LOSING THEIR RELIGION? CONDO DEVELOPERS ANSWER CASH-STRAPPED PRAYERS OF T.O.CHURCHES & SYNAGOGUES OCTOBER 2022 · VOLUME 28 · ISSUE 3 PUMPKIN PIE-O-RAMA CREEPY COCKTAIL BARS HAUNTED WALKS CANDY TOURS
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PRIVATE EDUCATION GUIDEINSIDE
DAMMIT JANET, I LOVE YOU! Rocky Horror Picture Show shadow cast member on finding her match ON LIVING
GIVE Grinshpan
CONTENTS
Our 33rd annual primer to the city’s top private schools and programs
37 A NEW LEASE
Your dream home might be on the rental market right now! 21 OCTOBER 2022
’EM PUMPKIN TO TALK ABOUT Top Chef host Eden
on finding the most delicious pies in the city 51TAKE FLIGHT FOR FALL Jeanne Beker has selected six of the coolest bomber jackets and aviators 29 TRICKS, TREATS & GOOD EATS Everything you need for a positively petrifying time this Halloween 41 @fredas.com
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TRIVIA
Do you know T.O.?
Let the games begin by Ron Johnson
1. At the site of what restaurant did Toronto hold its last public hanging?
A. El Catrin B. Rainforest Café C. Terroni D. Sotto Sotto
2. The Lavender Lady is said to haunt what Toronto theatre?
A. Princess of Wales B. The Fox C. Elgin Theatre D. Factory Theatre
3. What delicious candy bar was invented in Toronto?
A. Mr. Big B. Crispy Crunch C. Big Turk D. Snickers
4. The ghost of Dorothea Mae Elliott is said to haunt what local hockey shrine?
A. Hockey Hall of Fame
B. Maple Leaf Gardens C. Scotiabank Arena D. Lord Stanley’s Mug
This restaurant is built on the site of a former court house
6 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 CITYSCAPENEWS
ANSWERS:1.C2.C3.B4.A
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20 questions with T.O.’s new vampire
Like many talented Toronto actors before him, André Dae Kim started his career acting on Degrassi. And, like Nina Dobrev and Vampire Diaries, Dae Kim is stepping into the teen vampire romance genre with his lead role in W Network’s Vampire Academy
Who is your favourite vampire?
I always say that I like the Count from Sesame Street, because, honestly, that's probably the first vampire that I ever encountered
How does it feel to set foot in the teen vampire romance world?
We have two people, Marguerite and Julio, who have both been a part of making some of the most successful vampire TV shows in the last decade, Vampire Diaries being one. So it's big shoes to fill, especially since this Vampire Academy is an adaptation of a successful series. So it's a lot of pressure, and I’m honoured to be able to step foot into this world.
Tell us about your role. So I play Christian Ozera. He is a Royal Moroi outcast within the Vampire Academy world.
Were you familiar with it?
No, but after I booked the role, I read the first Vampire Academy book, and I really enjoyed it.
What makes it popular?
I think it's this cool mix of romance and relatability, teen drama and love all put into a fantastical world.
What inspired you to become an actor?
I used to watch a lot of movies like the Indiana Jones movies, Lord of the Rings, as a kid. And I liked watching those. I definitely knew
that this is something that I'm very interested in.
What person do you most admire?
I'd say right now Benedict Wong. He's another British-Asian actor. And he's been in a lot of amazing films and TV shows.
What’s the first job you had in Toronto?
My first job was cleaning golf shoes at the Mississauga Golf and Country Club for a few months. I was a locker room boy. My first job when I was in Toronto was acting in Degrassi.
Best meal in Toronto?
I'm a huge foodie. Recently, I went to Rodney’s Oyster House. And I had a great thing of mussels and a lobster dish there.
What is your daily ritual?
Definitely getting up in the morning and walking to Starbucks to get my iced coffee.
Where do you think is the best view in the city?
The Bluffs in Scarborough.
Where do you go to get away from it all? Queen’s Park near my house.
Is there one thing you have multiple versions of?
I have a collection of key chains that I've had since I was 12, from countries where I've travelled.
Where’s the first place in town you send visitors? Definitely not to my house. I always have a great time at the ROM or the AGO.
What’s your prized possession?
I have a necklace that I'm actually wearing right now that I got from a fishing village in the north of Spain. I was out there shooting the show, and for some reason, I feel like this necklace has brought me a lot of good luck.
What talent would you most like to have?
I would love to sing in tune.
What is your greatest fear?
I think not living life to its fullest and missing out on opportunities because of my own personal insecurities.
Who in Toronto would you most like to hang out with?
I would say either Jagmeet Singh, or I guess Drake would be kind of cool too.
What’s your idea of perfect happiness? My idea of perfect happiness is being able to wake up and be content with the fact that you have so much left to learn and that life is going to throw things at you that you may not expect but that's part of the journey.
Vampire Academy airs Sundays at 9 p.m. on W Network. Johnson
The number of Michelin stars awarded to chef Masaki Saito, the most in the city, for his eponymous sushi restaurant in Yorkville.
The jersey number of Toronto-born NHL star P. K. Subban, who announced his retirement from the league last month at age 33. 76
The amount of a lawsuit, in millions, dropped by Marineland, stemming from an attempted theft of an 800-pound walrus.
The Vegas odds of the Toronto Raptors winning an NBA championship this season, which kicks off Oct. 19. NUMBERS
Pearson Airport’s place in a ranking of overall customer satisfaction at 20 airports around the world. Not good.
L-R: Toronto actor André Dae Kim, the cast of W Network’s ‘Vampire Academy’
7 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
—Ron
THE POST INTERVIEW
$1.5
+4,000 BYTHE
2
16
NEWSCITYSCAPE NEWS
No room for dynamic vision at city hall
This month marks what could possibly be the most boring and poorly attended election in the city’s history. And I’d like to know why.
Let’s start with what we know. We know that many of the city’s most progressive and veteran councillors quit. The list is a long one and includes both deputy mayors, veterans and younger councillors on the rise. Three or four could have been legitimate mayoral candidates now or in the future in Ana Bailao, Michael Layton, Kristyn Wong-Tam and Joe Cressy.
Cressy, for one, led the city’s very successful vaccination program as the chair of the Toronto Board of Health, a very public-facing position that he handled brilliantly. He was city councillor for a massive, wellpopulated downtown riding and a leading voice for progressive politics in the city.
His loss is huge. Even in this election, I believe he would have given Mayor John Tory some serious competition.
So why did they all leave?
The pandemic certainly took its toll on all of us, and that could be the reason. Or, it could be that city hall isn’t what it once was. Premier Doug Ford is using the city as his own little fiefdom, and our mayor is not standing in his way or pushing a city-building agenda.
There was a time when this city strived for more: when we were building beautiful art galleries and civic institutions, when we wanted to create a bike
city, a transit city. There was a time when we protested to stop expressways. When we had big ideas.
Now, we count our pennies and police our parks.
The only things the municipal and provincial governments seem to want to build are condos and roads.
We also have a mayor who is endorsing his way to his own city council in a move that many see as anti-democratic. Let local candidates pitch their plans to residents without interference. God forbid someone pushes back against the great bland wave at city hall. What’s happening is not right.
With the leadership in place at city hall and Queen’s Park micro-managing their way toward a dull status quo, who would want the gig?
What would the political legacy of these councillors be? Even more movie nights in the park? That’s not enough for people that actually have a vision and want to use politics as a way to make the city and its residents better.
It starts at the top. If any company had more than 25 per cent of its staff quit, including its most important managers, who should be blamed? It’s a short list of one.
DEAD-ITORIAL
DEAD-ITOR GRUB DEAD-ITOR Julia “Ghoulia” Mastroianni Jennifer “Shivers” Schembri
THE DARK ARTS
HEART DISSECTOR
MANGLING HEART DISSECTOR
SENIOR GROTESQUE DESIGNER
Erin “Allan Poe” Neilly Kristine “Harbinger of Doom” Hughes
GROTESQUE DESIGNER/ PRODUCTION CO-ORDINATOR Dorothy “Off With Her Head” Chudzinski Lindsay Low-Life
A fresh Johnson Jarrod “Jigsaw” Daley
SENIOR ANTI-SOCIAL DEAD-ITOR
SEVERED DIGIT-AL CONTENT CREATOR
“Lurking” Leanna Hosier Kaitlin “Cryptkeeper” Narciso
WAILS
ANTI-SOCIAL VP OF WAILS DISSECTOR OF ADVERTISING ACCOUNT MANGLERS
Lisa “Levitating” London Lynne “Boleyn” London
ACCOUNT UN-CO-ORDINATORS
Jo-Anne “Ichabod” Craine Rachel “Rotting” Roth Clara “Hells Bells” Strebel George “The Reaper” Redak “Snarling” Carly Roebuck
EXHUMATION
OUT OF CONTROLLER GENERAL MANGLER
CLASSIFIEDS MANGLER/ DISTRUSTING UN-CO-ORDINATOR
PROOFREAPER
DEADITOR EMERITUS
Tina “Trembling” Trevellin “Gory” Laurie McGillivray
Lance “Graveyard” Garvey
Sarah “Poison” Ives Paula “Torn-Neck” Richie
8 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
dull
Get ready for the most boring and poorly attended election in city history
set of councillors could bring much-needed energy RON JOHNSON 1256 YONGE ST., TORONTO, ON M4T 1W5 TEL 416.250.7979 WEB POSTCITY.COM FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION PLEASE EMAIL advertising@postcity.com The Fine Print: The contents of Post City Magazines Inc. are copyright 2022, all rights reserved, and may not be reproduced in part or in whole without the written permission of the Publisher. The contents of all ads are subject to the discretion of the Publisher. STEELES BAYVIEW LESLIE DON VALLEY YONGE ST LAWRENCE YONGE AVENUE BLOOR EGLINTON DUFFERIN ALLEN ROAD North York Post Thornhill Post Bayview Post North Toronto Post Village Post DONRIVER DUFFERIN YONGE MARLBOROUGH YORKVILLE POST (CONDO EDITION) DAVENPORT BLOORCOLLEGE AVENUE RDAVENUE RDDUFFERIN Yorkville Post Annex Post PUNISHER Lorne “Werewolf in” London DEAD-ITORIAL DIRECTOR ASSOCIATE PUNISHER-IT Ron “Of the Dead”
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Rethinking our relationship to the Toronto Islands
An aging fleet of ferries that the city will have to replace, coupled with a recent idea floated during the election campaign and an architect’s vision, has shone a light on the city’s relationship to its island paradise. Is now the time for the city to reconsider some sort of connection from the mainland to the island that doesn’t involve polluting and slow ferries? The timing could be right. The city is
finishing up public engagement and a study in preparation for a new Toronto Islands Master Plan that will guide enhancements to the area in the years to come. The ideas with the most support are more about preserving and enhancing the natural heritage of the islands. Pictured above, Toronto architect John Plumpton’s RevelHouse bridge design.
S ECTION
9 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 NEWS
Bike lane breakdown
As an advocate for bike lanes and a cyclist, it pains me to say this but I feel I must: I am starting to really dislike the bike lanes on Yonge, University and the Danforth. I dislike them as a driver, I dislike them as a pedestrian and I dislike them as a cyclist.
During the pandemic, the city boldly and aggressively rethought how people should move throughout the city. Roads were closed to traffic, hundreds of kilometres of bike lanes were implemented, and the idea that streets were not just for cars took hold. I agree that streets need to accommodate different forms of transportation, the “complete street” idea that four lanes of traffic can be turned into something for everyone has to change. The situation is becoming particularly challenging because more people are moving throughout the city but not necessarily on bikes or transit.
As a driver, the new lane markings on Yonge and University are not intuitive and neither is the on-street parking. If there is a bike lane there shouldn’t be street parking. It makes no sense for a few cars to block a lane of traffic, especially if the lanes are reduced to accommodate a bike lane.
As a pedestrian, the bike lanes around Yonge that are adjacent to the street and sidewalk patios had a nice European flair in the beginning. Now, those same bike lanes are increasingly being used by e-bikes making food deliveries, and the drivers are going more than 30 km/h and don’t stop or slow down
for pedestrians that are trying to get into a cab or cross the street.
As a cyclist, the bike lanes on these streets that are intended to create a safe environment for cyclists fall short. The bike lanes are often blocked by delivery vehicles making deliveries. The onstreet parking creates a situation where cyclists can be hit by a person opening a door, and the ebikes speed through the lanes. I was cycling on Danforth going close to 30 km/h on my own steam, and an e-bike honked at me to get out of the way.
About a month ago, a petition was circulated calling on the city to make the pilot bike lanes permanent. I was asked to sign the petition and I did not.
If the city is serious about bike lanes, it can’t be all things to all people, and the bike lanes must make sense. If there are bike lanes then there cannot be on-street parking and perhaps bike lanes shouldn’t be on busy streets with stores that need deliveries. The city also has to make a decision about whether or not e-bikes are permitted in the bike lanes and, if so, set a maximum speed.
Bike lanes are not just a symbol of a progressive city. They need to make sense in order to be useful and well-used. There is still some work for the city to do on this file.
KAREN STINTZ
Karen Stintz is a frequent cyclist in the city
Yonge, Danforth and University cycling projects miss the mark
STINTZ
Karen Stintz is a former city councillor, elected in 2003, and was a chair of the TTC. She lives in Ward 8.
10 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
ON MIDTOWNNEWS
Contact us to see how we can help. (416) 921 1700 r
Third time the charm for Mayor Tory
The next four years will be incredibly difficult for the City of Toronto. City council is broke: it does not have the money to meet the very modest priorities established for 2023. It is some $800 million short, a sum much too large to be made up with a property tax increase. The big tax programs — income tax, corporate tax, HST — all flow to the provincial and federal governments, while the city is left begging them for support.
The homeless problem is increasing, not decreasing. That’s a result of two factors: the inequality in our city, with abysmally low rates of welfare payments, and the shortage of affordable housing. The city has no direct control over inequality and does not have the funds to address the affordable housing crunch in the short or long term.
Climate change is sure to present more serious challenges for the city in the next few years — as it did recently in Montreal with extensive flooding. The city does not have the funds to take the protective actions needed to strengthen infrastructure.
City staff is stretched beyond its limits, and too many basic city functions are not being attended to. Starving the city bureaucracy of funds has resulted in ambitious and imaginative staff abandoning the city to find work in the private sector, and those who are left are worked too hard.
And with the strong mayor legislation now passed by the provincial government, city
councillors have no significant power to change city priorities.
For the first time in the city’s history the mayor is in charge, and the mayor is required by the strong mayor legislation to adhere to provincial priorities.
Provincial governments have belittled city government for the past 25 years: the megacity legislation in 1997; the reduction in the size of city council by 50 per cent in 2018; and now the strong mayor proposal.
for running again.
He is a nice man and has brought a sense of civility to the office, but he’s timid and sometimes misguided, such as when he authorized spending $2 million to remove a few dozen homeless people from a park.
Can he leave a legacy of which he and the city can be proud? Certainly, but it will require him to change his approach.
John Tory has been mayor for the past eight years. He might have made speeches about some of these issues, but he has not mobilized any sustained pressure to ensure the big issues are addressed. He could have been a strong supporter of the charter city idea, which would give the city more power and money, but he chose not to be.
At the moment, John Tory seems most likely to be re-elected as mayor: there are several dozen other candidates running against him, but none have much of a public presence or even experience on city council.
He has given no good rationale
He will have to start working proactively with councillors, social agencies and community groups to harass those other levels of government to give the city more power and substantially more funding. It means the mayor will have to get his hands dirty. He’ll be making enemies in those other governments. He will have to mobilize lots of people, which is something the mayor’s office can do. He will have to agree to work with councillors, rather than exercising the strong mayor powers on his own.
This will be a big change for John Tory. If he does not make that change, his legacy will be as the city’s longest-serving mayor who served when the city spiralled downhill. Let’s hope he does change.
John Tory looks to have an easy run to his third term
“Can he leave a legacy of which he and the city can be proud?”
11 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
SEWELL ON CITY HALL NEWS
No SmartTrack, no Rail Deck Park, what will his legacy be?
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12 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
Toronto churches are striking more partnerships with real estate developers in recent years, opening the door for increased housing supply while addressing contemporary challenges facing many religious institutions.
“Some of these churches — and depending on the age of the building — they may be looking at a lot of capital improvements or repairs,” explained Raymond Wong, vice-president of data operations at Altus Group, an advisory service for commercial real estate.
Joint ventures, then, can provide churches with new funding streams for upkeep and other community investments, even as their congregations and donations dwindle. On the flip side, developers get to build on what are often large, underused and welllocated pieces of real estate — a rarity in Toronto these days.
About five years ago, Altus Group began tracking Toronto development applications related to properties that are, or have been, occupied by places of worship. It has 24 such files in its database,
though not all are active.
The following examples are recently proposed or under construction.
Agricola Finnish Lutheran Church, 25 Old York Mills Rd.
Agricola Finnish Lutheran Church, in Toronto’s Hoggs Hollow neighbourhood, puts a Scandinavian spin on the proposed redevelopment of the parcel of land its congregation has called home since the mid-’60s.
The congregation wants more room for cultural and religious programming — and to establish a new centre for the city’s Finnish population. Earlier this summer, with the help of consultants, it submitted a development application to raze its church in favour of a 12-storey tower.
The plan: Sell condos to raise seed money for new facilities, including a modern place of worship, classrooms, meeting spaces and a daycare.
Walmer Road Baptist Church, 188 Lowther Ave.
Walmer Road Baptist Church and
developer TAS began looking at redeveloping the former’s Annex property in 2019, hoping to restore the church’s beloved sanctuary space. They wondered: Could condos provide the means to revitalize the beloved community hub, which has been closed for years in a state of disrepair for lack of funds?
That’s exactly what TAS, in partnership with the church, is now proposing. If approved by the city, a July development application for a 20-storey, 162-unit condo tower would resurrect the site as a mixeduse complex, including a restored sanctuary with a redone interior — work the congregation’s pockets weren’t deep enough to manage.
The church, built in the late 1880s, would maintain ownership over 10,000 square feet of the sanctuary. TAS, meanwhile, would operate commercial space that could provide offices for social enterprises or perhaps a venue to stage arts and entertainment.
“Our intention is to make this a welcoming and inclusive space that maintains the congregation’s — and the sanctuary’s — historic role
as a place for community and social innovation,” Ken Wilcox, vicepresident of development at TAS, said.
Bloor Street United Church, 300 Bloor St. W.
Incorporating a historic church’s architecture is often a big selling point for new residential developments, said Ben Myers, founder of real estate consultancy Bullpen Consulting.
“Cielo [Condos] is a great example of that — the tower coming out of an absolutely stunning church that grabs people’s attention and adds to the marketability of the project,” said Myers, who has consulted on at least one proposed churchdeveloper project.
Cielo Condos is what developer Collecdev calls its mixed-use project on the site of the Bloor Street United Church, a late-19century neo-Gothic heritage building. The development, which encompasses upwards of 200 condo units in a 29-storey tower, preserves and restores large portions of the spired, stone church
(and the neighbouring Pidgeon House, a semi-detached home that dates back to 1890).
Saint Monica’s Parish, 44 Broadway Ave.
Collecdev is also joining forces with Saint Monica’s Parish, in north Toronto, on another similar project. However, in this case, the church is offering up its land on the condition that it gets a new facility. The plans, under review by the City of Toronto, propose erecting a 39-storey, 376-unit condo tower where Saint Monica’s currently stands and building a new church in front.
Aware that the existing church needed a major reno, the Archdiocese of Toronto began considering development opportunities six years ago, before settling on Collecdev as a partner.
In April, around the time Collecdev was breaking ground on its Bloor Street project, James Milway, the Archdiocese’s chancellor of temporal affairs, explained the thinking behind the group’s plans.
“When the dust settled, financially, the Archdiocese would be ahead,” he said.
Wexford Heights United Church, 2102 Lawrence Ave. E. Like many other church-related development schemes, the one for Wexford Heights United Church — whose history spans more than 175 years — saves the structure’s heritage elements while adding density, in this case with an 11storey building and two townhouse rows. Unlike most others, though, the March 2022 proposal pitches all 100 homes as rentals, with nearly a third at below-market pricing.
Another difference is it’s part of a multi-year, nationwide initiative related to the church itself.
In May, Kindred Works, the newly established development manager for the United Church of Canada’s property arm, announced an ambitious target to create mixed-income housing for 34,000 people nationwide within 15 years.
Other active projects tied to Toronto’s United churches are for St. Luke’s and Wilmar Heights, as well as the Church of the Master United Church.
Tim Blair, CEO of Kindred Works, laid out the independent company’s vision: “We are demonstrating that it's possible to provide equal benefits for your business, for the people you serve, for wider society and the environment.”
Find an aging Toronto church or synagogue with a shrinking congregation and bills to pay and, odds are, it is either considering redevelopment or it’s underway by Josh Sherman
Losing their religion: cash-strapped churches are turning to developers and condos
Clockwise from left: Renderings of the redevelopment projects at Bloor Street United Church, Agricola Finnish Lutheran, and Saint Monica’s Parish
13 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
FEATURE NEWS
Markham to spend $188 million to buy Shouldice site
The City of Markham has announced that it is purchasing 7750 Bayview Ave., home to the private Shouldice Hospital and ample green space.
According to a press release, Markham will use the nine-hectare (22-acre) site for a variety of purposes for the long-term benefit of its residents.
“By purchasing this coveted site, Markham is advancing the goals of its Integrated Leisure Master Plan in this part of the city. The natural beauty of the site makes it one of Markham’s crown jewels, and we are delighted to bring it into public ownership for use by the entire Markham community,” said Frank Scarpitti, mayor of Markham.
Plans thus far include a new public park and open space, conservation of the former McCullagh Estate and support of the existing lease with the Shouldice Hospital, a facility that has specialized in hernia care since 1945, as well as potentially other public and city uses.
Markham is purchasing the lands from a limited partnership managed by Liberty Development Corporation. There is a current application to develop the site for a mixed-use residential project.
"I want to thank the property owner and its development manager, Liberty Development Corporation, for their willingness to co-operate with the City of Markham in this endeavour. Entering into this agreement helps advance Markham's strategy to acquire green space in anticipation of future growth,”
added Scarpitti. “With the population of Thornhill and the rest of Markham continuing to increase, especially with additional densities coming to Thornhill, acquiring this additional open space is an important strategic step."
According to the city, the $188 million purchase will be funded by reserves specifically designated for the purpose of acquiring and creating city parkland. Property tax dollars are not being used for the purchase.
“I am overjoyed that Markham Council accepted a plan put forward by me and Mayor Scarpitti that will see ownership of these lands, in their entirety, transferred to the City of Markham,” said Ward 1 councillor Keith Irish. “This will protect the property in perpetuity thereby preserving the unique and historic nature of the site while opening it up as additional parkland for generations of residents to enjoy.”
