run. He was no pair or group skater, nor had he any interest in dancing - only the conventional waltz. In essence, he was ego-centric, an individualist, and concentrated on self-effectuation - essentially, a showman. Like his progenitor, the Pond Skater, he interred his knowledge in silence and darkness. He wrote no book, no articles, gave no discourses, had no disciples. He believed ignorance in the spectators was the mother of admiration. If a tyro like myself asked a question, he nonchalantly skated aside."

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

The Daffy Duo: The Larry Jackson And Bernie Lynam Story

Photo courtesy "World Ice Skating Guide"

"The average skater does his skating from the knees down; the figure skater skates from the hips down; but the comic must do his skating in all sorts of off-balance, bent-over backwards and awkward positions. We have to do the unorthodox type of skating to get laughs and without laughs, well..." - Larry Jackson, "Lockport Union-Sun and Journal", November 5, 1953

Bernard 'Bernie' Franklin Lynam and Lawrence 'Larry' Alvin Lynam were both born in Seattle, Washington to working class families - Bernie on November 18, 1918 and Larry on October 30, 1916. 
As children, both spent time living outside of the Seattle area - Bernie in Tacoma and California and Larry in Portland, Oregon. Despite the fact they were born in the same city and had a lot in common, their paths never crossed until they were adults.

Both Bernie and Larry were athletic young men who achieved success in multiple sports. Bernie won the amateur featherweight title of Seattle in boxing and the U.S. junior four hundred and forty yard title in speed skating. He also excelled in swimming, diving and figure skating. Larry's first 'real' taste of athletics was at the age of ten, when he became a horse jockey. He went on to play baseball, hockey and box lacrosse and was the one hundred and five pound amateur champion of the Pacific Coast in boxing in 1931. He later recalled, "My four sisters babied me. I came home with black eyes too often. So one day my father took me to the YMCA and told them, 'Teach this kid to defend himself.' The next step was to the Washington Athletic Club, of Seattle... My coach there was Stanley Frey, who had been a good middleweight prospect. His career ended while he was training with the loggers. He had his upper leg caught in a 'choker' hook which is used to lift logs... Frey was an excellent coach. He impressed me with the fact that a good big man is taken for granted, but that a little man must prove himself. I still remember the bout in which I won the title. I got hit in the Adam's apple in the first round, and I couldn't close my mouth, so I was breathing like a guppy. But I managed to put my man away in the second." He got his start on the ice thanks to a hockey player. "One of the hockey players [at the local rink] gave me my first skates. The only trouble was that I wore a size three and the skates were size seven, so I wore them over my tennis shoes. But it saved me time, anyway. A bunch of us used to go down to the skating rink early in the morning before anyone else was up. We found out that a certain window was left open so we would boost one guy up there and he would let the rest of us in. Then we'd play hockey for an hour before going home to breakfast. The owner of the skating rink never did find out but he always wondered why his light bill was so high." Soon, Larry became the locker room and 'stick boy' for the Seattle Sea Hawks.


Larry got his start in the skating world performing in between hockey games and in club carnivals in Seattle in the mid-thirties. Encouraged by Evelyn Chandler, he headed to Hollywood, where he met Bernie. They were both cast in bit parts in the Sonja Henie film "My Lucky Star". The story of how they teamed up to form the famous 'Daffy Duo' is wild. Larry recalled, "We had just finished making a picture - 'My Lucky Star' - with Sonja Henie and we were sitting in the audience at an ice show in San Diego. It seems all three of the show's ice comedians were out. One had pneumonia, another was injured and the third one was sick. We were asked to fill in. We were rehearsing the music with the orchestra as the people were coming for the show that night." Bernie added, "There was only one costume shop and all we could find there was a pair of old-time straw hats. So we thought up the idea of a rube number and it's been part of the act ever since. We went to the Goodwill Industries and the Salvation Army and bought some old clothes, then stopped at a music store for a stock arrangement of 'Yankee Medley. At 7:30, while the audience was coming in, Larry and I were up on the orchestra platform pacing out the steps while the director scored the music." Their last-minute effort earned them a standing ovation and five encores.


