Abandon Hope Mabel Dorothy Teaser Trailer 2015
Journalist Alan Humber has returned to Newfoundland, for the first time since he was adopted as a child, to investigate the death of his father on the schooner the Mabel Dorothy thirty years previous. Wayne MacPhail’s Abandon Hope Mabel Dorothy is a haunting and beautiful play, filled with loss, love, and longing, and ultimately hope and forgiveness. It is a play that will stay with you long after you’ve left the theatre.
Written by Wayne MacPhail, directed by Kevin Woolridge
(Warning: Contains some strong language)
Video Shot by Michael Rhodri Smith
Fiddle: Holly Meyer-Dymny
Words in Edgewise: People Lose Their Way--And Their Belongings
People Lose Their Way — And Their Belongings
A new work for the stage by Joan Sullivan
Starring Neil Butler, Andrew Loman, Nicole Rousseau, Joan Sullivan
Words in Edgewise favourite, playwright Joan Sullivan, returns in February with another one of her amazing verbatim dramas examining dementia through the words of Nietzsche and others in People Lose Their Way — And Their Belongings, starring Neil Butler, Andrew Loman, Nicole Rousseau, and Joan Sullivan. Joan creates these compelling short plays, or performed texts with commentary, by re-mixing existing texts, her past work in the Graduate Program in Humanities has included Science, Technology, and Pontius Pilate (Words in Edgewise, September, 2010) Roland Barthes and Jean-Paul Sartre in a heated debate and Antoinin Artaud and Marshall McLuhan talking about language and theatre.
Joan Sullivan is the editor of the Newfoundland Quarterly and a freelance journalist whose work appears in The Globe and Mail, on CBC Radio's Tapestry, and in The Telegram. She is also a playwright and director and her credits include Your Only Life, which she wrote and performed in St. John's, Halifax and Montreal; an adaptation of Wayne Johnston's The Story of Bobby O'Malley; and Cassie Brown: My Life in Non-Fiction, which premiered last summer at the Grand Bank Regional Theatre Festival and later toured provincial schools. Her theatre work in 2010 includes Rig, an adaptation of Mike Heffernan's oral history of the Ocean Ranger, staged by Rising Tide theatre, and a gig as the first visiting director with the Grand Bank Regional Theatre Festival. Joan is also studying for a Master's degree in the Graduate Program in Humanities at Memorial University. She lives in St. John's with her daughter, Marianne.
From: wordsinedgewise.ca
GBRT 2015 Season Trailer
Join us this summer as the Grand Bank Regional Theatre celebrates its 20th anniversary of love, music, and laughter. Running from July 8th - Aug 29th, 2015 in historic Grand Bank, NL. For info on our season, including our schedule and tickets, please go to grandbanktheatre.ca.
filmed by Michael Rhodri Smith
fiddle by Holly Meyer-Dymny
Old Missus and The Big Fish Teaser Trailer 2015
Henrietta Bartlett is 92 years young, but that has never slowed her down. When her granddaughter Kid comes to Grand Bank for the weekend, they catch the biggest codfish ever seen on the Burin Peninsula. Hiding the illegal catch from fisheries officers is a walk in the park for Old Missus Bartlett, but things get more complicated when an unexpected and mysterious relative arrives.
A brand new play by Artistic Director Kevin Woolridge playing all summer long at the Grand Bank Regional Theatre in beautiful Grand Bank, Newfoundland.
For ticket information visit: grandbanktheatre.ca
Sharon's Nook
A tearoom in downtown Grand Bank, Newfoundland where the food is great and there are lots of topics for conversation. Home cooked meals at affordable prices with that personal touch. The owners, Sharon and Jack Grandy, work at the store and are always up for a good chat. This is a Cash Only business. An ATM is available at the Scotiabank branch about a 100 meters away. On your way to or from the St. Pierre et Miquelon ferry (5 kilometers away), take a few minutes to enjoy a homecooked meal and Sharon's famous cheesecakes. You'll be glad you did!!
How To Make Clickable SVG Map HTML & CSS
Clickable SVG Map HTML & CSS
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Beauty Tips clip- Mental Health is a Myth
A clip from Berni Stapleton's new one-woman show, Beauty Tips for the Vain & Deluded.
Written and performed by Berni Stapletpn, Directed by Jenn Brown, Stage Manager Crystal Parsons, Light/Sound Design and operator Andrew Crawford, costumes Heather Bonnell.
