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The South Etobicoke News

Serving Humber * Mimico * Lakeshore Village * Long Branch * Alderwood

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Artist pays lovely homage to the community by creating beautiful and informative maps

April 14, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

JESSIE holding antique style, beautiful maps of Long Branch and Mimico, which are for sale. Photos by Tom Godfrey.

COMMUNITY Barber Andy Dinner (right), with coffee mug in hand, bought a map of  New Toronto from Jessie for his salon.

 

New Toronto artist Jessie Schutte is paying homage to the area by creating antique-looking historic maps that highlights different communities.

People seem to be liking the beautiful prints of New Toronto, Mimico and now she is working on a Long Branch map. They each contain local history and well-known businesses now gone.

There will only 100 copies of each print made and they look great when framed.

“So far we have sold more than 50 of the New Toronto maps,” says Schutte, a former school teacher. “People seem to like them.”

She is also a co-owner of the Big Guy’s Little Coffee Shop, at 2861 Lake Shore. Blvd. W., where the prints can be obtained.

Community barber Andy Dinner purchased one of the New Toronto pieces on the spot.

“I like it. New Toronto is where my business is,” Diner says. “I am putting this up in my store.”

Another woman was also querying about obtaining another piece of the lovely artwork.

Dinner promises to return to purchase one of Schutte’s coffee mugs. The mugs have photos of the various maps on their sides.

The Lake Shore map it turns out features a photo of a black fox, which residents swear, and have photos to prove, still roams the area.

There are also iconic images on the maps, which includes San Remo Bakery, Toronto South Detention Centre, Mimico Arena and Birds & Beans Coffee shop in Mimico.

The maps are $25 each and the mugs are two for $20. You can obtain information or place an order by emailing  jessie.schutte@me.com

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social

Hanging with the Stars back in the day at the famous Skyline Hotel

March 23, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

THE DIAMONDS at the Skyline Hotel was a fun night.

Reporter DAVE KOSONIC reflects on his days covering bands for the Toronto Star at the Skyline Hotel.

The GREAT Tanya Tucker

DAVE with the Stars at the former Skyline Hotel. That’s Rick Nelson, top, middle and Roy Orbinson at the bottom, middle.

 

When I was a teeny-bopper I loved to listen to recordings by chart toppers including Lesley Gore, Del Shannon, Ricky Nelson and other stars of the time.

I never dreamed that I would rub shoulders with them in the mid-1980s during revival concerts at the former Skyline Hotel on Dixon Rd.

Many people will remember the Skyline, which featured the Diamond Lil’ carbaret shows, with the dancing bar girls.

I did a weekly entertainment column for The Toronto Star’s Etobicoke Bureau, in which I wrote about these live shows in advance to help boost ticket sales. As part of the job, I was a guest at the VIP get-togethers with the stars.

Lesley Gore was a tiny lady and when I was introduced to her back stage she looked at me and responded “Hi Dave” like she had known me for years. She was one of three stars scheduled for the stage. Gore had requested to be last up as the concert’s high-lighter but she was escorted onstage first.

She performed four of her hits including It’s My Party and She’s A Fool quickly and then stomped off the stage. Gore died of lung cancer at age 68 in February 2015.

When I met Roy Orbison often dubbed ‘The Big O’ he had just completed his last set. He lit up a smoke and chatted with me, and my wife, Dorothy,  for several minutes. He came across as a quiet and humble man. He had a fear of flying and one of his brothers ferried Orbison and his crew to his shows in a customized bus.

Orbison had performed many of his hits including Only The Lonely, Oh Pretty Woman and Dream Baby. Some related to tragedies including the death of his wife Claudette. Orbison suffered a fatal heart attack at age 52 in 1988.

During Ricky Nelson’s Skyline show he sung many of his hits such as Hello Mary Lou, Travelin’ Man and Fools Rush In. I met him up close and he looked great almost like in his teenage days. Sadly a few months after the show Nelson , 45, and his fiancé Helen Blair,28, perished when his DC 3 airplane crashed in a Texas field on New Years Eve 1985.

