
Ontario singer-songwriter to hold free concert in the Sault
Tony Ryma talks with Metis singer-songwriter Amanda Rheaume about her new album and her upcoming free concert in Sault Ste. Marie.
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CTV News
40 minutes ago
- CTV News
Tens of thousands pack the streets for P.E.I.'s Gold Cup Parade
Tens of thousands of people have filled the streets of Charlottetown for the Gold Cup Parade. Maria Sarrouh reports. Loading the player instance is taking more time than usual Loading the player instance is taking more time than usual There were big grins and bagpipes blaring for blocks as the RCMP's band marched in downtown Charlottetown, kicking off the Gold Cup Parade. It's a big summer tradition on Prince Edward Island, and according to organizers, the largest parade east of Montreal. On Friday, tens of thousands of people filled the streets. From the front row, lots of little hands waved. 'There's a lot of fun stuff,' said Sebastien Cairo, aged 7. 'Our family is here, and we get to see some of the people who help our communities,' said his brother, Mathis Cairo. Morgan McWilliams was in the crowd with her family. 'Just seeing all the firefighters,' she said, describing her favourite part of the parade. Some workers on the Island got the day off. Others took a break to watch, including construction crews. People set up their lawn chairs long before the fun started, saving a seat for themselves and furry friends. For many, it's a homecoming. 'I'm home visiting because I just moved away,' said Elizabeth Ward, who moved from P.E.I. to Nova Scotia a year and a half ago. 'I've been coming now for 19 years,' said her friend Mary Jane Victory, who's from Ontario. '(It's) kind of a nostalgic feeling, coming back to watch it as an adult,' said Catherine Reid, adding she spent several years living away, and is happy to be back. The parade featured nearly 70 floats from communities across the country. The Burlington Teen Tour Band travelled all the way from Ontario; members of the province's Mi'kmaw community danced through the streets, fitting the year's theme of 'Let the Music Move You.' P.E.I musician Lennie Gallant was the parade marshal, while The Island Shrine Club — a fraternity based on fun, fellowship and Masonic principles — also road through the streets. Kent Building Supplies flew a giant balloon Pink Panther. With tourists coming into town, the parade helps small businesses, but the benefits go beyond that. 'There's the economic spinoffs, but there's the cultural spinoffs too,' said Derek Tweel, who is responsible for Gold Cup Parade committee logistics. 'You'll see floats from the Chinese society, and it keeps going.' The parade dates back to 1962. It's an important part of P.E.I.'s Old Home Week, a showcase of the province's agriculture and harness racing industries. 'We have company from Nunavut and wanted to make sure that they experience some of Old Home Week,' said Marilyn Neily. 'We've been coming to the parade since I was a little kid, and my daughter this year is actually a banner carrier,' said Kari MacDonald. The festivities continue Saturday at the Gold Cup and Saucer, the region's most celebrated harness racing event. At Charlottetown Driving Park, the fastest horses and drivers from Eastern Canada will line up just before midnight to compete for the $100,000 final prize.


CBC
40 minutes ago
- CBC
Remembering the NFB's groundbreaking women's film studio, 50 years later
Social Sharing An event in Cobourg, Ont., is shining a light on a precedent-setting piece of Canadian film history. And it all started in a basement room at the National Film Board. That was the first location of Studio D — created in 1974 with the purpose of making films by, for, and about women, and initially given a shoestring budget of just $100,000. Fifty-one years later, the studio is being highlighted by the Canadian Women in Film Museum with a screening of a documentary about its history, as well as a screening of one of the most acclaimed works to come out of it — the academy award-winning 1977 short documentary, I'll Find a Way. "Without that policy that the film board had started, I would have never gotten an opportunity to become a film director," Beverly Shaffer, director of I'll Find a Way, told CBC News. As outlined in a blog post by the film board last year, it was the NFB's Kathleen Shannon who pushed for, founded, and served as the first executive producer of Studio D, which gets its name from the NFB's traditional in-house letter naming system. "No such thing existed anywhere in the world at that time," said Shaffer of the publicly-funded, explicitly feminist film studio, which provided training and support to fledgling filmmakers until 1997 when it was shut down. "Initially, a lot of the women didn't have filmmaking experience, but the film board was surprised and astonished [to learn] there was a big audience for these films, because of the issues and the perspective that they were showing," she said. Those issues included difficult or under-covered topics like abortion around the world, queer life in Canada, pornography, motherhood and the dangers of nuclear war. Not only did audiences respond — critics did too, ultimately awarding Studio D filmmakers with 130 awards in total, including three Oscars. The first one of those, Shaffer's win in 1977, carried extra significance because it broke a multi-decade academy award dry spell for the film board. Rick Miller with the Canadian Women in Film Museum in Cobourg told CBC Toronto that he feels awareness about Studio D and its films is "pretty low," inspiring him to hold Sunday's screening event. "It aligns with the narrative of our museum, which is film history of Canadian women … and also aligns with our narrative of women who are overcoming the gendered expectations of their time," he said. The museum will screen a number of other Studio D titles this fall, Miller said. The NFB itself has also endeavoured to raise awareness about Studio D, uploading some 90 of its films to a new online channel in 2024. According to Suzanne Guèvremont, current NFB chairperson, the film board remains committed to gender parity, with 56 per cent of productions in 2023 and 2024 directed by women. It also sets targets for Indigenous, Black and racialized filmmakers, she said. "Studio D marked the NFB's first step on a broader journey toward equity, diversity and inclusion across all areas of our work," Guèvremont said in a statement.


CTV News
8 hours ago
- CTV News
Joanne Kormylo discusses her debut novel, ‘The Resistance Daughter'
For first-time novelist Joanne Kormylo, writing historical fiction was a way to get closer to her father, who had served as an RCAF bomber pilot and was a prisoner of war during the Second World War. 'He didn't talk about it. It was very difficult for him,' Kormylo told CTV News. 'It formed a very large part of my life because, in hindsight, he did have PTSD, which no one recognized in those days. He was a wonderful, wonderful man,' she said. Her debut novel, The Resistance Daughter, tells the story of a prisoner of war and the efforts of civilians in the Polish Resistance. The book is published by Hodder and Stoughton, a British publishing house. 'I feel it's such an important part of Canadian history that I was disappointed that it wasn't more recognized here to be published, but the U.K. was really wonderful to me,' she said.