A remount of the original from The Grand Bank Regional Theatre Festival.
GPRC Conservatory Choir 1993
Audio cassette recorded in 1993 and converted in 2018
Founded in 1989, the Grande Prairie Regional College Conservatory Choir has grown from eight singers to twenty-five in 1993. The Choir is comprised of the Conservatory Choir (25 voices) and the Conservatory Ensemble (15 voices).
Awards include the Knights of Columbus Trophy for best Ensemble in the Grande Prairie and District Music Festival (1989, 90, 91, 92, 93) and in 1991 were named Provincial Champions in the Best Ensemble category.
Competition at the 1992 Provincial Choral Festival resulted in an Honors with Distinction rating. In May, 1993, both the Choir and the Ensemble received a Silver rating at the National Musicfest Festival in Edmonton.
In March, 1993, in the locally sponsored CFGP Showcase of Stars, the Ensemble won $1000 for first place as the Best Vocal Group singing the medley from Les Miserables.
Founder and Conductor of the Choir is Ellyn Otterson. She received a Bachelor of Music from the University of Wisconsin, and has completed post-graduate studies at the Universities of Colorado and Calgary. In addition to teaching school music, she has conducted the 1975 Canada Winter Games Chorus, the GPRC College/Community Choir, and Lethbridge Musical Theatre's production of Oliver. Ms Otterson teaches private voice and piano in her Grande Prairie studio.
Sydney P. Larter (accompanist) received a B.A. & L.R.A.M from the Royal Academy in London, England. Mr. Larter teaches privately in his Grande Prairie studio.
SIDE A
Alleluia
Battle of Jericho
The Unknown North
Ave Maria
Beautiful Savior
While By My Sheep
Going Up A Yonder
SIDE B
Gloria
Come Let Us Start A Joyful Song
Da Pacem
How Lovely Is Thy Dwelling Place
Sing Alleluia
Simple Gifts
Les Miserable Medley
*Recorded and mixed at Livewire Audio, Grande Prairie, AB by Keith Lowe
Driving in a Halifax Blizzard, February 13, 2017
Driving around the Halifax peninsula during a blizzard on February 13, 2017.
0:00 Queen and Spring Garden; former site of the Bank of Montreal, Rogue's Roost bar, and the original Tom's Little Havana.
0:27 Spring Garden Place (left),
0:30 Park Lane (right)
0:36 Lord Nelson Hotel (right)
0:42 Victoria Park (left), Public Gardens (right)
3:46 Dalhousie University (left)
4:23 University of King's College (left)
4:53 Oxford Street
5:23 Saint Thomas Aquinas Church (right)
5:59 Shaar Shalom Synagogue (right)
6:01 Oxford Theatre
6:29 Quinpool Road
6:45 West End United Baptist Church (right)
8:21 Atlantica Hotel (right)
8:24 The Willowtree (nickname for the intersection Robie Street, Quinpool Road, Bell Road, and Cogswell Street)
9:30 Bell Road
9:41 QEII Health Sciences Centre (right)
9:47 CBC Television Halifax (right)
9:58 Citadel High School (ahead and left)
10:06 Museum of Natural History (right)
10:19 Halifax Junior Bengal Lancers (right)
10:32 Citadel High School (left), Citadel Hill (right)
12:36 Halifax Common (left)
12:56 Halifax Armoury (right)
13:10 Agricola Street
16:16 Oland Brewery (right)
17:22 Young Street
19:02 Windsor Street
19:13 Halifax Forum (left)
20:03 Faith Tabernacle Church (right)
21:44 St. Antonio's Church (right)
22:26 St. Vincent's Nursing Home (right)
22:47 Atlantica Hotel (ahead)
22:57 Quinpool Road
23:52 Vernon Street
26:16 Coburg Road
26:41 Lemarchant Street
26:41-29:00 Dalhousie University
26:56 Killam Memorial Library (right)
26:56 Marion McCain Arts and Social Sciences Building (left)
27:39 Dalhousie Student Union Building (right)
27:51 Kenneth C. Rowe Management Building (right)
27:58 Dalhousie Arts Centre Rebecca Cohn Auditorium (left)
28:11 Goldberg Computer Science Building (right)
28:11 Schulich School of Law (left)
28:22 Nova Scotia Public Archives (right)
28:35 Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Station 2 (right)
28:46 Dalhousie Faculty of Dentistry (left)
