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Welcome to our skating timeline. We hope you find this both informative and fun. Use the date bar at the top to click through the years. Look out for the icons
Britain was just recovering from the “three day week” and there was little in the
way of green shoots of recovery. Harold Wilson was prime minister and Margaret
Thatcher became leader of the Conservative Party. The average house price in the UK was £12,000,
a gallon of petrol cost 72p and the male working population received an
average salary of £4,000.
Tiger Woods, Angelina Jolie and David Beckham were born. Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded Microsoft. In Nottingham, England, two teenagers who had met seven years earlier, danced together on ice for the first time. They were to become the ying and the yang of their sport, their names linked in immortality: Torvill and Dean. |
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Jayne worked as an insurance clerk; Chris was a trainee policeman. But under the watchful eye of their coach, Janet Sawbridge, they won their first competitions in Sheffield and Bristol, and then in St. Gervais, France. They were on the way to becoming sporting legends. In Oberstdorf, Germany, they came 2nd at an international competition, followed by a 4th place finish at the British Championships.
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Unlike some Eastern European competitors, there was no likelihood of Jayne and Chris giving up their jobs and committing full-time to skating. Every morning and evening they would practice, until Chris left the area to continue his training as a policeman. Dedication was called for. And it paid off when they came 1st in Oberstdorf and 3rd at the British Championships. This meant they qualified to compete at the European and World Championships the following year.
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Steady progess. At the European Championships in Strasbourg, France, Jayne and Chris ended up in 9th place and 11th at the World Championships in Ottawa, Canada. They returned to Nottingham with renewed determination. The highly respected coach, Betty Calloway, agreed to oversee their training and they began taking ballet classes. In November, they won the British Championships for the first time, an achievement that repeated itself for the next 6 years.
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They were placed 6th at the European Championships in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now Croatia) and 8th at the World Championships in Vienna. The main focus was skating and working. There was little time for a social life. Early mornings and late into the night were spent at cold ice rinks. They became British Champions again.
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A major breakthrough. After coming 4th at the Europeans Championships in Gothenburg, Sweden, Jayne and Chris participated in their first Winter Olympic Games, held in Lake Placid, USA. They came a respectable 5th but it was Robin Cousins who stole the show with his Gold Medal in the men’s event. At the World Championships in Dortmand, Germany, they moved up to 4th position.
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They were not expected to win the European Championships, in Innsbruck, Austria. The Russians had dominated the sport for the past 12 years. But on a glorious night for British skating, Jayne and Chris became European Ice Dance Champions and six weeks later in Hartford, Connecticut, USA they achieved their 1st World Championship Gold medal. Suddenly, Jayne and Chris were the new darlings of the British media, their relationship off the ice a subject of continued speculation.
After much deliberation and consultation, they opted for the Overture from the stage musical, Mack and Mabel, as their Free Dance. It would be the first time a single piece of music had been used to tell a complete story. For the Blues OSP, they chose a version of Summertime performed by the American harmonica virtuoso Larry Adler. |
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At the European Championships in Lyon, France, Jayne and Chris retained their Championship title and scored their first sixes in overseas competition, three for Summertime and 11 for Mack and Mabel - a total of 14 out of 18, which was a record for an International Championship. They were also triumphant for the second time at the World Championships in Copenhagen, Denmark.
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Crisis. A fall in practice just days before the Europeans in Dortmund, Germany, left Jayne unable to compete. They withdrew from the competition.
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The European Championships came first. The OSP for this year was the Paso Doble and the Torvill and Dean performance is remembered as being their best ever, scoring six 6’s for Artistic impression. Bolero gained them a further 11 and the stage was set for the Winter Olympic Games in Sarajevo, in the former Yugoslavia, now Bosnia and Herzegovina.
All this time, Jayne and Chris had relied on grants. Their financial future was far from certain. There were options to join a number of ice shows as guest performers, but they harboured a desire to put together their own company of skaters and bring their style of ice dance to the millions who had supported them over the years. |
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They returned to Australia to prepare for Torvill and Dean: The World Tour. Graeme Murphy became co-artistic director and after assembling a company of top international ice skaters, rehearsals were held in a disused warehouse in downtown Sydney. Three months later, a few try-out shows were performed in New Zealand and Australia, then the entire company was transported to Oberstdorf for final rehearsals before the opening at Wembley Arena, London, England in the summer. Capacity audiences for eight shows a week with a run of seven weeks ensured that almost half a million people watched the show.
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Torvill and Dean: The World Tour went to North America, opening in St Johns, Newfoundland in January and toured throughout Canada, performing in enormous ice hockey arenas. After a short break, the show moved to the southern hemisphere and Australia, including performances in Tasmania in the circus tent, last used in Nottingham a year earlier. |
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With nothing they could do on the ice, Jayne flew to Australia for a well earned holiday. Chris headed for London to try out tap dancing and singing lessons. Filling in the time until he and Jayne could get back to work. |
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Jayne and Chris began working with their second company of skaters, the Russian Allstars, whose artistic director was Tatiana Tarasova. Tatiana had been a rival for many years at European, World and Olympic competition. |
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Torvill and Dean and the Russian All Stars continued in Australia. Things came to an abrupt halt when Chris, invited to participate in a celebrity NASCAR race in Melbourne, crashed and tore a ligament. After an operation, he spent the next two months in plaster which led to perhaps the oddest Torvill and Dean duet. They were persuaded to make a CD by Australian music producer Kevin Stanton, singing 14 cover songs by artists such as the Mamas and Papas and Sonny and Cher. ‘Here we Stand’ was released only in Australia in June of that year. |
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A leading UK impresario, Phil McIntyre, brought the tour to the UK and it played all over England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. It was the longest running tour they had ever done. All the Russian skaters could speak English by the end of it – and some of the British skaters had learnt some Russian.
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Having been approached by the BBC to film a documentary for their Omnibus series, a piece of music was commissioned, named Tilt. After weeks of rehearsals at Alexandra Palace in London, it was filmed and aired under the title Bladerunners later in the year. |
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The Duchesnays won the silver medal at the Winter Olympics in Albertville. |
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Jayne and Chris performed in the Tom Collins Tour of Champions across North America. They choreographed a new piece entitled Drum Duet to the music of Phil Collins. |
At the British Championships held in Sheffield, Jayne and Chris led after the Compulsories, their Rumba Original dance scoring all 5.9s and 6s, bar one judge. The Free dance, skated to a specially arranged, orchestrated and recorded version of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers’ Lets Face the Music was a triumph. It scored eight 5.9s and a 6 for technical performance and all 6s for artistic impression.
Seven weeks after the Olympics, their new show, Face the Music, opened in Sheffield. The response was overwhelming and went someway to make up for the disappointment at the Olympics. After it’s UK debut, the show travelled to Australia and North America. |
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The Face the Music tour returned to the UK and finally finishes its run on August 1st. It had been seen by more than one million people.
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Jayne and Chris were invited to perform with Stars On Ice, which was managed by IMG. This was in Tokyo, Japan and featured a cast of past Olympic, World and National Champions.
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Torvill and Dean performed again with Stars on Ice, touring the USA and Canada. |
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Ice Adventures was performed for the last time, closing at the Sheffield Arena.
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