George William Alphred Chapman 13 December 1850, Saint-François-de-Beauce, Canada East 23 February 1917, Ottawa, Ontario RIP |
Bonne fête!
A JOURNEY THROUGH CANADA'S FORGOTTEN, NEGLECTED AND SUPPRESSED WRITING
George William Alphred Chapman 13 December 1850, Saint-François-de-Beauce, Canada East 23 February 1917, Ottawa, Ontario RIP |
I'm not sure what's going on here, but the image does remind me of this iconic cover:
I read Bear as a twenty-year-old, and have not revisited.
Do the two novels have much in common?
Doubt it. North Overland was Franklin was first published by the Religious Tract Society. My copy features this bookplate:
I'm a bit peeved. As a boy, my father, an Anglican, was awarded many books for regularity and punctuality at the Church of St John the Baptist, Pointe Claire, Quebec. Walter Scott's The Black Arrow was one, but the novel that made he greatest impression was Number 44 by Harold M Sherman.
Not only that, my father was presented pins recognizing these accomplishment to be worn proudly on his lapel.
I too was raised an Anglican. Regularity and punctuality were not rewarded at my childhood church – St Marys, Kirkland, Quebec – though we children enjoyed juice and cookies after Sunday School.
The 2011 Canadian Census records George Bee (born 1895) as the eldest son of David and Catherine Bee. The Bee family lived at 240 Gerrard Street, now home to the Virginia Hamara Law Office.
The Calgary Herald, 29 September 1978 |
This weekend the 29th Toronto Jewish Film Festival presents Love on the Nose.
Do you know it?
I didn't before being contacted by the Toronto Jewish Film Foundation. A made-for-TV movie, Love on the Nose, aired on the CBC in September 1978... and then never again. The screenplay, credited to "John Smith" (read: Ted Allan), tells the story of David (Saul Rubinek), a young Trotskyite who, thanks to his uncle (Paul Soles), lands a job at Keller's cigar store in Depression-era Montreal. The establishment is a front for a bookie joint, which allows David a good amount of time for on-the-job studies of Karl Marx.
Love on the Nose received glowing reviews; I've yet to find a critic who said a bad word. Much of the praise landed on Saul Rubinek. He played a character a decade younger than himself, though you'd never know it. Al Waxman was singled out for playing a crime boss, a character so very different than the Larry King we'd come to love on The King of Kensington. Reading the reviews, it's clear that to that point the critics hadn't recognized the actor's range.
Months later, the Windsor Star was still going on about it.
The Windsor Star, 9 January 1979 |
I was contacted by the Festival because of my writing on Allan this blog, in Canadian Notes & Queries, and in my most recent book. It was my pleasure to provide a short video postscript to the film in which I discuss Love on the Nose, its relationship to Allan's 1949 pulp Love is a Long Shot, and the lighter 1984 version published by McClelland & Stewart.
What I didn't mention – but should've – is that Love on the Nose is the best of the three.
Tickets for Love on the Nose can be purchased through this link.
You will not be disappointed.
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