28:53 IWK Health Centre
28:58 Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation (left)
29:17 IWK Children's Hospital (right)
29:26 Nova Scotia Rehabilitation and Arthritis Centre (left)
29:45 Victoria General Hospital (right)
30:03 Victoria Park (left)
30:18 South Park Street
30:25 Holy Cross Cemetery (left)
31:43 Young Avenue
33:13 Driver stuck in the snow
33:40 Point Pleasant Park (ahead and left)
34:19 Tower Road
35:41-37:49 St. Mary's University(left)
36:20 Halifax Grammar School (right)
37:06 Inglis Street
37:37 Inglis Street Elementary (right)
37:56 Robie Street
38:27 Gorsebrook Junior High School (right)
38:59 Dalhousie Faculty of Dentristy (right)
40:27 Camp Hill Cemetery (right)
41:06 Camp Hill Veterans Memorial Hospital (left)
42:10 Wanderer Grounds (ahead)
42:38 Public Gardens (left)
43:35 Sacred Heart School (right), Spring Garden Road
44:56 Lord Nelson Hotel (left)
46:22 Halifax Public Library (right)
46:41 Dalhousie Sexton Campus (right)
46:39 Nova Scotia Provincial Court (right)
46:45 St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica (left)
46:52 The Old Burying Ground (right)
47:10 Barrington Street
48:16 St. Paul's Anglican Church (left)
48:26 Grand Parade (left)
48:36 City Hall (left)
49:05 Duke Street
49:07 Granville Square (left)
49:09 Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University (left)
49:16 Nova Scotia Court of Appeal (ahead)
49:24 Hollis Street
49:36 Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (left)
49:37 Province House, Nova Scotia Legislative Assembly (right)
51:09 Four Points Sheraton Hotel (right), Courtyard by Mariott Hotel (left)
52:33 The Westin Nova Scotian Hotel, VIA Rail station (left then on right)
52:09 Lower Water Street, Discovery Centre (right)
54:03 Alexander Keith's (left)
54:36 Maritime Museum of the Atlantic (right)
55:00 Halifax Transit Ferry Terminal (right)
55:14 Historic Properties (right)
55:22 Halifax Mariott Harbourfront Hotel (right)
55:24 Cogswell Interchange
56:07 Homewood Suites Hilton Hotel (left)
56:17 Halifax Regional Police Headquarters (left)
56:21 Centennial Pool (ahead, left)
56:30 Gottingen Street
56:50 Global Television Halifax (left)
56:56 Metropolitan Regional Housing Authority (right)
57:01 Mi'kmaw Native Friendship Centre (left)
57:13 Dalhousie Legal Aid (right)
58:23 North Memorial Public Library (right)
59:07 Canadian Forces Base Stadacona (right)
1:00:07 St. Mark's Anglican Church (left)
1:00:08 Shambhala School (right)
1:01:13 Hydrostone Market (right)
1:03:15 Getting stuck in the snow
1:06:32 Canadian Forces Base Windsor Park (right)
1:06:42 Royal Canadian Mounted Police (right)
1:07:47 Oxford Street
1:09:57 North Street Gospel Hall (right)
1:10:03 Oxford School (left)
1:11:33 Oxford Theatre (right)
1:14:58 Dalhousie University (left), University of King's College (left)
1:15:20 Beth Israel Synagogue (right)
1:15:30 Ambrae Academy (right)
1:15:41 First Baptist Church (right)
1:16:24 Wickwire Field
1:16:27 Dalplex
1:17:38 IWK Health Centre (left), Gorsebrook Junior High School (right)
1:17:56 IWK Children's Hospital (left)
1:18:43 Victoria General Hospital (left)
Renaissance Center, Detroit, MI [HD]
GM Renaissance Center
Video: June 28, 2014
Located on the Detroit International Riverfront, the Renaissance Center complex is owned by General Motors as its world headquarters. The central tower is the Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center, which is the tallest all-hotel skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere (when it first opened in March 1977 it was the tallest hotel in the world) and features the largest rooftop restaurant, Coach Insignia. It has been the tallest building in Michigan since it was erected in 1977.
The Renaissance Center totals 5,552,000 square feet making it one of the world's largest commercial complexes (24th largest in floor space - This type of complex has been termed a city within a city.