Jerry Lee Lewis had the concert promoters anxious the evening of his show. The show-goers were told Lewis was to appear shortly but he wasn’t present. Promoters called his manager in The U.S. and were told that his aircraft would be departing soon to come to Toronto. The Skyline show promoters then told the audience that Lewis was running late and that the show would go on. His performance was remarkable as he aggressively pecked the keys of his piano while performing Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On and Great Balls of Fire.

The mid ‘80s Skyline retro concerts featured many other hit-makers including Wilson ‘The Wicked’ Pickett, The Diamonds, Freddie .’Boom Boom’ Cannon, Lou Christie and Brenda Lee and others of that era.

Filed Under: Business, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Music

Mystery behind the mermaid driven sea horse alive in Village of Islington

February 15, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

MAGICAL SEA HORSE ridden by a mystical mermaid in this piece of art.

ANOTHER BEAUTIFUL piece of art gracing another apartment building in the Village of Islington.

MIGHTY CEASER is keeping an eye on things. Photos by Tom Godfrey.

The Village of Islington is known for its many pieces of artwork including 28 murals and some large beautiful sculptures that grace the front of a number of the older apartments.

Aside from the beautiful murals, one piece (top photo, small and flashing photos on front page) that catches the eye stands outside a 90 Cordova Avenue apartment and looks like a huge white waterhorse, with its front legs flaring as it is being ridden by a mermaid from great depths. That is one person’s perception of the aging artwork.

The art is enjoyed by thousands of residents as they travel on some bus routes to the Islington subway station.

There is no explanation of what the artwork represents. Locals say the horse is a mighty water stallion, a nemesis of the giant clam, which lives off algae in the deep seas and opens its mouth for the food to photosynthesize.

This sculpture is a very interesting piece of art that opens many questions about its creation and what it depicts.

Nearby at another apartment is a sculpture of what looks like baby pacifiers pointed towards the heavens (middle photo).

There was no history left behind to signify what the pacifiers or galloping horse means. Residents see the art daily and walk by.

The sculptures are in the Village of Islington Better Improvement Association (BIA,) that was established in 1986 and won the 2012 Toronto Association of Business Improvement Areas (TABIS) award for outstanding murals.

They murals are excellent and many showcase an art history of the area, which features a five-block art walk.

The BIA says the area is fast becoming a celebrated treasure of Toronto’s west end as the murals attract great interest in their depiction of the life and times in the old village of the 1800s and early 1900s.

Some of the themed murals include: War of 1812, Hurricane Hazel, the Guelph Radial Line, Gordon’s Dairy, the Volunteer Fire Brigade, an old Lancaster bomber incident, and the Pub with no Beer.

The BIA offers a guided mural tours at Doors Open Toronto and throughout the year upon request.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social

Beer-drinking Octoberfest octogenarian still king of the oom-pah-pah crowd

February 12, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Party icon George Kash is known worldwide for drinking two beers while standing on his head.

MIMICO’s ‘King of Oktoberfest’ George Kash performed for 27 years at Ontario Place. George Kash photos.

Mimico’s ‘King of Oktoberfest’ George Kash is a beer-drinking party icon at age 80.

Kash is proud to represent Mimico as the ‘undisputed Mr. Oktoberfest,” whose beer-drinking antics has thrilled fans for 27 years at Ontario Place and across the world.

He became famous as leader of the oompah-pah band Oktoberfest Express and as a standing Master of Ceremony for Toronto’s Festival of Beer.

The so-called ‘King of Oktoberfest’ and his trio have entertained generations at Ontario Place with his oom-pah-pah, sing-alongs and hand-clapping, foot-stomping, beer-drinking music that visitors love.

He is world-famous for his trademark move, in which he drinks two beers while standing on his head. And the fans love it.

