Kiss and cry
The kiss and cry is the area in an ice rink where figure skaters wait for their marks to be announced after their performances during a figure skating competition.[1] It is so named because the skaters and coaches often kiss to celebrate after a good performance, or cry after a poor one. The area is usually located in the corner or end of the rink and is furnished with a bench or chairs for the skaters and coaches and monitors to display the competition results. It is often elaborately decorated with flowers or some other backdrop for television shots and photos of the skaters as they react to their performance and scores.
The term was coined by Jane Erkko, a Finnish figure skating official who was on the organizing committee for the 1983 World Figure Skating Championships which were held in Helsinki. Erkko came up with the name when visiting television technicians who were mapping the arena prior to the event wanted to know what the area was called.[2][3] The first formal off-ice waiting area at the Olympics appeared in Sarajevo 1984.[4] The term "kiss and cry" was widely used by the early 1990s, and is now used officially in the International Skating Union Regulations,[5] and showing the "kiss and cry" room likely has helped make figure skating very popular in Olympics on television.[4] The American and other national federations train skaters on how to appear on camera while waiting.[4]
In South Korea, Kim Yuna, the 2010 Olympic champion in Ladies' Singles, hosted a reality TV program titled "Kiss and Cry", where South Korean entertainers learned and tried figure skating skills, which was aired on SBS from May 22 to August 21, 2011.
References
- ↑ "kiss-and-cry area" definition from Double-Tongued Dictionary
- ↑ Sonia Bianchetti Garbato, Cracked Ice. ISBN 88-86753-72-1. p 45-56
- ↑ Erkko, coiner of 'kiss and cry,' passes away at 78
- 1 2 3 Macur, Juliet (2010-02-22). "After Skating, a Unique Olympic Event: Crying". The New York Times. pp. A1. Retrieved July 29, 2012.
- ↑ "Constitution and General Regulations". International Skaters Union. Retrieved July 29, 2012.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kiss & Cry. |
|