The Renaissance Center was conceived by Henry Ford II and financed primarily by the Ford Motor Company. It became the world's largest private development with an anticipated 1971 cost of $500 million, but is said to have generated $1 billion in economic growth for the downtown in its first year. General Motors later purchased the building in 1996 and made it its world headquarters.
Sample of businesses in Renaissance Center (2014):
Andiamo Detroit Riverfront
Ashley's Flowers
AT&T Kiosk
Calumet Market & Spirits
Coach Insignia
Coffee Beanery
CVS Pharmacy
Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center
Detroit Segways
Fish City
Joe Muer Seafood
Jos. A. Bank
Potbelly Sandwich Works
Pure Detroit
Ren Cen 4 Theatre
RenCen Fitness Center
Rice Bowl Fresh Asian Kitchen
Scentsations Fine Jewelry & Gift Gallery
Starbucks
U.S. Post Office
Musical credit from this video:
Title: Jazz Ballad
Author: DuckMonster
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TD Bank Olde City Grand Opening
Team Olde City Philadelphia knows how to have fun!
[4K] Busan City Seomyeon Rainy Evening Walk Part 1 부산 서면의 비오는 저녁 파트1 釜山 ASMR
#seomyeon #walkingtour #busan
안녕하세요 Seoul Walker 입니다.
오늘은 부산 젊음의 중심, 서면 거리의 비오는 저녁을 함께 걸어봅시다. 네온사인으로 가득한 서면 젊음의 거리는 오늘밤도 화려합니다.
아침 7시, 당신을 위한 새로운 영상이 공개 됩니다.
당신의 새로운 아침, 그리고 오후 저녁 저의 영상을 보며 한결 여유로운 하루의 시작과 마무리가 되었으면 하는 바램입니다. 최대한 다채롭고 흥미로운 영상을 즐기실 수 있도록 노력하겠습니다.
영상이 마음에 드셨다면 좋아요, 구독, 알림 설정 부탁드립니다.
그럼 오늘도 행복한 하루 되세요!
Hi guys, I'm Seoul Walker.
Today, let's walk along Seomyeon main streets the colorful downtown of Busan together on a rainy evening.
►Google Maps:
►Naver Maps:
[Naver Maps] is very useful in South Korea.
Seomyeon is the commercial center and transportation hub in Busanjin-gu, Busan, South Korea. Seomyeon is also the most crowded area in Busan, having a floating population of 165,300 a day.[1] Seomyeon has three underground shopping malls meeting beneath the Seomyeon road junction, a department store, many shopping stores, bars, restaurants, movie theaters, banks, bookstores, clinics, etc.
Seomyeon has notable shopping areas, such as Seomyeon 1st Street. This area is located next to the former Cheonwujang near the intersection of the former Mariposa and the LG Electronics Seomyeon Service Center. Seomyeon 1st Street begun as a hot spot for young people, brimming with restaurants, karaoke, and shopping. In 2001, the Busan government remodeled the area with new sidewalks and street lights, and by 2005, 1st Street became known as the “Street without a car”. Seomyeon 1st Street is now the home of the Seomyeon 1st Street Grand Festival, held annually and consisting of dancing, cocktails, and quiz shows.[3]
Another hallmark of Seomyeon is Seomyeon Printing Street, located south of Lotte Hotel Busan. The street is only 15 meters wide and boasts of around 330 book-making shops. The street is a popular destination for those who wish to have design work done or print their business cards, among many other things. Since 1998, Seomyeon Printing Street has been the home of the Seomyeon Printing Culture Street Union Festival, further cementing its place in the printing industry.[3]
Seomyeon’s most famous area to shop is the Lotte Department Store, which includes an underground shopping area, as well. There are 5 stories below ground and 11 stories above. Among the shops, there is also a cinema, restaurants, and the popular hotel, Lotte Hotel Busan.[3]
Like many other regions in Korea, Seomyeon has its own regional dishes it considers to be specialties. While enjoying the sights of the area in the summer, one can dine on milmyeon, or cold sour, sweet, and spicy noodles in meat broth. In the colder months, Seomyeon offers a dish called ttukbaegi (meaning earthen pot) stew, usually made with fermented soybean paste, soft tofu, or fish and hot pepper. This special pot allows the stew to remain hot long after it has finished cooking. Other noteworthy Seomyeon specialties include pork and rice soup, kalguksu (chopped noodles), and broiled sea eel.[
- from Wikipedia
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???? Downtown Los Angeles LA Realtor Driving Tour 4K
Downtown LA Realtor Driving Tour 4K
Presented by:
Anthony Chambers, Realtor
800-897-6030
BRE01896381
Get in touch:
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Video mentions:
Most Expensive Home For Sale in Downtown Los Angeles
Least Expensive Home For Sale In Downtown Los Angeles
Staples Center
Grand Central Market LA
Bradbury Building
Little Tokyo Lofts
Walt Disney Concert Hall
Ritz Carlton LA
If your home is currently listed, or if you are working with another Realtor, please do not consider this a solicitation for business.