Following their performance in San Diego, Larry appeared in a bit part in the RKO Pictures film "Everything's On Ice". John H. Harris was looking for a comedy act for his upcoming skating tour and gave Larry and Bernie the job. They appeared in the very first Ice Capades show in New Orleans in June of 1940 and two Republic Pictures films based on the tour in the years that followed.


Bernie and Larry came up new acts for the Ice Capades every year. They appeared as clowns, in drag, as Davy Crockett's, Keystone Kops, silent film stars and hockey players and were wildly popular with audiences. In one of their best-loved numbers, they attached skis to their skates. Their rough and tumble antics led to many bumps and bruises. Larry had huge scars on both of his knees and claimed the one on his left leg came from Bernie and the one of his right came from Sonja Henie. Bernie once fell and hit his head on the ice, knocking himself unconscious. Another time he broke his leg. In an interview with Jack Laing in 1958, Larry recalled, "I broke Bernie's leg one night when I threw him, and he landed off-balance. He said, 'My leg! My leg!' I tossed him over my shoulder and carried him off the ice. The fans never realized what happened. Thought that it was part of the act. He was out for eight weeks. 


One time one of Larry and Bernie's gags backfired. They were wearing the khaki 'doughboy' uniforms of Great War soldiers and each of them were to wander into the crowd and loudly complain to audience members about the scratchiness of the fabric. Bernie asked a man, "Don't you have the same trouble, buddy?" He responded, "I certainly do, son." The audience member was famous General George C. Marshall, who served as President Harry Truman's Secretary Of State and Secretary Of Defense.


Bernie was the Ice Capades' top bowler and both he and Larry were huge fans of boxing and football. They travelled with a small television set they'd set up in their dressing room so they wouldn't miss any of the sports. Larry recalled, "We see fights every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and occasionally on Saturday. The fights and the football games occupy our spare time in the arena, when we are not on the ice."


The War temporarily interrupted Larry and Bernie's stint with the Ice Capades. Both Bernie and Larry had flying licenses and were recruited as bomber pilots in the Army Air Corps. After flying several missions in Europe, Larry was wounded flying over Italy, discharged and returned to America and the Ice Capades. While waiting for Bernie to return home, he skated a pair act with Patti Phillippi and a comedy duo with Leo Loeb, who later starred in the Ice Cycles tour. Bernie was stuck in Europe longer and skated in the shows at the Casa Carioca nightclub in Garmisch-Partenkirchen for a time.

Photos courtesy "National Ice Skating Guide"

Near the end of the War, Bernie and Larry reunited and resumed skating together with the Ice Capades. They retired from the tour in 1956, after entertaining audiences off and on for sixteen years. Larry took a job as the tour's advance man, travelling ahead of the tour to handle the publicity for the next show date. He recalled putting Catherine Machado and Ronnie Robertson on a plane in Los Angeles to compete at the I.P.S.A. World Professional Championships in England and picking them up three days later so that they could rejoin the Ice Capades. In the fifties - still the early days of commercial air travel - this was a really big deal. After his days working as an 'advance man' ended, he managed the Skate N' Spur nitery in Los Angeles with baseball player Jerry Priddy and jockey Ray York for a time before taking up part ownership in an industrial printing company. He remarried to a fellow Ice Capades skater named Alyce, having divorced his first wife Virginia in 1947. He had two sons - one from each marriage.


Bernie settled in Wilton, Connecticut and bought The Flower Pot at Crossways. He coached several local baseball teams and later became the general manager of the Greens Farms Ice and Golf Center in Westport, where Gretchen Van Zandt Merrill taught for a time. Though he'd married an Ice Ca'pet' named Carol Brown, he had a son with Nate Walley's wife Edythe. When Bernie and Carol got divorced, Carol married Nate. Both passed away in Los Angeles - Bernie on April 6, 1968 and Larry on October 10, 1981. Though their skating may have lacked the finesse of their co-stars, The Daffy Duo were true pioneers in ice comedy whose important contributions to skating history deserve recognition.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

Happy Landing


Released on January 28, 1938, Twentieth Century-Fox's dramedy "Happy Landing" was reported as the eighth highest grossing film of that year; the relatively new studio's second highest. It was three-time Olympic Gold Medallist and ten time World Champion Sonja Henie's third major Hollywood film. Produced by Darryl Zanuck and David Hempstead, the film was directed by Roy Del Ruth, who had previously directed the Oscar nominated MGM film "Broadway Melody Of 1936".


