WHAT’S NEW

The Canadian Walk of Fame

November 2017

Originally from: Journal Pioneer

P.E.I.’s Stompin’ Tom Connors inducted into Canada’s Walk of Fame

The Canadian Press
Published: Nov 16, 2017

A man hailed as Canada’s unofficial poet laureate has been inducted into this country’s Walk of Fame.

Stompin’ Tom Connors, who called Prince Edward Island home, was one of six people inducted into Canada’s Walk of Fame in a ceremony in Toronto on Wednesday evening.

The honour was also given to sprinter Donovan Bailey, actress Anna Paquin and environmental activist David Suzuki, as well as posthumously granted to civil rights leader Viola Desmond, businessman Ted Rogers, as well as Connors.

Suzuki said he has Canadian supporters to thank for his continued success. “I’m very pleased that there seems to be a sense that I deserve this recognition,” he said. “This funny-looking science geek, that I could become a person they would trust and watch – that says something about Canada.”

Suzuki “created environmental activism in this country,” said Jim Cuddy of Blue Rodeo, his longtime friend, who was chosen to inducted him into the Walk of Fame.

“I think we’re the better for it,” said Cuddy, adding other countries continue to grapple with environmental issues.

But Suzuki said he doesn’t necessarily think his recognition signals Canada’s unwavering dedication to environmental causes. “The environment as a really major issue? I’m still waiting to see,” he said.

Paquin, who at 11 became the second-youngest Oscar winner ever for her role in “The Piano,” said she was “flattered and honoured” by her inclusion in this year’s Walk of Fame, but that she was also “quite nervous for tonight.”

Paquin, who was born in Winnipeg and raised largely in New Zealand, said she’s proud of her recent work on Canadian productions. She appeared in Sarah Polley’s TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s novel “Alias Grace” and stars in the CBC crime drama “Bellevue.”

“I’ve worked in Canada an awful lot, because so much shoots here, but it was amazing to get to be part of two completely Canadian productions,” she said. “It was for Canadians, by Canadians, about Canadians.”

“To get to experience firsthand the enormous amount of talent and creative power that Canada has to offer … it’s some of the work that I’m most proud of.”

Sprinter Donovan Bailey said he knows that his induction into Canada’s Walk of Fame will affect the way he’s seen by future generations.

“This is definitely a huge legacy piece for me,” Bailey said from the red carpet alongside his 11-year-old son, Mateus, who presented his award.

“This is the gathering of the embodiment of success in Canada … I’m quite humbled.”

Walk of Fame CEO Jeffrey Latimer said he wanted to include posthumous inductees in order to focus the event on people from Canada’s past, and on people who have made social contributions that deserve more attention.

“I think that we’ve done a great job of celebrating stars,” he says. But now, “we have to empower our young people to find roads to achievement, and find out … how (an inductee) became a star, more than just what their fame was.”

One of the first people who came to mind was Viola Desmond, the Nova Scotia woman who became a civil rights pioneer after challenging racial segregation at a movie theatre in 1946. Latimer admits he hadn’t previously known very much about Desmond, who will appear on the new $10 bill in 2018.

“I learned a lot in the last few months,” he said.

Desmond was inducted into the Walk of Fame by a group including her niece Dawn Millington, nephew Sydney Parris, Canadian actor Lyriq Bent, and Martin Luther King III, who travelled to Toronto from his home in Atlanta for the ceremony.

Desmond’s story should be known because “every nation needs to understand its history,” King said. “It’s phenomenal that this woman is going to be on a $10 bill. Because she will be in the monetary system, young people will be asking: tell me more about what she represents, what she did.”

When asked about Desmond’s legacy, Bent, who starred in “The Book of Negroes,” simply said, “We’re living it.”

“Whatever it is that you enjoy about your life, that is the legacy.”

The gala will be broadcast next year, although a date has not yet been set. Global will air a one-hour retrospective special Dec. 3, hosted by “Will & Grace” star Eric McCormack.

Last year’s inductees included actor Jason Priestley, director Deepa Mehta and hockey player Darryl Sittler.

Legends Inductee

Stompin’ Tom Connors, hailed as the unofficial Canadian poet laureate, is credited with writing more than 300 songs with total sales in excess of four million copies. With his homespun and fiercely patriotic brand of music, Connors rich musical legacy includes Canadian country chart topping hits “Bud the Spud”, “Luke’s Guitar”, “The Bridge Came Tumbling Down”, “Sudbury Saturday Night”, “Big Joe Mufferaw”, “Ketchup Song” and Canadian anthem “The Hockey Song”.

Connor’s accolades include JUNO Awards for Best Male Country Singer (1971-75) and Country Album of the Year (1978). In 1978, however, he returned the awards in protest of JUNOs given to expatriate Canadians. Connor’s other accolades include the East Coast Music Awards Lifetime Achievement Award, SOCAN National Achievement Award (1999), SOCAN Lifetime Achievement Award (2009), the Governor General’s Performing Arts Award (2000), Toronto Musicians’ Union Lifetime Achievement Award (2011), and was the subject of a postage stamp issued in Canada Post’s recording artist series.

The Connors Family

PHOTOS FROM THE EVENT

Share This