About Downtown Los Angeles:
Downtown Los Angeles is the central business district of Los Angeles, California, as well as a diverse residential neighborhood of some 58,000 people. A 2013 study found that the district is home to over 500,000 jobs.[2]
A heritage of the city's founding in 1781, Downtown Los Angeles today is composed of different areas ranging from a fashion district to a skid row, and it is the hub of the city's Metro rapid transit system. Banks, department stores and movie palaces at one time drew residents and visitors into the area, but the district declined economically and suffered a downturn for decades until its recent renaissance starting in the early 2000s: old buildings are being modified for new uses, and skyscrapers have been built. Downtown Los Angeles is known for its government buildings, parks, theaters and other public places.
By 1920, the city's private and municipal rail lines were the most far-flung and most comprehensive in the world in mileage, even besting that of New York City. By this time, a steady influx of residents and aggressive land developers had transformed the city into a large metropolitan area, with Downtown LA at its center. Rail lines connected four counties with over 1,100 miles (1,800 km) of track.[5]
During the early part of the 20th century, banking institutions clustered around South Spring Street, forming the Spring Street Financial District. Sometimes referred to as the Wall Street of the West,[6] the district held corporate headquarters for financial institutions including Bank of America, Farmers and Merchants Bank, the Crocker National Bank, California Bank & Trust, and International Savings & Exchange Bank. The Los Angeles Stock Exchange was also located on the corridor from 1929 until 1986 before moving into a new building across the Harbor (110) Freeway.[7]
Commercial growth brought with it hotel construction—during this time period several grand hotels, the Alexandria (1906), the Rosslyn (1911), and the Biltmore (1923), were erected—and also the need for venues to entertain the growing population of Los Angeles. Broadway became the nightlife, shopping and entertainment district of the city, with over a dozen theater and movie palaces built before 1932.
Department stores also opened flagship stores downtown, including The Broadway, Hamburger & Sons, May Company, JW Robinson's, and Bullock's, serving a wealthy residential population in the Bunker Hill neighborhood. Numerous specialty stores also flourished including those in the jewelry business which gave rise to the Downtown Jewelry District. Among these early jewelers included the Laykin Diamond Company (later becoming Laykin et Cie [8]) and Harry Winston & Co. both of which found their beginnings in the Alexandria Hotel at 5th and Spring Streets.
The Los Angeles Union Passenger Terminal (Union Station) opened in May, 1939, unifying passenger service among various local, regional and long-distance passenger trains. It was built on a grand scale and would be one of the last of the Great Railway Stations built in the United States.
Abandoned 1970s 5 Level Back Split House - 3.3 million dollars
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This Abandoned house is a 5 level baclsplit built in the mid 1970s and has been sold for 3.3 million dollars to developers to make way for brand new condos
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Driving Downtown - Miami Millionaires Row 4K - USA
Driving Downtown Streets - Brickell Avenue - Miami Florida USA - Episode 54.
Starting Point: .
Brickell is an urban neighborhood of Greater Downtown Miami, Florida, United States, growing to become Miami's Millionaire's Row in the early 1900s after the construction of lavish mansions along Brickell Avenue by Mary Brickell. By the 1970s, office towers, hotels and apartments began replacing the historic mansions. Today, Brickell has grown to overtake the city's historic central business district to the north, as one of the largest financial districts in the United States. With a fast-growing residential population, Brickell is one of Miami's fastest-growing as well as its most dense neighborhood, with a 2010 population of about 31,000.
Brickell has a large concentration of wealthy Argentine, Colombian, Cuban, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan residents. Many work in the neighborhood's financial and trade sectors, or live in Brickell part-time.
Downtown Miami is an urban city center, based around the Central Business District of Miami, Florida, United States. In addition to the central business district, the area also consists of the Brickell Financial District, Historic District, Government Center, Omni and Park West.
