Stage Door News
Stage Door News
Canadian icon Gordon Pinsent is the 2016 recipient of the Stratford Festival’s Legacy Award. Mr. Pinsent was a member of the company in the 1960s, early in his stage career, and returned in the mid-’70s as a leading player.
Mr. Pinsent first joined the Festival company in 1962, appearing in Macbeth, The Taming of the Shrew, The Tempest and Cyrano de Bergerac. The production of Cyrano would be filmed and broadcast by the mammoth U.S. television network NBC. Mr. Pinsent and many of the actors he worked with that season would soon form Canada’s first generation of television stars, such people as Bruno Gerussi, John Vernon, John Colicos, Peter Donat and Kate Reid.
Another actor, who was starring as Macbeth and Cyrano that season, would become a lifelong friend and colleague: Christopher Plummer. And it is Mr. Plummer who will present the Legacy Award to Mr. Pinsent on September 26 at Toronto’s Four Seasons Hotel. In 2011, the roles were reversed with Mr. Pinsent presenting Mr. Plummer with the Festival’s inaugural Legacy Award.
“Gordon Pinsent is a great example of how the Stratford Festival has been a catalyst for the development of Canada’s finest actors not only on stage but on screen as well,” says Artistic Director Antoni Cimolino. “Stratford has given generations of the most promising talents a chance to meet, grow and create new work and relationships. Gordon was inspired by those he watched and worked with at the Festival and he in turn has been an enormous inspiration to so many of us in the cultural community in Canada. It is this legacy of artists inspiring artists that we celebrate as we honour Gordon Pinsent’s remarkable career and personal leadership.”
Mr. Pinsent, born in Grand Falls, NL, worked in radio drama before being taken under the wing of John Hirsch at the Manitoba Theatre Centre and later at CBC-TV. He spent just one year in the Stratford company, and quickly afterwards amassed a number of TV roles, beginning with a lead in The Forest Rangers, the first series shot in colour in Canada. He left the series in 1965, to star in the quintessentially Canadian series Quentin Durgens, M.P., one of the earliest hour-long dramas to run on CBC. His 1972 award-winning film, The Rowdyman, which he both wrote and starred in, was hailed for its insightful depiction of life in Newfoundland.
He was one of Canada’s biggest stars by the time he returned to Stratford in 1975 to play the lead in Brecht’s Trumpets and Drums in Robin Phillips’s first season as Artistic Director. The next year, at the urging of Mr. Hirsch, he wrote and starred in the memorable CBC Christmas special A Gift to Last. The movie was spun into a TV series and soon it was adapted for stage, becoming a perennial Christmas favourite at theatres across the country.
Mr. Pinsent has almost 150 film and television credits, including such classic American shows as Hogan’s Heroes, It Takes a Thief and Marcus Welby, M.D., and such Canadian classics as The Beachcombers and Danger Bay. Children know him as the voice of King Babar on the animated series and film Babar, which he continues to make. Throughout the 1980s and ’90s he was a regular on such series as Street Legal, Wind at My Back, Power Play and The Red Green Show. In the mid ’90s he starred with Paul Gross in CTV’s Due South, the first Canadian-made TV series to win a prime slot on a major U.S. network, CBS. The show was also a hit in the U.K., one of only a few foreign series to air on BBC1.
His films include John and the Missus, which he wrote, directed and starred in, winning the Genie Award for Best Actor; The Shipping News, based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by E. Annie Proulx, in which he starred alongside Kevin Spacey, Julianne Moore, Judi Dench and Cate Blanchett; and Sarah Polley’s acclaimed film Away from Her, in which he starred opposite Julie Christie, winning the 2006 Genie and ACTRA awards for Best Actor.
His most recent work includes The Grand Seduction, for which he won a Canadian Screen Award; Republic of Doyle, in which he played Maurice Becker; the role of Dr. Keaton in Sex After Kids; the elder Stephen Leacock in Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town; and the Archbishop in The Pillars of the Earth.
Mr. Pinsent is a Companion of the Order of Canada and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. He has received the Governor General’s Performing Arts Award, the Earle Grey Award for lifetime achievement in television, and a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame. He has honorary degrees from the University of Prince Edward Island, Ryerson University, Queen’s University, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Lakehead University and the University of Windsor.
The Stratford Festival’s Legacy Gala will be hosted by Lloyd Robertson. The event is chaired by Barry Avrich, Robert Badun and Wendy Pitblado, and will be held at Toronto’s Four Seasons Hotel on Monday, September 26, at 6:30 p.m. A limited number of individual tickets, priced at $1,000, are still available by contacting Rachel Smith-Spencer at rsmithspencer@stratfordfestival.ca.
Photo: Gordon Pinsent.
2016-09-12
Stratford: Gordon Pinsent receives Stratford Festival's Legacy Award September 26