After his father took his own life when John was 16, he moved to London to study with
Arnold Gerschwiler, who coached him to his first British title in 1971. In 1972, Curry found an American sponsor who enabled him to study in the United States with
Gus Lussi, who worked with him on jumps, and
Carlo Fassi, who worked with him on compulsory figures. According to figure skating historian James R. Hines, Curry "improved dramatically" under their coaching, helping him win a medal at every competition he entered in 1975 and win every competition he entered in 1976.
Competitive career Fassi coached Curry to
European, World, and Olympic titles in 1976. In the same year he was the flag bearer at the
Winter Olympics for Great Britain and was voted
BBC Sports Personality of the Year in 1976. He was the first male figure skater from Great Britain to win Olympic gold. As an amateur competitor, Curry was noted for his ballet-like posture and extension, and his superb body control. Along with Canadian skater
Toller Cranston, Curry was responsible for bringing the artistic and presentation aspects of men's figure skating to a new level. At the peak of his competitive career, Curry was also accomplished both at
compulsory figures and the athletic (
jumping) aspects of free skating. During his 1976 Olympic free skate, using music from the ballet
Don Quixote, he successfully landed a triple
toe loop, a triple
Salchow and a triple
loop jump. His performance is known to have garnered the highest score ever given during the era of the 6.0 scoring in figure skating. He earned 105.9 points out of a possible 108 points from a panel of 9 international judges. Only the judges from Canada and the Soviet Union did not place him first. The programme, with its formal ballet positions and "measured restraint", He also formed small skating companies that focused on "carefully choreographed and complex ensemble work skated to classical music and performed to exacting standards". Besides choreographing routines for the company, Curry commissioned works from such noted dance choreographers as
Sir Kenneth MacMillan,
Peter Martins and
Twyla Tharp. Curry was reportedly a difficult person to get along with, and a dispute with the business managers of his company forced it to suspend operations in the mid-1980s. Curry was inducted into the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 1991.
Theatre Curry's Broadway theatre credits include
Icedancing (1978) as a performer and director, the 1980 revival of
Brigadoon as an actor (playing Harry Beaton) and the
Roundabout Theatre 1989 revival of
Privates on Parade as Lance Corporal Charles Bishop. In 1979 Curry, alongside
Anthony Dowell, gave the premiere of a dance piece
Top Hat and Tails using the music by
Irving Berlin and choreographed by
Peter Gennaro, at the Million Dollar Celebration Gala at the
Metropolitan Opera House New York. ==Personal life==