Continues with Wings explained

Continues with Wings
Logo Alt:Official logo of Continues with Wings
Type:Ensemble show
Theme:Commemoration of Hanyu's back-to-back Olympic titles
Format:Figure skating exhibitions
Cast Size:9 skaters
Duration:180 min
Num Shows:3
Date:April 13–15, 2018
Country:Japan
Venue:Musashino Forest Sport Plaza
Attendance:27,000
Live Viewing:Japan (April 15, 2018)
Broadcast:CS TV Asahi
Chairperson:Yuzuru Hanyu
Organizer:Continues with Wings Executive Committee
Sponsor: (among others)

was an ice show produced by Japanese figure skater and two-time Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu in collaboration with TV Asahi and CIC Co., Ltd. The one-off event was held on April13–15, 2018, at Musashino Forest Sport Plaza in Chōfu, Tokyo. It was Hanyu's first self-produced ice show, commemorating his win of back-to-back Olympic titles in 2014 and 2018, and to express his gratitude to fans and skaters who had inspired and supported him in the course of his career.

Background

See main article: Yuzuru Hanyu Olympic seasons. At the 2018 Winter Olympics, Yuzuru Hanyu from Japan became the first figure skater in 66 years to win back-to-back Olympic titles in the men's singles discipline after American Dick Button in 1952. At his first Winter Games in 2014, he also became the youngest Olympic men's champion since Button in 1948. Hanyu is the first Asian male skater and second Japanese after Shizuka Arakawa in 2006 to win Olympic gold.

Continues with Wings was scheduled two months after Hanyu's victory at the 2018 Winter Olympics to commemorate his historic achievements and express his gratitude to skaters who had inspired and supported him in course of his career until then. The cast included coaches, choreographers, and team mates as well as Hanyu's role models in figure skating. Due to rehabilitation from a ligament injury in his right foot, which Hanyu had sustained in November 2017 after a fall on a quadruple Lutz jump, it was announced prior to the show that he would not perform on the ice himself.

Concept and structure of the show

The show lasted 2.5 hours and was directed by Hanyu, featuring a mix of exhibition programs as well as multiple talk rounds between Hanyu and the invited skaters. Each guest was introduced with a personal video message by Hanyu. Due to his recuperation from an ankle injury, he was not initially scheduled to perform. However, at the end of the show, he gave a surprise performance with a medley of past competition programs, skipping jump elements due to the injury. The show finale was arranged by Hanyu's former choreographers Jeffrey Buttle and Shae-Lynn Bourne to the song "Time to Say Goodbye", performed by the full cast.

Skaters

Main cast

Johnny Weir

Johnny Weir is an American television commentator and retired figure skater who has competed in the senior men's singles discipline. He is a two-time Olympian (2006, 2010), and the 2008 World bronze medalist. Known for his graceful and elegant skating style, Hanyu named him as one of his role models. Weir has designed two free skate costumes for Hanyu, among them his top for the 2013–14 Olympic season. In the 2018–19 and 2019–20 season, Hanyu dedicated his short program Otoñal by Raúl di Blasio to Weir who had skated his free program to the music piece in 2004–05. The two also performed together as lead cast members in the show Fantasy on Ice from 2010 until Weir's retirement in 2023.

Evgeni Plushenko

Evgeni Plushenko is a Russian figure skater and skating coach who has competed at four Winter Olympics (2002–2014), having won four medals, among them gold in men's singles in 2006 and the team event in 2014. Plushenko is one of Hanyu's childhood idols who influenced him in style and technique. Upon the conclusion of Continues with Wings, he was asked by Hanyu to allow him skate to Plushenko's 2003–04 free skate program Tribute to Nijinsky with music by Edvin Marton. With Plushenko's agreement, Hanyu used a new arrangement of the music piece for the free skate, titled Origin, and performed it as a tribute to his skating idol in the 2018–19 and 2019–20 season.

Jeffrey Buttle

Jeffrey Buttle is a Canadian figure skater and choreographer who has competed in men's singles. He is the bronze medalist of the 2006 Winter Olympics and the 2008 World champion. Buttle was in charge of Hanyu's short programs from 2012 until 2022, having choreographed six different programs for him, which scored seven historical and three world records in international competition. He also made the choreography for the final group performance of Continues with Wings to the song "Time to Say Goodbye" in collaboration with Shae-Lynn Bourne.

