Sunday, January 11, 2009





















Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Our first Quebecois recipient is Mathieu Chantelois born in 1975 in Montreal. Mathieu is a graduate of Carleton University (journalism) in Ottawa. He first became famous as one of the houseboys on the Canadian reality television show, "The Lofters". He was the first gay resident of the show. He later went on to host the popular gay television show, "So Gay TV" on PrideVision. He went on to host two other television shows, "Read Out" and "CoverGuy". Mathieu is also editor of the Quebec movie magazine, "Famous Quebec". Mathieu has always supported the GLBT community both in Toronto and Montreal and was named chair of the board at the 519 Church Street Community Centre in 2006. Merci Mathieu!

Friday, January 9, 2009




Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)




Rex Harrington born in Peterborough, Ontario is considered one of the most outstanding dancers of his generation. He has been dancing for the past 20 syears for the National Ballet of Canada. He joined the National Ballet School in 1981 and following that joined the Ballet of Canada in 1983. Due to his enormous connection with the audience he became their principal dancer in 1988. A prince of princes so to speak. He was appointed as an officer in the Order of Canada in 2001 one of Canada's most prestigious awards. He was recently inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame. In 2006, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by York University, Toronto and was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Recently he was a guest judge on So You Think You Can Dance Canada during week four of the competition, which aired on October 29, 2008, and week five which aired November 5, 2008 on CTV. Harrington is openly gay.



Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Brian Orser OC was born in Belleville, Ontario on December 18, 1961 and is a gay retired professional figure skater. He is one of the most accomplished figure skaters in Canada's history with 8 national titles, 2 Olympic medals, and a world title. In 1985 he was made a Member of the Order of Canada (OC) and was promoted to Officer in 1988.

Orser toured for many years with Stars on Ice. He skated his last with the show in 2007. He won an Emmy for his performance in Carmen on Ice. He was elected to the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame in 1989 and to the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame in 1995. He now coaches with Tracy Wilson at the Toronto Cricket Skating and Curling Club in Toronto.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009






Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Scott Thompson is a gay Canadian television comedian born June 12, 1959 in North Bay and best known for his time as a member of the comedy troupe Kids in the Hall. Thompson grew up in Brampton, Ontario. He is the oldest of the five troupe members. He attended Brampton Centennial Secondary School and was a student there at the time of the 1975 shooting massacre. He enrolled in York University but in his third year was asked to leave for being 'disruptive'. He joined the comedy troupe The Love Cats and while performing with them met Mark McKinney. In 1984 he became a member of The Kids in the Hall troupe. That troupe's series aired starting 1989 on the CBC in Canada and on HBO in the US, but moved to CBS for the fourth and fifth seasons.

Openly gay, he became best-known on the show for his monologues as the effeminate Buddy Cole as well as his appearances as Queen Elizabeth II. He also appeared on the following shows: The Larry Sanders Show, Politically Incorrect, The Late Show, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, Train 48 and My Fabulous Gay Wedding.

Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Schuyler Lee (Sky) Gilbert, Jr. (born December 20, 1952) is a gay Canadian writer, actor, and academic. Born in Norwich, Connecticut he studied theatre in Toronto, Ontario at York University and the University of Toronto, before becoming co-founder and artistic director of Buddies in Bad Times, a Toronto theatre company dedicated to GLBT drama. Gilbert's has also been know to perform in drag and his aka drag name is Jane.
Although primarily a playwright Gilbert has also published novels, poetry and an autobiography. He has also been a regular columnist for Toronto's Eye weekly. Many of Gilbert's works are produced at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre.
Gilbert holds the University Chair in Creative Writing and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph. He received his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto. The Hammertheatre Company, founded in January 2007, is a company devoted to theatre research in Hamilton, Ontario and also devoted to the plays of artistic director Sky Gilbert whose plays will deal with issues of gender and sexuality. The theatre is at the old Ancient Order of Foresters building in the James Street North neighbourhood where Hamilton's Art scene continues to blossom and where Sky has been living since 2004. His works both in print and on the stage have helped advance GLBT issues.

Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Maggie Casella who calls Toronto home describes herself as an Italian-lawyer-dyke comic, and who are we to argue with genius. Maggie credits Lea DeLaria, another brilliant American lesbian comic, as her mentor. Cassella is in a league of her own. She has always been a supporter of GLBT causes. She was host of her own talk show on CityTV Toronto, "Because I Said So". She is often on tour and is a regular in Provincetown, Mass during Lesbian Week Festivities.



Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

K.D. Lang was born on November 2, 1961, Edmonton, Alberta to Audrey and Fred Lang. The family moved to Consort, Alberta when she was nine months old, and there she grew up with her two sisters and one brother on the Canadian prairies.