The city expects to formally conclude this land transaction by year’s end once the due diligence currently underway is completed.
How to Support an Expecting Couple at a Law Firm
SANDRA ZISCKIND
“Simply put, a pregnancy should never impact a woman's career. I hear about this all too often in the legal industry. Story after story of women who are working at law firms that have their professional career negatively impacted by announcing that they are expecting.” — Sandra Zisckind, Managing Partner, Diamond & Diamond Lawyers
Having a baby is an exciting time for many couples, but the unfortunate reality is that many working women experience unwarranted setbacks in their career over something that should be a joyous milestone in their life.
Be Prepared for Maternity Leaves
As a senior executive in the legal industry — or any industry for that matter — it’s important to develop a maternity leave process as soon as you possibly can. Not every pregnancy is planned, and sometimes this news may be as much of a surprise to an organization as it may be to the expecting mother. “It’s important to have these processes in place so that your employee feels supported and ultimately relaxed about the idea of taking time off for a maternity
leave,” says Sandra Zisckind. It’s important that expectant mothers feel confident in your firm’s coverage system so that they’re comfortable leaving their cases with other members of your team.
Celebrate Your Employee's Bundle of Joy
Celebrate this huge milestone in your employee’s life! While the specifics of a celebration may vary from organization to organization, this is an essential aspect of showing the expecting parent the support that they deserve at such a pivotal time in their life. “At Diamond & Diamond, we like to throw a party or a work baby shower for the expecting mother,” says Sandra Zisckind.
Check In During Maternity Leave
While adjusting to parenthood is a busy time for many expecting couples, it’s crucial for an organization to show its support throughout the entire process.
“A new mother will undoubtedly have her hands full after a baby is born, but it's still very important to check in with them during their maternity leave! Even a quick text can go a long way in show-
ing your support throughout a very busy and often stressful time in their life,” says Sandra Zisckind.
Foster a Family-Friendly Company Culture
One thing that many organizations never think about is the impact that company culture can have on an employee’s feelings towards taking a maternity leave. Setting a company culture where employees feel comfortable talking about their lives outside of the office, including being parents, can help create a positive workplace environment. “Diamond & Diamond often uses the term ‘The People's Law Firm,’ and that’s a reflection of our love for our clients and our employees. We want our employees to feel empowered to share every milestone in their child’s life - from birth to graduations to any other accomplishment in between,” says Sandra Zisckind.
Be Flexible About Returning to Work
When an employee is ready to return from their maternity leave, it’s very important to be flexible about how this
may look. Some mothers may need the flexibility of working from home so that they’re able to tend to their child throughout the day should they need anything. “At Diamond & Diamond, we respect the wishes of each mother as they return to work. Whether they need to work from home or in a hybrid environment, we do our very best to accommodate their needs,” says Sandra Zisckind.
Closing Thoughts
At the end of the day, what it all comes down to is the age old saying: “Keep your employees happy, and strong business results will follow.” If you prioritize your employee’s needs, this will not only reflect positively on your company internally, but it will only stand to benefit you externally as well.
POST CITY X DIAMOND & DIAMOND
Tips from Sandra Zisckind of Diamond & Diamond Lawyers
Sandra Zisckind is a lawyer who was called to the Bar in 2003 and practices in the area of Plaintiff personal injury litigation in Toronto
Thornhill property to be home to new public park and other amenities by Ron Johnson
Part of the 7750 Bayview Ave. property purchased by the City of Markham
“The natural beauty of this site is one of Markham’s crown jewels.”
14 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
1-800-567-4878
NEIGHBOURHOODNEWS
Will Crosstown LRT ever be done?
City councillor takes Metrolinx to task by Josh Sherman
A midtown Toronto city councillor is once again voicing his frustration with the ongoing delays plaguing construction of the Eglinton Crosstown LRT, saying the provincial agency responsible for the project, Metrolinx, needs to do more for local residents and businesses.
“Years of delays, along with a lack of a plan to substantially mitigate the impact of construction on the communities — including financial support to the businesses themselves — has made it so that the new transit is the dream, but the construction has been a nightmare,” Coun. Josh Matlow, who represents Ward 12, said.
The city councillor is taking aim at Ontario transit agency Metrolinx, as its most recent deadline to complete the 19kilometre light rail transit line by the year’s end fast approaches — and seemingly with no quick end of construction in sight.
Work on the LRT began in 2011 and was supposed to wrap up in 2020. However, challenges — including the discovery of a concrete defect and a legal dispute between Metrolinx and contractor Crosslinx Transit Solutions — have led to repeated delays and headaches.
Metrolinx now aims to release an updated construction schedule “before the end of the month [September],” a spokesperson for the transit agency said, adding, “Significant progress has been made on the Eglinton Crosstown LRT, and Metrolinx continues to work with Crosslinx Transit
Solutions on the completion of this project.”
For businesses along Eglinton Avenue, construction over the years has meant less foot traffic and parking spots and construction hoarding that blocks storefronts.
“It’s a lot,” said Maureen Sirois, chair of the Eglinton Way BIA, describing the impacts that construction is having on the local business. “Accessibility, visibility, parking — these are the things that impact [businesses] depending on where you’re sitting within the construction
The Ministry added that Metrolinx has dedicated funding to help businesses out.
“Metrolinx continues to provide ongoing support to businesses through marketing initiatives such as ‘Experience Eglinton’ and Shop Local campaigns,” reads the statement. “To date, the government has allotted $3 million in additional business supports.”
Sirois said her BIA welcomes funding for initiatives like marketing and beautification, but, she suggested, it’s not the same as putting money directly in the pockets of businesses that have been devastated.
“The businesses that have been impacted will never get that back again — they’ve lost all those years,” she explained.
zone.”
Because of these issues, Sirois agreed with Matlow that financial compensation from the province is in order.
“Businesses along Eglinton were asked to bear the burden of construction for the greater good so that we would all benefit from transit eventually,” Matlow said.
The Ministry of Transportation said in an emailed statement that the province and Metrolinx “are working closely with communities, including local businesses and residents impacted by the construction of provincial transit projects.”
Along with Metrolinx and the province, the city should do more to manage traffic, including by putting up signs with detour routes and working with Toronto police on enforcement, Matlow said.
What Matlow has seen unfold in midtown doesn’t just leave him concerned right now. He’s also worried about how future infrastructure projects may affect other neighbourhoods, as well, given that construction on Metrolinx’s Ontario Line subway is set to ramp up.
“Our experience is that Metrolinx has treated both local residents and small businesses as collateral damage,” he said. “They treat communities as mere construction zones, and that’s not good enough.”
Crosstown LRT facing yet another delay
“They treat communities as mere construction zones.”
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15 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
NEIGHBOURHOOD NEWS
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Regent Theatre gets heritage designation
The City of Toronto, alongside local councillor Jaye Robinson, is making a move to designate the building at 551 Mount Pleasant Rd. as a heritage property.
The building, formerly home to the Regent Theatre, was purchased by Terra Bruce Productions for $7.4 million. The plan was to use the space for live theatre — the venue’s original use when it first opened in 1927, before it became a movie theatre.
“Everybody involved recognizes that it has significant heritage value both for the community and the City of Toronto,” said Bob Hallett, Terra Bruce’s chief operating officer. “And that maintaining as much of the various heritage aspects as we can is desirable.”
Hallett also confirmed that there is no plan to add a residential component to the facility.
And that is Robinson’s hope as well. “We don't want a condo here. We want a theatre,” said Robinson.
“Midtown lacks arts and culture desperately — it's all downtown. And midtown is growing by leaps and bounds,” said Robinson. “We need amenities and we need infrastructure, and part of the amenities is some arts and culture in this area. We want the theatre, so we’re going to push them [Terra Bruce] and keep them on the straight and narrow on it.”
The new heritage designation,
which was scheduled for a vote by Toronto City Council in late September, would afford the property much more protection than the previous heritage listing, Robinson said.
“We've been working over the summer with them, the heritage staff as well as the owners. And I think we've come to a good place,” she said. “A lot of people really push back when you go to designate because it's a lot more a clamp down, a lot more forceful, but if there’s some flexibility, then you collaborate. They’ve been great.”
The heritage designation still allows the new owners to do a lot of work on the site, including the interior and back of the building, while protecting the heritage attributes and facade.
The theatre was constructed “in 1927 to the designs of architect Murray Brown as a vaudeville theatre and cinema for Famous Players Canada,” reads a city staff report. “The property is a fine and surviving example of an early 20th-century purpose-built theatre along a neighbourhood main street, a typology that was once common but is becoming increasingly rare.”
“This is a very prominent piece of the Mount Pleasant strip that's been there for a long time,” Robinson said. “And so we're going to do everything we can to maintain it.”
Councillor Jaye Robinson wants more arts and culture in midtown
16 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
NEIGHBOURHOODNEWS
City moves to bulk up protection of historic midtown site by Ron Johnson
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Lawsuit filed against Benjamin’s
Allegations over handling of charitable donations Josh Sherman
More families are sharing their stor ies about bad experiences with a Toronto funeral home after a grieving father accused the facility of charging extra fees on charitable donations made in his late son’s honour.
“A lot of people have started to come out,” said Raziel Zisman — whose 19-year-old son, Liam, died on Jan. 3 this year — who now faces a legal battle with a foundation at Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel over contributions to the memorial fund.
On the day of Liam’s death, Zisman says he and his wife, Jeanne, scrambled to have a Zoom meeting with Michael Benjamin, the president of Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel, and make arrangements for the service.
In the call, Zisman said his family opted to establish the memorial fund with the chapel’s Benjamin Foundation, a registered charity, with the intention of eventually distributing proceeds to Chai Lifeline and Camp Quality. What he wasn’t told, he alleges, is that the foundation takes a 10 per cent cut of donations as an administration fee for holding the funds.
When Zisman was signing the contract after the call, he was so overwhelmed with grief that he didn’t notice the stipulation in print. In February, Zisman launched a lawsuit, which is ongoing, against the funeral home. Then, in May, he complained to the Bereavement
Authority of Ontario (BAO), the province’s funeral-industry watchdog, which, in a ruling last month, ordered Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel to send all donations to the Zisman’s chosen charities.
The BAO also said that the funeral business must release all 10 per cent fees dating back to Jan 1, 2016, by Jan. 31, 2023, and publish the fee on its website and in obituaries where the fund is mentioned.
Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel — known for being one of the only funeral homes serving
foundation, but that it is independent of the chapel.
Other Toronto families have alleged that the funeral home has been less than forthcoming in the past.
Suzanne Heft hadn’t thought about her experience with Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel for some time — until she heard about the Zismans’ situation.
“The funeral itself went perfectly well,” she said of the service that she arranged for her late husband, Harold.
the city’s Jewish community — has applied to the Superior Court of Ontario for a judicial review in hopes of striking down the BOA’s decision.
“We are seeking a judicial review for the simple reason that charities like the Foundation clearly and unequivocally do not fall under the jurisdiction of the BAO and are already regulated extensively and thoroughly under existing Canadian laws and regulations as well as the CRA,” said Michael Benjamin in an email statement to Post City.
Benjamin also explained that the family created the
But toward the end of that year, when she was selecting a headstone from a different business, a salesperson warned her that she might have been charged for a headstone “credit” on her funeral bill. (She suspects the salesperson was familiar with Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel and trying to help her out.) She was shocked to discover it was true. She had allegedly been charged a monument credit toward the future purchase of a headstone that never occurred.
Upon contacting the North York funeral home in November 2015, she was refunded within a week.
She filed a complaint with the BAO in January 2016.
Benjamin told Post City that the chapel is undertaking “a complete review” of its business practices and said the mortuary’s foundation no longer charges a 10 per cent administrative fee on donations.
“We recognize there are concerns and have listened to the feedback,” said Benjamin.
Benjamin’s Park Memorial Chapel is one of the only funeral homes serving the city’s Jewish community
17 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
NEIGHBOURHOOD NEWS
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Female assaulted while jogging in North York
Plus, more crime briefs by David Olsen
The Toronto Police Service is alerting the public to a sexual assault in the area of Don Mills Road and Sheppard Avenue East. On Sept. 4, at approximately 7 a.m., it is reported that a female victim was jogging in the area when a male suspect engaged her in conversation asking for directions. The suspect then sexually assaulted the victim. Investigators are concerned that there may be other victims.
A male suspect of Toronto has been arrested and charged after a shooting in the area of Keele Street and Sheppard Avenue West. On Sept. 10, at approximately 12:42 a.m., police responded to a call of a shooting and arrived to find a young male victim suffering from a gunshot wound. The victim was taken to hospital by paramedics in a lifethreatening condition and succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead at the hospital.
Investigators with York Regional Police are seeking three male suspects following two pharmacy robberies in Vaughan and Richmond Hill. On Sept. 19, at approximately 1:45 p.m., police responded to a pharmacy in the area of Chancellor Drive and Fiori Drive in Vaughan for a report of a robbery. Officers learned that three male suspects had entered the store, threatened employees with handguns, obtained various prescription drugs and cash and then fled in a silver vehicle. The employees were not injured. Later that day at 7 p.m., police responded to another pharmacy in the area of
Yonge Street and Bedford Park Avenue in Richmond Hill for a report of a robbery. It is reported that three male suspects entered the store with handguns, demanded cash and drugs and then fled the scene in a silver vehicle. Investigators believe the same suspects are involved in both incidents.
Police are seeking the public’s assistance in identifying a male suspect wanted in an assault investigation. On Sept. 21, at 3:40 p.m., a male victim was walking his dogs on a trail in the area of Riverdale Park East. It is reported the victim noticed a male suspect committing an indecent act. When the victim confronted the suspect, the suspect pushed the victim, causing him to fall. The suspect then fled the area. Toronto Police Service has released an image of the suspect.
Police have made an arrest as part of a homicide investigation after a stabbing in the area of Jane Street and Finch Avenue West. On Tuesday, Sept. 20, at approximately 10:18 p.m., officers responded to reports of a stabbing in the area. It is alleged that there was an altercation between a group of people near a bike trail. Officers arrived to find two male victims who had been stabbed. A 25-year-old male victim was transported to hospital with life-threatening injuries and is currently in stable condition. A 24-year-old male victim was pronounced dead at the scene.
Police concerned about additional victims in area following sexual assault
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CRIMENEWS
CITYWIDE BREAK-INS
SEPTEMBER 2022
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ROYAL PALM DR. AND HILDA AVE. YONGE ST. AND GARDEN AVE. CLARK AVE. W. AND JOANNA CRES.
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YORK VALLEY CRES. AND MAY TREE RD. 11:30 P.M. 4:30 P.M. 10:30 P.M. 4 A.M. 10 A.M. 2 A.M. 2 A.M.
PROCTOR CRES. AND ROTHMERE DR. ARNOLD AVE. AND FRANKLIN AVE.
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19 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 CRIME NEWS
W. AND ALNESS ST. YONGE ST. AND NORTHTOWN WAY BATHURST ST. AND SANDRINGHAM DR. BATHURST ST. AND VERWOOD AVE. INGLEWOOD DR. AND HARPER AVE. 6 P.M. 6 P.M. 1 A.M. 12 A.M. 12 A.M. 5 A.M. 3 P.M. SEPT. 13 SEPT. 14 SEPT. 16 SEPT. 18 SEPT. 19 SEPT. 20 SEPT. 17 BATHURST ST. AND LYONSGATE DR. BATHURST ST. AND EDINBURGH DR. BATHURST ST. AND MCALLISTER RD. 12 A.M. 12 A.M. 5 A.M. SEPT. 19 SEPT. 19 SEPT. 20 PROJECTS IN PROGRESS: • 369 Lake Promenade • 11 Berkindale • 22 Astor • 29 Ava • 32 Ardmore • 76 Brunswick • 83 Southvale • 561 Briar Hill • 30 Bayfield Cres • 59 Lake Promenade • 520 Fairlawn RECENTLY COMPLETED: • 15 McGillivray • 26 St. Hildas • 137 Chiltern Hill • 662 Hillsdale • 131 Alberta • 402 St. Clements • 7 Holland Park • 47 Astor • 710 Hillsdale • 67 Sutherland COMING SOON: • 8 May Tree • 195 Sutherland • 147 Bombay • 507 Melrose
20 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
MOORE PARK
A HOUSE THAT GROWS WITH YOU
A NEW LEASE ON LIVING
Considering renting for the first time in a while? You’re not alone. The market is hot right now, and while options are going fast, there are still a few stellar finds out there that you don’t want to miss. From a cosy Rosedale residence with a family-sized backyard to a North York property overlooking a ravine, your dream home might be on the rental market!
YONGE & SHEPPARD
SPACE FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
The home at 271 Forest Run Blvd. features four bedrooms, four bathrooms and a lower level that could easily turn into a separate space for in-laws or kids. It’s listed for $4,800 a month with Royal LePage Your Community Realty.
HOME BY THE RAVINE
The four-bedroom, four-bathroom property at 38 Gwendolen Cres. is true luxury living with an elevator servicing all three floors and a private backyard oasis. It’s listed for $7,200 a month with Chestnut Park Real Estate Limited.
From the charming exterior all the way to the oversized deck extending into the sprawling backyard, the house at 341 St. Clair Ave. E. is a family-friendly dream. With three plus one bedrooms, four bathrooms and enough space for a recreation room on the lower level — not to mention the renovated gourmet kitchen — this property is the ideal starter home. It’s listed for $6,800 a month with Re/Max Realtron Lucky Penny Homes Realty.
21 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
THORNHILL
REAL ESTATE NEWS
T.O.’s real (estate) story
Our boots on the ground look at where the city’s housing market is headed by Josh Sherman
Javier Lirman hasn’t ever seen his residential moving business so quiet.
The founder of Toronto-based movers Cargo Cabbie said the month of July is typically so packed that he calls Canada Day “the Super Bowl of moving.” Yet with home sales activity drying up for most of the year, he was left trying to compensate for lost hours by moving offices that were closing due to the pandemicrelated rise of work-from-home arrangements or doing deliveries between businesses.
“The reality is that the residential market, it’s been on standby now for three months,” said Lirman. “We went from the condo boom to the housing market boom to the renovation boom and now to napping — very little of everything.”
In August, Greater Toronto Area residential transactions remained 34.2 per cent below sales levels from a year ago, according to the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. Meanwhile, the average price of a home, including houses and condo units, was $1,079,500, inching up 0.9 per cent from the same month in 2021.
Although prices and sales unexpectedly rallied in August relative to July, Lirman — who estimates his residential moves are down 40 per cent from last year’s highs — is among those in Toronto’s business community who are still adjusting to the on-
the-ground reality of a housing downturn. Some operations, like his, which have been lifted by Toronto’s multi-year housing boom, are facing pressure to find different revenue streams.
“Housing activity supports an entire ecosystem of supply chains and businesses and industries,” noted Ester Gerassime, economic analyst at the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, “so there are concerns about a cooling down.”
In previous years, the final two weeks of August have been when Renee Elliott Carpenter’s home staging business really started to pick up, following a summertime lull. She starts getting more and more calls from prospective clients who, back from vacation, want to freshen up their homes before listing them during the fall market.
“September typically is our busiest month … and it’s definitely much slower than it was in previous Septembers,” said Elliott Carpenter, founder of Re:Creative, a self-described “Toronto-based property styling team.”
When the housing market is soaring, Elliott Carpenter said, she sometimes sees three to six properties in a single late-summer day. But, with fewer staging appointments, she’s been pivoting to interior design assignments of late.
“We’ve taken on jobs that are a good fit so I can keep my team
22 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
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occupied, because I want to keep them on board — I don’t want to have to lay anybody off,” Elliott Carpenter, whose business employs three, explained.
As a contractor, Elliott Carpenter’s husband, Chris Carpenter, offered a different front line perspective on the cooling market. “I think construction in Toronto is just a beast you can’t kill — it just keeps going,” said the owner of Carpenter & Co, who has been in the trades for two decades.
However, like his wife, he has recently shifted the workload for his six-person team to different areas. Although he tends to focus on high-end carpentry and millwork, over the past six months the company has been doing more full-home renos. It’s a change driven by two factors.
First, he’s seeing some families upgrade their homes rather than move. “They can’t sell their house for what they thought they could a few years ago; instead they’re just going to stay there and renovate it,” he explained.
Carpenter is also seeing investors ditch property-flipping plans to become landlords. In one case, plans for a teardown turned into transforming a house into rental units. The average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in the old city of Toronto climbed 3.2 per cent between July and August, according to a report from rentals.ca. Investors may not get
top dollar in a sale, but the rental market is still going strong, so they’re turning their attention there.
This is something Elan Weintraub, co-founder and director at Mortgage Outlet, has noticed, too. Overall, he’s definitely seen a decline in mortgage originations.
“I mean, I think it’s pretty clear that volume is down quite a bit since the frenzy that I would say probably peaked in February, March theoretically,” said the mortgage broker.
According to TRREB, listings averaged nine days on the market before selling in February, compared to 22 days in August.
Rock-bottom interest rates also played a role in the run-up that spilled over from 2021. “Money was basically free,” said Weintraub. He noted he was offering mortgage rates around 1 per cent early in the year, before the Bank of Canada turned on a path of interest rate hikes to try and tamp down inflation. They’re now approximately 5 per cent, depending on the terms, in the wake of the central bank’s latest hike to 3.25 per cent, on Sept. 7.
From where Lirman stands, those who are still buying homes tend to be in the upscale market.
“We’ve really slowed down, but when it comes to 3,000 plus square feet, homes are still selling, people are still buying,” he said.
That frenzy, he said, was driven by “FOMO: fear of missing out.” Some buyers had been afraid that if they didn’t pull the trigger on a deal then, they might be priced out forever. People had been refinancing their mortgages on Toronto condos to, for example, add rental properties in Alberta to their portfolios or invest in the stock market.
“I think there was a pretty clear point when buyers started having a little more rationality to their purchasing decisions,” he said. “Now, buyers are much more patient. Days on market is longer.”
“Those are the people that still have the money to move,” he explains.
According to Lirman, the worst is still ahead. “I think December is when we’re really going to see a drop or things are really going to stall,” he predicted.
Weintraub is reluctant to say where he thinks the Toronto market is headed — but his big picture view is positive.
“I still think the market is a good investment in the long run,” he said. “It’s very difficult to predict the specific bottom of the market.”
10 Delisle Ave. #906
Rare opportunity at The St. Clair! This southwest corner split-plan of approx. 1,732 sq.ft. features 2+1 bedrooms, 3 baths, reno’d eat-in kitchen & 2 balconies with city & Deer Park views. First-rate amenities. Parking + locker.
120 Rosedale Valley Rd. #701
Mid-century co-op in prime Rosedale! Exceptionally rare unit featuring 3 bdrms, 2 reno'd baths, Downsview kitchen, spacious living area w/ fireplace & 2 large balconies offering southwestern vistas. Parking + locker.
