Toller Cranston

Toller Cranston
Toller Cranston

Toller Cranston performs a split jump at the 1974 World Figure Skating Championships
Personal information
Full name Toller Shalitoe Montague Cranston http://www.tollercranstonofficial.com
Country represented  Canada
Born April 20, 1949 (1949-04-20) (age 62)
Hamilton, Ontario
Home town Kirkland Lake
Height 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Coach Ellen Burka
Former coach Eva Vasak
Skating club TCS & CC
Olympic medal record
Figure Skating
Bronze 1976 Innsbruck Men's Singles

Toller Shalitoe Montague Cranston, CM (born April 20, 1949) is a Canadian figure skater and painter. He is the 1971-1976 Canadian national champion, the 1974 World bronze medalist, and the 1976 Olympic bronze medalist. Although, because of poor compulsory figures, he never won a world level competition, he won the small medal for free skating at the 1972, 1974, and 1975 World Figure Skating Championships. Cranston is credited by many with bringing a new level of artistry to men's figure skating.

He rotates clockwise.

Contents

Personal life

Cranston was born in Hamilton, Ontario in 1949 and grew up in Kirkland Lake. When he was 11, his family moved to suburban Montreal.[1]

Growing up, Cranston had an uneasy relationship with his family, especially his mother who was also a painter and who had a domineering and self-centered personality. He later compared his childhood to "being in jail". In school he had the habit of asking provocative questions that made his teachers think he was being disruptive. Although he enjoyed history, he disliked more structured subjects like mathematics.[1]

After high school, Cranston attended the École des Beaux-Arts de Montréal. By his third year, he became restless with his studies. One of his teachers suggested that there was nothing more he could learn at the school, so Cranston set out at that point to establish himself as a professional artist.[2]

In 1976, he teamed with personal manager Elva Oglanby to write his first book, Toller, a mixture of autobiography, sketches, poems, paintings, humour and tongue-in-cheek observations.[2] It reached number 2 in the Canadian non-fiction charts.

Cranston co-wrote the autobiographical Zero Tollerance (1997) with Martha Lowder Kimball, and a second volume, When Hell Freezes Over: Should I Bring My Skates? (2000), also with Kimball. While he described a sexual tryst between himself and Ondrej Nepela[3] in the second book as well as affairs with women, in his books he presents himself as having lived without forming strong romantic or emotional attachments.

As of 2010, he lives in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, where his main artistic outlet is now his painting, which often incorporates themes related to skating.

Skating career

Amateur career

After an initial failed experience with ballet lessons, Cranston started skating at the age of 7, when his parents bought him hockey skates. He experimented on his own with trying to dance on the ice, and was only later told that what he was doing was called "figure skating". His mother was reluctant to allow him to pursue the sport seriously, but at the age of 11 he met Eva Vasak, who was impressed by his talent and offered to coach him for free.[1] Vasak coached him for the next 8 years.[2]

When Cranston was 13, he developed Osgood-Schlatter disease and was initially told that he would never skate again. After 8 weeks in a cast, he resumed training, and won the Canadian Junior Championship the next month.[1] This was in 1964. But, in the next few years, Cranston met with little success at the senior level. As he was dividing his attention with art school at this time, his physical conditioning was poor and he struggled to make it through his programs, which at that time were 5 minutes for senior men.[3]

After failing to make the Canadian team for the 1968 Winter Olympics, Cranston struggled with motivation and lack of training discipline. His career turned a corner when he began to work with coach Ellen Burka in Toronto in the following season. Burka forced him to do complete runthroughs of his entire program[3] and his results began to improve: third at the Canadian championships in 1969, and second in 1970.

Cranston quickly gained a reputation as the most innovative and exciting artistic skater of his time, one of the first to emphasize use of the whole body to express the music.[4] He was particularly known for the quality and inventiveness of his spins, which were widely copied by other skaters. (Cranston, incidentally, was a clockwise spinner and jumper.) Soon reports from competitions of this period began to mention younger skaters who had become "Tollerized" by attempting to copy Cranston's style, which was characterized by contrasting very stretched positions with a high free leg with more angular, bent-leg positions, and the incorporation of elements such as running toe steps and high kicks in step sequences.

Even during his competitive career, Cranston had talked about his goal in skating being to create what he called "theatre on ice", or skating as a form of dance expression, rather than winning medals. He explained that the purpose of perfecting the technical aspects of the sport was to allow the body to express the music or emotion.[5]

He won his first national title in 1971 with a performance that included triple salchow and loop jumps, and received a standing ovation from the audience.[6] But, it was in the 1972 season that he really established his reputation in the sport. At the 1972 Canadian championships, his marks included 4 6.0s for artistic impression and 6 5.9s for technical merit. Cranston skated poor compulsory figures at the 1972 Winter Olympics, but turned in a strong program to finish 5th in the free skating.[7] Then, at the 1972 World Figure Skating Championships, he won the free skating with another superb performance, again landing triple loop and salchow jumps and receiving a thunderous standing ovation as well as a perfect 6.0 mark for artistic impression.[4]

