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King, Allan Winton

  • CA QUA01742
  • Person
  • 1930-2009

Born 6 February 1930, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Allan King is one of Canada's leading filmmakers.The son of John Owen and Kathleen Mary (Keegan) King, he graduated from the University of British Columbia, with a B.A. in Philosophy, in 1954. His career spans four decades and every genre except animation. Retrospectives of his work have been shown in Montréal 1961, London 1970 and 1984, Rome 1983, Cinematheque Ontario 1995.

As an independent filmmaker, he was responsible for the documentary SKIDROW (1956); THE YUKONERS (1956); DREAMS (1956); PEMBERTON VALLEY (1957); and RICKSHAW (1960), which won awards at both the Leipzig and Vancouver Film Festivals the following year. After forming "Allan King Associates Ltd.", he opened a studio in London, England ("Allan King Associates England Ltd.") in 1961. It pioneered the then novel techniques of cinéma vérité and "direct cinema". By the mid-sixties he moved toward a genre he describes as "actuality drama," shaping spontaneous action into dramatic form to explore personal experience. The first was WARRENDALE, a film about emotionally disturbed children. It won the Priz d'art et d'essai at Cannes in 1967. It also shared the British Academy's Best Foreign Film Award and the New York Critics' Award in 1968.

In the decade from 1974 to 1984, his credits included the television dramas A BIRD IN THE HOUSE, which won four Canadian Film Awards; BAPTISING, which won the Best Drama Award at the Yoletin Festival; RED EMMA; SIX WAR YEARS; READY FOR SLAUGHTER, which was a winner at the Banff Film Festival; and WHO'S IN CHARGE?, that was shown by invitation at the Landon Film Festival; and the dramatic feature film (his first), WHO HAS SEEN THE WIND, in 1976. It won the Grand Prix at the Paris International Film Festival and the Golden Reel Award for the highest grossing Canadian film of the year. In 1978, his ONE NIGHT STAND won four Canadian Film Awards including Best TV Drama; and SILENCE OF THE NORTH..

In 1988 King was given the Ontario Film Institute Award for Excellence in Canadian Cinema. 1998 saw Allan King awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from Hot Docs, the Canadian international documentary festival, in recognition for his long and distinguished career. In 2000 he received the Directors Guild of Canada’s Distinguished Service Award and the Arts Toronto Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2002 "Warrendale" was denoted a masterwork by the AV Preservation Trust.

Allan King was married to Patricia Watson (30 June 1970), and they have two children, a daughter, Maggie Amarita; and a son, Robert Alexnader. Allan King alos has a daughter (Anna Augosta) by a previous marriage (Phyllis April Leiterman, 10 May 1952). He passed away at age 79 , June 15, 2009.

Drummond, Ross

  • CA QUA01748
  • Person
  • 1953-

David Ross Drummond was born at Toronto in 1953. He graduated from Queen's University with a Bachelor of Arts degree (Honours) in Political Science (1976) and a Bachelor of Law degree (1978). He was called to the bar in 1981 and is a member of the Law Society of Upper Canada. He was appointed a member of the National Parole Board from 1986 to 1991 and was reappointed for a second five year term. Mr. Drummond has been active as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario and Canada, holding various positions including the Chair of the 1984 Election Company. He has been a delegate to numerous provincial and federal conventions including all of the leadership conventions between 1976 and 1991.
In 1978 Mr. Drummond married Arletta Ruth Ranson.

Macdonald (family)

  • CA QUA01749
  • Familie
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Allward, Walter Seymour

  • CA QUA01754
  • Person
  • 1875-1955

Walter Allward (1875-1955) was probably Canada's most important monumental sculptor in the first third of this century. Born in Toronto, he first worked as a draughtsman for an architectural firm and subsequently modelled terra cotta decorative panels for the Don Valley Brick Company. His first commission was for the figure of Peace for the North West Rebellion Monument at Queen's Park, Toronto in 1894. While he later received commissions for portrait monuments (the Simcoe Monument (1896?-1903), Sir Oliver Mowat (1899?-1905) and J.S. Macdonald (1907-1909), all at Queen's Park), his preference was for more allegorical interpretations as evidenced in his South African War Memorial (1904-1910) on University Avenue in Toronto and the Baldwin-Lafontaine Monument (1907-1914) on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Yet his most notable early success was the Alexander Graham Bell Monument (1908-1917) in Brantford, Ontario. In 1912 he was awarded the contract for the King Edward VII memorial in Ottawa of which only two figures, Truth and Justice, were cast in 1923 and which are now installed in front of the Supreme Court in Ottawa. The most important commission Allward received was for the monument to Canadians killed in the First World War at Vimy, France, a project which would occupy him from 1921 to its unveiling in 1936 on the eve of the Second World War.

Simpson, Charles W.

  • CA QUA01759
  • Person
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Peck, Mary Alice

  • CA QUA01760
  • Person
  • 1855-1943

No information available on this creator.

Dobbs (family)

  • CA QUA01763
  • Familie
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Lawson, Drezile

  • CA QUA01766
  • Person
  • n.d.

Tollgate keeper, Athens, Ontario.

Catherine Harriet Caroline Fox

  • CA QUA01786
  • Person
  • 1871-1953

Student - Arts '01, at Queen's University at Kingston, Ont.

Whitmarsh, George A.

  • CA QUA01787
  • Person
  • 1838-?

Medical student and professor.

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