Sonja was reunited with Don Ameche and Jean Hersholt, whom she'd worked with in her first film "One In A Million". Cesar Romero, then better known for more serious roles, and singer extraordinaire Ethel Merman also headlined the cast. wo drums called "War Dance For The Wooden Indians".


Milton Sperling and Boris Ingster wrote "Happy Landing". The script went through at least three working titles including "Happy Ending", "Hot and Happy" and perhaps most amusingly, "Bread, Butter and Rhythm". The plot of the film involved an orchestra leader named Duke Sargent (played by Romero) and his manager Jimmy Hall (played by Ameche) accidentally landing their plane in Norway and meeting Trudy Ericksen (Henie's character).

Cesar Romero

The trio end up in America, where Trudy's figure skating talent is discovered and Jimmy becomes her manager. Trudy, the two men and Flo Kelly (Ethel Merman's character) become entangled in a series of romantic mishaps and misunderstandings and a double marriage ultimately occurs. As was the case in many of Henie's films, musical, dance, skating and specialty numbers often overshadowed the plot.

Don Ameche, Sonja Henie and Cesar Romero. Photo courtesy National Archives Of Poland.

The bulk of the filming for "Happy Landing" was done on stage fifteen of the Twentieth-Century Fox lot in Hollywood. "Silver Screen" magazine reported, "A section of a Norwegian street [on the lot] was covered by a huge black tent for shooting a night sequence in 'Happy Landing'. A man with a red flag kept all unauthorized persons away whenever shooting started. Inside this nocturnal tent was a bit of recreated Norway in midwinter. Snow - of the Hollywood variety, a mixture of gypsum and salt - lay deep on the ground. A bevy of comely blonde lassies in bright Norwegian costumes were dancing with the young bloods of the village to the spirited music of a native orchestra. The dancing platform was festooned around with swinging Japanese lamps."

Photo courtesy National Archives Of Poland.

Sonja worked hard to develop a new 'trick' for the film, a cannonball position sit spin where she held her leg as she pulled up into the upright position. In rehearsals, she tripped over a piece of cotton on the ice and flew backwards and hit her head, suffering a slight concussion and reportedly knocking herself unconscious for several minutes. Dr. William Branch told reporters "the injury was not serious and she would return to work within a day or two." 

Sonja Henie, Don Ameche, Ethel Merman and Cesar Romero

A number of rumours (many cooked up by Twentieth Century-Fox) helped fuel the 'publicity machine' until filming wrapped up on December 11, 1937. First and foremost of course was the tabloid's field day over a Sonja/Janet Gaynor/Tyrone Power love triangle. Sonja's appearances with Romero, Richard Greene and Jimmy Stewart gave gossip columnists cause to speculate over who the lucky man in Sonja's life really was. There was even a rumour about Sonja having a man back in Norway by the rather unimaginative name of 'Carl Carlson'. The mystery man likely never even existed.


A second rumour was that Sonja wore a beaded cap, bodice and a three hundred year old embroidered skirt in the film that had been passed down as a dowry in the Henie family. Sonja laughed this one off by saying, "How could I wear a dress three hundred years old? The silk would be all torn, wouldn't it?" A third  rumour suggested that Sonja was being 'difficult' on set. In her column, Louella Parsons wrote, "I've heard everything. Sonja Henie is asking for her release from Twentieth Century-Fox. The little ice skater had never made a picture and could barely speak English when Darryl Zanuck signed her and spent hundreds of thousands of dollars building her to stardom and now Sonja, who was the sweetest thing I ever met when she first came to Hollywood, is going temperamental on us. Her grievance is the long working hours at the studio and her annoyance at being asked to close her highly successful personal appearance tour."

