Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Celebrating Canadian Talent: GGPAA Winners 2017

Darpan News Desk, 10 Mar, 2017 01:49 PM
    The Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards Foundation announced their 25th-anniversary recipients of Canada’s most prestigious performing arts awards. The laureates of the 2017 Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards (GGPAA) for Lifetime Artistic Achievement are:
     
    Jean Beaudin – Film and television director and screenwriter.
    Hailed as a consummate director of Quebec literature, Jean Beaudin has delighted film and television audiences throughout his career as a director and screenwriter. From his early days at the National Film Board to his monumentally successful historical film dramas and TV series, his work stands out for its authenticity, simplicity and visual beauty, and has been instrumental in transmitting our cultural heritage and shaping a distinctive voice in Quebec and Canadian cinema. 
     
    Michael J. Fox, O.C. – Actor, writer, producer and humanitarian
    Michael J. Fox is a respected and accomplished screen actor, best known for his award-winning work in the television series Family Ties and Spin City and the Back to the Future film trilogy. Diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1991, he founded the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research in 2000. He has received numerous humanitarian awards and has become an outspoken and inspiring advocate for people living with Parkinson’s.
     
    Brigitte Haentjens – Theatre director and artistic director
    Passionate about language and literature, keenly interested in issues of identity, sexuality and power, Brigitte Haentjens is known for her dazzlingly original, avant-garde productions and her thoughtful and poetic approach to contemporary theatre practice. In a career spanning nearly 40 years, she has directed some 60 productions and garnered a host of awards and honours. Her remarkable achievements as a stage director stand alongside her outstanding work as a leader of major arts institutions. 
     
     
     
    Martin Short, C.M. – Actor, writer and producer
    Acclaimed stage and screen actor Martin Short is known for his wacky comedic characters and dead-on impressions, notably on Second City Television (SCTV) and Saturday Night Live. In a career spanning over 40 years, he has delighted audiences across North America and beyond, and made laughter an important Canadian export.
     
    Yves Sioui Durand – Writer, theatre and film director, actor and producer
    Writer, director, filmmaker and actor Yves Sioui Durand is a pioneering figure in contemporary Indigenous theatre and the founder of Ondinnok, Quebec’s first French-language Aboriginal theatre company. In a career spanning over 32 years, he has become known for his transcultural exploration of the contemporary Aboriginal experience through richly allegorical mythology. His artistic creativity updates an age-old cultural legacy for a contemporary audience while respecting ancestral codes, and as an artist, he believes passionately in the reconstruction of Aboriginal cultures through art.
     
    The Ramon John Hnatyshyn Award for Voluntarism in the Performing Arts
     
    William H. Loewen, C.M.
     
    Entrepreneur and philanthropist William H. (Bill) Loewen has provided leadership, direction and financial support to the performing arts for over three decades. A passionate music lover, he has a close association with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, to which he and his wife Shirley have donated over a million dollars through the W.H. & S.E. Loewen Foundation. Other organizations he has supported include the Manitoba Opera, the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, the Manitoba Choral Association, the Winnipeg Chamber Music Association, and the St. Norbert Arts Centre. 
     
    Photos: Benoît Aquin, Michele Bouvier, Mark Seliger, Sam Jones, Denis McCready, Mathieu Rivard

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Scotiabank CEO Concerned About Housing Market Corrections In Toronto, Vancouver

    Scotiabank CEO Concerned About Housing Market Corrections In Toronto, Vancouver
     The CEO of Scotiabank (TSX:BNS) says he's concerned about the possibility of a housing market correction in Toronto and Vancouver.

    Scotiabank CEO Concerned About Housing Market Corrections In Toronto, Vancouver

    RCMP Ordered To Pay Egregiously Harassed Force Member $141K

    RCMP Ordered To Pay Egregiously Harassed Force Member $141K
    Senior RCMP officers harassed a sergeant mercilessly and damaged his career after deciding he had lied to them about his unsuccessful bid to run for the federal Conservatives in 2005, an Ontario judge has ruled.

    RCMP Ordered To Pay Egregiously Harassed Force Member $141K

    B.C. Company Awarded $230-Million Shipbuilding Contract

    B.C. Company Awarded $230-Million Shipbuilding Contract
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area shipyard has been handed a $230-million contract to help create the latest vessel in the federal government's national shipbuilding plan.

    B.C. Company Awarded $230-Million Shipbuilding Contract

    Edmonton Man Appealing Sentence For Crash That Killed Toddler Granted Bail

    Edmonton Man Appealing Sentence For Crash That Killed Toddler Granted Bail
    Richard Suter, 62, was initially sentenced to four months in jail along with a 30-month driving suspension after he pleaded guilty to failing to provide a breath sample in a death.

    Edmonton Man Appealing Sentence For Crash That Killed Toddler Granted Bail

    Two-Vehicle Collision On Highway In East-Central Alberta Leaves Five Dead

    Two-Vehicle Collision On Highway In East-Central Alberta Leaves Five Dead
    RCMP say the crash near Amisk occurred Monday night when the driver and only occupant of a sport-utility vehicle crossed the centre line and hit a car with a family of four inside.

    Two-Vehicle Collision On Highway In East-Central Alberta Leaves Five Dead

    New Brunswick Officially Renames Five Locations With 'Negro' In Their Names

    New Brunswick Officially Renames Five Locations With 'Negro' In Their Names
    The province announced that Negro Lake in Grand Bay-Westfield will be called Corankapone Lake in honour of Richard Wheeler, whose African name was Corankapone.

    New Brunswick Officially Renames Five Locations With 'Negro' In Their Names