Kash has been performing this move since 1978, when he first did it to ‘put a few British upstarts in their place’, at the Edelweiss Beer Garden at Ontario Place. He remained there until it was closed.

For more than 27 years he’s been slugging back pints on stage and getting paid to do it.

“We are known for our infamous interactive techniques,” Kash says proudly. “I get right into the audience and bring people into the act in a way that would make any rock star envious.”

The artist loves the Lake Shore area, where he moved almost 50-years.

“I love the people here,” he says. “The area is great and I have public transit right at my door.”

He admits most of his gigs have been cancelled due to the virus, ”which turned everything upside down.”

Before the pandemic, he earned a good living as a musician, beer drinker, actor, town crier, disc jockey, auctioneer, clown and product promoter.

He misses one of his favourite gigs, playing Santa Claus, for city kids yearly.

“I’m a professional entertainer, that’s what I do,” he insists. “It’s unbelievable you can make a living this way. I’m just all about a good time.”

This so-called ‘Lord of the Lederhosen’ and Oktoberfest Express have gained acclaim performing in Australia, Fiji, Portugal, Morocco, and other hot Oktoberfest areas including Kitchener, Edmonton, Ontario Place and the Canadian National Exhibition, according to his website.

Kash is also known for his novelty acts in which he portrays Mr. Melon Head and Mr. Coffee Bean Head and Mr. Chocolate Head, which fans love.

For more information or to book gigs contact the George Kash Experience at 416-252- 1747 or send an  email to george@georgekash.com

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Social

 Rexdale’s Admiral Crumple with some fresh tracks inspired by the Las Vegas massacre

February 8, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

ADMIRAL Crumple is back with some fresh Hip Hop tunes from Vega. Courtesy photos.

 

Up-and-coming Rexdale Begamot Hip Hop artist Admiral Crumple is plugging some new tunes.

Admiral Crumple wants the community to know that he has released his first full-length film to DVD.

He is pleased with the film, Drab Vegas, which was filmed in the City that Never Sleeps five days before the shooting massacre more than three years ago.

“The film is shot in Las Vegas and has a few original Hip Hop beats playing throughout,” says Admiral Crumple. “The conversations are about the challenges, but also the hopes and dreams of modern life.”

The October 2017 massacre saw a gunman open fire on partiers on the Las Vegas Strip attending a Route 91 Harvest Festival.

Some 60 people were killed from the 1,000 shots that were fired by a gunman from the 32 floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel. Some 411 people were wounded, which rose to 867 when it was all said and done in what is called the worst mass shooting in the U.S.

The gunman later killed himself with the gun.

Admiral Crumple’s film is described as ‘dark and hardcore’ by some, while others said it is “an inspiring documentary, adding to the quality of hip hop and film culture.”

The Official Trailer for Drab Vegas can be viewed at youtube.com

The DVD can be purchased by sending $21.95 + $10 Shipping (U.S.) via Paypal to admiralcrumple@hotmail.com

Filed Under: Alternative, Business, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Hip Hop, Movies, Music, Social, Television

Activist and author June Callwood loved people and Mimico Creek

February 6, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

    A young June Callwood setting forth on her writing career. Courtesy photos.

JUNE CALLWOOD made a name for herself without leaving Etobicoke.

By DAVE KOSONIC

June Callwood lived much of her life in Etobicoke and is well-known in the community as a prominent and well-respected author, journalist and influential social activist.

Donna Cansfield, a former MPP for Etobicoke Centre, had great admiration for her friend Callwood, who passed away in 2007, due to cancer at age 82.  Callwood had bravely refused any treatment for her malignancy.

“The message she leaves behind for everyone but young women in particular is that there are lots of ways to show a passion for your cause,” Cansfield recalled. “June herself was an in-your-face activist in some ways, yet a great support behind the scenes in others.”

At the age of 16 in 1942, Callwood was hired as a young reporter at the Brantford Expositor for a humble $7.50 weekly, but in time moved up the ranks and was recruited as a reporter by The Globe and Mail.