Ethel Merman and Cesar Romero

Perhaps most amusing was the rumour that Ethel Merman sent herself a corsage on set... and the bill for said corsage to Cesar Romero.

Don Ameche and Sonja Henie on set

At one point, Sonja was visited on the set by Viggo Christensen, the mayor of Copenhagen, who requested her autograph. After polishing off a slice of pineapple with shredded carrot and fruit compote for lunch, she agreed to speak to a reporter from "Silver Screen" magazine. She told them, "Figure skating for the screen is the hardest of all because you have to hit certain marks and always be within range of the camera. You don't have the freedom you enjoy on skating rinks elsewhere... I make up all my dance numbers. Figure skating is nothing but dancing on ice. I have a wonderful dance director to work with, Harry Losée. I first outline on paper what I want to do, and then talk it over with him. He knows everything about camera angles."

Photo courtesy National Archives Of Poland.

One three-minute scene took ten working days, none shorter than ten hours, to film. The sequence was an ice ballet with Sonja and an ensemble of thirty skaters, inspired by Rimsky-Korsakov's "The Snow Maiden". The set was an artificial 'Norwegian lake' surrounded by pine trees and snow covered mountains, with two twenty five foot high Papier-mâché snow figures as props. Some of the reasons there were so many takes were lighting problems, noises made by lookers-on which made their way on the soundtrack and timing issues by skaters. During filming, Sonja reportedly wracked up a bill in excess of two thousand dollars on hosiery alone. She wore out at least two pairs of stockings a day, which cost thirty-five dollars each.

Bert Clark

Sonja's stand-in for "Happy Landing" was a forty-five year old veteran named Bert Clark. Clark hailed from Winnipeg, Manitoba and competed against Norval Baptie and Everett McGowan in speed skating races in the roaring twenties. Clark first came to Los Angeles in 1924 to manage an ice rink. Two years later, he already was instructing and doubling for film stars with no skating experience. "Motion Picture" magazine noted, "Bert has to don clothes like hers, and do her stuff... They couldn't find a gal for the job so they hired Bert as the only male stand-in for a female players - and while Sonja rests as lights and cameras are set up, Bert goes through the routine to assure that when Sonja steps out, they'll get the best angle on her. Sonja's legs are neater." Bert was the only one on set Sonja would trust with her 'good' seventy dollar blades. The "Los Angeles Herald And Express" reported, "When Bert Clark called the ensemble together a spokesman politely informed him that no member of the chorus would rehearse until new skates – like those worn by Miss Henie – had been provided. Stumped because it is rather difficult to replace 80 trained skaters, the studio promptly agreed to supply the chorus with skates costing $45 per pair. One hundred pairs of skates arrived early Friday morning, long before the rink had been frozen. The 80 girls and boys are now skimming along in a very happy mind."

Leif, Sonja and Selma Henie at the premiere of "Happy Landing"

When "Happy Landing" was released, Twentieth Century-Fox spared no expense in promoting the film, which faced stiff competition from Walt Disney's first full-length feature film, "Snow White And The Seven Dwarves". 

In Washington, an airplane towing a "Happy Landing" banner flew over the city. Ads appeared in every major newspaper and when the show premiered in New York City, the Roxy had one of its biggest ever showings - a fifty-two thousand dollar take in its first week.


The fact that Sonja was in town skating at Madison Square Garden at the same time with her Hollywood Ice Revue didn't hurt whatsoever. Publicists claimed, "So many telephone calls were received at the Garden for information on the show that one of the operators, Miss Sally Dunn, became 'temporarily deaf' and had to consult and ear specialist. It was estimated that 18,000 calls have been received by the Garden concerning the revue in the last 20 days."

The Westhampton Cinema in Richmond, Virginia. Photo courtesy Dementi Studio Archives.

