Cultural life
News •
Toronto has long dominated Ontario’s (and English-speaking Canada’s) cultural life and continues to do so. Home to many of the province’s artists and cultural institutions, the city also functions as the media centre of English-speaking Canada; it thus plays a key role in popular culture and entertainment. As is true in Canada generally, the popular culture of Ontario is strongly influenced by that of the United States. This is particularly evident in television, film, music, and professional sports.
The arts and cultural institutions
Toronto is the centre of Canada’s English-language theatre, which is of international importance. The city also boasts several symphony orchestras, numerous choirs and chamber music groups, two major opera companies, and the National Ballet Company of Canada. Some of the city’s many public and private art galleries and museums enjoy international eminence—most notably, the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Royal Ontario Museum. Toronto has attracted numerous graphic artists and sculptors as well.
Other parts of the province host successful theatre festivals. Stratford, in southeastern Ontario, is the site of the Stratford Festival of Canada, which opened as the Stratford Shakespearean Festival of Canada in 1953. There is an annual George Bernard Shaw Festival at Niagara-on-the-Lake, and the Blyth Festival, located at a small town in Huron county, annually produces several works by Canadian playwrights.
Upper Canada Village, near Morrisburg in eastern Ontario, and Black Creek Pioneer Village, on the northern outskirts of Toronto, are re-creations of 19th-century Ontarian communities. Several forts dating back to the late 18th and early 19th centuries—Fort Henry at Kingston, Fort York at Toronto, Fort George at Niagara-on-the-Lake, and Fort Malden at Amherstburg in southwestern Ontario—have been restored. Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons, near Midland in central Ontario, is a reconstruction of the mission established by the Jesuits in 1634.
Federally funded cultural agencies, the provincially funded Ontario Arts Council, and private donors offer crucial support to the cultural life of the province. Ottawa’s cultural life in particular, dominated by the National Arts Centre and the National Gallery of Canada, is heavily subsidized by the federal government.
Several authors with international reputations are associated with Ontario. Some of the best known are Robertson Davies, Alice Munro, Michael Ondaatje, Margaret Atwood, and Rohinton Mistry. Among musicians is the pianist Glenn Herbert Gould, while noteworthy visual artists include Michael Snow and Vera Frankel.
Sports and recreation
Traditionally, Ontario has been the home of three Canadian Football League teams; however, the Toronto Argonauts and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats have proved to be more stable franchises than their counterpart in Ottawa. The province is also the home of a number of other major professional sports franchises, including the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League, the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association, and the Toronto Blue Jays, who play in Major League Baseball’s American League.
Since 1878 Toronto annually has been the site of the Canadian National Exhibition, one of the largest summer fairs in North America. Each year, Toronto also hosts Caribana, a festival in honour of Caribbean culture, while Ottawa is the site of Winterlude, a celebration of the northern climate.
More than 200 provincial parks, covering almost one-tenth of the province’s area, protect the natural landscape and cultural heritage of the province. They offer a range of outdoor recreational activities, from everyday use to wilderness experiences.
Media and publishing
Several provincial newspapers with a national readership—including The Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, and National Post—appear daily. Toronto is the headquarters of national radio and television broadcasting, both public and private, and the provincially owned TVOntario. Toronto is also the book- and magazine-publishing centre of English-speaking Canada.