There she met and later married well-known journalist Trent Frayne, but her maiden name always appeared on her story bylines since the newspapers at the time did not hire many married women.

For much of her life Callwood lived in the tree-lined Thorncrest Village area north of Rathburn Road and close to Mimico Creek on Hillcroft Drive.  During a 1984 interview Callwood said: “I love my street the access to the creek (Mimico Creek)…it’s a wonderful neighbourhood.”

Callwood made landmark contributions in Etobicoke and the GTA.  She was a member of the board of directors at Etobicoke General Hospital and now William Osler Health Centre.

“She was passionate about health care social justice and the community – a great supporter and a wonderful asset,” added Kytas Mickevicius then president and CEO of both hospitals.

She also was a key player in the creation of the June Callwood Centre for Women and Families and Casey House – Canada’s first HIV/AIDS hospice.  And along the way she authored 30 books and wrote for high-profile magazines, including Chatelaine.

Callwood in 1978 was appointed to the Order of Canada, the country’s second highest civilian honour. She received a Canadian Journalism Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award in 2004, was  inducted into the Etobicoke Hall of Fame and earned her private pilot’s licence at age 70, which she maintained for many years.

She also dealt with many personal challenges in her own life.  She and Trent parented two daughters and two sons.  Daughters Jesse and Jill are well-respected writers and their elder son is Brent.  Casey Frayne was the youngest son and he was killed by an impaired driver in 1982 on Highway 401 while driving home from university.

On a personal note, some of Callwood’s teenagers attended Burnhamthorpe Collegiate Institute when I was a student there back in the day.  Mom June regularly drove them back and forth to BCI, as most parents did back then.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social

Remembering popular Elwy Yost and his Saturday Night at the Movies

January 24, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Fans loved Elwy Yost (with John Candy right) and his Saturday Night at the Movies.

 

 

 

 

 

By DAVE KOSONIC

“Good evening ladies and gentlemen and welcome once again to Saturday Night at the Movies. My name is Elwy Yost.”

That is the welcoming way Canadian television personality Yost began his weekly movie program for 25 years from 1974 to 1999 just after multi-colored stars glistened on viewers TV screens.

Yost had a long connection with Etobicoke and few people knew that he was  a full-time English teacher at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate Institute.

“Well it is that time ladies and gentlemen to turn your lights down very low and put your feet up.” Yost added while introducing a show about alcoholism as presented in the cinema.

“It is harrowing but it is magnificently made and I am very proud of this film,” were words he used while reviewing the Academy Award winning movie The Lost Weekend produced by Billy Wilder and starring Ray Milland with screenplay by Charles Brack.

Yost always appeared very relaxed while he sat back in a comfy chair and turned on his retro film projector and then said with a smile: “If you are ready I am now so let’s roll our projector.”

Yost was well-known for hosting CBC television’s weekday Passport to Adventure series from 1965 to 1967, TVOntario’s weekday Magic Shadows from 1974 to the mid-1980s and Saturday Night at the Movies.

He also authored four books about movies.

The broadcaster  was born in Weston in 1925 and passed away in West Vancouver 2011 of natural causes at the age of 86.  He was married to Lila Ragnild for 60 years and has two sons, Christopher and Graham, who is a producer and screenwriter in Los Angeles. Yost was also a film maker and he produced two movies titled Ida Makes a Movie and Moulin Rouge.

Yost joined the Canadian Infantry in 1944 and was honorably discharged in 1945. Other brief employment included construction work at the CNE, working in circulation department at the Toronto Star and a job in the aircraft industry in Malton. Yost earned a degree in sociology from the University of Toronto in 1948. He worked on and off as a panelist on television shows until the late 1960s when he became the permanent host of the CBC radio show It’s Debatable and his career then blossomed.

After Yost’s death in 2011 an editorial in the Toronto Star entertainment section reflected back upon his life. ‘The bald man with the moustache, wire-rim glasses and odd name was an unlikely candidate for stardom…at the peak 250,000 viewers appreciated his appetite for gorging on movies and taking trips to Hollywood to talk with the people who made them.’