The reception to "Happy Landing" was overwhelmingly positive, with many theatre managers remarking on how patrons all seemed to leave with a smiles on their faces and reviewers applauding the picture's catchy melodies, comedic touches and production value. "Picture Play" magazine raved, "Sonja Henie is a latter-day phenomenon, an ace attraction on the screen and in the rink. The public is ice-skating mad, or is for Miss Henie's particular brand of gliding. In her case it is rhythmic grace, technical precision and brilliance, and what counts perhaps more than anything, a winning, infectious personality. She is at her best in the new picture. The ice sequences are splendidly staged. They have verve, beauty and imagination. Never do they partake of a gaudily mounted stunt."


As is always the case, there were a handful of negative reviews of the film to balance things out. One "Motion Picture Daily" reviewer complained, "Believe that her next picture would please even more if there was not quite so much skating. Sonja doesn't need skates to put over her pictures." Others bemoaned the fact the film was too long and that Sonja's acting was rather 'one-note'.

Even back then, you could always count on the fact that when it came to skaters, everyone had an opinion... and even Sonja Henie herself was fair game.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

Director's Seat: The Sad Story Of Adrian Pryce-Jones

Adrian Pryce-Jones (right) on the set of the film "Hobson's Choice". Photo courtesy British Film Institute.

The son of Marion (Dawnay) and Henry Morris Pryce-Jones, David Adrian Pryce-Jones was born September 13, 1919 in the town of Windsor, England. He had a privileged, upper-class upbringing. His father was a decorated Colonel in the Coldstream Guards. His grandmother was Lady Victoria Alexandrina Elizabeth Gray. The Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne and the Earl of Wharncliffe were his uncles. He was also related to the managing director of the Pryce-Jones Department Store in Canada - once the Hudson's Bay Company's biggest competitor.


Adrian took up figure skating as a teenager and began pursuing the sport seriously while studying at Eton College. He regularly travelled to London to train with Arnold Gerschwiler at Richmond Ice Rink and within a few short years, earned the NSA's Gold Medal in Figures. In 1938, he won the bronze medal in the junior men's event and finished sixth in the senior men's event at the British Championships. In 1939, he repeated as the junior men's bronze medallist. He was hailed by reporters as the next 'big thing' in British men's skating - the heir apparent to the likes of Graham Sharp and Freddie Tomlins. 

Photo courtesy "Skating World" magazine

Just as Adrian's star was rising in the figure skating world, World War II broke out in Europe. Like so many other young British skaters, he joined the military. He served with the Welsh Guards in North Africa and Italy, reaching the rank of Captain. 

Henry Graham Sharp, Adrian Pryce-Jones and Arthur Apfel. Photo courtesy "Ice Skating" magazine.

After the War ended, Adrian staged a comeback to the figure skating world and won the bronze medal in the senior men's event at the 1946 British Championships, behind fellow servicemen Graham Sharp and Dennis Silverthorne. None of the men who entered had much practice, recalled Sharp, and "rehabilitation to civilian and family life [took] time." For Adrian and his rivals, participating in such an event before a large, clapping crowd may have been therapeutic to some; jarring to others. Adrian fell into the latter category, but still chose to return to compete one last time in 1948 in a bid to make the Olympic team. He again took the bronze, but dazzled the audience with his "well-known and surprising sit spin with his hands clasped behind his back." Retiring from competitive skating, hre served as a judge and on the NSA's Ice Figure Committee for a time. 

At the same time he was competing, Adrian embarked on a career as a director. His credits included a stage adaptation of Agatha Christie's "Ten Little Indians" and the films "Moulin Rouge", "Summertime", "Time Without Pity", "Deep Blue Sea" and "Hell Is Sold Out". He worked with dozens of 'A List' stars including Katharine Hepburn, Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, Rex Harrison, Zsa Zsa Gabor and Charles Laughton.

