Culture in Toronto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Toronto, Canada, is a city of many museums, theatres, events and sports. It is also one of the most ethnically diverse cities in Canada and the world. This means that there are many cultures which bring along their traditions and music. It is also home to the Canadian National Exhibition one of Canada's largest outdoor fairs.
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[edit] Exhibits
Toronto has a world-renowned museum, the Royal Ontario Museum (frequently referred to as "the ROM"), and one of North America's largest art galleries, the Art Gallery of Ontario (also known as the "AGO"). Exhibition Place is the home of the Canadian National Exhibition (the CNE or "the Ex"), an annual event that takes place in August which also hosts the Canadian International Air Show. Nearby Ontario Place is a popular amusement park on the waterfront.
It has a vibrant visual arts scene, with artist-run venues such as Mercer Union and YYZ Artists' Outlet presenting important exhibitions of contemporary art from both the local area and abroad.
[edit] Performing arts
Toronto is home to Canada's most active English language theatre scene, and is considered to be the third largest centre for English language theatre in the world, behind New York City and London. It is home to both acclaimed works by companies as the Soulpepper Theatre Company, the Canadian Stage, and Tarragon Theatre and large Broadway style musicals. Several Broadway theatrical hits originated in Toronto, such as the 1993 revival of Show Boat and Ragtime. Venues for theatre include the Canon Theatre (formerly Pantages Theatre and Pantages Cinema), the Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres, the Princess of Wales Theatre, the Royal Alexandra Theatre, the Poor Alex Theatre, and the Harbourfront Centre. It is the mandate of Theatres such as The Factory Theatre and Theatre Passe Muraille to produce distinctly Canadian Theatre and support local artists. Canadian artists that have started in these theatres include George F. Walker, Michael Healey and Ann-Marie MacDonald.
Musical venues in Toronto include Roy Thomson Hall, home to Toronto Symphony Orchestra (TSO); the Toronto Centre for the Arts in North York; the Hummingbird Centre and Massey Hall. The National Ballet of Canada and the Canadian Opera Company are based in Toronto; they both moved into the purpose-built Four Seasons Centre in 2006.
As Canada's largest city and the main centre of its recording industry, Toronto is also home to many Canadian pop, rock, and hip hop artists. This includes both musicians native to Toronto and those who have moved to Toronto from other towns and cities. The live music scene in Toronto is centred primarily in the Queen Street West area, part of what is known as the Entertainment District, although not all of Toronto's music venues are in this neighbourhood. More established acts play at venues such as Lee's Palace, The Opera House, The Horseshoe Tavern, The Mod Club, The Phoenix Concert Theatre, The Guvernment, and Kool Haus (formerly known as the Warehouse). Major concert tours by stars are usually booked into larger venues such as Air Canada Centre, Hummingbird Centre, the Rogers Centre and the Molson Amphitheatre at Ontario Place.
[edit] Literature
The Greater Toronto Area is the centre of English Canadian literature and many of Canada's best known writers, such as Margaret Atwood and Michael Ondaatje, write and set their books in Toronto. Other prominent Toronto-based writers include Rohinton Mistry, Morley Callaghan, Michael Ignatieff, George Elliott Clarke and the late George Faludy and Jane Jacobs. Canada's English language publishing industry is mostly based in Toronto. It is home to major companies, such as McClelland and Stewart and smaller firms like House of Anansi Press, Key Porter Books and Coach House Books. The Toronto Book Awards honor authors of books of literary or artistic merit that are evocative of Toronto. Pen Canada, based in Toronto, was formed in 1926 to defend freedom of expression and is one of 141 centres of International PEN. North America's largest literary festival, the annual International Festival of Authors takes place each fall in Toronto.
Both of Canada's English language national newspapers (the National Post and the Globe and Mail) are based in Toronto, as is Canada's largest-circulating daily newspaper (The Toronto Star) and many other major magazines and periodicals. The city is thus home to a large number of Canada's journalists. As a nexus of multilingual activity, Toronto has 79 ethnic periodicals.