When she attended Red Deer College, Lang became drawn to country music. Soon, she became fascinated with the life and music of Patsy Cline and ultimately determined to pursue a career as a professional singer. Lang formed a Patsy Cline tribute band called the Reclines in 1983, and they recorded a debut album, Friday Dance Promenade. Also in 1983, she presented a performance art piece, a seven-hour re-enactment of the transplantation of an artificial heart for Barney Clark, a retired American dentist. A Truly Western Experience was released in 1984 and received strong reviews and led to national attention in Canada.
Singing at country and western venues in Canada, Lang made several recordings that received good reviews and earned a 1985 Juno for Most Promising Female Vocalist. She accepted the award wearing a wedding dress and made numerous tongue-in-cheek promises about what she would and would not do in the future, thus fulfilling the title of "Most Promising." She has since won eight Juno Awards.
In 1986, she signed a contract with an American record producer in Nashville, Tennessee and received critical acclaim for her 1987 album, Angel with a Lariat, which was produced by Dave Edmunds.

Lang, who came out as a lesbian in a 1992 article of the LGBT magazine The Advocate, has actively championed GLBT causes. She sometimes utilizes an androgynous physical appearance. She has performed and supported many causes over the years, supporting HIV / AIDS care and research. Her animal rights veggetarian stance, including a "Meat Stinks" campaign, created much controversy, particularly at her hometown in the middle of Alberta's cattle ranching industry.

Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Glen Murray was the first openly gay mayor of a major metropolitian city in North America. He served as mayor of Winnipeg, Manitoba from 1998 to 2004. Murray was born in Montreal, PQ October 26, 1957 and attended John Abbott College and Concordia University. In 1999 Winnipeg hosted the Pan American Games and Murray became known across the country. Murray ran for a federal seat but was defeated. Murray was appointed by PM Paul Martin as chair of a National Round Table on the Environment and Economy in March 2005, despite opposition from other political parties and a non-binding vote against his appointment in the House of Commons. In 2006, the Round Table releashed a report stating that Canada could reduce greenhouse gas emissions using existing technology. He now lives in Toronto, where he is president and CEO of the Canadian Urban Institute. He also lectures at the University of Toronto and Massey College.

Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)
The Rev. Brent Hawkes, CM, D.Min born in Bath, New Brunswick is a gay Canadian clergyman. Since 1977, he has served as senior pastor of the Metropolitian Community Church of Canada for LGBT parishoners, and is one of Canada's leading gay activists. On June 29, 2007, Governor General Michaelle Jean appointed Brent Hawkes as a member of the Order of Canada. Hawkes has a BSc (1972) and BEd (1973) degrees from Mount Allison University (Sackville, New Brunswick) and a Master of Divinity (1986) and Doctor or Ministry (2001) degrees from Trinity College, University of Toronto. Each Christmas Eve his church holds a Christmas Eve service at Roy Thompson Hall in Toronto with over 5000 in attendance making it one of the largest Christmas services in the country.

January 14, 2001, Hawkes gained national attention by performing a wedding ceremony for two same-sex couples. Although Toronto city clerks would not issue marriage licenses Hawkes employed the alternative provided in Ontario law for regular church attendees to publish official banns for three consecutive weeks, and thereby conducted a legal marriage without requiring prior government permission. In the spirit of the banns as a public opportunity for interested parties to raise legal objections, the church also issued a press release in late 2000 announcing its intentions. The government of Jean Chretien did not endorse the marriages, although Governor General Adrienne Clarkson sent a personal letter of support. The city clerk refused to register the record of marriage, leading to a court battle. On July 12, 2002 the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled that the marriages performed by Hawkes in January 2001 were legal, but stayed its decision pending a possible appeal, and on June 10, 2003, the Court Appeal for Ontario affirmed this, and striking down all barriers against same-sex marriage in the province of Ontario, with immediate effect.


Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)