Locally known as Downtown, the area is a cultural, financial, and commercial center of South Florida, tracing its present-day history back to the 19th century. In recent years, Downtown Miami has grown and physically expanded to become the fastest-growing area in Miami, with rapid increase in population and the greatest concentration of high-rises in the region. Greater Downtown is home to many major museums, parks, education centers, banks, company headquarters, courthouses, government offices, theaters, shops and many of the oldest buildings in the city.
Miami is a seaport city at the southeastern corner of the U.S. state of Florida. As the seat of Miami-Dade County, the municipality is the principal, central, and most populous of its metropolitan area and part of the second-most populous metropolis in the southeastern United States. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Miami's metro area is the eighth-most populous and fourth-largest urban area in the U.S., with a population of around 5.5 million.
Miami is a major center, and a leader in finance, commerce, culture, media, entertainment, the arts, and international trade. In 2012, Miami was classified as an Alpha−World City in the World Cities Study Group's inventory. In 2010, Miami ranked seventh in the United States in terms of finance, commerce, culture, entertainment, fashion, education, and other sectors. It ranked 33rd among global cities. In 2008, Forbes magazine ranked Miami America's Cleanest City, for its year-round good air quality, vast green spaces, clean drinking water, clean streets, and city-wide recycling programs. According to a 2009 UBS study of 73 world cities, Miami was ranked as the richest city in the United States, and the world's fifth-richest city in terms of purchasing power. Miami is nicknamed the Capital of Latin America and is the largest city with a Cuban-American plurality.
Downtown Miami is home to the largest concentration of international banks in the United States, and many large national and international companies. The Civic Center is a major center for hospitals, research institutes, medical centers, and biotechnology industries. For more than two decades, the Port of Miami, known as the Cruise Capital of the World, has been the number one cruise passenger port in the world. It accommodates some of the world's largest cruise ships and operations, and is the busiest port in both passenger traffic and cruise lines.
The Cineplex WorldGaming Canadian Championships
Qualify today:
100% FREE TO REGISTER, 4 WEEKS OF ONLINE QUALIFIERS, 768 REGIONAL COMPETITORS
LIVE FROM 24 CINEPLEX THEATRES, 32 FINALISTS
OVER $50,000 IN PRIZES.
Presented by PlayStation, the Cineplex and WorldGaming Canadian Championships kicks off with the latest entry in Activision's blockbuster Call of Duty franchise, Call of Duty: Black Ops 3.
We're giving players of all skill levels the chance to take part in our free online qualifiers and to earn a spot playing on the big screen at one of 24 Cineplex locations across Canada.
From there, we'll invite the top players to come to Toronto to go head-to-head for over $50,000 in total prizes.
WALTER WILLISON sings WAITIN' FOR THE ROBERT E LEE with TOMMY BANKS
Walter Willison sings Waiting For The Robert E. Lee on Tommy Banks Celebrity Revue TV show, hosted by Jimmy Dean, November 1976. Tony Award nominee and Theatre World Award winner Walter Willison has starred on Broadway in TWO BY TWO, PIPPIN, GRAND HOTEL, NORMAN, IS THAT YOU?, WILD AND WONDERFUL, A CHRISTMAS CAROL at Madison Square Garden, and Leonard Bernstein & Stephen Schwartz's MASS at The Kennedy Center in Washington, and in numerous productions Off-Broadway, regional productions around the US, and in The 1st International Tour of THE FANTASTICKS in Japan. Films include Ziegfeld: The Man and His Women and Harry and Walter Go To New York; TV includes starring in the NBC sitcom McDuff, The Talking Dog, Days of Our Lives, Theodore Dryser's An American Tragedy on PBS' The Great Novelists, and numerous others. Mr. Willison is also an active writer, director and producer on and Off-Broadway. Tommy Banks' Celebrity Revue was a TV variety series produced in Vancouver, for syndication in the 1970s. Executive Producer, Jack Rhodes, Producers, Gary Jones & Tommy Banks. Tommy Banks is a Canadian pianist, conductor, arranger, composer, television personality and former senator. He starred on Celebrity Revue, a TV variety series produced in Vancouver, for syndication in the late 1970s, and acted in dramatic roles in National Film Board and feature film productions. He presented a show on CKUA called The Solo Piano of Tommy Banks in about 1960,hosted the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) television show, The Tommy Banks Show, from 1968 until 