Adrian's success in the figure skating, film and theatre worlds and the fact he was a jovial man - the kind to entertain friends with impromptu piano performances at parties - made him quite popular. However, his private life led to his ultimate (premature) downfall. In his memoir "The Bonus Of Laughter", Adrian's brother (the author) Alan Pryce-Jones wrote, "It was only... in my forties that I came to know my brother. After the War, he went into the world of cinema, impelled by a brother-officer, Terence Young, and for some twenty years led a successful career with Carol Reed, Otto Preminger, and other good directors, working on such movies as 'Moulin Rouge' and 'Summertime', but never given the chance of setting up film on his own. To direct stars needs a special temperament; and it is on the first assistant-director that this need falls with special harshness. He had to calm the star's tantrums. He had to set up a location in, say, Tobago. He had to undertake prodigies of organization. And not this Adrian was not really suited. He was very efficient and very well-liked. But the strain of constant movement led him to drink a little, then to add to pills to vodka, then to drink a lot. Finally, he was going from nursing-home to nursing-home, too often becoming engaged to a fellow-alcoholic on the second floor. What can a brother do? I tried cajolement, tyranny, warning, sympathy. And at times all went well. Adrian was a delightful companion [though] he was unexpectedly shrewd, but years later, towards the end of his life, I remembered the advice of an American friend who had worked on 'Horizon' with Cyril Connolly, and suffered from a sister afflicted with periodical bouts of drunkenness. 'There is only one thing to do,' Tony Bower had said, 'with an alcoholic. Ask them to stay. Furnish their room with cases of liquor and bottles of pills, and hope it won't take too long' - brutal advice, but comprehensible." After Adrian's father's death in 1952, his mother gave him a small inheritance, which he apparently squandered on brandy. He passed away in St. Moritz, Switzerland on December 15, 1968, at the age of forty-nine.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

The 1972 European Figure Skating Championships

Commemorative pin from the 1972 European Championships

Platform shoes and high waisted, flared boot cut pants were all the rage for men, Don McLean's "American Pie" topped the music charts and the Tequila Sunrise was the latest cocktail fad. 1972 may have been an Olympic year, but from January 10 to 15, all that mattered to many skating buffs was the European Figure Skating Championships.

Christine Errath. Photo courtesy "Skating" magazine.

The event was held at the newly completed, state of the art Scandinavium in Gothenburg, Sweden as part of the city's three hundred and fiftieth anniversary celebrations. The two hundred by one hundred foot arena, which had completed construction less than a year prior and seated up to ten thousand spectators, was the largest indoor rink in Scandinavia at the time. Ticket sales were astronomical, proving that Swedish skating fans were just as enthusiastic as they were in the days of Ulrich Salchow and Gillis Grafström. The thousands of spectators that showed up certainly weren't disappointed, for the competition proved to be every bit as engrossing as the Olympics and World Championships that followed. Let's take a look back at all of the excitement!

THE ICE DANCE COMPETITION

The ice dance podium

West German siblings Angelika and Erich Buck took a three point lead the compulsory dances and increased it through the entire event. They did the unthinkable in beating the unbeatable Lyudmila Pakhomova and Aleksandr Gorshkov, earning a string of 5.9's and one 6.0 in the free dance. It would prove to be the one and only time in the height of their career that Pakhomova and Gorshkov would ever be defeated in international competition and the crazy thing about it all was that it wasn't even particularly close in Gothenburg. In her book "Figure Skating History: The Evolution Of Dance On Ice", Lynn Copley-Graves noted, "Angelika and Erich Buck had never skated so well. Betty Callaway had guaranteed their content, style and musical interpretation."

Janet Sawbridge and Peter Dalby in 1972. Photo courtesy "Skating World" magazine.

The bronze medal went to Britons Janet Sawbridge and Peter Dalby, who were students of the legendary Gladys Hogg. Though they were an unlucky thirteen points back of the winners, Sawbridge and Dalby earned a 5.9 from the West German judge in the free dance and a great reception from the Swedish crowd. Only a fifth of a point separated the fourth and fifth place teams, Hilary Green and Glyn Watts of Great Britain and Tatiana Voituk and Viacheslav Zhigalin of the Soviet Union. As was more often than not the case back in those days, the results of the top ten teams didn't change a wee bit from the start of the competition to the end.

THE PAIRS COMPETITION


Liudmila Smirnova and Andrei Suraikin

As the three time and defending European Champions, Irina Rodnina and Alexei Ulanov were heavily favoured to win again in Gothenburg. They took a lead in the compulsory short program with an outstanding performance and coasted to victory with an almost perfect free skate. Irina's two-footing of a double Axel and Alexei's difficulty on the second jump in their side-by-side four jump combination were their only errors. The silver medal went to their Soviet teammates Liudmila Smirnova and Andrei Suraikin, who challenged Rodnina and Ulanov artistically but failed to offer the same level of technical content.