Professor Mark Lipton, University of Guelph has never had any interest in setting foot on routes that have already been laid out for people to follow. Since his teen years, he has created his own path based on his passions and what he believes is important.
As a gay teenager in Toronto, Lipton attended two high schools before finding an alternative school that suited his needs. Because media studies didn't exist when he was beginning his undergraduate studies in the mid-1980s, he picked and chose courses and universities — including the Ontario College of Art and Design, York University, the University of Toronto and Concordia University — that would give him the scope of media education he sought.
Reading Neil Postman's Teaching as a Subversive Activity inspired Lipton to pursue his master's and PhD degrees in media ecology at New York University under Postman.
“I was interested in studying the ecology of media — how media change affects media environments, looking at the relationship between media and culture.”
Because Lipton wasn't afraid to take risks and create his own research questions, Postman took him under his wing.
By the time he was 22, Lipton had completed his master's degree and began teaching a full course load while working on his PhD. Within a few years, he was appointed director of the master's program in media ecology.
“I believe good research comes from the personal, and because I was teaching so much, I decided to let my research grow out of my experiences in the classroom,” he says. “When I showed my students media like print advertisements, I was constantly struck by their unsophisticated readings, so I wanted to study their strategies of meaning making.”
By studying the way 175 first-year students analyzed visual media, he was able to learn how young people were making use of media and constructing meaning. This allowed him to adapt his curriculum and pedagogy accordingly.
While teaching at NYU, Lipton also began teaching English and media arts at the Harvey Milk High School for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, intersexed and questioning youth in New York City. Even though it meant an even heavier workload, teaching at Harvey Milk was important to him because he didn't have that kind of support system when he was a teenager, he says.
“I think it's important that young people have a safe space. I was also interested in studying the problematics of a gay and lesbian high school.”
Lipton created a 12-minute multimedia piece called Listening to the Voices of Students at Harvey Milk, documenting his perceptions and experiences of his two years with the school.
After teaching 15 different courses over 10 years at NYU, Lipton received a Mellon Foundation Fellowship to teach at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. He was hired specifically to help set up Vassar's new media studies program. Soon after his arrival, he met a woman in the process of starting the Children's Media Project, a not-for-profit arts and education organization focusing on media and technology.
Through that project, he wrote a proposal to receive funding from New York State to create an anti-smoking curriculum for middle-school children. After U.S. tobacco companies lost a class action suit, they were required to give each state a lump sum of money, part of which had be used for anti-smoking education. Lipton obtained more than $700,000 for his anti-smoking curriculum from the New York State Children's Health Initiative, which was administered through the United Way and Dutchess County's Children's Services Council.
Lipton himself began smoking at age 14 and has been trying to quit ever since. Because his parents and teachers smoked, he was never told not to, he says.
“Kids need to be told why they shouldn't smoke. It's about having the information to know why to say no. I think we should let kids know how they're being manipulated and ripped off and try to move them to action.”
His workbook, Smokescreens, and textbook, Smokescreens: From Tobacco Outrage to Media Activism, are now used in middle-school classes throughout Dutchess County. Lipton, who was appointed director of media education for the Children's Media Project, also conducted media literacy workshops for parents and teachers and was involved in setting up a youth media drop-in centre that helped students create anti-smoking public service announcements. These were shown on television stations throughout the Hudson Valley.
Lipton was drawn back to Ontario last year to be closer to his family and because he wanted to research the province's media literacy curriculum, which is one of the oldest in North America.
While teaching last year at the University of Toronto, he found he wasn't able to pursue his research interests fully.
“By coming to Guelph, I've been liberated to pursue my research the way I see it and to continue to do important work. I do things because no one else in the community is doing them and it needs to be done.”
Lipton has just written a report for the Ontario Medical Association and the Ontario Campaign for Action on Tobacco, giving his assessment of a tobacco curriculum called “Wise Decisions.” He finds fault with it because it's funded by Canada's three big tobacco companies and focuses on decision-making around smoking, rather than spelling out the dangers of smoking.
He's also written a piece about copyright for media teachers in Ontario that will be published in an education journal called Orbit. And he has an article about the history of the condom coming out in January in an anthology called Culture and the Condom. In addition, he's editing a book on visual communication about evaluating web design.
Lipton says U of G has encouraged him to continue to make his own path. He has designed and is teaching a fourth-year special studies in English course called “Digital Literacies.”
“Given that I'm interested in conducting a survey of media education in Ontario, I wanted to design a course that would help me in conceptualizing some of that work. This course looks at digital culture and the school's responsibilities.”
Half of Lipton's teaching responsibilities are in Guelph-Humber's media studies program, where he's currently teaching “Mass Communication.” In the winter, he'll teach a course on subcultures.
“I think it's important that undergraduates in media studies understand the full range of cultural forms of expression,” he says.

(Reference from article by - RACHELLE COOPER , "At Guelph" November 24, 2004 - Volume 48, No. 18.)

Sunday, January 4, 2009



Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Svend Robinson born March 4, 1952 is a Canadian politician, Canada's first openly gay elected official and a prominent activist for gay rights. He was a MP in the Canada House of Commons from 1979 until 2004, when he resigned after confessing to committing a theft. He unsuccessfully sought to return to the House in 2006.

Robinson was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota of Danish descent to Edith Jensen and Wayne Robinson. His father opposed the Vietnam War and brought his family to live in Canada. Under the dual-citizenship provisions of U.S. law, Robinson remains an American. He obtained a law degree from the University of BC and completed post-graduate work at the London School of Economics. In 1972, he married his high-school girlfriend, but they divorced after he told her about his sexual orientation. Robinson was the New Democratic Party (NDP) MP for ridings in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby, British Columbia, the third-largest city in the province. As the longest-serving British Columbia MP of his time, in office from 1979 to 2004, Svend Robinson is also notable for having been the first MP to out himself as gay in 1988. Robinson ran to succeed Audrey McLaughlin as leader of the NDP at the 1995 NDP Leadership Convention, but withdrew in favour of Alexa McDonough after the first ballot even though he had received the most votes.