61 St. Clair Ave. W. #1005 & #1504
Granite Place! Each suite is renovated offering north facing views, 2 bdrm/ 2 bath plans, walk-out to an oversized balcony. Parking + locker incld. Enjoy first rate amenities
10 Avoca Ave. #701
One of Toronto's most desirable co-ops at Yonge and St. Clair! This 2 bedroom, 2 baths approx. 1,100 sq.ft. and features a sizable balcony with northwest vistas. Excellent amenities and steps to nature and urban conveniences. Rental parking.
Clockwise from left: home stager Renee Elliott Carpenter, mover Javier Lirman, contractor Chris Carpenter
23 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
“Buyers are much more patient. Days on market is longer.” REAL ESTATE NEWS
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24 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 90 Eglinton Avenue East 416-440-0123 Visit us online: www.vanrijk.com Estate Jewellery and Watches Rolex • Patek • Cartier • Omega • Breitling • Audemars Piguet • IWC Since 1985 Tues. Wed. Fri. 10:30am–5:30pm Thurs. 10:30am–6:30pm Sat. 11:00am–5:00pm Sun. Mon. Closed COLOUR SERVICES BY L’OREAL PROFESSIONAL PARIS Book Your Seat Online at BlowdryLounge.com Follow us on @ blowdrylounge Toronto's Premiere Blowdry & Finishing Salon SAT - CALL FOR DETAILS Cozy sweaters, awesome jeans, joggers, vests , coats etc. Tribal, Renuar, FDJ, Parkhurst and more… Fall has arrived at STORE HOURS - Tues. Wed. Fri. Sat. 11 a.m. til 4 p.m. Thurs. 11 a.m. til 7 p.m.25 Mention this ad to receive *All New Fall Items *RegPrices FALL SHOPPING
25 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 WWW.WILLIAMASHLEY.COM/WAREHOUSESALE *Save up to 80% o Ntl. Sugg. Reg. Price or Comparable Value. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Personal shopping only. Cash, Debit, Visa, Mastercard & Amex accepted. No cheques or credit notes. Items are subject to stock availability. All sales final. E. & O.E. Although strollers may not be accommodated, toddler friendly shopping carts are available that allow for a toddler to be seated securely, or a baby car seat to be placed inside the cart. RUT H ERFORD JAN E S T HWY 4 0 0 T E R E C AR DR CRESTMOUNT CR E DI TV I E W LANGSTAFF RD WES T ON R D. 1 1 1 C R E D I T V I E W R O OA A D V VAAU U G H A N O N ( (HHWWY Y 4 4000 0 & L LAANNGGSSTTAAFFFF) ) RESTOCKED D DAILY FREE PARKING location SAVE UP TO 80%* STARTS OCTOBER 28 TABLEWARE . KITCHENWARE . HOME DÉCOR & SO MUCH MORE 25,000 SQ. FT AND OVER 22 DEPARTMENTS TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY......... 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM FRIDAY.................................................................. 10:00 AM - 8:00 PM SATURDAY & SUNDAY...................................... 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM CLOSED MONDAYS In-Person Fall 47th Annual 162 Cumberland Street 416.967.7500 FALL SHOPPING
26 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 Cynthia FindlayFine Jewellery & Antiques Toronto, Canada Est. 1978 Open by Appointment Only, Shop Online Anytime. www.cynthiafindlay.com • 416-260-9057 Chosen BEST ANTIQUES2022 by Post City Magazines AND FURNISHINGS Manufacturers Clearance Centre 84 Doncaster Ave. (Yonge & Steeles) phone: 905.482.0350 80%OFF MASSIVE CLEARANCE SALE UP TO Many items below cost! Brand Name Lighting for Less! CL ASS I C T R A D IT IO N A L M ODERN CHANDELIERS • PENDANTS • SCONCES • LAMPS • OUTDOOR • BULBS FANS • PARTS • CEILING & VANITY LIGHTING • CONSIGNMENT •BUY • TRADE Tues to Fri 10am –5pm • Sat 10am –5pm • Sun 12 –5pm Visit us at www.inhomelighting.ca | Email: inhomelighting@rogers.com Specializing in Fixture & Lamp Repair, and Fixture Restoration SPECIALIZES IN AGING & SUN-DAMAGE TIRED OR ANGRY EXPRESSION LOOSE & SAGGY SKIN LINES & WRINKLES BROWN SPOTS & FACIAL VEINS ACNE & ROSACEA STUBBORN FAT DEPOSITS To book a consultation please call: 416.483.4541 www.GidonAesthetics.com 1849 Yonge St., Suite 307 Toronto FALL SHOPPING
CURRENTS
S ECTION
It’s that time of year again — when creatures of the night come out to play. No, we’re not talking goblins and ghouls and witches. After a two-year hiatus, Nuit Blanche is back and bigger than ever, and it’ll be summoning all kinds of artists, students and more to emerge from their lairs (read: studios and dorm rooms) to enjoy an overnight spectacular of contemporary art. The return marks the event’s
16th year, happening overnight from sunset on Oct. 1 to sunrise on Oct. 2. And this year, it’s undergoing an expansion: the art exhibits will not just be spread out across the downtown core and Scarborough, but also throughout North York and Etobicoke and neighbourhoods such as Don Mills, East Danforth, Sterling Road, Bloor-Yorkville and more. Come for a sight and stay for the night! Nuit to remember
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A
Clockwise from top: Nuit Blanche installations: ‘murrungamirra’, ‘The Dinner Table’ and ‘BlueGirl’
28 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 163 CORTLEIGH BLVD. $7,249,000. 50’ X 134’ LOT, 4+1 BEDS AND 6 BATHS, APPROX. 4,307 SQ. FT. + BSMT. 388 ELM RD. $3,995,000. 30’ X 105’ LOT, 4+1 BEDS AND 5 BATHS, APPROX. 2,708 SQ. FT. + BSMT. 609 AVENUE RD. #1702 $2,849,000. 2+1 BEDS AND 3 BATHS, APPROX. 1,780 SQ. FT. PLUS 2 TERRACES, 2 PARKING AND 1 LOCKER. $7,500/MONTH, 40’ X 129’ LOT, 4 BEDS AND 3 BATHS, APPROX. 3,000 SQ.FT. TOTAL. 60 CHUDLEIGH AVE. $1,749,000. 31’ X 120’ LOT, 3 BEDS AND 2 BATHS, APPROX. 2,100 SQ. FT. TOTAL. $7,300/MONTH, 30’ X 150’ LOT, 3 BEDS AND 4 BATHS, APPROX. 2,186 SQ. FT. + BSMT. ASKING PRICE $9,195,000. SOLD IN ONLY 31 DAYS! ASKING PRICE $6,999,000. SOLD FOR 95% OF ASKING! 320 ROSEMARY RD. 8 WEETWOOD ST. 36 HAZELTON AVE. #6A 16 HEDGEWOOD RD. 1 OAKLEY PLACE SOLD ASKING PRICE $6,295,000. SOLD IN ONLY 19 DAYS! REAL ESTATE BROKER SOLDSOLD FOR LEASEFOR SALE FOR LEASE
TAKE FLIGHT WITH FALL’S HOTTEST JACKETS
There’s a new trend this fall, and it's taking its cues from pilots! Aviation dressing is in, and Jeanne Beker has selected six of the coolest bomber jackets paired with aviators to get you started.
Jeanne Beker | One of Canada’s most trusted authorities on fashion, now watch her on TSC’s Style Matters with Jeanne Beker or tune in to her new podcast Beyond Style Matters.
SPORT SOME COLOUR
Frank And Oak, 735 Queen St. W., $49.97
"This is a really refreshing and unusual shade for a little bomber jacket. And what a great jacket for travel; it would pack really well."
LEATHER WEATHER Nordstrom, 260 Yonge St., $299
"What a timeless look that's also a bit tougher. Leather is huge this year, and with this faux shearling collar, it has a retro vibe too."
CROPPED AND LOADED Freda's, 45 Elm St., $139
"This is a very casual style, a very sporty style and very, very classy. It's so nice and cropped, and the sleeves look a little fuller."
TICKLED PINK Mackage, 3401 Dufferin St., $690
"This has a real feminine approach to dressing in a bomber-style jacket. It has that great quilting; such a cosy and fun jacket."
RETRO MOMENT
Max Mara, 151 Bloor St. W., $995
"This looks like it could be from the '40s or '50s; great for those who love that nostalgic look. It's great quality and an investment."
VINTAGE VIBES
TNT, 390-394 Eglinton Ave. W., $3,795
"I've always loved a black and white story, and it has gold buttons — most bombers have zippers. Such a bold fashion statement."
SPORT SOME COLOUR Ray-Ban, $237 Yonge
LEATHER WEATHER Nordstrom, $90 260 Yonge St.
CROPPED AND LOADED Archives, $550 archivestoronto.com
TICKLED PINK Zane, $240 753 Queen St. W.
RETRO MOMENT Bonlook, $149 220 Yonge St.
Holly Eyewear, $540 Cumberland St.
VINTAGE VIBES
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FASHION CURRENTS
220
St.
@ca.frankandoak.com @mackage.ca @ca.maxmara.com @tntfashion.ca @fredas.com
130
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High-fashion T.O. retailer takes on kidswear
TNT is bringing glam children’s clothing to midtown by Megan Gallant
This fall, TNT is stocking up its Eglinton flagship location with clothing and apparel designed for kids. Although the retailer previously ventured into kids’ fashion about eight years ago, this time it’s coming back a little bit different.
“The idea here,” says owner Arie Assaraf, “is to focus on the mother or the father who will buy clothes for the kids, as opposed to focusing on the kids who decide what they want.”
Although the former TNT Kids used to market to children of about four to 12 years old, this time the fashion is sized for two age groups: zero to 36 months old and two to eight years old.
“Because a 10-year-old already has their own mind made,” says Assaraf. “They’re going online; they’re finding their own thing.”
With about 60 per cent of the shop focusing on babies and 40 per cent on the
two- to eight-year-old age groups, the line includes many European kids’ brands, like the Barcelona-based Petit Indi, Frenchbased Billieblush and English designer Stella McCartney. Other favourites include Levi’s, the Animal Observatory, Chloe and Zimmermann.
“With the kids, as far as colours go,” says Assaraf, “super neutrals. We’re going to have some fun things in there, but that message, that thread, will be very organic looking. And then when it comes to the two- to eight-year-olds, that’s when we go a little bit more fun. West Coast, you know, casual West Coast feeling.”
Assaraf says that it was important to him to not only have a range of products for children, but to also include a range in price.
As TNT heads into its 30th year of business, Assaraf is very mindful of having three generations of shoppers. Seeing his customers growing, becoming grandmoth-
ers and mothers, had influenced the decision to bring TNT Kids back.
“This is kind of a build — an introduction,” he adds, stating that his plan has always been to watch TNT evolve.
There’s no date set for the opening of TNT Kids, as Assaraf wants it to “organically” open. He does, however, have all the merchandise and is confident the space will be ready within the month.
Although Assaraf hopes over time to expand TNT Kids to the Bayview Village and Yorkdale locations, it will only be immediately available online and at TNT Eglinton at 390–394 Eglinton Ave. W.
“We want to make sure that there is one anchor space and that we have everything in there. We just want to make sure that we’re telling stories of brands as opposed to just little items. And we will evolve with that all the time.”
Get the best fall sneakers & shoes at these local shops
Fall has finally arrived, marking the start of cosy hoodies, workwear and warm trousers. To complete the newfound change in wardrobe, Torontonians are going to need to step up their shoe game and here are four places to do just that.
John Fluevog
Located in the Distillery District, John Fluevog has been producing high-quality and eclectic shoes since 1989. This location carries some of their hottest silhouettes, including Starfleet, the brand’s Star Trek–themed boots, which fit the city’s fashion scene perfectly. 4 Trinity St.
Capsule Toronto
For a complete 180, head over to Capsule, where you will find every neutral shade of New Balance and Salomon ever made. The boutique is very streetwear centric, predominantly playing with technical and sometimes utility-styled pieces. 69 Yorkville Ave., #104
119 Corbo
For those looking to find their newest shoe obsession, head over to 119 Corbo, where you can find a vast selection of high-end fall releases. This Yorkville boutique recently received a great selection of women’s sneakers from Jil Sander, as well as a few boots from Stella McCartney, Dries Van Noten and Balenciaga. 119 Yorkville Ave.
Due West
Due West offers customers a tailored shopping experience that mixes functional, technical wear with high fashion garments meant for those who dress on the bold side, including the brand Kenzo’s easy-to-wear sneakers, which can be your next grab-and-go shoes for the upcoming season. 431 Queen St. W. —MM
Here are the city’s top autumn fashion trends
Back to work, back to school, back to cool by Marcus Mitropoulos
Fall is upon us, and let’s face it, you’ve walked around campus or your office and have definitely seen some people rocking cooler styles than you. Try these four fashion trends to get up to speed.
Wide leg workwear: Wide-cut pants have been popular for a few years now, but workwear has more recently made its way back onto the fashion scene. Dickies is a great wide leg option with a workwear esthetic, but for a newer local alternative with similar styles, try Rosa Rugosa founded by Matty Matheson and Ray Natale.
Crocs and clogs: These are the perfect 9-to-5 shoes. Crocs have had a revival in recent months, especially their newer platform style, which you can find at Nordstrom. For other clogs, check out
Frock in Roncesvalles, for on-trend styles, or Getoutside on Queen West for the comfy classics (Birkenstocks and more).
Funky side bags: Your backpack is important, but a side bag to carry all of your goodies will make you even more stylish. For those looking to splurge, Due West carries a bunch of high fashion brands, including Kenzo, And Wander, Moschino and many more.
Knit sweaters: Get out the cable knits! Just in time for fall, Cos is located on Bloor Street and has an affordable selection of sweaters. Or shop Yorkville’s Stone Island for high quality sweaters that are constantly tested back in the atelier’s Italy hometown to give you that true high fashion feel.
© Lindsay Rosset
L–R: Gray Label clothing brand, the new TNT store for kids
Sneakers from Capsule Toronto
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CURRENTS
FASHION NEWS
36 Prince Arthur Annex $13,500,000 | 10 Parking Spots
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3 + 1 Bedroom | 2.5 Baths 3 Car Parking
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Incredible opportunity. Fantastic & versatile home in a superb location. Lane access to a rare full sized 2 car garage is the icing on the cake for ample parking & storage, as well as potential laneway development.
32 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 416-960-9995 416-960-9995 Sotheby's International Realty Canada, Brokerage | 416-960-9995|1867 Yonge St., Suite 100, Toronto ON Sotheby’s International Realty Canada. Independently owned and operated. Not intended to solicit Buyers or Sellers already under contract.
Broker, Senior Vice President, Sales Sales Representative Senior Vice President, Sales DenhamandBrown.com DenhamandBrown@sothebysrealty.ca @denhamandbrown We believe it’s essential to hear your child’s voice. With a personalized and collaborative approach, we provide you with solutions for your child’s educational needs. We navigate school choices, provide educational planning, and ensure your child’s educational goals are met. www.nancylerner.ca 416.866.7552 Educating the Whole Child
BATTLE OF THE SUPERFAN-ATICS all know resident Raptors fan Nav Bhatia, but basketball isn’t the only sport with its very own superfan in Toronto. a family of Blue Jays enthusiasts through the ages to a hockey lover with a basement memorabilia, this city’s teams have some of the greatest fans in the world! Julia Mastroianni
ARGOS ABOVE EVERYTHING
CREATING A TFC LEGACY
One of a few recognized supporters’ groups for the Toronto FC, you’ve likely seen the Red Patch Boys (RPB) flying their banners and leading chants at every game. President Brad Humber, who has been to every TFC playoff game since the team’s inception, says he wouldn’t call the RPB superfans. “We’re more like really engaged fans.” Humber says preparing for matches is a “full day affair,” involving pre-gaming and setting up with other supporter groups hours before kickoff. “With only 17 home games a season, you end up seeing the same faces,” Humber says. “It’s a real family atmosphere.”
MULTI-GEN JAYS LOVE
Being one of the Toronto Argonauts’ top fans has its perks — like getting a personal shout-out from former Argos player Derrell Mitchell during his Canadian Football League Hall of Fame induction speech. Lori Bursey has been a fan of the team since the early ’80s, and she attends every home game along with as many away games as possible. “The only stadium I have yet to get to is Mosaic in Saskatchewan,” she says. Her commitment to the sport is so intense that she’s turned down job promotions in Ontario and overseas because it meant no longer being able to attend Argos games! 1 3 4
Longtime baseball fan Joyce Zweig got tickets for the whole family (including her three sons) when they announced a team would be coming to Toronto. They all were at the Jays inaugural opening game in 1977 — and Joyce and her son Jonathan, who was nine at the time, have never missed a home opener since. “I think people who knew us considered us a Blue Jays family right from the start,” oldest son Eric says. Back in the pre-Internet days when radio was the only way to follow every game, Jonathan says, “I once brought a transistor radio on a date, to a movie no less! Never had a second date with her.…”
THE LEAFS COLLECTOR
Kurtis Stevenson has been a fan of the Toronto Maple Leafs since he was six years old all the way from Redcliff, Alberta — making his love for the team all the more admirable.
He’s been collecting Leafs memorabilia for 15 years in a selfdescribed basement “cave,” featuring everything from gameworn gloves and helmets to mannequins dressed head to toe in gear. His reputation earned him a seat at the Leafs Jan. 1, 2022, game when COVID restrictions limited fans to mostly the players’ families.
“But buying a lot of gear doesn’t make you more of a fan; we all have the same passion,” he notes.
33 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
2
We
From
‘cave’ covered in Leafs
by
2 1 3 4 FEATURE CURRENTS
To save the planet and ourselves, we need to look up
Near the end of the film Don’t Look Up, Leonardo DiCaprio’s character, astronomer Randall Mindy, turns to the people around him and says, “We really did have everything, didn’t we?”
Although the “everything” has never been equally distributed, humans really have had all that we need to survive and thrive. If only more people would recognize that everything this small blue planet provides — from food and water to a relatively stable climate — is affected by our actions!
If we care for the natural systems of which we’re a part, they’ll continue to sustain us. If we overwhelm them with destruction, overexploitation, pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, we’ll get increasingly frequent and severe heat waves, droughts, floods and other extreme weather–related events, as well as the food and water shortages, refugee crises and systemic breakdowns they bring.
It’s not too late to turn things around — we’re seeing great progress in many areas — but there’s no time to waste. Europe was reeling under record high temperatures this summer, with massive fires in cities and forests; the famed 500-year-old Inca archeological site Machu Picchu in Peru is threatened by fire; the area around Lytton, B.C., was
burning again; parts of Africa have been hit with devastating droughts; and both the Arctic and Antarctic have experienced unprecedented heating.
It’s all taking a toll on people’s physical and mental health, and it’s devastating to all life.
We have to wake up, look up and see that our well-being and survival depend on recognizing
t he systemic failures causing these massive disruptions. When we upset natural systems, nature responds with a shift to some sort o f equilibrium. But nature is indifferent to us; the planet will survive even if we don’t.
There’s no excuse, no reason for this. We know the causes, and we have numerous solutions, with more being developed every day.
Technological innovation is advancing faster than expected, with more efficient and costeffective renewable energy and energy storage methods continuing to come on board. Governments, industry and people worldwide are moving away from fossil fuels, learning to use energy more efficiently and conservatively and embracing clean energy solutions.
But it will take more. We need a paradigm shift. Major news outlets have touted the recent return to fossil-fuelled, energyintensive air travel as a “sign of hope.” Media in Canada feature
one item about climate chaos and then another about “good news for the economy” as oil and gas extraction picks up.
We’ve been blinded by a system t hat encourages voracious consumption, waste and growth as the only way forward — even while the benefits of that system accrue disproportionately to wealthy people and nations.
We’re now paying the price, and the bill is getting higher every day. We need governments to do far more than get together every few years and agree to lower emissions and protect natural features that sequester carbon.
We need to look up.
DAVID SUZUKI
It’s not too late to turn things around in Ontario and beyond, but there’s no time to waste
Cities across the world faced forest fires this year due to the climate crisis
David Suzuki is the host of the CBC’s The Nature of Things and author of more than 30 books on ecology (with files from senior editor Ian Hanington).
34 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
DAILY PLANETCURRENTS
Get a sugar rush with these Ontario candy tours
With Halloween just around the corner, who can resist sweets at this time of year? Whether you're fascinated by the culinary beauty of chocolate making, interested in learning more about candy factory history or just want to get your fill of Ontario’s coolest and sweetest treats, now’s the perfect time to enjoy that sugary goodness. Sure, the Redpath Sugar Museum in Toronto might be temporarily closed, but there are plenty of other candy experiences to be had around Ontario. Add these sweet stops to your next road trip!
Hummingbird
Chocolate Factory
Head over to the picturesque town of Almonte and enjoy more than just a chocolate factory. Specializing in award-winning craft chocolate making, this small batch chocolate factory offers a 40minute tour and tasting, where you’ll learn about the complex character of chocolate based on growing conditions and Hummingbird’s dedication to only sourcing ethically grown cacao. hummingbirdchocolate.com
The Chocolate Factory Experience in Niagara
Next time you’re in Niagara-on-
the-Lake, why not stop by the enclave of St. David’s, situated in the heart of wine country? Take a delectable 20-minute tour and learn all about the art of chocolate making — from its fascinating history to modernday production. Take a peek inside the factory, and taste freshly melted chocolate right from the melting tank. cfxniagara.ca
The Stratford Chocolate Trail
Known for its world-renowned stage productions, Stratford also happens to be a sweet tooth’s paradise. Purchase a self-guided tour package and hop on the chocolate trail for a day of sampling and discovery. Pop into several bespoke local chocolatier shops to meet, taste, learn and enjoy. visitstratford.ca/chocolatetrail
The Candy Factory/ Georgian Bay Chocolates
For adventurers en route to Blue Mountain, make a stop in Collingwood to explore the Candy Factory. Overflowing with all kinds of rainbowcoloured candies and chocolates, this special factory and shop offers a phenomenal selection of confections. What's more,
visitors can glimpse the skilled candy-making artists at work before exploring the candy equipment museum on site. candyfactory.ca
Chocolate Tales
Take your cacao obsession to the next level and book a hands-on chocolate-making workshop. Available in both Toronto and Hamilton, learn how to create gorgeous Belgian chocolate from scratch or make decadent truffles or refine your skill with several chocolate decorating courses. To further compliment your experience, book a 30-minute tour of Hamilton’s Chocolate Tales factory to see production in action. chocolatetales.ca
The Fudge Factory
No trip to Niagara Falls would be complete without a visit to Clifton Hill’s Fudge Factory. Grab yourself a slice of smallbatch fudge and discover the many sweets and treats available. Watch the pro candy cooks whip up all sorts of confections right before your eyes and experience the magic of this part of town. cliftonhill.com/shopping/fudgefactory
L-R: Candy apples at The Fudge Factory, painting bars at Hummingbird Chocolate Factory
Six
35 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
GREAT ESCAPES CURRENTS
sweet adventures, from a historic chocolate factory to an iconic fudge landmark by Rebecca Hesse ANYTIME ∙ ANYWHERE ∙ ANY DEVICE Download 311 App Visit: toronto.ca/311 Call 311 CONNECT WITH 311 TORONTO
Degrassi and Netflix star lands role opposite Mila Kunis
Nicole Huff on earning a breakout role with her childhood movie idol by Zakiya Kassam
From a very young age, Nicole Huff had a fierce passion for the arts.
