
Parade: Queer Acts of Love & Resistance highlights the frontlines of the struggle
Whether it's Alberta's recent legislative changes restricting access to health care, education and sports for transgender and gender diverse people, or the rise in police-reported hate crimes motivated by sexual orientation, LGBTTQ+ rights can no longer be taken for granted in Canada.
It's in this political context that Winnipeg filmmaker Noam Gonick debuts his latest documentary Parade: Queer Acts of Love & Resistance, which highlights the pivotal moments that shaped Canada's LGBTTQ+ movement.
Black-and-white photos and rarely seen archival footage — including Super 8 reels newly digitized after 50 years in storage — animate the stories shared by dozens of activists and community leaders.
In one particularly unsettling sequence, graphic imagery of police brutality against queer protesters from two different eras are juxtaposed, one in colour, the other in black and white, underscoring the ongoing struggles through the decades.
Some events may already be familiar to some viewers. The gay liberation movement of the 1970s or the devastation of the AIDS crisis in the '80s have been widely covered in pop culture, but are often filtered through an American lens.
In Parade, Gonick shifts the focus to the uniquely Canadian experience of queer resistance and resilience.
The film is at its strongest when highlighting lesser known histories, such as that of Jeanine Maes, one of the last women institutionalized for lesbianism in 1962 or the police raids and censorship trial against The Body Politic, one of Canada's first gay publications.
Broken into thematic chapters like a docu-series, the film moves through stories told from gay, lesbian, trans, drag, Indigenous, Asian and Black communities. At times, this structure can feel a bit disjointed, but reflects a familiar challenge in queer storytelling: how to represent a community that is not singular.
Shared struggle and defiant joy are the unifying threads across these stories, though, at times, hearing similar themes from many voices makes the film feel somewhat repetitive and fewer voices might have allowed some of them more room to breathe.
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Still, in today's climate, Gonick's film feels more urgent than ever. It's a 96-minute history lesson on the hard fought rights of Canada's queer communities, from police raids to early drag shows, and community organizing to the House of Commons.
Justine Pimlott, the film's Toronto-based, Winnipeg-raised producer, hopes the documentary serves as a reminder of where the community has come from, and a call to action.
Audiences already seem to be taking inspiration from the film, which screened at the Gimli International Film Festival this past weekend and took home the awards for best Manitoba director and best Manitoba film. It also previously received the audience award for best documentary feature at the Inside Out 2SLGBTQ+ Film Festival in Toronto.
If you've ever wondered why police attendance at pride is so contentious – or why Pride itself remains a necessary act of resistance and joy — Parade offers the answers.
fparts@freepress.mb.ca
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Toronto Sun
18 hours ago
- Toronto Sun
High-profile athletes join Trump at White House for revival of U.S. Presidential Fitness Test
Published Aug 01, 2025 • 4 minute read (From left) U.S. President Donald Trump speaks, flanked by golfer Bryson DeChambeau, Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butkerand and WWE CCO Triple H, prior to signing an executive order restarting the Presidential Fitness Test. Getty Images President Donald Trump on Thursday reestablished the Presidential Fitness Test for American children, a fixture of public schools for decades that gauged young people's health and athleticism with 1-mile runs, sit-ups and stretching exercises. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account 'This is a wonderful tradition, and we're bringing it back,' Trump said of the fitness test that began in 1966 but was phased out during the Obama administration. An executive order he signed Thursday also reinvigorates a national sports council that the president stocked with former and current athletes and other figures from the sports world. Several prominent athletes joined Trump and top administration officials, including allies such as friend and pro golfer Bryson DeChambeau; and others who've attracted controversy such as former New York Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor, a registered sex offender. It's the latest athletics-related push from Trump, an avid golfer who remains enthralled with the world of sports. He played baseball in high school and plays golf almost every weekend. Much of the domestic travel he has done this year that is not related to weekend golf games at his clubs in Florida, New Jersey and Virginia was built around attending sporting events, including the Super Bowl, Daytona 500 and UFC matches. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. "Thank you so much for allowing me to be here." Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker joins other pro athletes and extends his gratitude to President Trump during a White House event for the President's Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition. — Fox News (@FoxNews) July 31, 2025 'I was always a person that loved playing sports. I was good at sports,' Trump said. 