Professional career

After the 1976 competitive season, Cranston began a long career in professional figure skating. Following up on his earlier-stated goal of developing "theatre on ice", Cranston performed in his own tour, "The Ice Show", also featuring Gordon McKellen, Colleen O'Connor and Jim Millns, and several other former elite competitors.[8] He later toured in Europe with Holiday on Ice, and in 1983 appeared in a short-lived production at Radio City Music Hall in New York City with Peggy Fleming and Robin Cousins.[8]

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Cranston made a series of skating specials for CBC television. The best of these was "Strawberry Ice" (1982), a fantasy that also featured Peggy Fleming, Sandra and Val Bezic, Allen Schramm, and Sarah Kawahara, with imaginative costumes designed by Frances Dafoe. The production won a variety of awards, including an ACTRA Award and was redistributed in 67 countries.[3] Cranston's other TV specials included "Dream Weaver" (1979)[9] and "Magic Planet" (1983).[10]

During this period Cranston was a regular on the Canadian variety TV show Stars on Ice,[11] and appeared in the similar NBC series The Big Show in 1980.[12]

His other television credits include an appearance in an ice ballet production of "The Snow Queen", also starring John Curry and Janet Lynn.[13] In 1983 he portrayed the character of Tybalt in "Romeo and Juliet on Ice", a production starring Brian Pockar and Dorothy Hamill as the title characters.[14] He appeared in Joni Mitchell's concert film "Shadows and Light"[15] He made a non-skating acting appearance in the 1983 short film "I am a Hotel", a music video featuring songs by Leonard Cohen.[16]

Throughout the 1980s, he was a regular competitor at the World Professional Figure Skating Championships and other made-for-TV pro skating events. In 1986, he was one of the cast members of the original IMG-produced American Stars on Ice tour (no relation to the earlier Canadian TV series of the same name), and appeared with the show for the next several years.[17]

Cranston was also a commentator on CBC television for figure skating events. However, in 1991, the CBC fired him, citing concerns from the Canadian Figure Skating Association that his often brutally frank and opinionated commentary was denigrating to Canadian skaters. Cranston filed a lawsuit against the CBC that was eventually resolved in his favor.[8]

In the summer of 1990, Cranston agreed to coach American skater Christopher Bowman, who moved into Cranston's home in Toronto. The influence of the notoriously unstable Bowman on Cranston's life was disastrous; Cranston later wrote, "...drug dealers buzzed the front doorbell morning, noon, and night. Prostitutes invaded my house from the street. Christopher sometimes announced that he was going out for a carton of milk and didn't return for three days." Cranston finally threw Bowman out in the fall of 1991. Meanwhile, he had become so depressed that he was unable to paint, and started taking drugs himself.[8] At this time, he began to make changes in his lifestyle: he sold his Toronto home, which was cluttered with art he had collected over the years, and bought a home in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.

Cranston continued to perform in Canada with Stars on Ice and IMG's smaller-city tour, Skate the Nation, for the next few years. However, in the fall of 1994, he broke his leg while practicing for a holiday show in Vail, Colorado.[8] Although he made a few skating appearances afterwards, in 1997 he decided to retire from professional skating before (as he described it)[3] he became a parody of himself.

Results

Event 1962-63 1963-64 1967-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76
Winter Olympics 9th 3rd
World Championships 13th 11th 5th 5th 3rd 4th 4th
North American Championships 6th 2nd
Canadian Championships 3rd J. 1st J. 4th 3rd 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st
Skate Canada International 1st 1st
St. Gervais 3rd
  • J = Junior level

Legacy

Cranston was inducted into the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame in 1976, the Canadian Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 1997, the Order of Canada in 1977 and Canada's Walk of Fame in 2003. He was inducted into the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 2004.

As an Artist

After leaving the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Cranston became self-supporting as an artist, making enough money to cover his skating expenses. He held his first exhibition at his coach Ellen Burka's home in the spring of 1969.[3] In November 1971, he had another successful one-man show in Toronto, the result of almost a year's work.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Interview in Today magazine, 1981
  2. ^ a b c Elva Oglanby, Toller, ISBN 0-7715-9944-7
  3. ^ a b c d e f Cranston, Toller; Martha Lowder Kimball (2000). When Hell Freezes Over: Should I Bring My Skates?. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0771023375. 
  4. ^ a b "'72 Worlds", Skating magazine, May 1972
  5. ^ a b "Theatre on Ice", Skating magazine, Mar 1972
  6. ^ "Canadians", Skating magazine, Mar 1971
  7. ^ "Olympics '72", Skating magazine, Apr 1972
  8. ^ a b c d e Toller Cranston, Zero Tollerance, ISBN 0-7710-2334-0
  9. ^ BFI database
  10. ^ BFI database
  11. ^ IMDB cast credits for Stars on Ice
  12. ^ IMDB cast credits for The Big Show
  13. ^ Answers.com entry for The Snow Queen
  14. ^ IMDB information for Romeo and Juliet on Ice
  15. ^ Video at Joni Mitchell's web site
  16. ^ IMDB information for I Am a Hotel
  17. ^ Scott Hamilton, Landing It, ISBN 1-57566-466-6

External links


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