Want to learn more about figure skating history? You are in the right place!
Created in 2013, Skate Guard is a blog that focuses on overlooked and underappreciated areas of the history of figure skating, whether that means a topic completely unknown to most readers or a new look at a well-known skater, time period, or event. There's plenty to explore, so pour yourself a cup of coffee and get lost in the fascinating and fabulous history of everyone's favourite winter sport!
"Figure skating is more than a sport-hobby. It is a way of life!" - Michael Kirby
Born on February 20, 1925, in the picturesque town of Sydney, Nova Scotia, Michael John Ronald Kirby was the son of Frederick Luke Kirby, a department store manager from Toronto who had served as an airman during The Great War. His mother, Ann (McIsaac) Kirby, hailed from Glace Bay and was the daughter of the general traffic manager for the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation. Both parents were raised in devout Roman Catholic households. When Michael turned four, the family left their home on George Street in Sydney and journeyed west to Winnipeg, where his father took on the role of manager at the local Woolworth's store.
Not long after they arrived in the Prairies, Michael fell extremely ill with a heart deformity caused by rheumatic fever and was bedridden for approximately a year. A visiting heart specialist recommended skating as a healthful activity that might put a little pep in the sickly boy's step. Fred Kirby, an ex-hockey player, held the strong belief that a parent should be a child's primary educator. To fulfill this role, he purchased a pair of figure skates and dedicated himself to mastering them, all to teach his young son, Michael. As Michael's health began to get better, he started picking up skating skills from his dad on a pond in a vacant lot that had been transformed into an ice rink by the local fire department.
When Michael began taking formal skating lessons and entering competitions, his health improved dramatically. At six foot three and one hundred and seventy-three pounds in his teens, he towered over his competitors. In 1938, he headed to Montreal for his first Canadian Championships, where he placed last among the five skaters vying for the junior men's title. The following year, the Kirby's packed up again and headed east to Toronto when his father was transferred to the Woolworth's store there. Michael joined the Toronto Skating Club and returned to the Canadian Championships in 1940, where he finished second in the junior men's event to Denis Ross and won the junior pairs title with Shirley Ann Halsted. The following year, he won the junior men's title and the fours title with Tasie (Theresa) McCarthy, Donald Gilchrist and Virginia Wilson. His success as a fours skater earned him a trip to the 1941 North American Championships in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, where the Toronto Four he was part of won the silver medal.
In 1942, Michael teamed up with Donald Gilchrist, Virginia Wilson and Eleanor O'Meara to win a second Canadian fours title and won the senior men's title on his first and only try. The July 18, 1953 issue of "The Montreal Ensign" recalled that in winning the Canadian men's title, "He was no sickly invalid doing the glide and waltz type of skating but a robust, square-shouldered young man who dazzled his audiences with his violent twists, leaps and spins."
Several factors contributed to Michael's decision not to remain in the amateur ranks. During World War II, pretty much every Canadian men's skater was involved in the War effort in one way or another. Michael had no one to compete against and the cancellation of international skating events during wartime meant he had little to strive towards. He had also graduated from a five-year high school course at St. Michael's College in January 1942. An offer from Shipstad and Johnson's Ice Follies tour was just too attractive to pass up for a seventeen-year-old.
Photo courtesy "Skating" magazine
While on tour, love blossomed between Michael and a familiar face, Canadian women's and pairs champion Norah McCarthy. However, the tall, dark and handsome young Caper was on the verge of being lured away from the tour by what appeared at first to be a more attractive contract offer from MGM. He turned to Norah for advice. In the July 18, 1953 issue of "The Manitoba Ensign", Michael explained, "I have always had a great respect for a woman's intuition so before I signed on the dotted line with MGM, I wanted a woman's viewpoint first. I had known Norah since I was twelve, had been in competitions in Canada with her and we were at that time partners in the Ice Follies. She had good common sense as well as intuition so I took her along to the studio with me. That day I discovered that I needed Norah not only as a pass to get me past MGM but I needed her life partnership as a pass to get me past St. Peter." The young lovebirds married at the ages of nineteen and twenty-one at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills, California. Their attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Shipstad.
Sonja Henie and Michael Kirby
Sonja Henie and Michael Kirby
Sonja Henie and Michael Kirby
Michael Kirby and Sonja Henie
Initially, the decision to sign with MGM seemed to have been an unwise move. Given bit part after bit part, Michael appeared to be on the fast track to nowhere. All of that changed in 1948 when his contract ended and he was cast as the leading man in the Universal film "The Countess Of Monte Cristo" alongside Sonja Henie.
