SAN FRANCISCO – He’s tanned with a
chiseled chest. Naturally, he’s shirtless, even on the ice, with
tight white pants and black figure skates. Joel Mangs is an amazing,
energetic, acrobatic figure skater, a former Swedish Junior
Champion, a former principle skater with Disney On Ice, a two-time
Gay Games gold medalist and a two-time silver medalist this summer
at the first World Outgames in Montreal.
“I love skating; it’s my first
passion,” said Mangs, 34, who now lives in Amsterdam.
Mangs’ on-ice accolades are, though, far-overshadowed by his
on-camera credits.
Mangs is the real-life Brad Patton, the popular porn star of such
titles as "Beyond Perfect," "Heaven To Hell," "Hot Wired 2" and
"Cross Country," among others.
“Joel is kind of the former me; Brad is kind of the current me,” he
said. “I enjoy both, (skating and porn). I can’t pick one over the
other.”
Mangs was one of about 50 skaters here Sept. 2 at the Yerba Buena
Ice Center for the annual SkateOut’s Cabaret on Ice Series, dubbed
One Hit Wonder, a benefit for three charities: the Asian & Pacific
Islander Wellness Center, the Breast Cancer Emergency Fund and the
TeamSF Fitness Fund. There were two performances, with about 300
fans watching each, which raised at estimated $10,000.
All of the skaters volunteered their time and effort. Many had spent
time this summer in Chicago competing in Gay Games VII and/or in
Montreal. None had their medals here, but each had lasting, lifelong
memories from the gayest sporting summer ever.
“I get goose-bumps when I go out there,” on the ice, Mangs said. “I
have to train every day for this, if I want to compete and perform
at a high level.”
Mangs resumed skating three months ago after retiring several years
ago. He now trains for the ice for about two hours a day.
“I had a great time (at the Gay Games) in Sydney four years ago and
I would have loved to have gone to Chicago; I know the skating
competition in Chicago was great, probably better organized,” than
in Montreal, he said. “If I’m still skating in 2009 and 2010, I’ll
probably compete in both.”
In the meantime, he’ll spend time in bed, literally. And get paid to
do it.
“If someone had told me five years ago that today I’d be a porn
star, I’d have laughed at them,” he said. “I really enjoy porn. I
wouldn’t do it if I didn’t enjoy it. There are others, especially
straight boys, who do it for other reasons. But I do it because I
enjoy it.” Specifically, “sex with hot men … what’s not to like
about that?!” he added.
THUMBS-UP FOR BOYSTOWN
Josh Figurido (photo)
won two gold medals this summer in his first Gay Games, but it was
the Chicago bars that he remembers most.
“I love Chicago; I had a blast there. The Gay Games were amazing,”
said Figurido, 26, of Boston. “The best part of being in Chicago was
Boystown, of course. Sidetrack and Roscoe’s are my favorites.”
Figurido, who has been skating for 20 years, is gay and single. He
wore his medals to the Closing Ceremony, held at Wrigley Field –
then went directly to Hydrate.
“I’m very proud of the medals,” he said, then added with a smile: “I
just used (the medals) to get free drinks.”
“The Gay Games was one of the most memorable experiences of my life.
It was so much fun, especially getting to meet so many other gay
athletes, and not just figure skaters.”
MORE PRAISE FOR BOYSTOWN
Fabiano Fernando (photo)
is originally from Brazil and now lives here in the Castro District.
But it’s Chicago’s Boystown that he vividly recalls from his Gay
Games experience.
“Boystown … oh my Lord. I wish Boystown was here in San Francisco.
Sure, we have Castro, but the quality of bars in Chicago is
incredible. Boystown is so much fun,” said Fernando, 30, a waiter.
“I loved Chicago; it was a very welcoming city. It was everything I
thought it would be, from the moment I got there. It was an amazing
experience.”
Fernando won the gold medal in his division.