“I grew up dancing, singing, acting, playing piano, figure skating and doing karate — my parents enrolled me in so many different activities,” says the Toronto actor. But it was acting and music that drew her in the most.
“I was always watching movies or listening to music to get inspiration, and I just enjoyed creating and telling stories that made people smile,” she says. “And as I got older, I found that it wasn't just about making people smile, it was also about feeling things. I watched films and listened to music that I could relate to or to help me get through a difficult time.”
Huff has been performing since she was six years old. She got her start acting in commercials — she has over 35 under her belt — but shifted gears to TV in 2008.
REPORT CARD
STUDENT: Nicole Huff
GRADUATED: Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts
BEST SUBJECT: Drama
WORST SUBJECT: Science
CURRENT JOB: Actor
“As I started putting my focus into acting, I started seeing results.
I started taking acting lessons and really trying to hone my craft, and it specifically grew in high school,” she says. “I graduated from Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts. I majored in drama and I just absolutely fell in love
with it.”
Although Huff describes herself as “always outgoing,” it was at Cardinal Carter that her confidence grew and she began to expand her range as an actress.
“I got more comfortable in myself and being able to portray different characters and tell
different stories,” she says. “And that's around the time where I auditioned for Degrassi. Degrassi really helped me get into different rooms with different casting directors. I noticed that after I landed [that] part, I started getting more opportunities to read for different characters.”
For Huff, Degrassi was a breakout role. But in her view, she’s had several — each one allowing her to test the waters of something new — and she hopes to have many more to come.
In 2020, she landed the role of Paige Aquino on the hit series Tiny Pretty Things, an experience which she says helped her to make a name for herself in Los Angeles. The show exploded on Netflix, and Huff became someone who was getting recognized by fans internationally. In 2021, she played Alina Taylor on CBC’s Pretty Hard Cases — her first big comedy role.
Now, Huff has earned her
breakout role in film as Olivia Kaplan in Luckiest Girl Alive, which stars and is produced by Mila Kunis. Huff says it feels like a major accomplishment for her to work alongside Kunis.
“It's such a big deal to me because I grew up watching her and grew up loving her work,” she says. “I remember watching Gia growing up and seeing Mila Kunis play young Angelina Jolie and admiring that movie. And now I get to work with her. It's funny how things come full circle that way.”
Now that Huff has wrapped filming for Luckiest Girl Alive, she’s taking some time to focus on her musical aspirations. And she also hopes to land her next breakout role soon.
“I’m hoping to portray a lead character, whether that be in a film or a television show,” she says. “Or get to work with someone else that I look up to. Someone like Mila Kunis, you know?”
Nicole Huff gained international recognition for her role in ‘Tiny Pretty Things’
36 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
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Dammit Janet, I love you!
For Rena, co-cast head, stage manager and occasional Janet with Toronto’s long-running The Rocky Horror Picture Show shadow cast, the show isn’t just a career or an interest — it’s a way of life. Luckily, she found someone who loves it just as much as she does — her husband of four years and boyfriend of 14 years before that, Air’leth. The Excited Mental State cast member takes us on the “strange journey” of their meet cute at the former Bloor Cinema and their themed wedding.
How they met
We met as teenagers in line for The Rocky Horror Picture Show at the then Bloor Cinema. We were both regulars who went the last Saturday of every month and showed up early to line up to get the best seat. Air'leth was there with his two best friends right in front of me. To pass the time, they started singing the music from Hedwig and the Angry Inch — a sort of Rocky Horror–adjacent cult film. Naturally, I sang along, and they turned and offered to let me sit with them. I think the first thing Air'leth said to me was, “Can you watch my bag for a minute?”
This being 2005, what ended up
happening was he got my email address off of the Toronto Rocky Horror fan forum and added me on MSN Messenger.
The first date
We had a very strange but lovely first date: April 2, 2005. We met at a juice place and ended up walking from Queen and Spadina to Yonge Street to Bloor and back to
kept chatting on MSN!
I brought him to my high school prom, and we kept dating as we both went to university in the city. We were still so young (17 and 18), so despite being madly in love, we took our time before taking any big steps.
The wedding
We wanted to have a relatively traditional Jewish ceremony, but we had to throw in some nods to how we met. As everyone took their seats in the synagogue, my friend played a very gentle version of “Science Fiction, Double Feature” (Rocky Horror's opening song), and I walked down the aisle to “The Origin of Love” — one of the songs from Hedwig that we sang together that first time we met. We had an after-party at a bar downtown that night and hired three drag queens to perform. They brought us up onstage, and we danced “The Time Warp” to finish off the night!
The secret to success I remember feeling self-conscious about having to explain to my friends that there's this weird movie from the ’70s and every month I get dressed up and watch it and can quote the whole thing because I've seen it 200 times. And then I met Air'leth — someone who not only understood that, but shared that! If you start your relationship knowing the weirdest thing about each other off the bat, that's a great foundation.
Other than that, we grew up together, but I don't think we would have had an easy time if we had gotten married at 19. Maybe 14 years was a bit long to wait, but I'm glad we were able to grow and get comfortable as adults and still find ourselves happy and in love.
Shared interests
I think we have a great balance of things we like to do together (seeing live music and theatre, hosting Shabbat dinners), as well as our own interests and passions that we pursue on our own.
Bathurst station. I think it was eight hours of just hanging out and talking. It was funny because we had been chatting online so much, but we still had so much to say in person! I was completely smitten with him. Not only were we both Rocky Horror fans, but we were both vegetarians, Jewish, cat lovers, etc. We got home and immediately
I've seen lots of lifelong friends made at Rocky Horror. It warms my heart every time I see a giddy group of teenagers come to our show, all dressed up and excited about the chaotic joy around them. Rocky Horror is such a special community. That's the reason it's lasted for almost 50 years — it's a fabulous place to let go, be free and be not only accepted for who you are, but celebrated!
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Longtime Rocky Horror Picture Show cast member on finding her match
Rena and Air’leth incorporated ‘Rocky Horror’ songs into their wedding
“ We met as teenagers in line for ‘The Rocky Horror Picture Show’ at the then Bloor Cinema.”
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37 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
HOW THEY MET CURRENTS
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THE TICKETS CURRENTS
On and Off the Ice, on Oct. 24 at the city’s favourite basement, the Dakota Tavern. Trottier is a sixtime Stanley Cup winner and one of the leaders of the New York Islanders dynasty of the early ’80s. This unique evening also includes a musical set with Trottier performing with Bidiniband, featuring Dave Bidini. dakotatavern.ca
MUSIC
8. Go to to Lizzo
Lizzo is bringing her The Special Tour to Toronto on Oct. 7, at Scotiabank Arena. The Detroit, Michigan, singer is touring in support of her latest album, Special, released this summer and featuring the number one hit “About Damn Time,” amongst other gems. Lizzo is a classically trained flautist. She released her debut album Lizzobangers in 2013 and has since become a popular and award-winning international artist. Special guest on the tour is Latto. scotiabankarena.com
THEATRE
Rock legends, hockey legends and leather shorts
Here this
1. Go to Oktoberfest Toronto
The city’s largest Oktoberfest celebration runs until Oct. 1 at Ontario Place. The biggest celebration of Bavarian culture is set for Saturday night, so get out your leather shorts and head down for an evening of beer and bratwurst and stay for the live entertainment, killer polka tunes and good times. torontooktoberfest.ca
2. See Mean Girls
Former theatre kid and one of the funniest people on the planet, Tina Fey, got to live the dream and create a Broadway musical version of the beloved cult classic movie Mean Girls. This new musical production straight from New York City is created and written by Tina Fey and produced by Torontonian Lorne Michaels of Saturday Night Live fame. The musical follows the life of young Cady Heron (played by Lindsay Lohan in the movie version) who has navigated some pretty challenging scenarios in her young life but nothing prepared
her for the most frightening challenge of all — high school. Mean Girls runs from Oct. 25 to Nov. 27 at the Princess of Wales Theatre. mirvish.com
3. Go to Kevin Hart
The Man from Toronto is back in the city to perform a rare night of standup comedy as part of his Reality Check Tour. Hart is one of the most popular comedians in the world and has starred in countless very funny movies, including Jumanji and The Man from Toronto, which was shot in Toronto last year, featuring Hart opposite Woody Harrelson. The Grammy Award–winning American comedian’s last tour was in 2017, and he sold out arenas across North America. His last tour, the 2017 Irresponsible tour, sold out several prominent venues across North America, Europe, Asia and Oceania. He has been nominated for two Grammy awards for his comedy albums and two Primetime Emmys for his film and TV work. Hart performs at Scotiabank Arena, Oct. 29–30. scotiabankarena.com
4. Go to The Who
In 1982, legendary British band the Who played the last show of the First Farewell Tour right here in Toronto. The concert was recorded, and the band released it as a double live album. So the band has always had an eye for our city, and fans can expect an amazing show when the pinball wizards return for a rare concert appearance on Oct. 2 at Scotiabank Arena. Only Roger Daltry and guitarist Pete Townsend remain from the original lineup of the acclaimed band that has sold more than 100 million albums and is considered one of the most influential of all time. Toronto musician Steven Page opens the show. scotiabankarena.com
opening night event will be an outdoor screening at stackt market, featuring the film Forest for the Trees by Rita Leistner. The Canadian Screen Award–winning film explores the physical and emotional aspects of a community of Canadian west coast tree planters. planetinfocus.org
9. See The Storyville Mosquito
5. Watch Planet in Focus film festival
Toronto’s festival of environmental films, Planet in Focus, is back with an in-person festival this month, Oct. 13–23. The full schedule was to be announced on Sept. 30, but the
6. See Kent Monkman Acclaimed Cree artist Kent Monkman’s major solo exhibition Being Legendary opens at the Royal Ontario Museum on Oct. 8 showing until March 19, 2023. According to the ROM, the Toronto artist “created this new body of work in direct response to artifacts and natural history specimens in ROM’s permanent collection.” The exhibit features 35 paintings as well as sculptures and etchings.
BOOKS ART
7. See Bryan Trottier reading Hockey and lit fans alike can catch a legend of the game and top 75 NHL player of all time Bryan Trottier read from his new memoir, All Roads Home: A Life
One of the country’s most ambitious and creative artists, Kid Koala brings this unique production to town for a short run at the Bluma Appel Theatre, Oct. 20–23. The Storyville Mosquito is a live animated graphic novel that is performed, filmed, edited and scored in one take each night. A team of 15 performers, musicians, foley artists and technicians cinematically bring the characters to life using miniature sets, puppets and multiple cameras, and it is accompanied by an original music soundtrack featuring a string trio and Kid Koala on piano, turntables and percussion. kidkoala.com/tour/
FILM
10. Watch Kevin Smith
A ’90s folk hero and filmmaker, Kevin Smith is in town this month for the Clerks III: The Convenience Tour at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre on Oct. 11, at 7 p.m. The event will include a screening of Clerks III, followed by a Q&A with Smith. He released his first film, Clerks, in 1994, followed by Mallrats, in 1995, establishing himself as a gifted chronicler of slacker culture. queenelizabeththeatre.ca
L-R: Oktoberfest Toronto is Bavarian beer hall heaven, plus comedian Kevin Hart hits town this month
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rom.on.ca
EVENT THEATRE COMEDY FILM MUSIC
BIG
are the best 10 events happening in Toronto
month
40 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
tricks,treats & goodeats SHIPWRECKS
CREEPY COCKTAILS
THE ALICE
This immersive cocktails experience is an evening filled with costumes, role-playing and a devilishly good time in keeping with the spirit of the season. The Alice is described as a “theatrical, alternate reality experience that will take you down the rabbit hole.” Plus … cocktails! The show is held at Thirty Six Knots, a midtown furniture store. thirtysixknots.com
Eerie Events
STORM CROW MANOR
Although the self-professed nerdy sanctuary is a little bit Halloween all year, Storm Crow kicks it up a notch in October with spooky drinks and events. For instance, the pub, festooned with decorations from Klingon to Harry Potter, is hosting its first annual Halloween Market on Oct. 16. stormcrow.com
HALLOWEEN ON A BOAT!
HAUNTED HARBOUR Haunted Walk and Pirate Life get together for this ghostly tour of Toronto’s Haunted Harbour. The show blends immersive theatre, ghost stories and a nautical excursion into an unforgettable experience aboard a ghostly vessel. Expect harrowing tales once the ship sets sail from 1 Queens Quay E. piratelife.ca/hauntedharbour
GHOST SHIP 2022
This is a floating night club, and, for one night only, it’s dedicated to all things spooky, spectral and, otherwise, scary. The boat departs from the harbour of doom at 11 Polson St. on Saturday, Oct. 29, and returns, or at least hopefully returns, in the wee hours of the morning of Oct. 30. There’s even a $500 prize for best costume. eventbrite.ca
THESE NIGHTS OUT ARE HEAVY ON THE HOCUS POCUS
MYSTICISM
A small gathering is invited to an intimate and authentic Victorian seance. Toronto’s historic and haunted Howland Inn is the setting for Jaymes White’s eerie and soulshaking event that runs until Nov. 26. jaymeswhite.com/seance
MURDER
Looking for an evening of dance with a spooky vibe? Try an immersive double bill at Harbourfront Centre, Oct. 27–29, that includes the thrilling piece Double Murder, with the macabre comedy of murder and desire, Clowns, opening the evening. harbourfrontcentre.com
WITCHCRAFT
One of the most beloved Halloween movies of all time is back. The Revue Cinema is screening the film Hocus Pocus on Oct. 31. Don’t miss this classic, starring Bette Midler as the witch Winnie Sanderson, then watch the long-awaited sequel on Disney+. revuecinema.ca
WIZARDRY
If there is an ideal night of Halloween fun for the entire family, it could be tickets to see the musical take on the story of everyone’s favourite wizard. Dress up as your fave character, and check out Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, on now at the Ed Mirvish Theatre. mirvish.com
From top: Haunted Harbour; Ghost Ship
41 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR A POSITIVELY PETRIFYING TIME THIS HALLOWEEN
CONTINUED ON NEXT SPREAD
haunted towns
WHITEVALE
This little hamlet in north Pickering is pretty and has some nice hiking. Just don’t get stuck here after dark. Maybe it’s the old flour mill, the gnarly trees or pot-holed roads winding their way around ancient and abandoned homes. There’s a reason why more creepy shows per capita are filmed here!
The Dead Zone, Paradise Falls, Goosebumps, for example, not to mention at least one well-known haunted house. Enjoy!
shop till you drop
AWAKEN THE SPIRITS WITHIN
THE OCCULT SHOP
This one-stop shop for all your spiritual needs includes books, candles, oils, incense and more. This Bathurst Street shop specializes in custom incense sticks and cones, herbal blends, bath salts and over 2,000 magical oil blends made in house. theoccultshop.ca
HAPPY SOUL
Happy Soul is a store that specializes in metaphysical products, with most of its goods also incorporating educational instructions. The sizable freebies help to draw in customers looking for candles, incense, tarot oracle cards, sound bowls and other products. happysoulcrystals.com
THE ROCK STORE
The Rock Store is a crystal emporium and health centre located in downtown Toronto. Set in a hundred-year-old two-storey French-inspired mansion, it features a specialty store selling crystals, meditation tools, healing literature, ritual items and yoga items. therockstore.ca
SHANTI BABA TRADING
At Shanti Baba Trading, they believe that the power of healing comes from within. However, they also believe that it can be harnessed and channelled through the use of shamanic and spiritual tools. From crystals and minerals to aromatic smoke products, Shanti Baba Trading offers a wide range of items that can help to improve your mental, physical and emotional well-being. shanti-baba-trading.myshopify.com
SCARY SPOTS
GET YOUR CREEP ON AT T.O.’S MOST HAUNTED BUILDINGS
LUCAN
Located in rural southwestern Ontario, Lucan has a lot of things going for it, including a lovely main street, country charm and, yes, a museum largely dedicated to one of the country’s most infamous mass murders in history.
The story of the “Black” Donnellys involves family feuds and an angry mob burning the Donnelly family to the ground, killing four of the five family members. Go.
Have your fun.
DAVID
Toronto’s Kiefer Sutherland put in a seriously sinister turn as this vampire in the ’80s classic Lost Boys. The film is worth watching for the sax solo alone, but a cool squad of dirt biking teen vamps is good too.
ELENA GILBERT
Fellow Torontonian Nina Dobrev became a vamp icon with her lead role as Mystic Falls resident creature of the night in Vampire Diaries. The show is still essential viewing for teens today, even if you’re Team Stefan. Bletch.
GIBRALTAR POINT LIGHTHOUSE
Hands down, there have been more hauntings reported at this Toronto Island spot than any other in the city. Go at night, learn the tale of murder most foul at this very spot, and hope to catch a glimpse of the resident ghost.
THE DON JAIL
More than 60 people were hanged at this very spot on Gerrard near Broadview, and many say those killed still walk the grounds of this eerie building including a blond woman who killed herself.
From top: The Rock Store; Shanti Baba Trading
42 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
T HE 2022 HALLOWEEN GUIDE
DAVID CRONENBERG
Toronto’s fave body horror filmmaker has made a career of making people squirm. His skills are front and centre in his new movie Crimes of the Future. Of course, we are partial to his classic The Fly for Halloween.
GUILLERMO DEL TORO
This horror fan and filmmaker, who grew up in Toronto, has not one but two Netflix projects on the go, first a remake of Pinocchio followed by the creepy Cabinet of Curiosities just in time for Halloween.
Devilish Date Nights
LEGENDS OF HORROR
The grounds of Casa Loma will be transformed into an immersive theatrical experience filled with actors, gardens, and chambers below the castle including tunnels and dark spaces never-before open to the public in this one-hour immersive experience. legendsofhorror.ca/zombieapocalypse
SCREEMERS
Toronto’s original haunted attraction includes seven haunted walk-through mazes, featuring over 120 live actors and limited rides on the Midway of Madness, housed under a huge 15,000-square-foot tent with stage shows and a licensed vampire lounge. screemers.ca
FEAR FARM
Wander through a pitch-black cornfield (just don’t get lost) and experience four different horror mazes at this legendary haunted farm. Look out for chainsaw-wielding hillbillies, creepy clowns and much more. fearfarm.ca
MARTINO MANOR
Roam through a three-story spooky indoor haunted house and vast outdoor maze, filled with live actors and shadows that unexpectedly sneak up on you. This event, located in Etobicoke at 7 McIntosh Ave., is so scary it’s only for those 14 and older. martinomanor.com
Dressed To Kill!
real ghost kitchens
SPIRIT HALLOWEEN
This is T.O.’s top shop for Halloween garb. It boasts costumes for kids, adults, plus sizes and couples, as well as amazing decorations and animatronics for a spooky home. Hot new arrivals include a Ted Lasso tracksuit. stores.spirithalloween. com/on/toronto
CANDY’S
This midtown shop offers period pieces, horror, occupation, plussize options, couples’ costumes and humorous attire (i.e., stand out in an inflatable sumo costume complete with a battery-operated fan or this Mona Lisa costume). candyscostumeshop.com
WORTS AND ALL
Balzac’s has several staple locations across Ontario, but their Distillery District location is one of the best places in the city for coffee with a side of history. It’s also reported to be haunted. There have been several reports of a man dressed in old-fashioned clothing roaming about the building and disappearing through walls. Some say it’s the ghost of James Worts, who founded the mill in 1831, and is especially active this time of year.
STEAK AND NECKS
The iconic Keg Mansion steak house on Jarvis was once the private residence of Hart Massey’s family. Legend has it that, after the tragic death of Massey’s daughter Lillian in 1915, one of the maids was so distraught by grief that she killed herself. In 1976, the mansion became home to the Keg restaurant, and ghostly visions of the dead maid have been seen by Keg patrons and employees ever since.
From top: Martino Manor; Fear Farm
HORRIFYING HAUNTED HOUSES
THE BEST COSTUME SHOPS FOR ALL HALLOWS' EVE
43 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
T HE 2022 HALLOWEEN GUIDE
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BIO
WHOLE LIFE INSURANCE AS AN ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT
If only we had a crystal ball. We would know the best time to put money in the stock market, when interest rates will rise, when death or injury would occur; or on a lighter note, pick next week’s winning lottery numbers. Unfortunately, there isn’t such a thing as a crystal ball. However there is the ability to help people look at their finances differently and perhaps look at alternative investment options based on our current economic environment.
Recently there has been an opportunity to make use of life insurance as an alternative asset class. This is an excellent strategy for business owners who accumulate retained earnings within their corporations. This type of planning is particularly attractive to individuals, who would be characterized as having a low risk tolerance and don’t want to risk their capital; who are interested in increasing the value of their estate that would pass on to their children.
The meaningful benefits of whole life insurance are:
• The ability to increase your rate of return significantly on cash, near cash and a portion of your fixed income portfolio over a long period of time;
• The ability to access your equity in a tax effective manner if the invested capital is required for other investment opportunities to provide you
CONTACT
Independent Financial Concepts Group www.ifcg.com
with a future income;
• Significant downside protection in the event of death with immediate liquidity that can be used to finance estate tax liabilities, provide funds for charitable endeavours or equalize estate assets for your children and grandchildren;
• The ability to create a significant capital dividend account, which would enable your heirs to access corporate capital in a tax-free manner in the future.
In conclusion, the strategy of using whole life insurance as an alternative investment involves repositioning a portion of corporate dollars into a permanent life insurance contract. Structured correctly the strategy minimizes the capital gains triggered upon death and takes advantage of the Capital Dividend Account to pay a tax-free dividend to the shareholders/beneficiaries. Funds contributed to the strategy grow free from tax and are accessible during one’s lifetime.
•Do you wear dentures? Many people over the age of 65 use some form of removable denture. While the majority of dentures fit well, some always move, lift and cause discomfort. These people may choose not to wear them. This may lead to difficulty chewing and lack of confidence in social interactions. There is also a strong link between overall good health and proper oral care.
