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East Coast Music Awards to hit the stage tonight in Newfoundland capital

East Coast Music Awards to hit the stage tonight in Newfoundland capital

ST. JOHN'S - The annual East Coast Music Awards has returned to Newfoundland, where the gala awards ceremony and several performances will be presented tonight in St. John's.
Leading this year's nominations is Enfield, N.S., rapper Classified with eight nods.
Among the East Coast talent expected on stage tonight will be Classified, Jah'Mila, Kellie Loder and The Ennis Sisters.
The awards show and five-day conference, which started Wednesday, has faced turmoil since last fall when some association members complained about a lack of transparency and representation.
In March, the East Coast Music Association responded by rolling out a six-point plan after several musicians declined their nominations to protest the non-profit's direction.
Among other things, the association ousted CEO Blanche Israel in January and has pledged to create a member advisory group and a committee on equity and inclusion.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 8, 2025.

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Flowers, confetti, cheers as Guillaume Côté takes last bow with National Ballet
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Flowers, confetti, cheers as Guillaume Côté takes last bow with National Ballet

TORONTO - Ballet star Guillaume Côté has taken his last bow with the National Ballet of Canada. The celebrated principal dancer brought his palms to his heart and smiled as confetti and flowers rained onto the stage following a farewell show Thursday. Côté was saluted with an eight-minute standing ovation after the career celebration, which included his multimedia piece 'Grand Mirage' and a restaging of 'Bolero.' The Quebec-born dancer wraps a 26-year career with the Toronto company that saw him star in most of the biggest classical and contemporary roles including Romeo, Prince Charming and Prince Siegfried. He became a principal dancer in 2004 and has performed as a guest artist for major ballet companies in cities including Milan, London, New York, St. Petersburg and Hamburg. Also a choreographer, musician and composer, Côté now focuses on his dance company Côté Danse, which brings its show 'Burn Baby, Burn' to Toronto's Bluma Appel Theatre this weekend and Germany in July. He founded the company in 2021 and is also artistic director of a summer dance festival in Quebec known as Festival des Arts de Saint-Sauveur. – With files from Angelina Havaris This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 6, 2025. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

US Open '25: Oakmont is the name that stands out in golf's toughest test
US Open '25: Oakmont is the name that stands out in golf's toughest test

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

US Open '25: Oakmont is the name that stands out in golf's toughest test

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The U.S. Open remains the only major keeping him from the career Grand Slam, and this likely will be his last one. Mickelson won the 2021 PGA Championship at age 50. His five-year exemption to the U.S. Open runs out this year, and he already accepted one special exemption (which he didn't need when he won the PGA). Only once has the USGA awarded a second exemption to a player who had not won the U.S. Open. That was the late Seve Ballesteros. ___ AP golf:

British translator Karen Leeder and German writer Durs Grünbein win Griffin Poetry Prize
British translator Karen Leeder and German writer Durs Grünbein win Griffin Poetry Prize

Hamilton Spectator

time5 days ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

British translator Karen Leeder and German writer Durs Grünbein win Griffin Poetry Prize

TORONTO - British scholar Karen Leeder's translation of 'Psyche Running' by Durs Grünbein has won the Griffin Poetry Prize. They were awarded the $130,000 literary prize at a ceremony in Toronto. Leeder is a professor of German language and literature at Oxford University, and the Griffin judges praise her translation as being 'universal, lyrical, philosophical.' This is the second time a translation of work by Grünbein, who lives in Berlin, has been shortlisted for the Griffin. 'Ashes for Breakfast: Selected Poems,' translated by Michael Hoffmann, was a finalist for the International Griffin Poetry Prize in 2006, before the Canadian and global prizes were combined. Margaret Atwood also received the $25,000 Lifetime Recognition Award at the poetry reading and ceremony. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 5, 2025.

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