Retro Canada

Retro Canada

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Snippets of Canada, Canadiana prior to year '99. Interesting photos & posts not necessarily seen in your history books. Find us on YouTube!

05/14/2023

At 6 p.m. on Dec. 16, 1953, Vancouver got local television.

Photo: A night shot of the neon lights along Granville Street in 1955 overlaid with CBC Vancouver's old logo.

Courtesy: https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/this-week-in-history-1953-vancouvers-first-television-station-starts-broadcasting/wcm/dd528740-ab98-4b35-9f68-850101783509/amp/

Photos from Retro Canada's post 05/11/2023

Talent Caravan (ca. 1950's-early '60's) - CBC series was like an early version of American Idol, except it had weekly winners who were decided by viewers sending in postcards.

Gordon Lightfoot also appeared on CBC's Talent Caravan with his singing partner Terry Whelan.

Excerpted from: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/q/blog/look-back-at-gordon-lightfoot-s-early-days-as-a-famous-country-dancer-1.4906786

Photos from Retro Canada's post 05/08/2023

Music Hop (1963-1967) Canadian television series hosted by Alex Trebek and Dave Mickie.

Pop and rock music was featured in this series for youth, essentially a Canadian version of American Bandstand.

A pre-famous Gordon Lightfoot performed on Music Hop in the early '60's. Canada's first teen idol Bobby Curtola also was on the show in 1963.

Excerpted from: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_Hop
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/q/blog/look-back-at-gordon-lightfoot-s-early-days-as-a-famous-country-dancer-1.4906786

Photos from Retro Canada's post 05/07/2023

Bonimart pop made in Canada. Bonimart was a discount store in Quebec. In other provinces they operated as Towers department stores. They became defunct in 1991.

Excerpted from: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Towers_Department_Stores

Photos from Retro Canada's post 05/04/2023

Wayne and Shuster, Canadian comedy duo (early 1940's-late '80's)

Formed by Johnny Wayne and Frank Shuster, the duo were active from the early 1940s until the late 1980s - first on radio and then on both Canadian and American television.

Wayne and Shuster were born in the same neighbourhood in Toronto, Ontario, and met in grade school. They both studied at the University of Toronto, where they wrote and performed as "Shuster and Wayne".

By 1954, they hosted a regular comedy show on the CBC. In 1958, they signed a one-year contract with Ed Sullivan to appear regularly on The Ed Sullivan Show for $7,500 a show.

By the mid-60's The Wayne & Shuster Hour; their very own television show was born. They also debuted Canadian musicians such as The Guess Who.

Wayne and Shuster were well known in Canada, and were Ed Sullivan's most frequently recurring guests, appearing a record 67 times on his show.

Despite repeated suggestions that they should move to the United States to further their careers, the duo chose to stay in Canada.

By the late 1970s, critics were calling their comedy irrelevant and out of date, but their Canadian TV ratings remained strong. In 1980, CBC re-packaged their material into 80 half-hour specials that were syndicated worldwide.

The pair continued to produce comedy specials until Wayne's death from cancer in 1990.

Courtesy: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne_and_Shuster
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/sunday/boaty-mcboatface-vancouver-s-china-syndrome-yes-it-s-a-thing-two-waynes-and-a-shuster-1.3555806/two-waynes-and-a-shuster-1.3555870

Photos from Retro Canada's post 04/30/2023

Ed’s Warehouse Restaurant (mid-'60's-late '90's), Toronto

Ed’s Warehouse was once located at 266 King St W (at Ed Mirvish Way on the northeast corner) in Toronto’s Entertainment District.

In the early 1960s, Ed Mirvish, the founder of Honest Ed’s, had finished his restoration of the Royal Alexandra Theatre. At the time, that stretch of King St West was lonely, so Ed purchased the neighbouring Reid Building and converted it into a restaurant to attract patrons to the theatre.

A jacket and tie were required for men, and if you came without a tie, Ed supplied it. The décor of Ed’s Warehouse was an attraction in itself. It included antiques, red brocade, massive vases, various lamps including many Tiffany ones, red tablecloths, photos of celebrities and much more.

Over the decades, Ed acquired more warehouses along the section of King Street West and opened Ed’s Seafood, Ed’s Chinese, Ed’s Italian, Old Ed’s and Ed’s Folly. Ed’s Warehouse closed in the late 1990s, while Old’s Ed’s, the last of Ed’s remaining restaurants, closed in 2000.

Excerpted from: https://www.torontojourney416.com/eds-warehouse/

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