'When you are really focused on sports, you've thought about nothing else. To an extent, this is one of the reasons I like golf. You get away for a couple of hours.' The announcement also came as Trump readies the United States to host the 2025 Ryder Cup, 2026 FIFA World Cup games and the 2028 Summer Olympics. He also signed a different executive order earlier this month mandating that federal authorities clarify whether college athletes can be considered employees of the schools they play for. Trump on Thursday said the council, known formally as the President's Council on Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition, will also deal with various issues on college athletics, such as the transfer portal that has more easily allowed athletes to switch from school to school. The council, which will have up to 30 members, will also develop criteria for a Presidential Fitness Award. The fitness test will be administered by his health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. In the test, children had to run and perform situps, pullups or pushups and a sit-and-reach test, but the program changed in 2012. It evolved into the Youth Fitness Program, which the government said 'moved away from recognizing athletic performance to providing a barometer on student's health.' Then-first lady Michelle Obama also promoted her 'Let's Move' initiative focused on reducing childhood obesity through diet and exercise. The Youth Fitness Test, according to a Health and Human Services Department website last updated in 2023 but still online Thursday, 'minimizes comparisons between children and instead supports students as they pursue personal fitness goals for lifelong health.' Among those who joined Trump on Thursday, in addition to DeChambeau and Taylor, were Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker; Swedish golfer Annika Sorenstam; and WWE chief content officer Paul 'Triple H' Levesque, the son-in-law of Trump's education secretary, Linda McMahon. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Taylor, who has appeared on stage with Trump at campaign rallies, pleaded guilty in New York in 2011 to misdemeanor criminal charges of sexual misconduct. He was sentenced to six years of probation and ordered to register as a sex offender. He was arrested in 2021 in Broward County, Florida, and charged with failing to report a change of residence as a sex offender. He later pleaded no contest to an amended charge, was ordered to pay $261 in court fees, and the case was closed, court records show. 'I'm just proud to be on this team,' Taylor said as he briefly took the microphone at the signing. 'I don't know why, I don't know what we're supposed to be doing, but I'm here to serve. And I'm here to serve you.' The NFL distanced itself from comments Butker made last year during a commencement address at a Kansas college, when he said most of the women receiving degrees were probably more excited about getting married and having children than entering the workforce and that some Catholic leaders were 'pushing dangerous gender ideologies onto the youth of America.' Butker also assailed Pride Month and railed against Democratic President Joe Biden's stance on abortion. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Butker later formed a political action committee designed to encourage Christians to vote for what the PAC describes as 'traditional values.' Sorenstam faced backlash for accepting the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Trump on Jan. 7, 2021, the day after rioters spurred by Trump's false claims about his election loss to Biden stormed the Capitol in Washington. Other well-known figures in athletics are on the council but did not attend the event Thursday. They include retired golfers Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley, hockey legend Wayne Gretzky and Roger Goodell, commissioner of the National Football League. The return of the exam brought mixed reactions from some who study exercise. Trump is putting a welcome focus on physical activity, but a test alone won't make America's children healthier, said Laura Richardson, a kinesiology professor at the University of Michigan. The exam is only a starting point that should be paired with lessons to help all students improve, she said. 'It's not just, you get a score and you're doomed,' said Richardson, whose teaching focuses on obesity. 'But you get a score, and we can figure out a program that really helps the improvement.' Toronto & GTA Columnists Canada World Sunshine Girls

Montreal Gazette
a day ago
- Montreal Gazette
Montreal's diverse Ensemble Obiora is changing the faces of classical music
Music The classical music world is pretty white. But rather than simply accept the imbalance and hope things change eventually, Allison Migeon and her partner Brandyn Lewis decided to do something about it. 'It started in 2021,' Migeon said. 'Brandyn and I were asking ourselves a lot of questions, like many people, about what we wanted to do and things we wanted to change professionally. Also, with everything that happened around (the death of) George Floyd, we took time to think — how could it be that in the milieu we had evolved in for so many years, there was so little representation of people of different origins? It was always the same types of people on stage, and the same types of repertoire being played.' And so Migeon and Lewis founded Ensemble Obiora, Canada's first orchestra comprised primarily of professional musicians from culturally diverse backgrounds. Migeon, who has experience in cultural administration, is the group's director. Lewis, a double bassist who is the first Black musician to perform regularly with the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, is Ensemble Obiora's artistic director. They began reaching out to racialized musicians they knew, and as word spread, people began contacting them. 'There was a lot of interest,' Migeon said. 'It's something new that had never been done in Canada. We're used to seeing this type of orchestra in the U.S., and there's Chineke! Orchestra in London, but in Canada, there's nothing like this in classical music.' Ensemble Obiora is made up of approximately 50 musicians primarily from Quebec and Ontario, who come together in various combinations depending on the repertoire of a given concert. They are of African, South Asian, Middle Eastern and Indigenous heritage, with a few white players thrown in for good measure. 'Our goal is to reflect the society we live in,' Migeon said. 'We don't want to discriminate. It's important to have allies.' The orchestra is in its fourth year of participation in the OSM's Virée classique concert series, being held Aug. 13 to 17. As the ensemble in residence of the music department of Université du Québec à Montréal for the past three years, it engages in activities with students and performs regularly at UQAM's Salle Pierre-Mercure. This weekend, Ensemble Obiora steps outside, performing for free Saturday at 7 p.m. in N.D.G. Park and Sunday at 2 p.m. in Ahuntsic Park as part of the Campbell Concerts series. For the occasion, the group will play music by composers of African descent. The program features three works. Tzigane, for wind quintet, by Grammy-nominated American flautist and composer Valerie Coleman, 'a piece inspired by Eastern European music and the Roma,' Migeon said; Nonet In F Minor, by 19th-century British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor; and Danzas de Panama, by 20th-century American composer William Grant Still, whom Migeon describes as 'the don of African-American composers, and the first Black man to conduct an American orchestra.' Engaging with such material 'is important for us,' Migeon said. 