[edit] Events
Toronto plays host to a variety of different events year-round. In September, Hollywood celebrities, actors, writers, directors, and producers from around the world descend on the city for the Toronto International Film Festival, which, according to a variety of sources, has surpassed Cannes as the number one film festival in the world. The last week of June is Pride Week, where LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered and queer) community members gather from national and international backgrounds to celebrate sexual diversity. The week is celebrated with both a Pride Parade and Dyke March along with various other pro-LGBTQ events. It is one of the largest Gay Pride celebrations in the world, together with Montreal, San Francisco, California and Parada do Orgulho GLBT de São Paulo. Gay Pride Week is organized by Pride Toronto, a non-profit volunteer organization. In July, Caribana, the largest Caribbean festival in North America, attracts more than one million celebrants for the concerts, the food, the King and Queen of the Bands competition, and the very popular Caribana parade. The Molson Indy is also held in Toronto every year in July. The Ontario civic holiday which is called Colonel By Day in Ottawa, Peter Robinson Day in Peterborough and Simcoe Day in Toronto and in most of Ontario, named after the first lieutenant governor of Upper Canada, John Graves Simcoe.
[edit] Festivals
- Toronto International Film Festival - September
- Hot Docs, North America's largest documentary film festival
- World Stage International Theatre Festival
- Sprockets Toronto International Film Festival for Children - April
- International Children's Festival of the Arts - May
- Le Salon du Livre de Toronto- French Book Fair
- Toronto Downtown Jazz Festival - June
- Beaches International Jazz Festival - July
- Celebrate Toronto Street Festival - July
- Toronto Fringe Festival - July/August
- Caribana - July/August - North America's largest street festival
- Toronto Pride - June
- International Festival of Authors - October - North America's premier literary festival
- Contact Toronto Photography Festival
- Word on the Street - Canada’s largest, annual outdoor book and magazine festival
- Fête de la Musique (World Music Day) - June 21 annually. Musicians from all over the world perform free concerts throughout the city
- Subtle Technologies Festival - May.
- Mcluhan International Festival of the Future
- Idea City
- Toronto International Dance Festival
- Canadian Music Week
- North by Northeast - June
- Luminato, Toronto's Festival of Arts and Creativity - annual festival which will premiere in June 2007
- Nuit Blanche Toronto - an all-night free celebration of contemporary art September 30 - October 1, 2006
- Canada Blooms
[edit] Tourism
Toronto has a thriving tourism industry as it has many landmarks and attractions, the most popular of which is the CN Tower. The city has largely recovered from the 2003 SARS outbreak; however, the tourism industry had to make certain cuts, with some elements not having yet returned to the status quo. The strong Canadian dollar and tighter border security have both resulted in a drop of US visitors, while tourists from overseas continue to increase.
One of Toronto's major annual attractions is the Canadian National Exhibition (CNE), attendance to which is a family tradition for some. Regular sporting events, such as home games of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Blue Jays, Toronto Raptors, Toronto Marlies, Toronto Rock, and the Argonauts, also bring many tourists to the city every year.
[edit] Music
- Toronto Goth Scene : Fans and devotees of Gothic Rock and Goth subculture.
[edit] Indie
- The legendary Horseshoe Tavern has been a live music venue for 52 years. Although its stage plays host to big name acts, the venue strives to be an artist- and industry-friendly venue, booking emerging Canadian and international artists.
- Sneaky Dee's is another staple rock venue in the city. It boasts punk karaoke and occasionally known as Sneaky Disease. The stage plays host to shows for Canadian Music Week and the Wavelength Music Series, a weekly live music series started by independent musicians to foster the indie scene. Wavelength also includes a zine and an indie rock drop-in centre.
- The Queen West Art and Design District offers the hip Gladstone Hotel with venues for a cross pollination of scenes. These stages are perfect for indie acts about to emerge from under the radar.
Source: "Indie nation," Canadian Geographic Online
[edit] Sports
- Further information: List of sports teams in Toronto
[edit] Current professional franchises
Club | League | Venue | Established | Championships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Toronto Argonauts | Canadian Football League | Rogers Centre | 1873 | 15 |
Toronto Maple Leafs | National Hockey League | Air Canada Centre | 1917 | 13 |
Toronto Blue Jays | Major League Baseball | Rogers Centre | 1977 | 2 |
Toronto Raptors | National Basketball Association | Air Canada Centre | 1995 | 0 |
Toronto Lynx | USL First Division | Centennial Park Stadium | 1997 | 0 |
Toronto Rock | National Lacrosse League | Air Canada Centre | 1999 | 5 |
Toronto Marlies | American Hockey League | Ricoh Coliseum | 2005 | 0 |
Toronto FC | Major League Soccer | National Soccer Stadium | 2006 | 0 |
[edit] Current semi-professional franchises
Club | League | 'Venue | Established | Championships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Toronto Maple Leafs (baseball) | Intercounty Baseball League | Christie Pits | 1969 | 7 |
Toronto St. Michael's Majors | Ontario Hockey League | St. Michael's College School Arena | 1996 | 4 |
Toronto Eagles | Ontario Australian Football League | Humber College Park | 1989 | 9 |
Toronto Downtown Dingos | Ontario Australian Football League | Humber College Park | 1996 | 3 |
[edit] Major sporting venues
- Air Canada Centre - home of the NHL Toronto Maple Leafs, the NBA Toronto Raptors and the NLL Toronto Rock.