Shae-Lynn Bourne

Shae-Lynn Bourne is a Canadian ice dancer and choreographer who competed with Victor Kraatz, becoming the 2003 World champions and finishing in fouth place at the 1998 and 2002 Winter Olympics. Bourne has choreographed all five of Hanyu's free skate programs from 2014 to 2022, which scored three historical and two world records in competition. She also contributed to the choreography of Hanyu's Olympic short program Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso in collaboration with Buttle. Since its inauguration in March 2023, Bourne has been a recurring cast member of the ice show Yuzuru Hanyu Notte Stellata, a commemoration event of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Rifu, Japan.

Takahito Mura

Takahito Mura is a Japanese figure skater who won the 2014 Four Contintents Championships in men's singles among others. He was Hanyu's senior and training partner at their home rink in Sendai, Japan. When Hanyu had moved up to junior level, Mura guided him in mastering the triple Axel jump, which later became one of Hanyu's signature elements and most consistent jumps in the history of figure skating. Like Bourne, Mura is also a recurring cast member at the ice show Yuzuru Hanyu Notte Stellata.

Yuko Kavaguti and Alexander Smirnov

Yuko Kavaguti is a retired Japanese figure skater who changed citizenship in 2007 and competed with her partner Alexander Smirnov for Russia in pair skating. They are the 2010 World bronze medalists and two-time European champions (2010, 2015). Kavaguti's successful move from Japan to Russia encouraged Hanyu to pursue a skating career overseas as well, moving from Sendai to Toronto, Canada, in 2012 to train under Brian Orser and Tracy Wilson at the Toronto Cricket Skating and Curling Club.

Minoru Sano

Minoru Sano is a retired Japanese figure skater who competed in men's singles. He is the 1977 World bronze medalist and founder of Prince Ice World, the first ice show to be held in Japan. It was Sano who introduced Hanyu and his sister to the sport of figure skating and "fundamentally inspired" Hanyu to start skating. From then, Hanyu was trained by Japanese coach who also coached Sano and Kavaguti. For Sano, it was the first skating performance in 22 years at Continues with Wings at 66 years old.

Video messages

The invited guest skaters Stéphane Lambiel and Javier Fernández were not able to attend the show in person, so they sent video messages that were shown on screen at the venue. At the 2018 Winter Olympics, Hanyu named both skaters as his role models alongside Weir, Plushenko, and Dick Button. On the final day of the show, Hanyu's former training partner Javier Fernández gave a surprise performance of his Olympic free skate program Man of La Mancha, which was recorded live at Fernández' home rink in Madrid and shown on screen at the show.

Attendance and accessibility

The venue was sold out on all three days of the show, with a capacity of 9,000 seats and ticket prices ranging from 6,000 to 18,000 yen ($57–171 as of 2018). The last day was screened live in 66 movie theaters nationwide and aired live on the Japanese subscription channel CS TV Asahi. On May6, 2022, Continues with Wings was rebroadcast on the channel as part of the program special "Golden Week Figure Skating". The event was sponsored by the cleaning and skin care company P&G as well as the Japanese airline ANA among others.

Set list

First half

  1. Johnny Weir – "Ave Maria"
  2. Takahito MuraThe Phantom of the Opera
  3. Jeffrey Buttle – "For Forever"
  4. Minoru Sano – "The Heart of Budapest"
  5. Kawaguti / SmirnovManfred Symphony
  6. Shae-Lynn Bourne – "Bom Bom"
  7. Evgeni PlushenkoTribute to Nijinsky

Second half

  1. Takahito Mura – The Beauty and the Beast
  2. Kavaguti / Smirnov – "Bubbly Dance"
  3. Jeffrey Buttle – "Better to Be Loved"
  4. Johnny Weir – Beyoncé medley
  5. Evgeni Plushenko – "Tango Amore"
  6. Yuzuru Hanyu – program medleys
  7. Group finale – "Time to Say Goodbye"

Program medleys by Yuzuru HanyuShow 1

  1. From Russia With Love
  2. Zigeunerweisen

Show 2

  1. Mission: Impossible II
  2. Étude in D-sharp minor
  3. "Parisienne Walkways"

Show 3

  1. "Sing, Sing, Sing"
  2. Romeo + Juliet
  3. Seimei

See also

Notes and references

Official guide and documentary books

Print works cited

External links