•Dental implants can help. Dental implants can restore comfort and confidence and help people love their dentures again. A dental implant has two parts: a metal root that is secured to the jaw bone and an abutment. The abutment is a specifically-made part that will securely anchor your denture in place preventing movement. Implants are so versatile that they can replace a single tooth or a bridge, eliminate the need for a removable partial denture or even secure complete full-mouth dentures. Implants are safe and have a proven track record for long-term success. When using implants to replace a single tooth, neighbouring teeth do not need to be used as anchors for the replacement making it a very conservative choice in many cases.
Dental implants do not require any special care other than routine dental visits. Age is not a factor in the success of dental implants. Most people in good
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health are excellent candidates.
•Do you have broken or missing teeth? One Visit Porcelain Crowns may be right for you. A full or partial crown is used to replace or strengthen a broken tooth. When a tooth is filled multiple times throughout a patient’s life, the critical tooth structure necessary for the tooth to be strong and function well may be lost. Many of these teeth break and require restoring. Options usually include very large fillings or crowns. Fillings fit inside the tooth and require original tooth structure to hold it all together. If part or all of the original tooth has been lost, then a full coverage crown may be a better option. There are many different materials and methods that may be used to make full coverage crowns. With digital technology, we can make a direct 3D image of the broken tooth from the patient’s mouth, design the new tooth (crown) on the computer chairside and have the new tooth made in the office. These crowns are beautiful, strong and functional and are permanently placed in the patient’s mouth in one visit. Amazing technology!
Madison Bongard and Jaymie Bongard
Involved in the financial industry since the late 1970s, Jaymie co-founded Independent Financial Concepts Group (IFCG) in 1995 and belongs to Top of the Table, which accepts fewer than 1% of financial planning professionals worldwide. A graduate of Western University, Madison joined IFCG in 2014. Together, they support clients with tax-advantaged wealth accumulation and preservation strategies.
Dr. Edwin Lewandowski, Dr. Elvira (Ella) Mostyn, Dr. Haley Frydrych
Dr. Lewandowski is a graduate of New York University (NYU) College of Dentistry. He has worked as an instructor at the NYU Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto Faculty of Dentistry as well as in a hospital based dental clinic. Dr. Mostyn obtained her dental degree from The Faculty of Dentistry at James Cook University, Australia. Dr. Haley Frydrych received her dental degree from the University of Toronto.
48 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
Dr. Edwin Lewandowski and Associates 1200 Centre St., Suite 101 Thornhill, ON 905-762-0122 www.thornhilldental.com
BIO CONTACT DENTAL IMPLANTS ONE VISIT PORCELAIN CROWNS Thornhill Dental PROFESSIONALS
S ECTION
Toronto outpost of Momofuku moving on
When news broke in 2012 that “one of the most important restaurants in America” was heading to Toronto, the city’s foodies collectively wept with joy. Chef David Chang (pictured above, inset) had built a culinary empire with New York’s Momofuku Noodle Bar, and the first Canadian outpost was a cause for much celebration. Now, after a decade of countless bowls of ramen, the hip export will be
closing its doors and exiting the Shangri-La Hotel. Although some might speculate the departure might be connected to Momofuko’s noticeable absence from Toronto’s recent Michelin Guide, the lockdown is most likely to blame. There’s still plenty of time to grab a menu mainstay, like the ginger scallion noodles or the delicious pork belly bun — Momofuku will close its doors on Dec. 23.
49 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
FOOD
PROFESSIONALS
LET ME SAY IT AGAIN
If you still haven’t considered making your Will and Powers of Attorney, please do so because if you don’t you are not doing your beneficiaries or yourself any favours! If you neglect to organize your personal affairs the costs to your estate or yourself personally may be significant.
To refresh your memory, a Will is your way to ensure that your property is distributed to the individuals and charities you would like to benefit on your death. The Will comes into force the day you die. If you don’t have a Will in place when you die, your estate will be distributed in accordance with the provisions of the Succession Law Reform Act, with the result that your assets could go to people you may not intend to benefit, and people you want to leave to benefit your assets to may miss out. Don’t let that happen.
To be valid, a Will must be in writing and signed by yourself in the presence of two witnesses. There must be three people at the table to see each other sign. Sounds straightforward, but these formalities must be followed, otherwise the Will may not be valid. Your witnesses should not be persons also named in your Will to receive a gift, nor should either witness be the spouse of a person named to receive a gift in your Will.
No time for the formalities of a proper Will? In a pinch, you may make a Holograph Will. This is a less formal document, entirely handwritten by you, signed and dated by you at the end of the document. If all these particulars are followed, it may be valid. It may be dangerous to do a Holograph Will if you don’t know what you are doing and certainly if you have assets of any size. Not only do you have to follow the formalities highlighted here, but you have to word the document correctly so that every- one understands it. Furthermore, if you type your Will out on the computer, then print, date and sign it, this Will may not be recognized as a valid Holograph will as it is not in your own handwriting. Then your estate is back at square one and your property will be distributed in accordance with the Succession Law Reform Act.
Don’t forget Powers of Attorney, a real must for both Property and Personal Care. An experienced Wills and Estates lawyer can streamline the process and ensure you don’t trip into any pitfalls.
BIO
We’ve all heard it – take more Vitamin C, D, Zinc, Echinacea, eat this not that, exercise more, sleep more and so on. It’s certainly well-meaning advice to give people a fighting chance at warding off the virus du jour (whether it be COVID-19 or influenza). Yet, all too often, we are confronted with conundrums where one person thrives with certain recommendations, and another dwindles. Why do we see such disparity? Genetics. When genetic sequencing platforms, like 23andMe, first came to market they focused on ethnic origins and major disease risks, like cancer,
rather than modifiable parameters. As time has progressed, more platforms allow us to take the “raw data” of your genome and “decode” it to know not just what genes you have, but how those genes interact. This is the true key to lifestyle genomics – understanding how different genes, in seemingly unrelated areas, interact to impact health.
This genetic interaction is also the key to using genes to optimize immunity. We can’t just look at the genes related to immune function. We also must consider inflammation, detoxification,
CONTACT
Mary Anne Shaw - Barrister and Solicitor 1366 Yonge Street, Suite 308
stress, sleep, and nutrient absorption genes. Often, inflammation, stress and detoxification genes can carry the most weight.
For example, one of the main immune genes, IRF5, dictates how quickly the immune system recognizes and mounts a response to an invader, like a virus. If your genetic make-up is “typical” (known as wild type), then your immune system will see this invader quickly, neutralize it and you will possibly never know it was present.
But, if you are “atypical” (known as variant), then you won’t see the invader as quickly, allowing it time to replicate, produce symptoms and trigger inflammation.
If your inflammation genes are also variant, you will be more prone to mounting a significant inflammatory response that can contribute to increased symptoms, disease severity and ineffective treatment.
Furthermore, if your genes make you more prone to getting locked in a stress state, you will not only produce more inflammation, but you will also have a harder time recovering from the physical stress of the virus.
Similarly, if you happen to genetically code for a fast-acting enzyme in the liver, called CYP 1A2, then you are going to produce more toxic intermediates from incoming toxins. While this can be a favourable genetic coding most of the time, in the face of immune attack, it can mean you produce more inflammation, further thwarting your ability to fight the infection. Not to mention, this enzyme is sped up by the popular immune herb, Echinacea.
So, what would we do in this case with this genetic understanding? We would consider using
maryanneshaw@shawlaw.ca Tel: 416-968-0096
an immune herb known to block the viral binding sites, such as Olive Leaf Extract, while also modifying the inflammatory and detoxification responses with agents like N-Acetyl-Cysteine (NAC) and Liposomal Glutathione. Lastly, we would modify the stress and inflammatory response with an extract from milk, called Lactium.
As this shows, by making small changes to our lifestyle, diet, and supplements, we can not only optimize our genetic blueprint, but we can also alter the way genes work. Knowing your genes means you can use targeted and individualized treatment, rather than presuming what actions might fight the germs this cold and flu season.
Mary Anne Shaw, B.A., LL.B.
Mary Anne Shaw is an established lawyer whose law practice focuses on Wills and Estates, Residential Real Estate and Family Law. Mary Anne Shaw is very active in the community, and has served on many boards and foundations in the not-for-profit arts and health sectors. She provides personal service and practical solutions.
Dr.
Dr. Hand,
50 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
GERMS & GENES: HOW GENETICS CAN HELP YOU FIGHT COLD & FLU SEASON The DNA double helix and nucleotide base pairs that create a gene Q Wellness 124 Merton St. Suite 405 416-485-9000 www.qwellness.ca Email: info@qwellness.ca
Quinn Hand, ND is a naturopathic doctor with clinical interests in digestion, stress, hormones – and their interactions. She has been using genetics for the last 5 years to optimize her clients’ health.
Quinn
ND
GIVE ’EM PUMPKIN TO TALK ABOUT
Can you imagine a multi-course Thanksgiving dinner that isn’t followed by a big ol’ slice of pumpkin pie? We tapped chef and television personality Eden Grinshpan to give us her take on where to nab the most delicious pie in the city.
WANDA’S PIE IN THE SKY
“While it’s a little too runny and watery, it still tastes nice. The colours are warm, rich and pumpkiny. I like the design of the crust, and that there’s a substantial amount of it, because I always like to eat the crust.”
287 Augusta Ave., $32
Tasteslikehomemad e
CHARMAINE SWEETS
“This pie has a beautifully pumpkin flavour to it, and the crust has the most satisfying crunch and texture. I love how rustic it looks and the addition of the gooseberry on top. I really like eating something that feels homemade, so I feel that visually this pie speaks to me — especially being a crust girl.”
115 Vanderhoof Ave., $24
SWEETIE PIE
“I find the crust on the bottom to be a little too soft, or maybe it’s too thin — I just want more. They did a nice job balancing the spices and highlighting the pumpkin flavour. The whipped cream is a nice addition, but I don’t think it’s necessary.”
1639 Bayview Ave., $26.99
Publi sher oice
LA ROCCA
This pie has a classic pumpkin pie filling made with fresh cream and a perfect amount of spice. The almond shortbread crust is crisp and flavourful, and this gorgeous wreath of seasonal leaves makes for a rustic, festive effect. 2638 Yonge St., $29
PHIPPS DESSERTS
“Visually, the glazed look isn’t that appealing to me, and I find that it’s a little too soft. There’s a pumpkin purée texture coming through, and I’d like it to be a bit more firm. It’s very sweet, which isn’t a bad thing. This pie is less about the spice and more about the pumpkin. They really captured the pumpkin flavour.”
1875 Leslie St., #21, $15.65
Festive
ELECTRIC LOVE BAKESHOP
“I like the texture! It’s all about the spices with this one. A lot of warm flavours are coming through. The pumpkin flavour is secondary to the warm spices, but it’s still really nice. I like the amount of crust because I just like a chunky crust.”
788 Marlee Ave., $30
nutt y texture
EDEN GRINSHPAN
The Food Network star is the current host of Top Chef Canada as well as a bestselling author.
RUNNER-UP
CRUST BAKING CO.
“This is really nice. I love the use of spices in this pie and the addition of the nuts and that textural element that you get. They’ve done a great job flavouring the pumpkin, highlighting and treating it well in the pie. It feels very festive and very fall.”
9610 Yonge St., Unit B1, $35
FLAKY TART
“It’s light and airy, which is something you don’t expect with pumpkin pie. The filling is definitely the star here. It’s not overly spiced and it has a creamy texture. There’s not a lot of pumpkin flavour though.” 711 Mount Pleasant Rd., $25
’ s ch
WINNER
TASTE TEST FOOD
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One chef, two Michelin restaurants
Patrick Kriss receives double the love from the Michelin Guide by Ben Kaplan
Patrick Kriss was wearing all black — jeans, shirt, jacket and high-tops — when I went to meet him at Alo the day before Canada’s first Michelin stars were announced.
“I'm trying not to think about it,” Kriss told me of the Michelin star, which would be the biggest food story in Toronto of the last 10 years.
“How's that going?” I asked him at the restaurant he opened in 2015, which flew in the face of conventional thinking: tasting menus, by then, were seen as behind the times.
“Not well,” he said with a straight face, and then we both laughed.
Kriss, whose French restaurant Alo sits just beneath Queen Street on Spadina Avenue, is regarded by many to be Canada’s best chef. And so when the Michelin stars were later announced and it turned out that Kriss had not only earned one for Alo, but a second one for Alobar Yorkville, I got him back on the phone and asked how he feels.
“Relieved,” he said, and described spending the evening drinking champagne with his business partner and staff. “I’m relieved that it’s over, so we can get back to business, but everyone’s excited, and the kitchen’s excited, but we’re not going to change anything — we got here because of what we do.”
Kriss is an interesting human being: gruff, intense, creative, his hair sheathed super short. And he doesn’t just have a propensity for
wearing all black. He avoids the spotlight and shuns glad handling customers, and it never dawned on him to open perhaps the country’s finest new restaurant with his own name.
“I don't want fame or glory. I just want a good restaurant with good food,” he says.
Alo began its tasting menu during the trendy rise of the gastropub, but the chef, originally from Scarborough who learned his ways around the kitchen both at Daniel in New York and his local Scarborough Lick’s, says his obsession with fine food began as a relentless pursuit not to fail.
“When you're on the third floor at Queen and Spadina, it’s a long … drop — you don't want to hit the ground," he said.
Far from hitting the ground, Kriss now joins chefs at Edulis, Enigma Yorkville, Quetzal, Sushi Masaki Saito — which nabbed two — and five other Toronto locales as winners of a Michelin star. “It’s great for our customers,” says Kriss, “The people you see every day.”
Kriss says he didn't create the expectations on him and his staff to either win an award or be blown away, but he knows what people expect when they walk through his door. Currently, in addition to Alobar in Yorkville and Aloette, his stylish, buzzy bistro, there are two takeout joints set to open next year — one at Yonge and Dundas and one at Yonge and Eglinton, where
diners can get his legendary burger to go.
Alo, he says, which has nine tables and an open kitchen and makes a new menu every night for the 11-course tasting meals, will not be replicated anywhere else.
“We’re not going to do another tasting menu,” he says point blank, when I asked what doors have opened to him after winning two of the world’s fanciest dining awards. “We’ve already turned down offers to open in Dubai.”
At Alo, serving such items as Alaskan king crab and Peking duck, Provimi veal and foie gras, Kriss has elevated Toronto's dining scene. Indeed, Daniel Boulud, his old boss, says Patrick Kriss is the best chef in town, someone who has made European chefs and chefs from New York look to Toronto to see new trends.
“Someone told me, ‘Stick to your plan with Alo,’ and I thought, ‘Yeah, we'll stick to the plan,’ but when you’re losing money the first six months of the first year, it's hard to stick to the plan,” says Kriss, who still plates Alo's dishes and is in his restaurant nearly every night. “Now, we stick to the plan. Restaurants need to be nurtured. I don’t cook for myself. I cook for the customer. I’ve been doing this for seven years and I haven’t missed many services.”
The services brought pride and relief to Patrick Kriss when he nabbed two of Toronto’s first
Michelin stars, and although he was trying not to think about it, he admitted it was something he wanted: not for the fame or the glory or the additional business — Alo still only has nine tables and, before his win, reservations weren’t open until Oct. 4 for a table in November or December — but for the possibilities it would open for his staff and the ability it might provide as he seeks to expand into new cities, South Beach perhaps.
“We have a lot of great restaurants in Toronto, a lot of talented chefs and restaurateurs, and the Michelin star is good for the city,” says Kriss, who mentions Bar Isabel and Terroni as places — places that didn’t get a star — where he likes to dine. “If I win the Michelin, I wake up the next morning and start my day again. There’s already a line at Alo. It doesn’t change anything. If anything, it puts more pressure on the team, but the kitchen is excited, and I think we’re the type of restaurant that should have a Michelin star. We do try to be at that level.”
Patrick Kriss is now officially at that level. But don’t expect the chef in all black to rest on his laurels.
“I’m competitive,” he told me, “Now I want two stars and I want Aloette to get a star. The message is always, ‘Let’s keep going, guys. We can get better.’ We have the Michelin stars, but our work here isn’t done.”
PATRICK KRISS OPENS ALDER
Alder, the latest offering from acclaimed chef and owner of Alo Food Group, Patrick Kriss, has debuted at the newly opened Ace Hotel Toronto. The restaurant features a Mediterranean-inspired menu that celebrates seasonality and, at its core, a signature wood-fired hearth and grill infusing flavour into each dish. Among the menu highlights are the half grilled chicken with harissa jus, big eye tuna with charred poblano aïoli and for dessert, gluten-free coconut cream pie and dark chocolate and peanut millefeuille.The spirit and atmosphere at Alder matches the vibe at Ace Hotel Toronto, says Kriss. “We’re about being welcoming to all and a place that’s easy and relaxed.”
—Jennifer Schembri
Cucumber and melon salad
Clockwise from left: Chef Patrick Kriss, a snippet of Alo’s multi-course tasting menu, Alo’s stylish dining room
53 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
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MUCH ADO ABOUT STUFFING those of us not blessed with the culinary skills of Martha Stewart (but want our families to there are plenty of places in the city that can turn you into a Thanksgiving pro. Jennifer Schembri
FREE-RANGE TURKEY AT STK
If you want your turkey with a side of swank, Yorkville steak house STK has got you covered. The roasted free-range turkey dinner includes cornbread and sage stuffing, shallot and thyme confit thighs, sautéed green beans with crispy shallots, maple baked sweet potato and Yukon gold mashed potatoes with a parmesan crust. The price is $69 for adults and $39 for children 12 and under. If you still have room for dessert, there’s a spiced pumpkin pie with candied ginger cream and crunchy caramel honeycomb available for $15 a slice. Reservations can be made on STK’s website.
BABY BACK RIBS AT BARQUE
If you’re craving some ridiculously good barbecue this holiday season, Barque has got you covered. The Thanksgiving Heat-to-Eat Menu includes a plethora of options to choose from, including Thanksgiving smoked meats for four. It features one pound each of smoked brisket, BBQ chopped pork and smoked turkey breast with smoked salsa verde for $135, or the Full Rack O’Bama baby back ribs for $58. Sides include smoky dill pickle slaw for $16 and smokehouse stuffing for $22. Orders can be placed for pickup or delivery at barque.ca or through Ambassador.
TOP SIRLOIN BLACK ANGUS BEEF AT MARBEN
For Thanksgiving, farm-to-table restaurant Marben is inviting you to sit down to its Sunday Roast. A staple for the people of Britain that also represents family, togetherness and warmth, Marben’s roast dinner is made up of four components: top sirloin black Angus beef, potatoes, gravy and Yorkshire pudding accompanied by roasted root vegetables and horseradish. The Sunday Roast is $40 per person and reservations can be made on OpenTable.
TURKEY ROULADE AT THE DRAKE
The Drake’s Get Stuffed Feast is available for in-person dining or by pre-order to be savoured at home. The three-course meal includes sunchoke and parsnip velouté to start, followed by a turkey roulade, roasted root vegetables and mashed potatoes. For a vegetarian alternative, opt for baked acorn squash with wild rice and roasted root vegetables and mashed potatoes. A vegan option is available as well. If you’re able to save room for dessert, there’s apple berry crumble topped with vanilla ice cream. The meal costs $44 per person and $22 for kids and is available Oct. 9–10. Reservations and takeout orders can be made on their website.
55 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 FEATURE FOOD
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Little Italy gets a traditional pizza tavern
Couple brings love of food and each other to the neighbourhood by Christine Hogg
Danny’s Pizza Tavern is the newest player on the block in Toronto’s Little Italy neigh bourhood.
Opened in August 2022, Danny ’s is the vision of owners Danny Barna, who is a journalist, and his fiancée, Anna Hopkins, who is a writer and director Helmed by chef Jonathan Pde, who previously worked at Park Hyatt and Piano Piano, this is the couple’s first venture into the restaurant business.
Specializing in pies that are stretched thin and crispy around the edges, Danny’s draws inspiration from the bar pies that are often found in Midwestern U.S. cities like St. Louis or Chicago. Barna says the aim of the restaurant is all about creating a friendly, neighbourhood joint that ’ s warm, cosy, unpretentious and versatile.
“If you want to come in with the family for pies and fries, we can do that,” Barna says. “If you want to come in for something more elevated, get dressed up for a big night
out, we can do that too. We love to think of ourselves as a place that mixes our favourite elements of high and low.”
Danny’s Pizza Tavern combines the comforts of a pizza joint mixed with the atmosphere of a local tavern.
“To me a tavern is somewhere that’s welcoming to all,” Barna says. “ We definitely don’t see ourselves as a pizza parlour, espe cially since we feature much more than just pizza. The wines and cocktails speak to that idea of versatility.”
The pizza menu at Danny’s is split into two sections, for red pies and white pies. There are five classic red pizzas: tomato, cheese, sausage and peppers and Hawaiian, which features more complex ingredients like fennel and gorgonzola bolognese, as opposed to the typical canned pineapple and shaved ham you’ ll find elsewhere in the city. The white pizzas include the cacio pepe, the green pie and the mushroom pie.
“To me there is no such thing as a perfect
pizza,” Barna says. “It’s such a subjective thing, with so many different iterations. And while ours may not be perfect, I’d say it’s pretty damn good.”
All pizzas are 14 inches and range in price f rom $20 to $28.
Pizzas aside, Danny’s also sells a selection of shareable starters like warm olives and a few different salads, as well as mains like the vinegar chicken or the 7 oz. Tavern burger
The drink menu is extensive, with roughly 40 wines (reds, whites, sparkling and orange) available by the glass or bottle, and there’s a solid selection of beers, ciders and cocktails, including the classic Aperol Spritz served massive ($18). There’s also a daily happy hour from 5 to 7 p.m.
Danny ’s Pizza Tavern is located at 611 College St. and is open Wednesday to Sunday, from 5 p.m. to late.
Swanky chophouse to open in Union Station
Blue Bovine is modelled after Casa Loma’s BlueBlood eatery by Raquel Farrington
Toronto is getting another steak house to add to its roster of fine dining restaurants in the city. Except this time, instead of landing in the financial district or a neighbourhood as posh as, say, Yorkville, the chophouse will arrive at the transit hub–turned–cultural destination Union Station in 2023.
The Liberty Entertainment group recently announced the latest addition to its impressive list of venues and restaurants, including BlueBlood Steakhouse, Liberty Grand, Don Alfonso 1890 and all three Cibo Wine Bar locations.
Promising to be a riff on the classic steak house, the new venture, Blue Bovine Steak and Sushi House will include offerings like those found at Casa Loma’s much-loved eatery BlueBlood — but with a twist. Along with fine cuts of quality meats and fresh
daily seafood selections, diners can also expect delicious premium grade sushi too.
According to Retail Insider, the buzzy new restaurant will span approximately 10,000 square feet in the east wing of Union Station and be a sleek, modern space that maintains the heritage and history of the original train station building. While dining on filet mignon, Blue Bovine guests will delight in bustling city views day and night through expansive windows that look out onto the action-packed downtown core.