- Maple Leaf Gardens - Former home to the NHL Toronto Maple Leafs.
- Allan Lamport Stadium - named after Toronto Mayor Allan Lamport, City-owned facility
- Beatrice Ice Gardens - York University
- Birchmount Stadium - City-owned facility
- Christie Pits - home to the Toronto Maple Leafs (baseball), City-owned facility
- Esther Shiner Stadium - former home to York University Yeomens Football team
- Greenwood Racetrack - demolished and replaced be Woodbine Park and housing development
- National Soccer Stadium - Construction began at Exhibition Place in June, 2006
- Rexall Centre - home to National Tennis Centre at York University
- Ricoh Coliseum - formerly home of the AHL Roadrunners and current home of the AHL Marlies. On City land.
- Rogers Centre - Owned and used by MLB Toronto Blue Jays and also home to the CFL Toronto Argonauts
- Toronto Track and Field Centre at York University
- Varsity Stadium - University of Toronto, since demolished
- Varsity Arena - University of Toronto Varsity Blues Hockey
- Woodbine Race Track - owned by the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Commission
[edit] Food
As a multicultural city, Toronto offers a variety of food options. The city celebrates this diversity via numerous food festivals:
- Winterlicious and Summerlicious - city-wide festivals celebrating the restaurants and culinary diversity of Toronto
- Taste of Danforth - Greek
- Corso Italia - Italian
- Chinatown Street Festival - Chinese
- Rib Fest - Etobicoke, Scarborough
- Taste of Lawrence - Caribbean, Lebanese
- Toronto Beer Festival
- Sante Wine Festival
See also:
[edit] Neighbourhoods
Toronto is a city of vibrant neighbourhoods. See also: List of neighbourhoods in Toronto.
[edit] Art
Toronto is home to the renowned Royal Ontario Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, Bata Shoe Museum, Harbourfront Centre, Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, the Design Exchange, Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, the University of Toronto Art Centre, the Ontario College of Art & Design, the Art Gallery of York University, and many private galleries in Yorkville, the Distillery District, Queen Street West as well as other areas in the downtown core. Nuit Blanche Toronto is an all-night free celebration of contemporary art which features public art commissions, all-night exhibitions, live performances and programs throughout the city. During Doors Open Toronto, which takes place annually in May, over 140 buildings of architectural, historic or cultural significance open their doors to the public for a city-wide celebration. The annual Toronto International Art Fair showcases modern, multi-disciplined art with a focus on the latest developments in the international art scene. The Queen West Art Crawl, produced by Artscape is an annual weekend-long festival celebrating the arts on Queen Street West.
[edit] Art in Toronto's subway system
For art in Toronto's subway system, see:
[edit] Parks and gardens
One of the greatest strengths of the city is its beautiful parks and gardens.[1]
- Edwards Gardens
- Riverdale Farm
- Guildwood Park
- High Park
- Allan Gardens
- James Gardens
- Toronto Music Garden
- Toronto Island Gardens
- Toronto Zoo
- Don Valley Brick Works - former industrial site which has been converted into a wetland area
[edit] Nightlife
The city's art community attracts and has top theatre groups, galleries, and other high culture attractions.
The bar scene is housed in many different sections of the city, each with its own flavour and type of patrons.
The city's many dance and live music venues host many international and Canadian performers.
Toronto's comedy clubs are legendary. They have served as training grounds for stars such as Jim Carrey, The Kids in the Hall and SCTV.
[edit] External links
- Imagining Toronto A catalogue of Toronto fiction, poetry, non-fiction, memoir, and critical works on Toronto literature
- Toronto, Dance! Online community for dancers in Toronto
- Unknown Toronto A journal of little known facts about Toronto, including arts and culture