1983, is the recipient of the Juno Award, the Gemini Award, the Grand Prix du Disques-Canada, several ARIA Awards, and is a member of the Edmonton Cultural Hall of Fame. Mr. Banks provided musical direction for the ceremonies of The XI Commonwealth Games, EXPO ’86, The World University Games, The XV Olympic Winter Games, and for countless television shows. He has produced and/or conducted command performances for Her Majesty the Queen and the Royal Family, and for President Ronald Reagan; was the founding chairman of the Alberta Foundation for the Performing Arts, a member of the Canada Council from 1989 to 1995 and a policy consultant to the Council from 1996 to 1998, chairman of the Edmonton Concert Hall Foundation from 1989 to 1991, the recipient of an honorary Doctorate of Laws from the University of Alberta, of the Sir Frederick Haultain Prize, the Alberta Order of Excellence, and is an Officer of the Order of Canada. He has conducted symphony orchestras throughout North America and in Europe, and his recordings are on Century II Records, distributed by Royalty Records. Jimmy Dean was an American country music singer, television host, actor and businessman, perhaps best known today as the creator of the Jimmy Dean sausage brand. He became a national television personality starting in 1957, rising to fame for his 1961 country crossover hit Big Bad John and his television series,The Jimmy Dean Show. His acting career included a supporting role as Willard Whyte in the 1971 James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever. Mr. Dean was nominated for The Country Music Hall of Fame in 2010, although he was formally inducted posthumously. Waiting For The Robert E. Lee was composed in 1912 by Lewis F. Muir & L. Wolfe Gilbert, introduced by Al Jolson at The Winter Garden in 1913,featured in the 1927 film The Jazz Singer, and recorded by Jolson.
Woman of Labrador
Canadian poet, singer-songwriter, sailor and islander Andy Vine ( composed this song in the late 1970s. While music-making in St. John’s, Newfoundland he discovered “Woman of Labrador”, the remarkable autobiography of Elizabeth Goudie. Of Inuit, Indian, French and English roots, Goudie (née Blake) was born in 1902 in Mud Lake, Labrador. At 18 she’d wed a trapper, raising their eight+ children in the brush – her memoirs recounting life and travails and dwellings from a trapper’s “tilt”, and log cabins to a Summer lake-shore fishing house and beyond – all that comes with and from such a pioneering existence in territory that encompassed family homes in Mud Lake, North West River and Happy Valley-Goose Bay
Inspired by Goudie’s story, Vine distilled things into music – and a song popularized by legendary NL folk-rock group Figgy Duff (Pamela Morgan singing this tune with that band of pioneers in their own field).
The image accompanying the music in this video, of “The Labrador ‘liveyere’ ”, is found in “The Story of Grenfell of the Labrador”, a biography of medical missionary Wilfred T. Grenfell (1865 – 1940) – first published in 1922, and, then, digitally, in 2005 as an ebook by Project Gutenberg’s Jeannie Howse and team.
Sir Grenfell’s biographer explains that liveyeres are those hardy souls who permanently reside in the region (as distinct from folks who come for Summer-fishing or other activities, and don’t stay in Wintertime). As well, for his international audience, the author Dillon Wallace notes: “It will be interesting to turn to a map and see for ourselves the country to which Doctor Grenfell was going. We will find Labrador in the northeastern corner of the North American continent, just as Alaska is in the northwestern corner.”
And so lives and events mingle and tales are passed on – through oral and written histories. Through song.
Of musician Allison Crowe, veteran Canadian playwright, and Artistic Director of Theatre Newfoundland and Labrador, Jeff Pitcher ( says: No matter where she is in this world, that voice, that conviction, it crosses all borders. She's one of those rare artists that fits into any culture, any community because she is who she is - an incredible talent.
“Woman of Labrador” finds home again on “Newfoundland Vinyl II”, Crowe’s just-released album:
As the album title suggests, it's a song collection inspired by, and arising from, Allison Crowe's involvement with the hit stage show, Newfoundland Vinyl - presented at Canada's Gros Morne Theatre Festival, and produced by TNL.
The album celebrates this creative bond between Crowe, an internationally-loved touring and recording artist, and Theatre Newfoundland and Labrador, a professional theatre company founded on Newfoundland's west coast in 1979.
For these past three Summers TNL's engaged Crowe as Musical Director of Newfoundland Vinyl - a perennial favourite at the annual GMTF.
