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Scott Hamilton California and Tennessee
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Clearly one of the most sought after keynote speakers and most popular figure skating stars in the world today, Scott Hamilton is also a role model, a humanitarian, and a cancer survivor. As a public speaker, he exudes enthusiasm and inspiration. As a figure skater, he is forever bridging the gap between sport and entertainment. As a role model, he contradicts the saying that "good guys finish last." As a humanitarian, he avails himself to any plight that will improve mankind. But, more important, as a cancer survivor he is a constant reminder that with fortitude and determination, anything is possible. Scott's much publicized bout with testicular cancer in 1997, and his November, 2004 diagnosis of a benign, non-cancerous pituitary brain tumor, from which he is successfully recovering, has touched him with a special insight into life and the human condition.
Scott is an avid participant in a wide variety of charitable events, and serves as an official spokesperson for Target House at St. Jude Children’s Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, as well as his own Scott Hamilton C.A.R.E.S. Initiative (Cancer Alliance for Research, Education and Survivorship) at the Cleveland Clinic Taussig Center in Cleveland, Ohio. Additionally, he promotes his Foundation’s web site Chemocare.com and serves on the Board of Directors for Special Olympics. Adversity has motivated and strengthened Scott’s outlook on life. It has created and molded his courageous character. Six weeks after his birth on August 28, 1958, Scott was adopted by Ernest and Dorothy Hamilton, both professors at Bowling Green State University. When Scott was about two, he contracted a mysterious illness that caused him to stop growing. For the next six years, doctors prescribed a variety of unsuccessful treatments. After his illness was mistakenly diagnosed as cystic fibrosis and he was given six months to live, the Hamiltons took their son to Boston's Children's Hospital where his ailment began to correct itself by special diet and moderate exercise. From the beginning, Scott skated with great confidence and uncommon speed. He began taking formal lessons, joined a hockey team and within a year, his illness disappeared and he began growing again although he would always be considerably smaller than his peers. His miraculous recovery was attributed to the effects of intense physical activity in the cold atmosphere of the rink.
Over the next several years, his continued dedication paid off. By 1980 he was good enough to capture third place in national competition and win a berth on the U.S. Olympic squad. In addition, he earned a solid fifth place finish at the 1980 Olympics in Lake Placid. Then in March of 1981, Scott's dazzling free skate program at the World Championships enabled him to win the title and become only the second American to do so since 1970. Later that same year, he took an individual Gold medal at the first Skate America tournament and was voted Male Athlete of the Year by the United States Olympic Committee.
Since 1986, audiences have seen him perform in his own Scott Hamilton's America Tour; with numerous U.S. symphony orchestras; and 15 national touring seasons in Stars On Ice which he also co-created and for which he served as co-producer until his retirement from the tour in April 2001. His October 1997 comeback to skating, preceded by a People Magazine cover story profiling his courageous battle against cancer, and Maria Shriver's highly rated profile of Scott for NBC's Dateline, was capped by the live CBS Television Network Special Scott Hamilton: Back on the Ice. By all counts, the event was one of the most emotional and riveting evenings of the year. In addition to producing ice specials for television, ice spectacles (including Stars on Ice which he still co-produces), he also co-produced the highly acclaimed off-Broadway production Now Hear This!
During a fourteen-year tenure with the CBS Television Network as one of their most articulate sports analysts, Scott’s coverage of the figure skating competition at the 1992, 1994 and 1998 Winter Olympic Games were heralded as an incisive, exuberant and refreshing. Similar accolades were bestowed upon Scott for his NBC Television Network commentating and coverage of figure skating at the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympic Games. He also co-hosted the NBC-produced show titled Olympic Ice which aired daily on the USA Network during the 2006 Winter Games. Simultaneously, he hosted the prominently successful Fox Television Network prime time Variety/Reality show, Skating with Celebrities between January and March, 2006. |
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