For over three decades the Liberty Entertainment Group — led by Nick Di Donato — has redefined Toronto’s restaurant nightlife. When the new spot opens in 2023, you can swing by for lunch or dinner any day of the week.
Popular café from the U.K. Pret A Manger lands in Toronto
For anyone who has ever almost missed a flight out of Heathrow Airport in London, England, just to board with one of Pret A Manger’s signature Choc Bars, good news has arrived.
The U.K.-based café has finally opened in Canada, with one location in Toronto and another in Vancouver.
Since opening its first-ever location back in 1986, all of the foods served at Pret A Manger continue to be made using seasonal, local ingredients. Some items, including the soups and oatmeal, are outsourced and made by trusted suppliers; however, the majority of the menu is made fresh daily in house.
There are a few notable differences between the U.K. shops and the Canadian Pret, mostly due to the availability of local ingredients. In London, for example, there are far more baguettes and sandwiches to choose from, including open-faced sandwiches, like the smoked salmon and soft cheese open sandwich that you won’t find here in Toronto.
Instead, Pret A Manger Canada’s Toronto location currently has four tasty baguettes on offer (including the famous ham and cheese), four sandwiches, two hot wraps and two cold wraps, a selection of salad bowls and soups, and the signature yogurt parfaits topped with fresh fruit and muesli.
Hot breakfast is also served, and one of Pret’s bestsellers, the creamy oat porridge, is available, along with croissants and other freshly baked pastries like cookies and muffins.
As far as beverages go, Pret serves organic coffee made using Arabica beans. Hot and cold espresso-based beverages are also available.
Pret a Manger Canada’s Toronto location is located inside the A & W at 60 John St. and is open daily from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. —CH
L-R: Banquet seating at Danny’s Pizza Tavern, the menu includes burgers and dessert
Burrata, prosciutto Lindsay Rosset
57 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
& melon salad ©
NEWS FOOD
Toronto has hot new sandwich district and it’s delicious
With Good Behaviour’s grand opening near Davenport and Yonge, Grandma Loves You’s number one ranking in Canada and Black Camel’s stellar local reputation, we think it’s safe to say that the area stretching from Summerhill to Yorkville has become the sandwich district of Toronto.
All within a few blocks of each other, each local shop offers a signature sub that it has become known for around the city — and, in some cases, around the country and beyond.
Who’s up for a sandwich crawl?
Grandma Loves You
This local sandwich shop might be Canada’s most well known. Nestled away in the corner of a small plaza on Yonge, this hidden gem had its time to shine, being rated number one in Yelp’s round up list of “Canada’s Top Places to Eat.” The hole-in-the-wall spot is a favourite among locals and is owned and operated by Sarah and Artin Davoodi, a couple who moved from Germany to Canada in 2018. With humble beginnings as a convenience store, the shop soon evolved into a take away sandwich counter, quickly becoming renowned for its cold cut subs and grilled hot dogs. The European eatery serves a variety of sandwiches, bagels, doughnuts and snacks.
Try the spicy ham with Grandma’s homemade hot sauce. 1084 Yonge St.
Black Camel
Renowned for its slow-cooked beef brisket and pulled pork sandwiches, this cosy spot has been a Toronto staple for over a decade. With unique techniques, like using an espresso machine to scramble the eggs for the breakfast sandwiches, it’s no wonder that Black Camel’s reputation has blown up around the city. The top seller, the beef brisket, is a bestseller for a reason. Not only is the brisket’s dry rub a custom creation, but the brisket takes nearly five days to prepare, marinating for three days before being slow-cooked for 14 hours overnight. 4 Crescent Rd.
Good Behaviour
Good Behaviour might have started as a gourmet ice cream shop, but with its leap into the sandwich sphere, it quickly grew to become one of Toronto’s favourite spots for classic submarine sandwiches. From the spicy meatball sub to the classic cold cut offering, the Good Behaviour menu — though lean — is quite impressive to the taste buds. With a large variety of specialty in-house sauces that elevate Good Behaviour’s subs, the sandwiches are stuffed full with meaty, cheesy deliciousness. Will it be messy? Yes. But what good sandwich isn’t a bit sloppy?
Try the spicy meatball sub with veal, pork and beef meatballs topped with provolone, basil pesto mayo and chili oil. 874 Yonge St.
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58 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
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The three-block area represents some of the city’s best sub shops by Kaitlin Narciso NEWSFOOD An assortment of subs from Good Behaviour
Michelin snubs that deserve better
Five amazing eateries that were overlooked for stars by Ron Johnson
The Michelin Guide just unveiled its list of Toronto restaurants worthy of its coveted stars. Although the restaurants on the list are impressive, there were a few surprise inclusions as well as a handful of snubs.
Canoe
For more than a quarter-century, Canoe has been at or near the top of every major list. Executive chef Ron McKinlay trained under Michelin-starred chef Tom Kitchin in Scotland. He helped open chef Gordon Ramsay’s restaurant Maze in Melbourne, Australia.
Bar Isabel
Chef and restaurateur Grant van Gameren turned the city’s culinary scene on its collective ear when he opened his ode to Spanish cuisine and food culture
Bar Isabel. Since then, it remains one of the best restaurants in the guide. So, when Michelin decided to give GVG a star for his Mexican restaurant Quetzal and not Bar Isabel, we were surely not the only ones with raised eyebrows.
Scaramouche
Chef Froggett is an ever-present guiding hand at Scaramouche, and as a result, it has maintained its quality and consistency. Perhaps Michelin’s move into the city can help light a fire under Scaramouche to recapture its spot as one of our top culinary destinations.
Restaurant 20 Victoria
When Yorkville’s Brothers Food & Wine closed up shop during the pandemic, the city lost a gem. But the team behind that
impressive restaurant, Chris White and Jonathan Nicolaou, found their footing and bounced back with the intimate and elegant new space Restaurant 20 Victoria. Chef Julie Hyde has also joined the team and since opening last summer Restaurant 20 Victoria has become one of the most coveted tables in town.
Café Boulud
One of the big-name chefs pushing to bring Michelin to Toronto has been Daniel Boulud. And he should know. Boulud’s French restaurant Daniel in New York City has two stars. So when Michelin made the move to the city, we couldn’t have been the only ones to think Yorkville’s Café Boulud, a beautiful and highly regarded French bistro, would have a good shot at a star. But it was not meant to be.
Celebrated chef opens neighbourhood hot spot
In 2019, Dandylion, which is the predecessor of Dotty’s, a new neighbourhood bistro opened by chef Jay Carter, was named best in the city in Post’s Streets of Toronto’s list of the top 50 restaurants in the city, as voted by Toronto’s top chefs and restaurateurs.
“Few chefs in this city have an approach to food as unique and humble as Jay Carter. I admire the thoughtfulness put into the food,” said Grant van Gameren, in the article.
Dandylion was also named the sixth best restaurant in the country by Canada’s 100. Carter worked under chef Susur Lee at the beginning of his career in Toronto, both at the longtime chef’s eponymous restaurant Susur as well as Lee, before taking over the kitchen at the former midtown landmark Centro.
Dotty’s is now open at 1588 Dupont St. and, according to a social media post on the old Dandylion
Instagram page, “Dotty’s is a relaxed neighbourhood spot where you can snack on pimento cheese dip with Ritz crackers.” The eatery offers a seasonal menu of snacks, sides, main plates and desserts.
Dotty’s is open from 4:30 until 9:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Although there isn’t a sign, patrons are asked to enter via the side door on Franklin Street.
The restaurant is named after its sommelier’s Beckett’s mom, according to the post, who owned a restaurant when Beckett was a child.
“Dotty is my mom! She and my Dad ran a restaurant long before me. And they were good to people,” she wrote.
The post also noted that there is lots of wine, which will surely be wonderfully curated by sommelier Beckett, as well as tasty cocktails and beer. “Beers are Dad’s drink.”
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L-R: Atlantic Oyster with pancetta, pea and truffle from Canoe; chef Daniel Boulud
Tandoori
Dawn Perlmutter
59 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 NEWS FOOD
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The Michelin stars of midtown and the 905
Uptown and suburban eateries surprise in city’s first guide by Raquel Farrington
Last week was a big moment in the local culinary world as the inaugural Toronto Michelin Guide welcomed 13 restaurants to the list. The ultimate hallmark of culinary excellence, the highly coveted honour was awarded to restaurants boasting cuisine ranging from Italian to Japanese.
Although Toronto’s downtown core is now home to several restaurants bearing the Michelin star, midtown and 905 area restaurants are also shining bright. Some of the finest multi-course Japanese and Asian-inspired farm-totable eateries, too, were recognized as some of the city’s best.
North York’s Kaisek Yu-zen Hashimoto earned one of Michelin’s coveted stars. The traditional kaiseki eightcourse menu has been served there since it opened its doors back in 2009.
“Our business has always been family owned and operated. Staff was always family,” says Kei, the youngest son of chef Masaki Hashimoto and current assistant manager of the restaurant.
When asked what advice the chef would give to others aspiring to a Michelin star rating at their restaurant, chef Hashimoto said dedication was key.
“Focus on a style of culinary technique and dedicate your life to it. If you enjoy Japanese cuisine, learn and understand everything there is to know about it before you venture into a different culinary technique,” Kei Hashimoto relayed on behalf of chef Hashimoto. “Set the foundation first before jumping stones. Learn from it, preserve it, then
personalize it.”
John-Vincent Toriano, executive chef and owner of Thornhill’s new Michelin-starred establishment, fine-dining restaurant Frilu, showcases the simplicity of nature through a seasonally changing tasting menu. Before opening his own restaurant, Troiano apprenticed and worked for chef Hashimoto.
Opened in 2018, fresh ingredients are procured from Troiano’s own Tottenham-based farmstead and help to build seasonal dishes that reflect the Japanese influence of his culinary training.
Troaino’s advice for those aspiring to a Michelin star rating at their restaurant was similar to chef Hashimoto.
“Don’t aim for it, just tap into your passion and stay focused on that,” said Troaino. “Things come when you least expect it.”
For both chefs, the Michelin stars have been years in the making, involving a humble commitment to their craft and years of hard work. In a sense, it was a full circle moment for the two chefs to share the stage at the reveal ceremony, accompanied by representatives of six other restaurants in Toronto, including Shoushin, Yakashi, Sushi Masaki Saito, Aburi Hana, Alobar Yorkville and Enigma Yorkville.
L-R: Chef and owner John-Vincent Troiano and chef So Sakata of Frilu
“Focus on a style of culinary technique and dedicate your life to it.”
60 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
NEWSFOOD
DENNIS PITINO
PRIVATE EDUCATION GUIDEINSIDE
Our 33rd annual primer to the city’s top private schools and programs
S ECTION
90,000 votes for school spirit
Post City Magazines’ 11th annual private school mascot competition ran from Sept. 8 to 16, and the competition was hot, hot, hot! Thirteen Toronto schools competed for the top prize of a pro sports team mascot visit and bragging rights of course. A massive congratulations to everyone who participated — in our eyes, every mascot is a winner for their indomitable school spirit! We received over
90,000 votes throughout the voting rounds, and it was Crescent School that received the highest number in the final round: 31,105 votes! St. Clement’s School placed second with 25,241 votes, and Bayview Glen placed third. To celebrate their win, Wylie the Coyote (middle) and Crescent School received a visit from the Toronto Raptor (left) and the Maple Leafs’ Carlton the Bear (right)!
61 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
KIDS
With kids officially off to class, parents are already dealing with homework, lunches and all those after school activities. One area that parents should devote their attention to is their child’s learning styles, which can help their athome learning and classroom learning as well.
Visual learners
Visual learners watch faces intently to pick up information and enjoy written texts, maps and charts. They often recall the positioning of information on a page and can become distracted by messy surroundings or movement around them. At home, try presenting pertinent words or equations on colourful posters and wall displays.
EXTRACURRICULAR
Auditory learners
Auditory learners prefer verbal instructions and enjoy dialogues, plays, debates, discussions and stories read aloud. During at-home study time, try using educational videos and recordings to enhance the learning experience. Telling stories as a family, singing songs and chanting or memory work will simplify retention of information.
Kinaesthetic learners
Kinaesthetic learners learn through active involvement and have difficulty sitting still for long periods of time. They enjoy sports and competitions and prefer group activities to solo work. For the athome kinaesthetic learner, try playing trivia games that test the family’s smarts and also encourage
movement such as gesturing and wiggling to win the game.
Tactile learners
Tactile learners will use writing and drawing as memory aids. They’ll test the spelling of a word by writing it down to find out if it “feels right” and will use gestures and expressive movements while talking. Parents of tactile learners might consider investing in a dry erase board or chalkboard to allow the child to better process ideas.
Remember, these labels are just guidelines — a way to tune in to your child’s learning habits and better communicate with teachers. Don’t use them to put your child into a “learning box,” because we all demonstrate various styles.
Learning educational videos and recordings will help a visual learner at home
62 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
is always in style With school in full swing, parents should pay attention to their child’s preferred method of studying by Nancy Del Col Using
FEATUREKIDS Forest Hill 501 Eglinton Ave. W. 416-482-MATH (6284) mathnasium.ca/foresthill Contact us today to schedule a free trial. Leaside 856 Millwood Rd. 647-924-MATH (6284) mathnasium.ca/leaside
GUIDE
The essential parental survival guide
From tough teachers to forgotten lunches
Most kids will struggle at some point in their educational journey, and we, their parents, will want to tear out our hair. It’s way too hard trying to fix that which we cannot control. By which I mean teachers, school policies and, of course (last but not least), our child.
Our child’s school struggles will likely be our education in just how little control we have. And we can’t help trying. Below are five common school problems and how to help.
My child doesn’t like their teacher and feels intimidated by them, but doesn’t want me to say anything.
This is hard because failure to honour your child’s need for confidentiality unfortunately trumps our parental need to fix it.
Intervene without their permission and they clam up. Of course if a child is in physical and emotional danger, all confidentiality bets are off. But failing that, your only move is to coach your child on how to engage the teacher.
Ask the child to tell you everything they dislike about the teacher. Resist the inevitable urge to interrupt and tell them how to fix it. Stay quiet. Listen intently.
Then use the Socratic method (asking questions) to draw out of them what they might do to make this better. Kids take better care of solutions they create.
My kid’s best friend is in a different class.
Bummer. Don’t call the school. They won’t do anything and you’ll have squandered a chit you may need later in the year. See question one. Get them to tell you everything crappy about the kids in their class. Empathize but don’t agree. Rinse and repeat. This is a golden opportunity for your child to learn social flexibility. It will be hard and it will happen. You will be their greatest cheerleader.
My child is getting bullied but won’t let me tell the school. This is not the small stuff. First draw out everything your child will share about it. Then figure out how serious it is. Ask your child to rank how bad the bullying is on a scale of one to 10. If it’s five or under, coach them on how to protect themselves. They may be able to avoid the bully. If not, coach them on saying to the bully, “Please stop. That hurts my feelings.” Lots of young bullies
PARENT TO PARENT KIDS
have empathy and just didn’t think about their actions and will stop when told that. If they don’t, hit Plan B.
Plan B is for bullying that ranks above five and if giving the bully feedback two or three times doesn’t work. Plan B is where you tell your child that it’s your job as their parent to protect them, and this requires you to talk to the school.
It’s no longer their choice because they’re not safe. Then you hold the school accountable.
I’m worried my kid isn’t eating their lunch.
Join the club. Do you know how many school lunches get tossed in the lunchroom? Or traded? I found out when they graduated university that my kids never ate the healthy lunches I painstakingly packed. When they’re hungry, they’ll eat. Don’t sweat the small stuff. This is the small stuff.
My child isn’t doing their homework and is falling behind. This one is awful because fixing it has been baked into our parental DNA since the day they were born. You can’t fix it. Forcing kids to do homework carries consequences. It tells them you lack confidence in their ability to take responsibility. And sets up a war zone on the home front. Nagging, pressuring, pushback. None of it good for relationships. And worse on their self-esteem. As young as eight, kids can learn to take responsibility. And nature abhors a vacuum. When we tell kids they’re 100 per cent in charge of their school work, it encourages them to step up.
And if they don’t? Not all will. That’s the hard part. If we rescue by nagging to do homework, it takes away their power. They tend to respond by going passive. You’ll be doing Grade 3 math. And Grade 8 algebra. Homework is mostly about learning to take responsibility. Messing up on that is the best lesson for kids. Let them mess up. Stand back. Chew your nails. Lose sleep. And stay silent. The vast majority of children will respond to school’s homework consequences by upping their game.
Ask your child what they’re feeling instead of telling them how to fix it
Parenting columnist Joanne Kates is an expert educator in the areas of conflict mediation, self-esteem and anti-bullying, and she is the director of Camp Arowhon in Algonquin Park.
JOANNE KATES
63 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
2022 SCHOOL OPEN HOUSE GUIDE
Bannockburn School | 416-789-7855
Visit bannockburn.ca for info on our in-person open houses: Sunday, October 23, 2022 from 10am - 2pm Sunday, January 22, 2023 from 10am - 2pm Sunday, April 23, 2023 from 10am - 2pm
Bayview Glen | 416-443-1030
Visit bayviewglen.ca for info on our in-person open houses: Saturday, October 29, 2022 from 9am - 11am Saturday, November 19, 2022 from 9am - 11am
Branksome Hall | 416-920-6265 x 268
Visit branksome.on.ca/admissions/visit-us for info on our in-person open houses: Junior School –Thursday, October 20, 2022 from 9:30am - 11:30am Middle School –Thursday, October 27, 2022 from 9am - 11am Senior School –Thursday, October 27, 2022 from 1pm - 3pm
Central Montessori School | 416-222-9207
In-person open houses are every Thursday at all locations from 9am - 3pm Find out more about our school at cmschool.net
Crescent School | 416-449-2556
Visit crescentschool.org/visit for info on our in-person open houses: Lower School Gr. 3-6 –Tuesday, October 25, 2022 from 10am - 12pm Middle/Upper School Gr. 7-12 –Wed., October 26, 2022 from 10am - 12pm
Greenwood College School | 416-482-9811
Visit greenwoodcollege.org/visitus for info on our in-person open house
Havergal College | 416-483-3843
Visit havergal.on.ca/virtual-admission-centre/ for info on our in-person open houses: Junior School (JK - Gr.6) –Tuesday, October 18, 2022 from 9am - 12pm Gr. 7 & 9 –Wednesday, October 19, 2022 from 9am - 3pm
Metropolitan Preparatory Academy | 416-285-0870
Visit metroprep.com for info on our in-person open houses: Thursday, October 27, 2022 from 6pm - 8pm Thursday, November 17, 2022 from 5pm - 7pm
Montcrest School | 416-469-2008
To book a tour, visit montcrest.ca or email admissions@montcrest.ca
Prestige School | 416-250-0648
Please call to book a tour. Find out more about our school at prestigeprivateschool.ca
The Rosedale Day School | 416-923-4726
Please call our Director of Enrolment to book a personal tour Find out more about our school at rds-on.com
St. Clement's School | 416-483-4414
Visit scs.on.ca for info on our in-person & virtual open houses: Friday, October 14, 2022 from 9am - 11am (in-person) Tuesday, October 25, 2022 from 6:30pm - 7:30pm (virtual) Friday, November 18, 2022 from 9am - 11am (in-person)
St. Michael’s College School | 416-653-3180
Visit applysmcs.com for info on our in-person open houses: Thursday, October 20, 2022 at 7pm Tuesday, October 25, 2022 at 7pm
The Sterling Hall School | 416-785-3410
Visit sterlinghall.com/admissions for info on our in-person open house
TanenbaumCHAT | 416-636-5984 x 479
Visit tanenbaumchat.org for info on our in-person open house
TMS | 905-889-6882
Visit tmsschool.ca for info on our in-person & virtual open houses: Upper School –Wednesday, October 19, 2022 at 9am (virtual) Lower School –Thursday, November 3, 2022 at 9:30am (in-person)
The Toronto Heschel School | 416-635-1876 x 334
Visit torontoheschel.org/admissions/open-houses for info on our in-person open houses: Wednesday, November 9, 2022 at 7:30pm (Open House) Sunday, December 18, 2022 at 10am (Chanukkah Party) Wednesday, January 18, 2023 at 7:30pm (Parent Coffee Klatsch)
Toronto Prep School | 416-545-1020
Visit torontoprepschool.com for info on our in-person open houses: Saturday, November 5, 2022 from 10am - 12pm Saturday, November 26, 2022 from 10am - 12pm Saturday, February 25, 2023 from 10am - 12pm
Villanova College | 905-833-1909
Visit villanovacollege.org for info on our in-person open houses: Thursday, October 20, 2022 at 7pm
Friday, October 21, 2022 at 9:30am
Friday, November 18, 2022 at 9:30am
The York School | 416-646-5275
Visit yorkschool.com for info on our in-person open houses: Thursday, October 20, 2022 from 6:30pm - 8:30pm Wednesday, November 2, 2022 from 6:30pm - 8:30pm
Discover what these distinguished schools have to offer with their open houses and info sessions this fall and winter
64 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
2022 PRIVATE EDUCATION GUIDE
Central Montessori School (CMS)
At CMS, we believe in the importance of building strong educational foundations during children’s most formative years. This has been our sole focus for over 25 years. With 4 campuses in central North York and Thornhill, CMS is committed to providing outstanding, accredited Montessori education that is accessible and affordable. CMS recognizes each child’s unique learning style and supports them towards reaching their full potential. Our renowned Casa program helps children build a solid
SCHOOL TYPE: Private School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1995
GRADES: Infants to Gr. 6
foundation and equips young minds with skills needed for future success. Our Elementary program features an enriched curriculum that focuses on wellness, problem solving and higher level thinking skills while nurturing individual strengths, encouraging innovative thinking and fostering a global perspective. Our students achieve superior results in math contests, spelling bees, sporting events and the Canadian Achievement Test. French Immersion is also available.
ENROLMENT: 900+
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 3:1, 5:1, 12:1
TUITION: $900 - $2000
The Toronto Heschel School
The Toronto Heschel School is a hidden gem, offering a progressive Jewish education within a warm, caring community. Abraham Joshua Heschel said, “Wonder is the root of all knowledge.” We aim to inspire a sense of awe and wonder in your children, and a lifelong love of learning. The school is inclusive and egalitarian, promoting mutual respect. Small acts of kindness and concern for others are the basis of interactions at our school. Heschel offers an integrated curriculum in which arts-based activities and Jewish
SCHOOL Private School 1996 Pre-K-8
Branksome Hall
Branksome Hall, a leading independent International Baccalaureate (IB) World School for girls, challenges and inspires students to love learning and to shape a better world.