Video courtesy Frazer Ormondroyd

East Germans Manuela Groß and Uwe Kagelmann claimed the bronze, with completing Groß completing two throw double Axels and a throw single Axel on a bandaged knee. West German Erich Zeller students Almut Lehmann and Herbert Wiesinger were fourth and a second East German pair, Annette Kansy and Axel Salzmann, moved up from sixth after the compulsory short program to fifth overall. Only two pairs in the top team weren't from East or West Germany or the Soviet Union... a testament to the utter dominance of Eastern Bloc pairs at the time.

THE WOMEN'S COMPETITION

The women's podium

The women's competition in Gothenburg boasted a whopping twenty-eight entries, the largest field since the 1959 European Championships in Davos. 'Human scribe' Trixi Schuba showed her utter superiority in the school figures, amassing an insurmountable one hundred and thirty point lead in the school figures. Eminent skating historian Dennis Bird remarked, "It is doubtful that such a decisive advantage has ever before been achieved since the European Championships began in 1930; not even Jeanette Altwegg or Sjoukje Dijkstra were ever so far ahead."

Trixi Schuba. Photo courtesy "Skating" magazine..

Trailing Schuba by some margin after the first round of competition were Switzerland's Charlotte Walter, Italy's Rita Trapanese, Hungary's Zsuzsa Almássy and the UK's Jean Scott. In the free skate, a pair of Jutta Müller students - Sonja Morgenstern and Christine Errath - claimed the top two spots. Morgenstern landed a triple Salchow and received a 6.0 for artistic impression from the Italian judge; Errath wowed the crowd with her technical difficulty and panache.

Video courtesy Frazer Ormondroyd

However, the duo of young East German women  had only been sixth and seventh in figures - well behind Schuba and the others - and were only able to move up to third and fifth respectively. Despite a fall in her fifth place free skate to music from "Man Of La Mancha", Schuba still claimed the gold, defeating Trapanese by one hundred and twelve points.

Though she had more points than Morgenstern, Almássy lost out on the bronze by one ordinal placing. Walter finished sixth, Scott seventh and Maria McLean of Great Britain eighth. After the event, a German newspaper reporter who clearly had no understanding of the judging system in place at the time cruelly pointed out that Schuba was a "champion without a double Axel"... because of course, the judging system was totally her fault.

THE MEN'S COMPETITION 

The men's podium

The biggest story of the men's competition didn't happen on the ice at all. It was, of course, the defection of Günter Zöller. Minus one East German boarding a boat to freedom, the twenty-three remaining men's competitors played out a game of chess on ice in the school figures. Many of the men shuffled positions considerably from figure to figure, but it was three time and defending European Champion Ondrej Nepela who was most consistent. Though he lost the RFO Paragraph Three to Sergei Chetverukhin of the Soviet Union, Nepela held a solid forty three point lead heading into the free skate. Chetverukhin, Patrick Péra, Vladimir Kovalev and John Curry followed in places second through fifth.


In the free skate, Péra fell on a double Axel and failed to complete any triples. Chetverukhin fell on a triple Salchow but skated an otherwise elegant and masterful performance. Curry tumbled on a triple loop but succeeded in landing a double Axel and triple Salchow. Yuri Ovchinnikov, only seventh in figures, took advantage of the mistakes of the others and claimed second place in the free skate... but wasn't even able to move up one spot overall.

Video courtesy Frazer Ormondroyd

Nepela delivered one of the most outstanding performances of his entire career, landing a triple Salchow, triple toe-loop, double Axel and double Lutz within the first minute of his program. When he landed a double Axel/double loop combination later in his program, it was clear that no one was going to touch him. He claimed his fourth European title with an impressive lead of sixty four points and fourteen ordinal placings over Chetverukhin. Péra, seventh in free skating, took the bronze ahead of Haig Oundjian, Curry and Kovalev.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.