Holiday on Ice is an ice show currently owned by Medusa Music Group GmbH, a subsidiary of CTS EVENTIM, Europe's largest ticket distributor, with its headquarters in Bremen, Germany.
Holiday on Ice originated in the United States in 1943. It was the brainchild of Emery Gilbert of Toledo, Ohio, an engineer and builder who created a portable ice rink. He took his idea of a traveling show to Morris Chalfen, a Minneapolis executive, who supplied the financing, and George Tyson, who used his theatrical background to create the show.
The touring show made its first international trip to Mexico in 1947. In 1946, the company expanded with another ice show and secondary unit, "Ice Vogues", which took over the Holiday's last season's production and extended it for another year making stops in Cuba and Hawaii. Then the Vogues toured in Central and South America while Holiday remain in North America. After 1956, the Ice Vogues became a second unit of Holiday on Ice.
After her touring company was shut down, Sonja Henie joined Holiday on Ice in 1953 until 1956. Her first performance with the company was in Paris while her final show was in South America.
US was represented by Holiday on Ice at Brussels World Fair in 1958. While in 1959, the new Cultural Exchange Program allow the company to travel to Russia. A Holiday on Ice show on October 31, 1963 was the scene of a gas leak and subsequent explosion at the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum which killed 74 people.
All owners except Morris Chaflen sold their shares of the North America Holiday on Ice to Madison Square Garden Corporation in 1964, while Chaflen retained ownership of the international Holiday on Ice tour and remained as executive producer of the North America company.
By August 1971, General Ice Shows, Inc., a subsidiary of Thomas Scallen's Medical Investment Corporation (Medicor) and parent company of Ice Follies, had purchased Holiday on Ice (North America) from Chaflen and Madison Square Garden Company. At that time, Chaflen had purchased $2.2 million in Medicor convertible subordinated notes, which when converted to stock would have made Chaflen the largest share of Medicor. Scallen had Medicor stall registering the notes and sold 400,000 Medicor shares to Arthur Wirtz. After lawsuits by HoI's Chaffen and Wirtz in 1976, Wirtz gained ownership of both shows.