“When I finished my program, I looked at the crowd and everyone was
standing and clapping; that was a moment I’ll never forget. It was
awesome,” he said. “The Gay Games was my first competition in
America, so when that gold (medal) was placed around my neck, it was
the most amazing feeling ever. At that moment, I knew that all I had
worked for, for all of those years, had finally paid off.”
Fernando trained for the Games for only six months, two hours a day,
after starting to skate only three years ago.
His medal is already framed, he said.
ONE NERVOUS NIGHT
Kris Fidler-Ballard (photo)
first learned of the Gay Games last November and immediately set his
sights on the seventh-annual sports and cultural event. “I did not
have any medal expectations when I went to Chicago,” said Fidler-Ballard,
25, who lives in New York City and works as an investment banker for
JP Morgan.
The Games was his first competition in eight years.
He finished fourth in his division.
“It was a fun experience. Hopefully next time I’ll win a medal,” he
said.
The best part of the Chicago Games? “Oh, 10,000 gay guys,” he said,
laughing. “Seriously, it was just nice to be somewhere that everyone
was rooting for you no matter how you did.”
Nervous? “I was dying; I was so nervous I was about to cry,” he
said. The day of my competition, I thought I was going to pass out.
When the music started, I thought I was going to have a heart
attack.”
His biggest fan is his husband: Burke Fidler-Ballard, 23.
OH, THOSE CUTE BOYS
Ron Fremont claimed he was simply greeting fans as they entered the
arena here for the second show, but his real reason was obvious.
“I’m stretching and greeting the crowd,” he said, standing near the
entrance to the rink. “This is my crowd, who I have to play to.
OK, sure, I’m checking out the cute boys.”
Fremont, though, is happily taken … thanks to the Gay Games.
“Chicago was the highlight of my summer, followed closely by
Montreal. I peaked skating-wise in Chicago and re-connected with my
future husband there,” said Fremont, 35, an elementary school
teacher from Vancouver, B.C., who also coaches figure skating.
Fremont met Lance Holman (photo)
on May 26 during a casual get-together for Team SF. They reconnected
on the Monday of the Gay Games during another Team SF event.
They’ve been dating ever since and Fremont plans to move to San
Francisco, where Holman lives.
"I didn’t know king-size beds could be so much fun,” joked Fremont,
who won a gold and silver medal in Chicago, a silver and bronze in
Montreal.
“In Chicago, we were in-separable,” said Holman, who won two bronze
medals in cycling. “The Gay Games were about as close to a true
life-changing experience as you could get. I want to spend the rest
of my life with Ron. I’m as happy as can be. It’s been amazing.”
So,do those skating slip-ups really hurt when you crash onto the
ice?
Yes, without question, he said. “It really hurts your ass because
that’s what you usually fall on,” he said.
HOT HOCKEY PLAYERS
Fremont has a thing about hockey players. He doesn’t like them on
his ice and claims their skates make deep holes and grooves into the
ice that affect his skating. “And why are you chasing a puck? If
you’re a grown man or woman chasing around a little puck, there’s
something wrong with that. Plus, they need to have that plexi-glass
up around the rink. Why? That really bothers me in a deep, profound
way,” he said, trying to hold back a smile.
Fremont then added: “I love hockey players; they have the greatest
asses and sweaty jockstraps too.”
FIVE TIMES THE MEMORIES
Louise Karch (photo)
won two gold and one silver medal in Chicago, her fifth Gay Games.
“Chicago … what a great city. The atmosphere was incredible,” said
Karch, of London, Ont. “The skating event was really well done in
Chicago. The Opening Ceremony in Montreal, though, was just so much
better (than Chicago), mostly because they had so much money to play
with.”
Karch, 42, is an executive career coach and was the 2004 and 2005
Adult National Junior Bronze & Interpretive Figure Skating champion
of Canada.
“The strand that seems to run through all of the Gay Games that I
have seen is, how amazing it is to see athletes of all abilities, of
all ages do their best. The Games really is all about the spirit of
inclusion,” she said. “I saw the ballroom dancing at the Chicago
Hilton; it was amazing. It truly was fairyland, no pun intended. The
men were extraordinary, definitely my wow-moment from Chicago.”
