How Oona and Gage Brown Turned a Rock Classic Into One of Ice Dance’s Most Electric Moments

Oona & Gage Brown perform at the Skating Club of New York's 2023 End of Season Skating Exhibition

When Oona Brown and Gage Brown glide onto the ice this season, the opening synthesizer notes of “Baba O’Riley” don’t just signal the start of another free dance — they announce something different. Something bold. Something unmistakably theirs.

For the sibling duo, now firmly establishing themselves on the senior international scene, the 2024–2025 free dance marks a defining moment in their evolution. Known for their musical sensitivity and expressive skating, the Browns chose to step outside traditional ice dance expectations by building their program around The Who’s legendary rock anthem — a move that instantly set them apart.

And once the music builds, so do they.

From the first sweeping edges across the rink, their choreography mirrors the restless energy of the song. Fast footwork sequences melt into fluid transitions, lifts soar with youthful urgency, and every movement seems driven by the song’s emotional pulse. Instead of simply skating to music, Oona and Gage appear to live inside it.

Fans have responded immediately. Online clips of their performances have spread quickly, with viewers praising the program’s freshness and emotional power. Many note how the siblings balance technical precision with an authenticity that feels increasingly rare in competitive skating.

Part of that connection comes from who they are off the ice.

Nothing Else Matters" But Skating for Oona and Gage Brown - U.S. Figure Skating

Raised in a large, tight-knit family, Oona and Gage’s journey has never followed a smooth, predictable path. Training costs, travel demands, and the relentless grind of elite competition required sacrifices and resilience from an early age. Yet throughout the challenges, their shared love for skating — and for performing together — remained the constant.

Their chemistry isn’t manufactured; it’s lifelong. Every glance, every perfectly timed step reflects years spent not just as partners, but as siblings who understand each other instinctively.

That closeness shows most in moments where the choreography softens, allowing emotion to take over. As the iconic refrain of “Teenage Wasteland” rises, their skating shifts from explosive to reflective, capturing both the rebellious spirit and quiet nostalgia embedded in the music. It’s a reminder that beneath the speed and athleticism lies storytelling — the heart of ice dance.

This season also represents a broader transition. Moving fully into senior competition means facing deeper fields and higher expectations. Judges scrutinize details more closely, and the margin for error shrinks. Yet performances like this signal that the Browns aren’t just trying to keep up — they’re carving out their own identity.

What makes their free dance resonate is its sense of joy. Even in high-pressure moments, they skate with a visible love for what they’re doing. Smiles flash mid-step. Energy flows naturally. The performance feels less like a routine and more like a shared experience between skaters and audience.

As the final notes fade and they strike their closing pose, applause often comes before scores appear — a sign that something deeper than technical marks has connected.

With Olympic dreams on the horizon and momentum building, Oona and Gage Brown’s “Baba O’Riley” program feels like more than a competitive entry. It’s a statement: that ice dance can be fearless, modern, and emotionally raw all at once.