Michael was given generally favourable reviews for his role as Lieutenant Paul von Cram in the film "The Countess Of Monte Cristo". The December 8, 1948 issue of "The Post-Standard" described him as an "adequate" actor and "excellent skater" who was "dashing and handsome enough to flutter feminine hearts." A provision in his contract for the film required him to appear as Sonja's leading man in Arthur M. Wirtz' Holiday Ice Revue.
In 1950, Michael headed overseas to Great Britain, where he starred alongside a second Olympic Gold Medallist, Barbara Ann Scott in "Rose Marie On Ice" for eight weeks. In 1951, when Wirtz replaced Henie with Scott in Hollywood Ice Revue, Michael returned to take on the principal male role in the tour. Though Michael and Barbara Ann developed a lifelong friendship, he described Sonja Henie as "the best partner I've ever had."
Michael Kirby and Barbara Ann Scott
Michael Kirby and Barbara Ann Scott. Photo courtesy Will Grendahl.
By the mid-fifties, Michael and Norah yearned to settle down. Together, they had already welcomed four of their eight - yes, eight - children. They settled in River Forest, Illinois, where Michael opened the first of his Michael Kirby Skating Schools in December 1953. In the school's first month, Michael and Norah were already teaching classes to five hundred young students on a 30 X 40 studio ice rink. In an interview in the February 25, 1954 issue of the "Long Island Star-Journal", he explained, "It's something I've always looked forward to. I guess I'm a fanatic on the subject but I'm convinced that skating is as fine as an all-around conditioner as swimming and it's equally good for all age groups. We were a little doubtful of the school's success at first. It seemed like a risky business and we sunk everything we had in it but it's worked out even better than we expected."
By the sixties, the school had proved so successful that Michael Kirby Ice Skating Schools were opened in downtown Chicago, Carpentersville, Dolton and Westmont. These small studio rinks offered an almost classroom-like environment to would-be skaters, with windowed seating areas for parents to watch their little Barbara Ann Scott's and Sonja Henie's of tomorrow as they learned the fundamentals of the sport.
Photos courtesy "Skating" magazine (left) and "Ice Skate" magazine (right)
Michael's goal with these schools was to take the elitism out of skating and make skating instruction available to everyone, regardless of their race, religion or how much money Mommy and Daddy had in the bank. He even marketed his own brand of skates to his students. During this period, he also proved instrumental in the creation of the ISI system and served as the organization's first President from 1961 to 1963. In 1968, he was inducted into the ISI's Hall Of Fame. He took on a second term as President from 1971 to 1973.
Michael's coaching career wasn't without controversy. Twice, his schools and students faced suspensions from the USFSA due to violations of the stringent amateur sanction rules. Back in those days, even a minor oversight, like failing to properly adhere to the correct procedures for requesting a sanction for a club carnival, was considered an infraction of the rules in the eyes of the U.S. Figure Skating Association.
Michael Kirby skating with Chatter The Chimpanzee and Sister Sean Edell
After almost two decades of running his schools, Michael left Chicago in 1973 and helped the powers that be behind the Ice Capades build rinks all around the world. He also penned three books: "Skating For Beginners" (1959, with Barbara Ann Scott), "The Young Sportsman's Guide To Ice Skating" (1962) and "Figure Skating To Fancy Skating: Memoirs Of The Life Of Sonja Henie" (2000). Among his students during this period were a young David and Jimmie Santee.
Michael spent his latter years sailing and travelling with Norah and passed away on May 25, 2002, at the age of seventy-seven. In 2011, his son David Kirby - an accomplished coach and ISU Technical Specialist - recalled his father in an interview on The Manleywoman SkateCast thusly: "I think my Dad was really a pioneer in many fields. I know people think of him as just a skater, but he worked with Eunice Kennedy Shriver, for example, very closely on the Special Olympics. And I remember he had a connection with the Kennedy family because he got to know a lot of the Kennedys during the late 1950s and early 1960s. I think that he did know a lot of celebrities through that, but I was probably too young. I remember teaching Cary Grant's grandchildren how to skate, and he came to the rink and somehow he knew my Dad... I never really appreciated the type of people my father associated with because I didn’t really understand who they were at the time, because I was just young. But I do know that he did have several connections with Hollywood and the business community, he knew Ronald Reagan, and it was all through skating. And he told me that one of the things he loved about skating was the great amount of interesting people he met all around the world. And that was the reason he always used for me to continue skating. He said, 'You’ll meet the greatest people in your life.' And he's been right."