Through the unique combination of wellbeing, outstanding academics and international mindedness, Branksome Hall students become impactful leaders who give back to their communities. Known for our strong liberal arts curriculum that develops critical thinking and inquiry skills, students can also participate in our immersive Study Abroad
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
culture serve as conduits for the Ontario school curriculum. We teach for understanding, whereby students internalize concepts and learn to think creatively and critically. Bilingual kindergarten classes foster a high level of Hebrew competency. As the first Jewish Day School in Ontario to reach Platinum EcoSchool status, environmental literacy is emphasized. Contact Bailey at admissions@torontoheschel.org to discover what a Heschel education could mean for your child!
ENROLMENT: 250 7:1 $8,500-$19,950
Program with our South Korean sister school, Branksome Hall Asia, as well as Noodle — our pioneering accelerator program for student entrepreneurs. Our graduates are welcomed by leading universities in Canada and around the world, most with scholarships, and we provide more than $1.4 million in student financial assistance each year. Branksome continues to set the pace for innovation in girls’ education, ensuring today’s students are well-prepared to solve tomorrow’s complex problems.
ENROLMENT: 910
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 7:1
TUITION: $37,130-$40,630
Building Strong Foundations since 1995.
Our 33rd annual Private Education Guide features top private schools & extracurricular programs, including an easy-reference information bar containing class size, student–teacher ratios & real tuition costs.
65 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
www.cmschool.net
YEAR FOUNDED: 1903 GRADES: JK-12
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO:
TUITION:
TYPE:
YEAR FOUNDED:
GRADES:
COLLABORATE EDUCATE GRADUATE
St. Clement’s Early Learning School
70 St. Clements Avenue, Toronto M4R 1H2 416-489-0822 or www.scels.ca
St. Clement’s Early Learning School
As the leading benchmark for Early Childhood Education since 1955, SCELS has stuck to its promise. Our promise is to provide an exceptional, individualized program that works best for your child. With an intimate staff of twenty, and small class sizes in one of Toronto’s historic landmark churches, we’ve developed a reputable program that encompasses a balanced academic and social/emotional curriculum. As you walk into our school, you feel instantly welcomed by our devoted team and outstanding students all flourishing together in a structured, academic, and play-based environment. At SCELS, each child has their own Individual Program Plan that we put in place to support positive growth every term – from Nursery through to Grade 2. Come and see for yourself! Join us for our Open House on Tuesday, October 18th, 9:15 am - 11 am. Contact us at admissions@scels.ca to book a tour or visit www.scels.ca to learn more about us. Be a part of our community, be a part of SCELS.
Havergal College
At Havergal College, each student is supported to make empowering choices and become the architect of her education. Situated on a beautiful 22-acre campus in Toronto, Havergal is an all-girls school (JK to 12) that offers a rigorous curriculum designed around the pillars of academics and wellbeing. In collaboration with mentors, teachers and a supportive peer community, our students learn new ways to express themselves with creativity, enthusiasm and self-confidence. Havergal offers extensive co-curricular, athletic, performing arts and leadership opportunities for students in all grades. Our graduates are connected for life to our network of more than 9,500 Old Girls/Alums from diverse career portfolios spanning the globe. The school’s future-ready programming focuses on student agency to ensure our graduates develop inquiry mindsets, prepared to solve problems and meet the demands of a rapidly-changing world. Learn more at havergal.on.ca.
SCHOOL TYPE: Private School YEAR FOUNDED: 1955 GRADES: N to 2 ENROLMENT: 150
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: Low TUITION: $11,000 to $21,075
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1894
GRADES: JK-12
ENROLMENT: 1,040
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 10:1
TUITION: $36,950 (Day) - $68,540 (Boarding)
“The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity.” Dorothy Parker
66 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
Metropolitan Preparatory Academy
Metro Prep Academy is a semestered, co-ed, university prep school for students in Grade 7 to 12. The academics are structured and challenging yet the environment is supportive and nurturing. Faculty and administration doors are open, encouraging strong relationships with students and their families. No uniform means Metro Prep students can express their individuality. In this setting they are taught to trust their instincts, think both critically and creatively, ask questions and seek the help needed to
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1982 (40-year anniversary)
TMS
Founded in 1961, TMS is a leading, accredited independent day school in York Region that offers a uniquely designed framework combining the Montessori and International Baccalaureate (IB) Programmes.
TMS operates from two campuses in Richmond Hill, ON with exceptional learning environments for students of all ages and stages. Our Lower School (at Bayview Avenue and Hwy 407) offers a Montessori start for students from 18 months to Grade 6. Our Upper School (at Bayview Avenue
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1961
GRADES: 18 mos. to Gr. 12
succeed. Extensive athletic and extracurricular opportunities foster the physical and social potential of each child. For 40 years, Metro Prep has been preparing students for the academic demands of university as well as teaching them the skills needed for lifelong success. In 2018, Metro Prep introduced a new specialized arts initiative, SMITH, which offers students the opportunity to balance their creative talents while pursuing academic goals. For more information, visit www.metroprep.com.
GRADES: 7-12
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 10:1
TUITION: $25,560 to $33,250
and Elgin Mills Road) is the only independent school in York Region that offers the International Baccalaureate Programme for students in Grades 7 to 12.
Our co-ed student population of over 825 thrives in academics while developing the life-changing mindsets of entrepreneurial thinking, positivity, and resilience that build a foundation for Significance in university, and in life. Get to know us at: tmsschool.ca
ENROLMENT: 825
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: Varies
TUITION: $19,100 to $32,700
67 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
TAKE ON THE WORLD with a point.
68 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 Innovator Connector
Toronto’s Leading International Baccalaureate JK-12 Gender Inclusive School www.yorkschool.com Well-rounded
Crestwood School
Crestwood School practises the traditional art of teaching by challenging young minds to learn and by structuring experiences that make learning possible. The school’s philosophy is based on tried-and-true methods of teaching the basics, thus providing students with a solid foundation in the three Rs. Homework and development of students’ organizational skills and good work/study habits are an integral part of the program. At the same time, Crestwood School is concerned with the “whole child”
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1980
GRADES: JK-6
The York School
The York School is Canada's leading International Baccalaureate gender inclusive school, offering a challenging and progressive learning experience that blends robust academics with strong socialemotional learning and support. This approach ensures our graduates become inquiring, knowledgeable and engaged citizens of the world.
Located in the heart of the city on the Yonge subway line, and offering education from JK
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1965
GRADES: JK-12
TanenbaumCHAT
TanenbaumCHAT, the GTHA’s premier Jewish community high school, offers enriched academic programming, an array of extra-curriculars, excellent educators, renowned ruach (spirit), and friendships that last a lifetime. An emphasis on Jewish values and community service strengthens our students’ Jewish identities. Our extremely successful New Stream program, which accounts for 25% of our 2022 intake, welcomes students who are new to Jewish education and provides an
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1961
GRADES: 9-12
— striving to maintain the balance of a child’s physical, social and emotional development. Each teacher is the key. With a well-planned program, a positive rapport with each and every student and a sense of commitment and dedication, Crestwood School’s goals are met!
Crestwood is located in the beautiful wooded valley at Bayview Avenue and Lawrence Avenue.
ENROLMENT: 400
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1
TUITION: $20,300-$30,300
through Grade 12, the York School attracts students from across the city.
The York School’s IB program is the ultimate passport for globally-minded students who go on to pursue higher education with confidence and make an impact in the world. With such a supportive community, an education at The York School fosters relationships that last a lifetime.
ENROLMENT: 743
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1 TUITION: $35,000
opportunity for every Jewish child to experience TanenbaumCHAT. Come and find out what makes our school special! Find yourself at TanenbaumCHAT!
Register for New Stream student tours: Tanenbaumchat.org/new-stream
Apply now: tanenbaumchat.org/apply Application deadline: December 1, 2022
ENROLMENT: 1290
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: Call for Details
TUITION: $22,500
Due to Covid we are presently not holding open houses. We welcome you to book a private tour. Please call the school
Celebrating years
“Ability may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.”
— Stevie Wonder
69 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
42
St. Clement’s School
St. Clement’s School is an independent girls’ day school in midtown Toronto. At SCS, we are evolving and redefining what it means to really learn and thrive in a world where the only certainty is change. We don't just want our students to thrive, we want them to boldly thrive - to see disruption as opportunity and possibility, to seize change with agility and imagination, to tackle the complex world of tomorrow with confidence and character.
We're taking a leadership role in learning so our learners will lead an ever-changing world. How? Their educational journeys will be marked by academic rigour and a renewed curriculum that continually challenges and assesses the act of learning in an inclusive and safe environment. Students will value learning as an outcome in itself, understanding it's about the success of the journey, not just the destination.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1901
GRADES: 1-12
ENROLMENT: 460
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1
TUITION: $34,500
The Sterling Hall School
We specialize in educating boys from Junior Kindergarten - Grade 8, delivering innovative academic practices and a character program that is a core component of SHS. Our boy-focused programming inspires individual growth, curiosity, and a passion for learning.
At SHS, we ensure boys are engaged in their learning, providing a challenging, leading-edge curriculum taught by caring and highly dedicated faculty. We support boys in developing their interests, character strengths, and leadership skills during these formative years.
Our school culture is warm and welcoming, with a strong community that enriches the experience of every SHS boy by creating a sense of belonging. Sterling Hall’s values of learning, character, and community are the foundation of all we do - that is why we are known as the school where boys belong.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1987
GRADES: JK-8
ENROLMENT: 320
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 7:1
TUITION: $33,400
LITERATURE, DRINKING WATER NATIONS, CONSERVATION IN PERU, BETTER HOMES FOR BEES. AND WHATEVER ELSE PASSIONATE ABOUT. KINESIOLOGY, ROBOTICS, CLIMATE CHANGE, EQUITABLE COMMUNITIES, FOOD SECURITY. AND WHEREVER ELSE I WANT TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE. SOCCER, YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS, CHOIR, DIGITAL CITIZENSHIP, DRAMA, THE KASIISI PROJECT IN UGANDA. AND WHATEVER ELSE I WANT TO JOIN.
“The beautiful thing about learning is that no one can take it away from you.”
— B.B. King
70 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 Discover a school as unique as you are. scs.on.ca
POLITICS, CLEAN
FOR FIRST
I’M
Rosedale Day
Meaningful Learning for Life. The Rosedale Day School is a transformative co-ed institution in downtown Toronto for JK to Grade 8 students. Our passionate and engaged educators inspire the authentic character and unique potential of each child while ensuring thorough academic preparation and a future-proof, growth mindset.
Inspired by meaningful learning for life, RDS is a deeply connected community that prepares children to be future-ready leaders
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent
YEAR FOUNDED: 1995
GRADES: JK - Grade 8
Bayview Glen
Bayview Glen is an academically invigorating, co-educational independent school for students from age 2 to Grade 12. Situated on two closely connected campuses in North York, our vibrantly diverse community is inspired by expert teachers and fuelled by a forward thinking curriculum. Bayview Glen welcomes all students into a nurturing community that allows inquisitive minds to flourish. Our broad offering of curricular and co-curricular activities ranges from Drama to Design Thinking, Robotics to Round Square,
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1962
GRADES: Age 2 - Grade 12
through inquiry-based programming. Our small class sizes and unique access to top-tier downtown institutions like UofT, AGO, and the ROM, provide authentic, real-world learning experiences to ensure our students are prepared to adapt confidently and engage responsibly in our changing world. Inquire today. 416 923 4726 www.rds-on.com
ENROLMENT: 165 STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1 TUITION: $26,406
Music to Model United Nations, Athletics to Advanced Placement. We value collaboration, problem solving and academic risktaking to foster the entrepreneurial mindset and respect for diverse viewpoints that are essential for success in the 21st century. Bayview Glen students graduate as compassionate cosmopolitans, fully prepared for top ranked universities at home and abroad. Equally important, they step forth with the skills and attitudes needed to embrace and influence a world of accelerating change.
ENROLMENT: 1,000+
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: Call for details TUITION: $19,850 - $29,450
71 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 co : education Through our collaborative, real-worldfocussed programme, our entire community learns and grows together. Boys and girls gain insight from each other. Age 2 to Grade 12 in Toronto bayviewglen.ca fr ysBo om each other ough c co:e each other e rvllaborati-eale, oc tioacdue our entir . orldogetherws to , our entir nd gr otn o 131 Bloor Street West, Suite 426, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1R1 416.923.4726 www.rds-on.com
School
The Toronto Prep School is an independent, co-educational, university preparatory school for discerning students and parents. Open House: Saturday, November 5, 2022, Saturday, November 26, 2022, Saturday, February 25, 2023 From 10:00am to 12:00 noon
Toronto Prep School
A combined 60 years of teaching experience has prompted Steve and Fouli Tsimikalis to create an environment that promotes learning, develops leadership and awakens social consciousness through the employment of energetic and hand-picked experienced faculty and staff. Toronto Prep offers a rigorous academic curriculum with the opportunity for students to participate in a variety of school clubs and athletics. Each student will receive a MacBook 13" with an extended warranty. Steve and Fouli have determined that it truly takes a village to raise a child. “A faculty working closely with parents/ guardians, smaller classes, supervised extra help before and after school and on Saturdays help students reach their personal potential for success,” notes Fouli. Their passion for teaching is evident: “The opportunity to contribute to the development of young men and women is a privilege,” says Steve.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 2009
GRADES: 7-12
ENROLMENT: 430
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 10:1 TUITION: $30,650-$32,250
Crescent School
Crescent School has been a leader in boys' education since 1913. Our mission, Men of Character from Boys of Promise, enables each boy to reach the full potential of his unique abilities. Character development drives everything we do. Crescent School has three divisions: Lower School (Grades 3-6), Middle School (Grades 7-8) and Upper School (Grades 9-12). In each division, we are committed to mentoring, role modelling, relational learning – which bring out the best in boys – and instilling core values of respect, responsibility, honesty and compassion. We nurture wellbeing while cultivating excellence in academics, arts, athletics, business, outreach and robotics. Our expertise is supported by exceptional resources, including high-tech learning spaces, modern libraries, a professionally equipped theatre and superb athletic facilities. A Crescent School graduate knows who he is, is ready and able to lead, and understands what is required to create his own legacy.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1913
GRADES: 3-12
ENROLMENT: 800
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 9:1
TUITION: $37,350
“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
— Nelson Mandela
72 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 250 Davisville Avenue, Suite 200 Toronto, Ontario M4S 1H2 Phone: 416.545.1020 www.torontoprepschool.com com o, 416.545.1020 www.torontopprepschool.c Visit our website www.torontoprepschool.com for more information and be sure to click on the links to our FaceBook and Instagram pages. Contact: Fouli Tsimikalis, Director of Admissions at ftsimikalis@torontoprepschool.com
Bannockburn School
A leading independent Montessori school for over 25 years, Bannockburn is recognized throughout Toronto for its outstanding academic standards, steadfast commitment to Montessori education, and deep respect for the potential in every child. Bannockburn’s Toddler, Primary and Elementary Montessori programs offer an enriched curriculum that exceeds provincial standards and nurtures a love of learning. Children ages 18 months to 12 years flourish in a child-centered community that culti-
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1993
GRADES: Toddler to Gr. 6
vates independence, imagination and intellect. Located in a beautiful facility, Bannockburn provides an ideal setting for inspired learning, with brilliant Montessori classrooms, ample outdoor space, a full-size gymnasium, and Music, Art and French specialty teachers. Every family at Bannockburn is proud to call it home: a warm, welcoming place where children love to learn, and where they thrive as creative, confident and compassionate individuals. Please visit www.bannockburn.ca to learn more.
ENROLMENT: 200
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: Varies by Age
TUITION: $17,450 –$26, 900
The Beez Kneez Nursery School
The value and desirability of nursery school is widely recognized not only on educational grounds but also for developing social skills and self-confidence.
Established in 2000, the Beez Kneez Nursery School provides a warm and creative atmosphere to foster young children’s imagination, curiosity and intellect. Our programs facilitate children’s social, emotional, physical and intellectual growth through an enriched curriculum, which includes French and dance classes
SCHOOL TYPE: Private School
YEAR FOUNDED: 2000
GRADES: PS to Kindergarten
Montcrest School
Montcrest School is a welcoming community that specializes in cultivating incredible young people. We believe in small class sizes and unparalleled student-teacher relationships. We believe individuality is something to protect, not suppress. And we believe in meeting our students with the ideal supports — and perfect challenges — for each age and stage, so they emerge as secure, self-directed young people who excel in academics and in life. Simply put, Montcrest helps children become who they’re meant to be.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1961
GRADES: JK-8
taught by our own specialty teachers. Most importantly, the children benefit from a high degree of individual attention from dedicated, professionally qualified teachers. All of our teachers hold Ontario teaching certificates and/or early childhood education diplomas, and the majority of our teachers also hold university degrees. Morning, full day, and extended programs available.
Lytton Park* Davisville Village
ENROLMENT: 75 STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1
TUITION: $4,250-$20,000
The BEEZ KNEEZ
FOR CHILDREN
18 MONTHS - 4 YEARS
Nursery School NurserySchool
Our broad aspiration is to be recognized as the leading elementary school community in Canada in realizing the unique potential of each child. Please visit our website or contact our admissions team to learn more about the Montcrest experience for your child and family.
www.montcrest.ca admissions@montcrest.ca
Montcrest School - You’ve got this.
ENROLMENT: 336
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1
TUITION: $28,150-$45,455
Morning, afternoon, full day Morning,afternoon,fullday or extended programs available orextendedprogramsavailable from 7:45 am - 5:00 pm from7:45am-5:00pm
Visit www.Beezkneez.ca Visitwww.Beezkneez.ca or call 416 487 8847 for a tour. orcall4164878847foratour.
“It’s not that I’m so smart, it’s just that I stay with problems longer.”
— Albert Einstein
73 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
Greenwood College School
Greenwood helps students develop the knowledge, skills and character they need to lead fulfilling lives and reach their full potential. Our personalized academic program provides each student with a high level of both challenge and support, and our welcoming, gender-inclusive community fosters openmindedness and engagement. Greenwood’s teachers get to know their students not only as learners, but as people. With this foundation in place, our progressive approach to learning challenges students based on what they need to stretch themselves and grow academically. Outside of the classroom, Greenwood offers an array of high-calibre athletics, arts and extracurricular programs. Experiential learning opportunities, including outdoor education and service learning, encourage students to find new depths of perseverance and to build connections with the broader Toronto community. When our alumni leave Greenwood, they’re ready to thrive in highly selective postsecondary programs, and to explore what excites them.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 2002
GRADES: 7-12
ENROLMENT: 500
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 7:1
TUITION: $40,740
St. Michael’s College School
Since 1852, St. Michael's College School has been educating and forming young men in goodness, discipline, and knowledge for lives of leadership and service. We are Canada's only Catholic, Basilian, faith-based independent school, educating young men from Grades 7 to 12 in a university-preparatory programme. Under the direction of the Basilian Fathers, our students discover the courage and develop the faith to be a modern man of St. Michael's: free in mind, body, and soul to pursue truth, choose goodness, create beauty, and build a civilization of love and care in service to our community and the world. Our students unleash their passion for meaning and curiosity by embracing Deep Learning, an inquiry-based learning pedagogy. In graduating young men who change the world through lives of faith, character, and service, St. Michael's College School brings integrity, unity, and healing to a fractured and uncertain world.
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1852 7-12
ENROLMENT: 1,000
STUDENT/STAFF 14:1
TUITION: $22,250
“Education is the passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today.” X
74 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 Join us for an open house: greenwoodcollege.org/visitus
GRADES:
RATIO:
Malcolm
Prestige School offers students an accelerated curriculum, close home-school contact and small class sizes. Younger students benefit from advanced math and science programs, French lessons from JK, nutritious hot lunches and extensive before and after school care. Additionally, students can look forward to intricate arts and crafts lessons, music and dance classes, and computer studies sessions that will encourage students to be creative through computer animation and document publishing. Older students experience individualized learning and 100% university placement. Our after school program strives to support the needs of children through academic, recreational, and social opportunities that enhance school day learning and build upon individual strengths and interests necessary for lifelong success. Our programs are designed to: improve children’s grades and academic achievement; increase children’s interest and ability in reading; increase homework quality; promote better social skills and improve self-confidence. celebrating its 60th anniversary, TFS’ mission is to develop multilingual critical thinkers who celebrate difference, transcend borders and strive for the betterment of humankind. The pioneer of French immersion in Canada, TFS offers an education that is unparalleled in its excellence, preparing students for today’s global world. Bilingual and coed since 1962, TFS teaches the curricula of France and Ontario through the framework established by the IB programs. We want our students to exude academic ambition, benefit from an all-round development as individuals and citizens, and view the world from an international perspective. TFS students balance rigorous science, arts and humanities programs, in a caring and nurturing environment. Students benefit from exceptional facilities, a 26-acre ravine, and a diverse, non-denominational environment. Campuses in Toronto and Mississauga. Ask about our full entrance scholarships for Grade 7 and above.
75 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
Prestige School SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School YEAR FOUNDED: 2003 GRADES: PS to 12 ENROLMENT: 280 STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1 or 18:1 TUITION: $14,500 - $18,000 PRESTIGE SCHOOL • Small class sizes • Accelerated Math & Language programs • French from Kindergarten • Physics, Chemistry & Biology as separate subjects from Grade 4 • Graduates receive OSSD • Outdoor playground Independent Private School • Grades PS to 12 Richmond Hill Campus 11 Headdon Gate (Bathurst & Major Mackenzie) Toronto Campus 21 Eddfield Avenue (Yonge & Sheppard) www.prestigeprivateschool.ca • prestige@prestigeschool.com 416-250-0648 • Before/After School Programs • Door-to-door transportation • Homework Help • Hot lunches • Tutoring • Variety of clubs 60 ansàToront o “ TFS has always been, and remains, the French school with an international outlook.” Andrew ’93 and Françoise ’93 with Irene TFS.CA Now
TFS - Canada’s International School SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School YEAR FOUNDED: 1962 GRADES: Age 2-UE ENROLMENT: 1,500 STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: Varies TUITION: $22,180-$37,630 “Develop a passion for learning. If you do, you will never cease to grow.” – Anthony J. D’Angelo
Reingold Tutoring
Reingold Tutoring is an established private tutoring company that specializes in math and science, servicing students in North York, Thornhill and Richmond Hill. We offer customized in-home, one-on-one tutoring for students in high school and elementary school. All of the tutors at Reingold Tutoring are highly motivated, responsible and skilled tutors who will ensure your son/daughter will attain their goals of higher education. They will teach, motivate and boost the confidence of your child. We have also had excellent results with students who have learning disabilities. Please visit our website at www.reingoldtutoring.com to read some of our client success stories. We pride ourselves on always being there for you at all times of the day and promise to be available when you need us most. Please feel free to give us a call at 647-519-4771 now to discuss your child’s upcoming education and learning needs or visit us online at www.reingoldtutoring.com.