Adrian Morrow in the Globe and Mail added, “His father would give him a dime every week to see a film and then have him recount the plot.’

On a personal note I was a student at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate when Yost taught there. I was not in his classes but he always voiced a friendly hello when he passed any student in the hallways.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Movies, Music, Social, Television

Popular journalist Gordon Sinclair travelled the world but never left Etobicoke

January 20, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

SINCLAIR (right) with fellow Front Page Challenge members Betty Kennedy, Pierre Berton (left) and Fred Davis

By DAVE KOSONIC

Legendary journalist and broadcaster Gordon Sinclair loved Etobicoke and is still considered a legend by many area residents.

Sinclair, a member of the Etobicoke Hall of Fame, managed to cram an enormous number of accomplishments into his busy life before passing away at age 83 in May 1984.

Sinclair grew up in the Cabbagetown area but spent much of his life living in his family home tucked away just off Burnhamthorpe Road w., near the Islington Golf Course.

Growing up, he dropped out of high school during his first year and was terminated by his first two employers, the Bank of Nova Scotia and Eaton’s. He served part time with the 48th Highlanders of Canada

Things began happening for him in 1922 when he was hired as a cub reporter by the Toronto Star and began working his way up the newsroom ladder.

Before long, he rose to become one of the most prominent Toronto Star reporters and for a decade in the 1930s travelled around the world four times on assignment, which included interviews with Queen Elizabeth, Adolph Hitler and Teddy Roosevelt among others.

The Star wrote that Sinclair had travelled 340,000 miles in 73 countries for the newspaper. During that time he wrote eight books on his exploits.

Sinclair married co-worker Gladys Prewett in 1926 and they were parents of three sons and a daughter. His eldest, Gord (1928–2002), was also a successful and respected journalist in Montreal, as well as a majority radio station owner.

Sinclair joined Toronto radio station CFRB in 1943 and became part-owner of that station the next year. He continued with CFRB until his death.

He appeared on the popular weekly CBC’s Front Page Challenge for 27 years flanked by other television personalities including; Betty Kennedy, Pierre Berton and Fred Davis.

Sinclair was flamboyant and developed his own “distinctive” style of dress which included plaid blazers and loud bowties. He especially loved wearing a kilt to celebrate his Scottish heritage.

He gained considerable attention globally when he praised the U.S. from his Canadian perspective in 1973 and at later dates.

“This Canadian thinks it is time to stick up for the Americans…I am one Canadian sick and tired of them being kicked around,” Sinclair stated.

The  broadcaster loved cars and drove around in a Rolls Royce for many years.

He was inducted into the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame and made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1979.

Sinclair died from a heart attack and rests in Etobicoke’s Park Lawn Cemetery. His spirit lives on in the community.

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social

Violinist Raha Javanfar fronts for Toronto blues band Bad Luck Woman

January 18, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

CLASSICALLY trained violinist Raha Javanfar is the front woman for blues band Bad Luck Woman. Courtesy photo.

Classically-trained violinist Raha Javanfar like most area musicians has been hit hard by a loss of musical gigs due to a spread of COVID-19.

Javanfar, a bassist and front woman for the Maple Blues Award nominee blues band, Bad Luck Woman and Her Misfortunes, is now teaching students online how to play the violin, piano and music theory.

The busy pre-pandemic four-piece band was silenced as the virus spread across the world and public health officials ordered people to stay away from crowds.

“The pandemic so far has been a roller coaster for me. I spent the first several weeks feeling quite depressed and uninspired,” she recalls. “I felt a deep resistance to this thing which was quickly being dubbed ‘the new normal.”

She, with partner Fraser Melvin, are busy these days writing tunes and performing virtually.

The Iranian-born entertainer held virtual classes last month with students at a Lakeshore Arts event, which was a big success.