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 Facebook, Bluesky, Pinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering one of six fascinating books highlighting the history of figure skating: https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.
Compulsory dances and school figures may be a thing of the past in ISU Championships, but in skating's glory days, they played a crucial role in deciding who came out on top.
Compiled from old rulebooks, magazines and judging manuals, the below data highlights how the scoring system evolved and changed over the course of over a century, under the 6.0 system.
SINGLES FIGURE SKATING
Abbreviations
used: CF (Compulsory Figures), FS (Free Skating), OP (Original
Program), SP (Short Program), TP (Technical Program), QR (Qualifying
Round)
Year
QR
CF
SP/TP/OP
FS
Number of Figures
Notes
1896
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1897
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1898
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1899
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1900
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1901
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1902
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1903
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1904
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1905
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1906
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1907
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1908
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1909
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1910
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1911
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1912
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1913
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
At 1913 ISU Congress, Norwegian Federation motioned that
figures & free skating should be worth the same. Voted down
10-2.
1914
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1922
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1923
N/A
61.11%
N/A
38.89%
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
Based on a maximum rating of 432 points – 264 for school
figures and 168 for free skating, by a factor of 14
1924
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1925
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1926
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1927
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1928
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1929
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1930
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1931
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1932
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1933
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1934
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1935
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1936
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1937
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1938
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1939
N/A
60-67%*
N/A
33-40%*
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
See note below table
1947
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
12 (6 figures skated on each foot)
1948
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1949
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1950
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1951
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1952
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1953
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
Proposal to make figures & free skating both worth 50% shot
down at ISU Congress
1954
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1955
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1956
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1957
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1958
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1959
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1960
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1961
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1962
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1963
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1964
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1965
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
Proposal to make figures and free skating equal in value got a
vote in favour at ISU Congress, but didn't meet 2/3 majority so
didn't pass
1966
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1967
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1968
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
6
1969
50.00%
N/A
50.00%
6
First year figures and free skating were equal in value at
World Championships
1970
50.00%
N/A
50.00%
6
1971
50.00%
N/A
50.00%
6
1972
50.00%
N/A
50.00%
6
1973
40.00%
20.00%
40.00%
3
After first season SP was included in singles events, “various proposals to
increase to four the number of compulsory figures skated in ISU
Championships were defeated” at ISU Congress.
1974
40.00%
20.00%
40.00%
3
1975
40.00%
20.00%
40.00%
3
1976
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1977
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1978
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1979
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1980
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1981
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1982
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1983
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1984
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1985
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1986
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1987
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1988
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1989
20.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
First year of original program with one set of requirements,
previously short program elements had been drawn from 4 different
groups
1990
20.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1991
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1992
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1993
Did not count (qualifying purposes only)
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1994
Did not count (qualifying purposes only)
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1995
Did not count (qualifying purposes
only)
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1996
Did not count (qualifying purposes only)
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1997
Did not count (qualifying purposes only)
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1998
Did not count (qualifying purposes only)
N/A
33.30%
66.70%
0
1999
20.00%
N/A
30.00%
50.00%
0
2000
20.00%
N/A
30.00%
50.00%
0
2001
20.00%
N/A
30.00%
50.00%
0
2002
20.00%
N/A
30.00%
50.00%
0
2003
20.00%
N/A
30.00%
50.00%
0
2004
20.00%
N/A
30.00%
50.00%
0
*Modern histories
of the sport note that compulsory figures were worth 60% and free
skating was worth 40% during this period. In reality, this was not
a uniform standard until after World War II. At the 1897 World
Championships, figures were worth 67% and free skating 33%. The
figure skating events at the 1908 Summer Olympics were based on a
maximum rating of 276 points – 168 for school figures and 108 for
free skating, by a factor of 9, with figures worth 60.87% and free
skating 39.13%. At the 1923 World Championships, scoring was based on
a maximum rating of 432 points – 264 for school figures and 168 for
free skating, by a factor of 14. Figures were worth 61.11% and free
skating 38.89%. These inconsistencies can be attributed to the fact
that the national skating associations that hosted the ISU
Championships played a major role in organizing
judging and scorecards in skating's early days.
