TIFF is coming to the Elgin & Winter Garden Theatre Center

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

Canada: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…
USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…

The Elgin Theatre opened on December 15, 1913. Months later, on February 16, 1914 the upstairs, Winter Garden Theatre opened, making it the last operating double-decker theatre in the world.  Next year they will be having their one hundredth anniversary.   So if you are looking for a book launch with class and history, you should check out the place!

They are open for corporate events, film, and TV shoots, including commercials.  On a guiding tour, I even heard about the ghosts that occupy the center. It is said, a saxophone player took a short cut off the stage, fell, breaking his neck. When they were renovating the location, workers would sense a presence. Eventually, they had a séance, a spiritualist got a weegie board, and they came up with a name for the culprit. That ghost came to be called Sam and he is known as a practical joker.  Another ghost is said to be a woman. She is seen to watch set ups, or rehearsals. When she is approached as if she were an intruder, she disappears, and the smell of lavender is in the air.  They call her the Lavender Lady. She is like trapped energy in a form.

There are so many shows going on at this venue. 
1.      Der Freischütz (The Marksman) presented by Opera Atelier, which goes on from October 27 to November 3, 2012
2.      Humor Me- Scotia bank and Dynamic Funds are teaming up with Dana Carvey to help raise funds for youth at risk. This goes on from October 17, 2012 at 7:30 p.m.
3.      Randy Bachman performs from September 20, 2012 at 8 p.m.
4.      TIFF- Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 6-16, 2012 – with screenings at various times, premiering more than 300 films from over 60 countries every September.

Take a look at the link http://www.heritagetrust.on.ca/EWG/Home.aspx .

I met Ellen Flowers, the Marketing and Communications Manager, in the outside café section which is temporarily open for the Celebrate Yonge Festival. “This Edwardian Theatre, “ said Ms. Flowers, ironically unsure if she meant to say Victorian “is from the era of the Titanic. The Titanic disaster occurred in 1912 and we came to be in 1913. So there was still a class system in place, the upper classes would go to see shows in the Winter Garden and the middle classes, and   working classes, would go to the Elgin. “

The 2002 Academy Awarding winning movie Chicago was filmed here. As a matter of fact, you will find a fully restored, vintage elevator that was painted for the film Amelia starring Hillary Swank and Richard Geer.  It is unofficially called the Richard Geer Elevator.  So if you did come, you could brag that you rode Richard Geer!  What else was shot at this center? The TV shows Lost Girls, Flash Point, and new this season Copper… Back in the fall of 2003 Lindsay Lohan came to the Winter Garden to film Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen.  

●        So much occurs at the Winter Garden and Elgin Theatre.  They have had in the past award ceremonies, such as Canada Walk of Fame and the NHL awards.  “Even when we are dark and have no productions on, we still have lots going on such as a corporate events, a meetings, or fundraisers, “ said Ms. Flowers, “Last year we had a fundraiser for Colon Cancer Canada that featured  Chantal Kreviazuk. “  The manager then paused to contemplate what else she could add.  “There is Winter Garden Theatre in New York, but it is a regular theatre, not a double-decker theatre.  New York’s Winter Garden is Winter Garden in name only it is not restored to look like a garden, as ours is. “The seven story complex is owned and operated by the Ontario Heritage Trust, which is an agency of the Government of Ontario. The OHT preserves and protects provincially significant built, cultural and natural heritage sites.  “It is important to keep the downtown core alive and vibrant with shops, restaurants and theatres, “ said the marketing manager. “It helps to keep Toronto a place where people want to come and visit, “ added Ms. Flowers before we parted ways.

Paul Collins, author of Mack Dunstan’s Inferno/ Mystery of Everyman’s Way

Contact him on

http://www.facebook.com/#!/authorpaulcollins 

Share with friends
You can publish this article on your website as long as you provide a link back to this page.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*