New Walk of Fame Stars Dig Their Canadian Roots
Source: |
Toronto Star |
Date: |
June 2, 2001 |
Author: |
Rob Salem |
Copyright 2001 Toronto Star Newspapers, Ltd.
homegrown talent
It's been a big week for celebrating our own - as un-Canadian a
concept as that is generally perceived. Consider the front page of
this paper over the last two days: Thursday stage and screen star
Martin Short got a doctorate from his alma mater, McMaster
University. Yesterday, sex therapist Sue Johanson, one of 53
recipients of this year's Order of Canada.
The Guess Who, too, recently received an honorary doctorate from
their hometown University of Brandon - and yesterday the veteran
Canadian rockers were among 14 new inductees to Canada's Walk Of Fame.
Also unveiling their sidewalk stars at yesterday's ceremonies:
Inuit artist Kenojuak Ashevak, hockey great Jean Beliveau, champion
figure skater Kurt Browning, baseball Hall Of Famer Ferguson Jenkins,
actor Leslie Nielsen, polka king Walter Ostanek and prima ballerina
Veronica Tennant.
Deborah Jerome Smith, daughter of world record sprinter Harry
Jerome, represented her late father.
A special star was also posthumously awarded to inventor Alexander
Graham Bell.
The four inductees not in attendance - author Margaret Atwood,
theatre and film auteur Robert Lepage, Hollywood producer/director
Ivan Reitman and opera star Teresa Stratas - are expected to
acknowledge their honours at a later date.
This year more than 30,000 submissions came in by public vote,
with the honorees selected from a short list of 30 by the Walk Of Fame
board. Reportedly, this year, Leonard Cohen, Shania Twain, Wayne
Gretzky and Dan Aykroyd did not make the cut.
Last night's honours capped a heady week for The Guess Who, a rock
'n' roll success story that started in Winnipeg back in 1957, when
founding members Randy Bachman and Gary Peterson formed their first
band.
"Last week," recalled Bachman, "at our honorary doctorate thing,
our Grade 12 high school principal came. He's about 80. . . . He was
always, you know, 'Stay in school. You're gonna be a bum.' And he came
up to us later, 'Boy, if you guys had listened to me, you wouldn't be
where you are today.' "
But then, for The Guess Who, acceptance has always been something
of a struggle.
"Even when we did our first quote-unquote reunion in 1983 or
whatever it was, all they could say was 'They're tired. They're
fat. They're bald,' " said Peterson. "But when we did the tour this
summer, I think everybody was finally ready to acknowledge that we
were a great Canadian band. . . .
"And that's what this Walk Of Fame is about. It's about honouring
all these people from every walk of life who have achieved . . . and
they are Canadians. That's great."
The new additions bring the sidewalk stars to 52 along the Walk Of
Fame: 13 designated city blocks running through the heart of the
city's theatre district.
Intermittent rain did little to dampen the enthusiasm at last
night's unveiling ceremonies, as a few hundred fans huddled damply in
bleachers set up along Simcoe St. outside Roy Thomson Hall.
A formal cocktail party and sold-out gala tribute and dinner
followed, co- hosted by celebrity interviewer Brian Linehan, improv
icon Colin Mochrie and singer/songwriter Jann Arden, with performances
by 1998 inductee Gordon Lightfoot and the Popstars pre-fab girl group,
Sugar Jones.
Earlier in the afternoon, fellow honoree Walter Ostanek was
spotted gleefully collecting autographs from every member of The Guess
Who.
Ostanek says he's now semi-retired after 44 years as the "Canadian
King of Polka," with 62 recordings to his name and 13 Grammy
nominations, three of them wins.
"I may not be a millionaire in my bank account, but I'm a
millionaire when it comes to doing what I enjoy. And it can't get any
better than today, when I get to stand next to Leslie Nielsen, who is
one of my favourites."
Nielsen stood a few feet off to the left, curiously regarding the
business card and complimentary polka CD Ostanek had just thrust into
his hands.
Nielsen has just wrapped Men With Brooms, a new Canadian curling
movie directed, co-written by and co-starring his Due South pal, Paul
Gross.
"It's going to turn out well. And it's great for me, because it's
a straight drama. Well, it's got fun in it. But it's not a wacko
comedy."
After carving out an entire career south of the border, it's only
in the last last few years that Nielsen has been able to find
consistent work at home. "I just did three pictures in a row in
Vancouver," he marvelled. "It's wonderful. "
As is the Walk Of Fame honour, he added. "The best part is, I had
nothing to do with it. I didn't have friends who came in and said
'Hey, he should be on the Walk Of Fame!' This came about because of
people across the country.
"And how Canadian is that?"
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