“Campers will build their own homemade percussion instrument, learn various rhythms, and experiment with different sounds to create their own grooves and melodies,” says a poster promoting the event.

Javanfar is thankful she is working in her field and attributes her career to a ‘rich fabric of numerous projects in various fields.’

She regularly plays fiddle in the Western swing band, The Double Cuts, and has performed with notable artists as Stars, Protest the Hero, Peter Katz, Tom Wilson and Daniel Romano.

The violinist is also known around town for other musical projects including; Voodoo Raha & Speedy Wax and Zuze, as well as frequent performance in the Concert Series at Soulpepper Theatre Company’s Riverboat, 27 Club, 88 Keys and Promised Land.

She is one of six co-creators of Now You See Her, a play by Quote Unquote Collective, produced by Nightwood Theatre, in which she performed the role of Daria. It was nominated for Best New Play at the 2019 Dora Mavor Moore Awards.

She has toured with Toronto Baroque orchestra, Tafelmusik, for over a decade as projections designer of concerts such as House of Dreams, Circle of Creation, and Tale of Two Cities, which has performed at Disney Hall in Los Angeles, the National Arts Centre in Ottawa and venues in Mexico, Australia, Japan and Malaysia.

She and Mellville are proud of their own brand of hot sauce, that is made to her recipe. Bottles of their home-made Bad Luck Woman sauce and her music are available for sale at www.rahajavanfar.com

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social

Police Academy actress Marion Ramsey made a number of  films in New Toronto

January 10, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Marion Ramsey who acted in all six Police Academy movies has died. She will be sadly missed.

U.S. actress Marion Ramsey spent a lot of time in New Toronto filming six highly successful “Police Academy” films.

The squeaky-voice star of the 1980 and 1990s movie franchise passed away on January 7 at her Los Angeles home after falling ill. She was 73.

Ramsey gained famed playing Officer Laverne Hooks in the memorable “Police Academy” franchise that were filmed at the former Lakeshore Psychiatric Institute, now Humber College, at Lake Shore Blvd. W., and Kipling Ave.

A number of indoor scenes were shot in a nearby studio.

The Philadelphia-born actress was well-liked had a long and memorable career.

In 1964, she appeared in “Hello, Dolly!,” and in the 1970s she established herself as a theatre, film and television talent. On stage, she acted in “Miss Moffat,” and on screen she took part in the variety show “Keep On Truckin.”

She rocketed to fame in 1984 with the first “Police Academy,” which was filmed in the South Etobicoke area. Cast members could always be seen milling around with residents.

Ramsey’s character remained popular and she acted in six installments of the movie until the last one “Police Academy 6: City Under Siege,” in 1989.

She also had an illustrious career on Broadway in productions like “Hello Dolly” and “Eubie.”

Ramsey will also be remembered for her appearances on “The Jeffersons” and was a regular on Bill Cosby’s sketch comedy series “Cos.”

In addition, she did voiceovers for “The Addams Family” cartoon series and “Robot Chicken.”

Her final role was in 2018′s “When I Sing.”

She leaves behind three brothers.

RIP Marion.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social, Television

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Digital Versions

June 2025

Thousands sign petition to keep Cineplex open. More than 12,000 people have signed a petition calling on the City to halt a plan to demolish the beloved Cineplex Cinemas Queensway to build 10 huge condo towers.

May 2025

City shelter now downsized from 80 to 50 beds. City of Toronto officials seems to be listening to pressure from an outraged community and back-peddling on some plans for a proposed Third Street homeless shelter.

April 2025

Big battle for April 28 votes in our community. It’s a battle between the Liberals and Conservatives for the federal ridings of Etobicoke Lakeshore and Etobicoke Centre on April 28.

March 2025

Mimico Creek fish life face risk due to road salt. Etobicoke Creek and the Don River are the worst in the Toronto area for being the saltiest waterways due to runoff from truckloads of road salt being used to melt our mountains of ice and snow.

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