First year pairs competitions were included at World
Championships, though it was not considered an official
competition for a World title. There were 2 pairs events – 1 for
a man and a woman and 1 for 2 men
1902
N
100.00%
1903
N
100.00%
1904
N
100.00%
1905
N
100.00%
1906
N
100.00%
1907
N
100.00%
1908
N
100.00%
First officially recognized World Championships for pairs,
though pairs competitions were held at Worlds every year from
1901-1907
1909
N
100.00%
1910
N
100.00%
1911
N
100.00%
1912
N
100.00%
1913
N
100.00%
1914
N
100.00%
1922
N
100.00%
1923
N
100.00%
1924
N
100.00%
1925
N
100.00%
1926
N
100.00%
1927
N
100.00%
1928
N
100.00%
1929
N
100.00%
1930
N
100.00%
1931
N
100.00%
1932
N
100.00%
1933
N
100.00%
1934
N
100.00%
1935
N
100.00%
1936
N
100.00%
1937
N
100.00%
1938
N
100.00%
1939
N
100.00%
1947
N
100.00%
1948
N
100.00%
1949
N
100.00%
1950
N
100.00%
1951
N
100.00%
1952
N
100.00%
1953
N
100.00%
1954
N
100.00%
1955
N
100.00%
1956
N
100.00%
1957
N
100.00%
1958
N
100.00%
1959
N
100.00%
1960
N
100.00%
1961
N
100.00%
1962
N
100.00%
1963
N/A
100.00%
1964
33.30%
66.70%
Trial of compulsory connected program
1965
33.30%
66.70%
Trial of compulsory connected program
1966
33.30%
66.70%
1967
33.30%
66.70%
1968
33.30%
66.70%
1969
25.00%
75.00%
25% was a reduction
1970
25.00%
75.00%
1971
25.00%
75.00%
1972
25.00%
75.00%
1973
25.00%
75.00%
1974
25.00%
75.00%
1975
25.00%
75.00%
1976
25.00%
75.00%
1977
25.00%
75.00%
1978
25.00%
75.00%
1979
28.57%
71.43%
1980
28.57%
71.43%
1981
28.57%
71.43%
1982
28.57%
71.43%
1983
28.57%
71.43%
1984
28.57%
71.43%
1985
28.57%
71.43%
1986
28.57%
71.43%
1987
28.57%
71.43%
1988
28.57%
71.43%
1989
28.57%
71.43%
1990
28.57%
71.43%
1991
33.30%
66.70%
1992
33.30%
66.70%
1993
33.30%
66.70%
1994
33.30%
66.70%
1995
33.30%
66.70%
1996
33.30%
66.70%
1997
33.30%
66.70%
1998
33.30%
66.70%
1999
33.30%
66.70%
2000
33.30%
66.70%
2001
33.30%
66.70%
2002
33.30%
66.70%
2003
33.30%
66.70%
2004
33.30%
66.70%
ICE DANCING
Abbreviations
used: CD (Compulsory Dances), FD (Free Dance), OD (Original Dance),
OSP (Original Set Pattern Dance),
Year
CD
OSP/OD
FD
Number of CDs Skated
Notes
1950
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
International Ice Dancing Competition held in conjunction with
Worlds, consisting of 4 compulsory dances and a 3 min free dance
1951
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1952
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1953
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1954
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1955
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1956
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1957
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1958
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1959
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1960
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1961
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1962
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1963
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1964
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1965
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1966
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1967
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1968
60.00%
N/A
40.00%
4
1969
45.00%
15.00%
40.00%
3
First year OSP skated at Worlds
1970
45.00%
15.00%
40.00%
3
1971
45.00%
15.00%
40.00%
3
1972
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
OSP was marked as part of compulsories
1973
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1974
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1975
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1976
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1977
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1978
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1979
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1980
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1981
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1982
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1983
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1984
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
OSP marked as a separate entity from compulsories
1985
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1986
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1987
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1988
30.00%
20.00%
50.00%
3
1989
20.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
Reduced compulsory dances from 3 to 2, at international
competitions (non-ISU Championships) 1 was permitted
1990
20.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1991
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
Original dance introduced, compulsory dances each judged
separately
1992
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1993
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1994
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1995
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1996
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1997
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1998
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
1999
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
2000
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
2001
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
2002
10.00% + 10.00%
30.00%
50.00%
2
2003
20.00%
30.00%
50.00%
1 (per team), 2 groups
Teams divided into 2 groups for compulsory dances
2004
20.00%
30.00%
50.00%
1 (per team), 2 groups
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