'It creates energy between the musicians on stage.' Toronto violinist Kirit Mascarenhas was drawn to that energy. He was introduced to Ensemble Obiora by violinist and Obiora concertmaster Tanya Charles. (Obiora operates with guest conductors, with Charles generally leading rehearsals.) 'I had always looked for an opportunity to feel this sort of connection with an ensemble,' Mascarenhas said, 'a place where I feel a sense of community, a collaborative space that is inviting and where I can look out in the audience and in the orchestra and feel seen and included. 'It's an opportunity to explore new music in unique ways that really engage audiences, while still paying homage to the work we have done in our formal education in the classical scene.' Mascarenhas was born in Goa, India, and has lived in Canada since he was six. His last name is Portuguese, a legacy of colonization he says creates 'almost an identity crisis, where you're Indian but you've got this Portuguese heritage so you could apply for European citizenship; but Indian people say, 'Are you really Indian?' It's convoluted.' He was inspired by a concert Ensemble Obiora gave in March celebrating the diversity of female expression and women's impact on classical music, with guest conductor Janna Sailor. The performance included a rendition of Meri Sakhi Ki Avaaz (My Sister's Voice), a piece for chamber orchestra by Indian-American composer Reena Esmail featuring Cameroonian-Québécoise soprano Suzanne Taffot and Toronto-based Hindustani singer Anuja Panditrao. The first movement offers a modern take on 19th-century French composer Léo Delibes's famous Flower Duet from the opera Lakmé. 'The structure demonstrates how you can showcase two voices from different worlds,' Mascarenhas said. 'It was an incredible opportunity and the kind of collaboration that reveals how we can really push boundaries within the classical field.'

Montreal Gazette
a day ago
- Montreal Gazette
Celebrity gossip blogger Deuxmoi thinks Justin Trudeau and Katy Perry wanted to be seen
By Anonymous celebrity gossip insider Deuxmoi gets so many submissions daily from around the world that when the New Yorker received photos of former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and American pop star Katy Perry having dinner at swanky Montreal resto Le Violon on Monday night, she didn't think much of it. But when TMZ's report the following morning took off and created a worldwide firestorm that resulted countless memes and an Entertainment Tonight date map pinpointing every stop on their supposed non-date/date, Deuxmoi told The Gazette she may have miscalculated the significance of the soirée. 'I found out about it before TMZ broke the story, and I didn't think anyone else would have this information because it was just coming from a restaurant in Montreal,' she said via phone interview. 'I did not expect TMZ to break it, so I received a text on Monday night about the sighting and I sat on it until the next day.' Deuxmoi is one of the Internet's biggest hot spots for celebrity gossip and candid photos. The Instagram page alone has more than two million followers, and the brand has spun out into merch, an app, a podcast and a novel. But what the self-professed 'curator' didn't expect, and this is where her experience in dealing with mountains of blurry celeb rendezvous photo submissions came in handy, was that there was more than one amateur paparazzi in Danny Smiles's resto. 'Little did I know that someone else at the restaurant sent a picture to TMZ, because my source was a different source than TMZ's source,' she said. That set off alarm bells. 'There were a lot of people at this restaurant. It wasn't empty, so I think they wanted to be seen,' she said. 'If you see where they were sitting, you could see they were sitting very close to the bar, so people were seated up and down the whole bar and their table was right next to that. It looked like that to me. So it's not like they were tucked away in a corner or in a booth. They were out in the open.' Celebrities of Perry's stature are usually pretty careful about being seen. Trudeau was also front and centre at her Bell Centre show on Wednesday night, adding even more fuel to the social media fire. View this post on Instagram A post shared by curators of pop culture (@deuxmoi) The photo Deuxmoi posted on their Instagram account on Tuesday received nearly 12,000 likes. A video from the concert is at nearly 7,000 likes. That's par for the course on her account, but not as big as, say, Hollywood A-listers Tom Cruise and Ana de Armas spotted in Vermont. For Canadians, a former prime minister spending time with an American pop star is big news. For Americans like Deuxmoi, Perry is the main draw here. Earlier this July, she announced she was splitting with longtime partner, actor Orlando Bloom. They have one child together. Perry also received a lot of media attention earlier this year, much of it negative, for joining Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin suborbital space flight. Because Trudeau news rarely makes a ripple down south, Deuxmoi said it's harder to get Intel on this week's date compared to when it's two twentysomethings involved. 'She's a pop star, but she's not, you know, like a Sabrina Carpenter or Chappell Roan. She's seasoned so people aren't talking about her as much. So the information is trickling in,' she said. In general, Deuxmoi added that although she has fans around the world willing to risk getting caught snapping a celeb in public for a moment of internet infamy, she rarely gets any submissions from Montreal. 'I gotta say, not really anything. I'm not shocked.' After searching for the word Montreal in her DMs, she landed on a few names. 'Joe Jonas once. Ryan Reynolds was there in May,' she said. 'And that's it. And I get sightings seven days a week.'