She also reflected on the Wyoming woman carrying the sign that said,
“For Matthew Shepard” and for the man who walked into the Opening
Ceremony from a country where, “if they knew he was gay, he’d be
persecuted and killed.”
SUPER SINGER
Sanford Smith (photo)
sang the Gay Games Anthem at the Closing Ceremony, standing among
the chorus underneath the Wrigley Field scoreboard in center-field.
“That was a terrific feeling, very cool,” said Smith, 42, a San
Francisco native who also served as the Games’ cultural manager. “I
really love the Games. It’s such a wonderful platform. It’s not
about being gay or straight or whatever; it’s about being
competitive and being the best that you can be.”
Smith is the coach for Cheer SF, which had four members performing
here at the ice show.
“This is a wonderful skating show that matches music with skating to
make a very entertaining night and raise a lot of money for several
worthy charities,” said Smith, who co-produced the show with Thom
Mullins, also a Gay Games medalist.
YES, THERE ARE GAYS IN IOWA
He’s 49 and nicknamed ‘Grandpa’ by the fellow skaters, many of whom
are half his age. But Burton Powley (photo)
is nonetheless one accomplished skater, most recently winning two
gold in Montreal and two bronze in Chicago.
And, yes, he is gay and really is from Iowa.
“I’ve won so many medals (in my career); that’s not why I skate. I
skate because I enjoy performing in front of a crowd and for the
camaraderie among the skaters,” said Powley, who lives in Des
Moines, where he is a professional skating coach and graphic
designer.
Powley drove his motor home to Chicago for the Games and actually
plugged it into the Zamboni room of the ice rink where figure
skating was held.
“I look at the ice rink as a giant canvas. The music is the color
and the skater is the brush. So, every time I’m skating, I’m
creating a new picture,” he said. “I have fun out there, reacting to
the crowd.”
Powley wear an electronic belt buckle, with a scrolling message that
he programs. It has, at times, said: ‘What are you looking at?’
U.S. SKATING PHENOM
Rohene Ward, (photo),
who has skated in numerous international events and is a candidate
for the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, made his second appearance at
SkateOut’s Cabaret on Ice series.
“I come because it’s for a good cause and I get to see my friends,”
said Ward, who lives in Minneapolis. “I just like performing. This
is not work; this is pure fun. The best part is skating, especially
the rehearsals when we all get let loose and be goofy.”
Ward tried out for the 2006 Olympic team, but did not make it. “That
made me work harder, made me hungrier,” he said. “My life has
changed dramatically since then, for the good. Definitely for the
good. A lot of positive people have come into my life, which I
needed.”
So what’s with Johnny Weir?
“Johnny’s Johnny,” Ward said. “It’s not for me to judge (Weir). He
is who he is, which is why he is who he is. And I am who I am.”
DRESSED FOR SUCCESS
Mike Dimalanta, 24, of San Francisco, (photo)
skated shirtless with overalls and a white bandana tied around his
neck. The look was the same as those in the video for "C’mon Eileen"
(by Dexy’s Midnight Runners), which he skated to.
“A few (in the crowd) knew why I was wearing the outfit and thought
it was so cute, that it went with the music,” he said. “I wasn’t
cold at all. Actually, I’m really hot, so (the outfit) helps.”
He added: “I really like this event; it’s fun.”
MEDALS, MEDALS & MORE MEDALS
Johnny Manzon-Santos (photo)
started skating five years ago and claimed six medals this summer,
including one bronze at three gold in Chicago.
“Chicago has a great gay sports community, and it really supported
the sports, especially figure skating,” said Manzon-Santos, 41 of
San Francisco.
So which was better, Chicago or Montreal?
“Wow, that’s a tough question,” he said. “Let’s just say, it’s
really important for gay athletes to have as many opportunities as
possible to compete. The more (events), the better.
“Personally, I have different warm-and-fuzzy feelings for each event
and I encourage athletes to go to both.
“Competing in events with and against amazing athletes from all over
the world was priceless.”