He has been a prominent gay activist throughout most of his adult life.



Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Irshad Manji was born in Uganda in 1968 to parents of Egyptian and Gujarati Indian descent. Her family moved to Canada when she was four due to Idi Amin's expulsion of South Asians. She and her family settled in Vancouver. She receivd an honours degree in the history of ideas from the University of BC. In 1990 she won the Governor General's Medal for the top humanities graduate. She was a speech writer for the NDP party and at 24 became the national affairs editor for the Ottawa Citizen. She has hosted several public affairs programs on television and has won a Gemini award.

She also produced and hosted QT: Queer Television for CityTV Toronto. In 2002 she became the writer-in-residence at the University of Toronto's Hart House till 2006 writing, "The Trouble with Islam Today". She is currently a senior fellow with the European Foundation for Democracy in Brussels. Jan 2008 she joined New York University's Wagner School of Public Service to spearhead the Moral Courage Project. She has received numerous death threats and her apartment is fitted with bullet proof windows.

Awards
Governor General's Award for Scholastic Achievement (Humanities)
Awarded Oprah Winfrey's first annual Chutzpah Award for "audacity, nerve, boldness and conviction."
Ms. Magazine named her a "Feminist for the 21st Century".
Immigration Equality gave her its Global Vision Prize.
2008 Honorary Doctorate from the University of Puget Sound





Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Toronto, Ontario female comic Elvira Kurt was the former host of the satirical entertainment talk show "PopCultured" on the Comedy Network in Canada. She is a Canadian of Jewish Hungarian descent and is openly lesbian. She coined herself with the term, "fellagirly" a combination of femme and butch. She hosted the second season of My Fabulous Gay Wedding and appears regularily on CBC Radio shows "The Debaters" and "Q".






Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

Born in Calgary, Alberta (July 2, 1968) Mark Tewksbury is a former Canadian swimmer best know for winning the gold medal in the 100 metre backstroke at the 1992 Summer Olympics. Mark trained at the University of Calgary. He was also a former host of the Canadian television show, "How It's Made". He also made the cover of Time magazine. He was inducted into the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame, the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame, and the International Swimming Hall of Fame and was named Canada’s Male Athlete of the Year. December 1998 he was the first Canadian athlete to voluntarily out himself and announce to the media he was gay. As a result he lost a six-figure contract as a motivational speaker. Tewksbury became a prominent advocate for gay rights and gay causes in Canada and the world. In 2003 Tewksbury joined the board of directors for the 2006 World Outgames Montreal. Mark was also cover boy for Canada's Sears catalogue. Always supporting gay issues Mark is known for his sense of humour as seen in some of the pics above, even dressed in drag for a Halloween Party.


Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

A native son of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia (September 14, 1958) Robert (Rob) McCall represented Canada at the Calgary 1988 Winter Olympics and was the recipient of a Bronze Medal for Mixed Ice Dancing. Rob McCall and Tracy Wilson captured the hearts of the nation with their magical dance numbers at the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics. Rob and Tracy were Canadian National Champions from 1982 to 1988 and three-time World Figure Skating bronze medalists. Rob McCall was also affiliated with the Halifax Skating Club and the Toronto Skating Club. Rob McCall also received the Order of Canada. Rob McCall is also a member of the Nova Scotia Sports Hall of Fame. Rob McCall later in his career also designed the choreography for such Canadian figure skating notables as Brian Orser. To date they are the only Canadian dance team to have won an Olympic medal. Rob McCall passed away at 33 of AIDS on November 15, 1991 in Ottawa, Ontario.

Outed by: Scott Hamilton outed Rob McCall in his 1999 autobiorgraphy. Mr. Hamilton is an American figure skater and Olympic gold medalist.



Gay Igloo Recipient (January 2009)

A native son of Lethbridge, Alberta (June 10, 1957) Ronnie Burkett is a Canadian and world famous puppeteer best known for his full scale theatrical productions for adults performed by marionettes. Burkett writes his own scripts. Appearing onstage throughout each performance, he manipulates and is the voice of every character, from newborn ducks to dying mothers, Christ and Satan and everything in between. His shows explore the full spectrum of what it means to be human, hurt, hungry; an artist, a child, a lover. He has earned the respect of the international theater community.
Awards:
1979 - Emmy for Cinderrabbit on PBS
1994 - 2 Dora Awards for Tinka's New Dress
1994 - 4 Elizabeth Sterling Haynes Awards for Tinka's New Dress
1994 - Special Citation - Obie Awards for Tinka's New Dress
1996 - Chalmers Award for Old Friends