TNL AD Jeff Pitcher's conception of a revival of vinyl era, and more, songs of Newfoundland and Labrador put wind in the sails of Allison Crowe's curatorial mission.
It's here! says pioneering music blog Muruch, Allison Crowe just released Newfoundland Vinyl II and it's the perfect follow-up to her traditional folk masterpiece, Newfoundland Vinyl.
Of her immersions as Musical Director with TNL, and the melodic bounty that's landed, Allison Crowe notes: There is so much wonderful music - you could piece together multiple anthologies and still only scratch the surface of such an extensive and rich collection. Each of these songs is its own story, of land and sea, of people, and each story in-and-of-itself could be an entire show. I'm truly grateful that you are here to hear the story these songs have to offer. She gives special thanks to the incredibly talented and versatile casts and crews of TNL's productions for their inspiration.
$1,000,000 Will Get You A House Like This Around The World
This video is sponsored by Vincero Watches. Go to and get 15% off your entire order PLUS free worldwide shipping when you use the promo code INFOGRAPHICS
So you've finally done it and hit the magic number in your bank account, $1 Million dollars, and you are ready to buy your dream house. Not so fast, because $1 Million bucks may not be worth as much as you think. Tune in on today's video and see what kind of house you would be able to afford, and where on Earth you have to live to afford it.
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CornerBrooker.com - Corner Brook Sings The 12 Days of Christmas
cornerbrooker.com
Filmed in Corner Brook, NL, Canada in December 2012 by Tom Cochrane with Candice Pike and Terry Randell.
Featuring:
Day 1
Gerri Lynn Mackey
Day 2
Jim Parsons
Olivia Ball
Day 3
Nick Hamlyn at Gary Bennett Music
Cst. Robert Edwards and Cst. Keith Bursey
Jacqueline Carey and Oliver
Day 4
Acabella
YMCA Pancake Team
Lindsi George
Aubrey, Kate, and Luke Sanders and Jill Brown
Day 5
Harold Moore
Kevin Buckle at the Whitehorse
Ryan David Butt
Marliee Pittman
Mark Bradbury
Day 6
Rachael Joffred
Daniel Payne
Brandon Hillier
Greg Pike and Colin Murray at McHugh's Bar
Kyle Curlew at Brewed Awakening
Tara Manuel
Day 7
David Peddle at Grenfell Campus
Ivan Emke
Terry Randell
Peter Ollerhead at Cycle Solutions
Kate Lafferty
Gary Graham
Louis McDonald
Day 8
Allison Crowe
Kevin Vincent at Newfound Sushi
Lily Smallwood
Diederik van Dijk
Gina, Colin, Sam and Jack
Robert Leamon
Christian Wright and Natasha Dalla-Guistina
Corner Brook City Council
Day 9
Kelsey Hogan at Corner Brook Regional High
Rosie Meyers at Brewed on Bernard
Lori Lee Hollett
Chris Banks
David Smallwood at the Rotary Arts Centre
Mark, Erin, Lily, and Nate Smallwood
Jeremy Eaton, Gary Moore, and Cherie Wheeler at CBC
Sean Ezekiel at The Lair
Jerry Etienne
Day 10
The Back Harbour Boys
Sarah Willett
Kendra Wheeler, Brady Reid, Melissa O'Brien,
and Julia Quinton of TNL Youth Theatre
Adam Brake
Corner Brook Women's Centre
Wendy Woodland
Lukas Wall
City of Corner Brook Staff
Brian McHugh and Bernice Hillier at CBC
Bay of Islands Musical Arts Choir
Day 11
Phil Churchill
Peter Antle at the Greenwood Inn and Suites
Sandy Wiseman
Katie Temple
Diane Crocker, Gary Kean,
and Geraldine Brophy at The Western Star
Greg Gale
The Chorale
Sheldon Peddle
Corner Brook Reflections Synchronized Swimming Club
Corner Brook Public Library Staff
Colemans at the Gardens Staff
Day 12
Jordan Stringer, Stephen Perchard,
and Mike Payne of Stage West Theatre Festival
Tom Cochrane
David Maggs
Humber Valley Derby Dolls
College of the North Atlantic - Corner Brook
Leif the Lucky
June Alteen, Rod Lyver,
and Brian McHugh of the CBC Turkey Drive
Sherman Downey and the Silver Lining
Gerald Mouland at Harbour Grounds
Jamie-Lee Cormier at JL Gallery
Meghan Greeley
Students of Corner Brook Regional High