Hudson College
Hudson College is a non-denominational, coed school offering a superior academic experience from our Reggio Emilia-inspired JK-SK program to university entrance. We ensure that all students enjoy a safe, challenging and rewarding environment that nurtures their maximum potential. Recognized for our excellence in delivering a rigorous, balanced curriculum and dedication to developing the whole child –academically, socially and emotionally – we give students the individual attention needed to develop their unique strengths and interests.
Our dedicated and experienced faculty care deeply about our students and their education. They share a true passion for teaching and participate in all aspects of school life as mentors, coaches and leaders. Our graduates leave us with a strong sense of character, leadership skills and dedication to community.
SCHOOL TYPE: Tutors
YEAR FOUNDED: 2000
GRADES: 1-12
ENROLMENT: Varies
AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 1
TUITION: Per hour
“To me, there’s no great chef without a great team.” Boulud
76 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 Reingold Tutoring We develop students for success! • Quality tutoring for every subject • One-on-one virtual tutoring (some in person) • Customized lessons • Highly skilled and experienced tutors • Motivation, study skills, and test prep • Strong results with learning disabled students Private tutoring services 50% Discount on first lesson | Flexible Hours & Scheduling Grades 1-12 + University www.reingoldtutoring.com
SCHOOL TYPE: Private School YEAR FOUNDED: 2003 GRADES: JK-12 ENROLMENT: 370 STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 10:1 TUITION: $16,900
— Daniel
Blyth Academy
Blyth Academy is a private school community of eight campuses in Ontario (six in the GTA). Each one is a thriving school community. Our average class size of 12 students allows our teachers to get to know students one-on-one and teach to their individual learning styles. Whether a student needs to slow down to focus on understanding concepts or speed up to excel and challenge themselves, they can rely on our passionate and engaging teachers for the tools to succeed. Our high
SCHOOL TYPE: Private School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1977
GRADES: 4-12
Villanova College
Villanova College is York Region’s only independent Catholic school. Our educational program prepares young men and women for university and for life by providing outstanding educational experiences, an engaged and caring faculty, and a variety of extracurricular activities. Learning at Villanova is exciting, engaging and enduring. Small class sizes, the Teacher-Advisor Program, STEM and AP programs, and other initiatives allow our faculty to give students the individual attention they
SCHOOL TYPE: Independent School
YEAR FOUNDED: 1999
GRADES: 4-12
school students follow a two semester, four-term schedule, with only two subjects per term. This structure promotes deeper understanding of subjects and better prepares students for the post-secondary program of their choice. Ninety per cent of Blyth Academy students are accepted to their top choice college or university and 85 per cent receive partial or full scholarships. Online learning options available. Visit blytheducation.com to learn more.
ENROLMENT: 700
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 12:1 TUITION: Starting at $20,325
require to reach and exceed their potential.
Located on 53 acres on the Oak Ridges Moraine, the school is situated in an idyllic setting with state of the art facilities.
The academic achievements of Villanova graduates have consistently been recognized through scholarship offers and acceptance to preferred universities. To provide your child with a foundation for lifelong success contact our admissions office or visit our website at www.villanovacollege.org
ENROLMENT: 550
STUDENT/STAFF RATIO: 8:1
TUITION: $19,900 - $20,400
77 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 • KING CITY, ON Family... ...Unlimited 905-833-1909 • admissions@villanovacollege.ca • www.villanovacollege.org • King City, ON REGISTER FOR A FALL OPEN HOUSE OCTOBER 20 - 7:00 PM OCTOBER 21 - 9:30 AM NOVEMBER 18 - 9:30 AM NOVEMBER 23 - 7:00 PM
78 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 Beautifying area gardens for over 10 yearsOver 15 years of Steven Benoit Jennifer Maclean Tom Day Keeping pipes and drains clear for over 26 years John Bell Adding colour to people’s homes for over 26 years Carol Roberts Over 30 years of painting homes Joanne Sallay Helping people learn for 30 years Total Renovations, Granite, Marble, Limestone, Ceramics Professional designer available for free estimate We bring quality craftmanship to your home or office. Interior & Exterior Work RELIABLE KITCHEN & BATH 416-564-4920 admin@ccsrenovationsandmasonry.com www.ccsrenovationsandmasonry.com 647-726-0030 & Basement, Kitchen & Bathroom Renovations, Masonry, Tiling, Painting & Radiant Floor Heating, Carpentry Including Deck Building & Repairs, Window Replacement, Drywall Designs & Installation, Baseboard, Trims and much more.Junk Removal and disposal, big or small! We get rid of all your junk and unwanted clutter! • Household items. • Yard waste. • Renovations debris. • Office furniture removal. • Electronic waste, etc. Free estimates (647) - 482 - 7444 residential/commercial contact@junkmagic.ca Spring Clean Ups Lawn Fertilization Lawn Mowing Garden Clean Ups Hedge & Shrub Trimming Leaf Raking FREE ESTIMATES Lawn Fertilization Lawn Mowing Garden Clean Ups Hedge & Shrub Trimming Leaf Raking 416-701-1881 info@epicpaving.ca www.epicpaving.ca PAVING ASPHALT • INTERLOCK • CONCRETE Insured & Bonded • 15 years’ experience FULLSERVICEELECTRICIAN ● Service Upgrades ● Troubleshooting ● Ceiling Fans ● Pot Lights ● Lighting Designs ● LED Retrofits ● Nest Thermostats ● Pools / Hot Tubs ● Generators FREEESTIMATES Toronto's most respected cleaning service! • CARPETS • AREA RUGS • DRAPERY • FURNITURE 416-461-4006 info@reliablecarpet.ca www.reliablecarpet.ca PROFESSIONAL DUCT CLEANING ® • NADCA Certified Air Systems Cleaning Specialists on staff • Indoor Air Quality Testing by Professional Engineer • Certified Mold Remediators and Ventilation Inspectors • State of the art Air Filtration Systems Professional Duct Cleaning since 1966 POWER VAC OFFERS A VARIETY OF INDOOR AIR QUALITY SERVICES 416-245-5120 WWW. POWERVAC . CA TOWNLEY MASONRY Restoration LTD. DUNCAN TOWNLEY 416-882-6673 RESIDENTAL // COMMERCIAL BLOCK WORK // BRICK WORK TUCK POINTING // PARGING CHIMNEYS // STONE WORK BASEMENT MASONRY Specialist in Hazardous Tree Removal and Ornamental Pruning runingtal Prnamenand O ee RTrdousHazar emoval THE NEIGHBOURHOOD’S TRIED AND TRUSTED To book an ad call 416-250-7979 x270 or email classifieds@postcity.com Next issue deadline: October 19th by 5 p.m. Classifieds are also available on our digital editions at postcity.com FALL FEATURED CLASSIFIEDS Colin Grant General Contractor with over 35 years under his belt classifieds
79 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 IRA’S HANDYMAN SERVICES • Picture Hanging • Fixture Installations • Plumbing & Electrical • Deck & Fence Repair • Painting • Furniture Assembly • Interlock Repair • Shingle & Flat Roof Repair “Small Job Specialist” irathehandyman@hotmail.com 416-274-6942 416-787-8084 info@showerrestorationtoronto.com showerrestorationtoronto.com Please Call David Shower Restoration of Toronto CALL: 416 930 5371 Heating, Air Conditioning, Fireplaces, Hot Water Tanks and Boilers. Rental Programs also available. OVER 30 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN HOME IMPROVEMENTS home RENOVATIONS • 35 years’ experience • Bathroom/Kitchen Renovations • Tiling/Flooring/Carpentry • Wall Repair/Painting • Free Written Estimates Geoffrey 647-342-6804 E-Mail: scgfacl@gmail.com Shower & Bath Clean & Grout Tile Repairs Sealing & Caulking Bathroom Remodeling Bathtub Caulking 416-826-0574 NO JOB TOO SMALL AFFORDABLE FAST RELIABLE & PROMPT SENIORS’ DISCOUNT YOUR SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED IS IT LOOSE, WOBBLY, STICKING, CROOKED, LEAKING, CRACKED OR BROKEN? DOES IT NEED REPAIR? CALL DAVE! @ 416 222 7583 For Minor Household Repairs FINLAY TOPP CONTRACTING Call Peter Topp @ 416-460-2250 Serving South of Steeles Quality Workmanship Guaranteed 5” Seamless Eavestrough Soffit / Fascia & Siding Free Estimates Seniors’ Discount Licensed Eavestroughing & Siding Experts 416-820-3852 SKYLIGHT PROFESSIONALS Repairs to Leaky Skylights New Installations High Quality Workmanship & Excellence Free Estimates • Licensed Seniors’ Discount 416-820-3852 Free Estimate All Work Guaranteed Licensed & WSIB Insured 30 Years’ Experience 647-522-2030 AYLEN ART ROOFING INC. Call Fred High quality home renovations & improvements 4 1 6 - 2 7 4 - 6 9 4 2 www.buildbrigade.ca 416-519-8335 905-881-1931 www.teachersoncall.ca learning TUTORING INSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES 416-488-4908 IMPROVE YOUR FRENCH! Join our lively and congenial daytime conversational French classes for adults. All levels. Qualified Experienced Teacher For more information, please call YORKMILLSTUTORING.COM MUSIC LESSONS ONLINE LESSONS TUTORSHIP Educational Services ONLINE OR IN PERSON (416)573-0274 You’ve got homework WE’VE GOT HELP! You deserve an expert tutor who: VISIT TUTORSHIP.CA / W / / / / / GARAGE LEANING? Ready to fall over? No Permit Required No Tax Reassessment No Set Back Issues Just a nice garage at a fraction of the cost of replacement Of course we also do General Home Renovations Call Peter: 416-554-3517 Garages rebuilt at substantial savings over replacement (single/double) Multifaceted Tradesman 25 Years of Experience Innovative, Quality Work Competitive Prices Customer Satisfaction is Paramount! Complete Building EnvelopeResidential & Commercial Renovations & Repairs Gregory: 416-409-4503
80 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 PLUMBER FULL PLUMBING SERVICES Burst pipes Faucet install Drain snaking Plugged toilets Bath/Kitchen Reno Blocked kitchen sink Camera Inspections Waterproofing JOBS OVER $500 SAVE $50 Flat rate up front pricing 647-308-6005 416-876-6679 Repair & Replacement Faucet Sink To ilet Shower Laundry Main Valve Leaking Pipe Backup Drain FULLY LICENSED & INSURED 24HR. SERVICE MET. LIC. # PH23521 LICENSED ELECTRICIANS CALL ANTHONY 416-704-4990 alcelectricinc@gmail.com Lic. # 7003478 APPLIANCE REPAIRS Professional repairs of all brands of refrigerators, stoves, microwaves,dishwashers, dryers, washers, heating and air conditioning. Warranty. Credit cards accepted. Seniors’ discount. Please call Fred 416266-6122. JOHN BELL PAINTING “Thank you for what most painters promise but few deliver.” R.L. 416-491-1010 Clean & efficient work done on time. ELECTRICAL PLUMBING WaterWorks Drains Waterproo ngFixtures Toronto’s Trusted Plumbers Since 1979 416-489-9633 WaterWorksCanada.com 2000+ Reviews 9.7/10 -Waterproo ng -Drains -Plumbing 40+ years experience Upfront Pricing Seniors Discount Michael Yu a Master Plumber Plumbing and Drains LANDSCAPING Tom Day Plumbing & Drains 24 hr. service Faucets, toilets, sinks, etc. installed.Blocked toilets, backed up drains, basement back ups. External & internal drain excavating. Complete washroom renovations. Featured On: Servicing North Toronto for 20 Years Perennial Gardens Fences & Decks Lawn Care & Garden Rejuventation Customizing in Small Landscape Projects: It may be more cost effective to redesign your garden space. Overgrown out of control garden? Please fill out our online contact form. Call: 416-427-3367 or Visit: awtl.ca A Woman's Touch Landscape Design 647-962-3146 Yonge / Eglinton LOW RATES 416-819-8888 • Renovation • Repair • Electrical • Plumbing • Carpentry • Drywall • Demolition • Painting • Gardening • Disposal • Decks and Fences With Dump Truck Handy man BWM CONSTRUCTION INC. Call John: 416-827-8397 bwmconstr@hotmail.com Flagstone & Stone Work Brick Restoration & Masonry Retaining Walls Concrete Work & Steps Rebuild Walk Out Basement Excavating & Addition WILDLIFE EXPERTS Professionally Repaired Roof Repairs Free Estimates Licensed Seniors Discount Squirrels Raccoons Birds 416-248-0211 PROFESSIONAL ROOF REPAIRS 416-248-0211 •Roof Repairs •Roof Maintenance •Missing Shingles •Major/Minor Leaks •Eaves and Downspout Repair • Raccoon Problems • Squirrel and Bird Problems ROOF REPAIR ROOF MAINTENANCE MISSING SHINGLES MINOR/MAJOR LEAKS EAVES & DOWNSPOUT REPAIR RACCOON PROBLEMS SQUIRREL & BIRD PROBLEMS ROOF REPAIR EXPERTS FREE ESTIMATES NO JOB TOO SMALL SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT LICENSED 416 820 3852 Handy Man Renova Repair Pain Drywall P ctrical LO RA enior’ count C a 416-830-6492 LICENSED Electrical Contractor v c ervice R P ervice gr P Troubleshooting Applianc MA Replacement and repairs to shingle and at roofs Aluminum eavestrough, fascia and so t 416-483-6326 METRO LICENSE 813. MEMBER OF HOMESTARS ESTABLISHED 1968. INCORPORATED 1974 PAINTING English Painter with over 30 years of excellence 416-422-3532 www.englishpainter.ca 647-238-2661 Hendrik Tree Service Tree Trimming TREE REMOVAL DEEP ROOT FERTILIZING Rejuvenate Your Trees Root Ball Removal SPRAY FOR GYPSY MOTH CONTOL Joe Bellissimo Bello Painting Over 40 Years Experience 416-737-7232 joe.bellissimo@yahoo.com ainting gBello P Pa earsY Ye erience
APPLIANCE REPAIRS
Professional repairs of all brands of refrigerators, stoves, microwaves, dishwashers, dryers, washers, heating & air conditioning. Warranty. Credit cards accepted. Seniors’ discount. Call Fred 416-266-6122.
81 | POST | OCTOBER 2022 WANTED! FINE ART & ANTIQUES Chinese Japanese Asian Porcelain Jade Bronze etc. Canadian art & ne paintings Inuit sculpture Sterling & jewellery China & porcelain Moorcro Doulton Art glass call Andrew Plum 416-669-1716 English Gentleman Buyer plums neart.com COLLECTOR LOOKING FOR Old Tube Hi Fi Components and Speakers. 40 Years or Older Tanoy rgans r Call: 519-853-2157 1-800-947-0393 ◆ Quality antiques ◆ Sterling, Silver Plate ◆ Chinese, Japanese, & Asian wares ◆ Bronze ◆ Paintings ◆ Old jewellery, watches, coins & medals ◆ Military items ◆ Teak Furniture ◆ Fancy cups & saucers Professional & Courteous 30 Years Experience Call David 416-231-9948 WANTED POST CITY MAGAZINES NEXT ISSUE DEADLINE October 19 416-250-7979 x270 classifieds@postcity.com 416-745-4981 or 416-953-6219 CASH PAID is looking for items found in a General Store before 1960. Eng. Tea tins, tobacco tins, post cards, bottles, magazines, old paper items, comic books, signs, toys, advertising, old store stock, etc. A Collector Trying To Recreate An Old Time General Store WANTED FOR SALE/WANTED ART & DESIGN Bespoke Selling Service …and all things fine. Fine Art Antiques Silver Asian MCM Jewelry Complimentary Consultation marketplace health care PERSONAL TRAINING HEALTH PROGRAMS SENIOR SERVICES Up to 24 hour care Meal Preparation Errands/Shopping Hygiene Assistance Light Housekeeping Respite Care for Families Palliative & Chronic Care Joyful Companionship Alzheimer/Dementia/Parkinson/Diabetes and Cancer Care Provider for Veteran Independent Program Weekends/Holidays Temporary/Long-term Day/Night, Live-in, Live-out Care FREE in-Home Consultation www.seniorhomecarebyangels.com/toronto1 Select Your Caregiver 416-398-4663 e for FamiliesrRespite Ca eparationrMeal P ca iverg giour CareegY YoSelect , CaLive-in Temporary/Long-term Te eteran PVovider for Ca PalliativeCareronic Ch Ca .seniorhomecarebyangels.com/toronto1 416-754-0700 Registered Nurses Personal Support Workers Caregivers Service in over 70 languages 24 hours a day, 7 days a week Accredited by Accredita on Canada Award Winning Agency NHI is proud to serve Toronto and the GTA since 1985 nhihealthcare.com Care At HometA 0700-4 7541 oc.arechtlaehi nh 5819ecnisGTAethdan otnoroTeversotduorpsiIHN ycneAggni nniWdrawA adanaC aitderccAybdetiderccA keewa d7,aydasruoh 24 seaguglan70rveoniecvireS m COMPUTER & IT SUPPORT Set-up, Tutoring, virus removal, troubleshooting, networks. House calls or remote support. Patient, references available. Your questions? My answers! David Block: t: 416-830-6160 e: dblock@sympatico.ca. Living Plants for Public and Private Spaces cti@citytropicals.com FREE ESTIMATES Tropical Plant Maintenance/Sales Consultation, Design & Installation Pruning & Synthetic Plants 593 Mortimer Ave. Toronto M4C 2J6 Bus: 416-422-4707 Fax: 416-422-4701 CITY TROPICALS INC. TESESTIMAAT orontove. TA ropicalT Welcome Autumn! Vision. Design. Build. 647-274-2048 grandmasgarden.ca Blueprint Design Decorative Planters Landscape Lighting Seasonal Clean-Ups Garden Makeovers & Maintenance Grandma’s Garden What does your garden need this year? We are a full service tree care company that promotes tree preservation with an ethical approach to caring for trees. 416-462-0007 www.kellytree.com - Pruning - Removals- Planting - Arborist ReportsSHASTA GARDEN DESIGN Design & Installation Planting & Pruning Garden Maintenance Complete Garden Makeovers 416-522-7288 Free Consultations shastagardens@hotmail.com INTERIORS & UPHOLSTERY MARCANTONIO FURNITURE Restoration & Repair 35 years’ experience 416-654-0518 Restoration of antique & modern furniture. In-home touch-ups of dining room sets, bedroom sets & kitchen cupboards. Gluing & general repairs. SHINY CLEAN HOUSE An Experienced European cleaning lady will keep your house clean. Our company is fully Insured & Bonded. Call Inna or Inga, 416-929-5777. www.shinycleanhouse.ca. CLEANING LADY AVAILABLE Experienced, insured, honest and hard-working. Attention to detail. maidforyoutorontoltd.com. Call Tanya at 416-897-6782. services CLEANING THOROUGH, METICULOUS HOUSEKEEPER Quickly Learns Your Preferences Anticipates & Solves Problems Impeccable References from 10-YEAR CLIENTS Sunny Disposition PLEASE PHONE GILLIAN 416 234-5500
APPLIANCES COMPUTER SERVICES arke Pwrencn Laed ILocat YearsofBusiness31+Ye Weeekends& veningsailable EAv COMPUTERSYSTEMS o emails:eply to ruick tQ essagee a MLeav -F(416) 488-9208 9-5 M eferred)om (prhelp@signa.c TOP CASH PAID Tibor: 647-866-5040 • Gold • Silver • Coins • Porcelain • Figurines • Paintings • Bronze • Watches • Jewellery • China • Instruments
looking back
OCTOBER 2022 EDITION
Monster Chiller Horror Theatre the hilarious house of frightenstein the all-night show
Hey you! We found a bunch of cool old tapes in the basement.
Originating on the Canadian sketch show, Second City Television (SCTV), Count Floyd is the alter ego of Floyd Robertson (played by Joe Flaherty) co-anchor of the SCTV News.
The employees at this low-budget TV station have to double up on jobs, making the news anchor also host of SCTV’s Monster Chiller Horror Theatre, where he wears a cheap vampire costume and speaks in a stereotypical Bela Lugosi–type accent.
Count Floyd often tries to make a quick buck during the movie by selling gimmicky 3D glasses, which would purportedly make the film more scary. The 3D films would invariably star masters of the genre, Doctor Tongue (portrayed by John Candy) and his Igor-like assistant Bruno (portrayed by Eugene Levy).
The station would usually provide truly awful films for the show that were not in the least bit scary, forcing Floyd to struggle to hype them to his audience. At other times the expected film would not materialize, and Floyd would be forced to fill time, sometimes improvising the entire movie plot on his own.
Where to watch: The Second City channel on
This live action show, produced by the Hamilton, Ontario, independent station CHCH-TV, follows the kooky adventures of classic monsters in a castle getting into hijinks. The series was a fixture on Saturday morning television for decades. Through its combination of humour and educational segments flavoured with mock horror, the show had a lasting impact on the youth of the day.
Vincent Price hosts with Toronto-native Billy Van starring in this wildly entertaining cult series, where Count Frightenstein and his friends are banished from Transylvania in this psychedelic adventure. Viewers step into the world of the Count, Igor, Grizelda “the Ghastly Gourmet,” the Wolfman, Bwana Clyde Batty, Dr. Pet Vet, the Professor and more!
All 130 episodes were made in a nine-month span starting in 1971 with Vincent Price’s scenes, all 400 of them, being taped over four days, not to mention Billy Van played 13 characters! The show celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2021 as the longest running pseudo horror kids’ TV show.
Where to watch: Streaming services Crave and Tubi
North America’s first regular late night marathon, The All-Night Show starred Chuck the Security Guard (played by Chas Lawther), who had taken over the facilities of CFMT (formerly called MTV) without the knowledge of the station’s owners.
Chuck and his cameraman pals find a bunch of old tapes in the basement, and after the station goes off the air at night, they broadcast their favourite shows, including The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, The Prisoner, Car 54, Where Are You? and many others.
During its late night run, The All-Night Show aired Mondays through Saturdays from 2 a.m. until 6 a.m. and featured early voice work by Maurice LaMarche and Jim Carrey.
Viewers participated in contests and comedic banter with Chuck and the crew during call-in segments, and musical guests would also stop by, including James Cotton, Richie Havens, Domenic Troiano, Burton Cummings and Mary Margaret O'Hara.
The show only lasted one year, ending when CFMT cut its budget for the time slot.
Before you go... if you’re a lover of all things nostalgic, campy and horror-ific, then look no further! These homegrown blasts from the past can now be re-watched to your heart’s content.
Where to watch: The Retrontario channel on YouTube
The late night horror film show that never quite manages to book really scary films.
1971’s amazingly fun and quirky Canadian monster show starring Billy Van and Vincent Price.
82 | POST | OCTOBER 2022
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© Retrontario © Alliance Atlantis © CFMT
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