Event Guide

May 2012
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The Walrus RBC Conversation Series, Children and Youth Mental Health: How to Foster Mental Wellness in Our Children

7 pm, Wednesday, May 16, 2012 at Prairie Theatre Exchange (3rd Floor, Portage Place, 393 Portage Avenue), Winnipeg

Moderator: Marcy Markusa, co-host of CBC Information Radio

Panel Members:

RBC Children’s Mental Health Project

The Walrus RBC Conversation Series is a national series of conversation events with a focus on children’s mental health. The events are invitation only, and feature an onstage moderated conversation between stakeholders in the mental health community. Our moderators are well-known journalists or public figures with knowledge of the subject. The topic is children’s mental health, and in particular, solutions to stigma. Our audience typically numbers around one hundred, and is comprised of mental health professionals, media, corporate stakeholders, and influential opinion leaders.

The goal of this series is to raise awareness of the issues faced by stakeholders, while also helping to foster a community among our attendees in order that they can work together to provide the best treatment possible for children and parents who access the mental health system.

RBC has an ongoing commitment to supporting children’s mental health, and this conversation series is a key part of the RBC Children’s Mental Health Project. The charitable non-profit Walrus Foundation, publisher of The Walrus magazine, has a mandate to promote and foster public conversations on matters that are vital to Canadians.

For more information, please contact david.leonard@walrusmagazine.com.

The Walrus HOOPP Luncheon Debate on Pensions: Be it Resolved that Canadians are incapable of saving for their retirement needs alone

12 pm, Wednesday, May 30 at Hart House Debate Room (2nd Floor, 7 Hart House Circle), Toronto
HOOPP

Join The Walrus Foundation, Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan, and your peers — leaders and influencers in the financial, pension, and healthcare fields — for a lively, engaging on-stage debate about the future of pensions in Canada, and Canadians’ roles in preparing for their retirement. This invitation-only, exclusive lunch event will feature leading thinkers on pensions and personal finance. Join us for this important debate.

Please RSVP to anita.stanusic@walrusmagazine.com to guarantee your complimentary space at this event. Space is limited.

The Walrus Glenbow Debate

6:30 pm, Thursday, June 7, 2012 at EPCOR Centre: Max Bell Theatre (205 – 8 Avenue Southeast), Calgary
The Walrus Glenbow Debate
Calgary’s Cowboy Culture: Living Legacy or Just History?

As we celebrate 100 years of the Calgary Stampede and the country looks at Alberta as a key economic driver, we will debate how Calgary’s rich past relates to the present and our future. Join some of Calgary’s top thinkers for a lively debate about culture, city-building, and what it means to be Calgarian.

Our participants will feature:

Moderator: Carol Off, CBC Radio host, As It Happens

Speakers: Chris Turner, journalist; Chima Nkemdirim, mayor’s chief of staff; Joan Crockatt, journalist and political commentator; Mercedes Stephenson, reporter, CTV News; Aritha van Herk, author

Click here to purchase tickets

Past Events

April 2012
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March 2012
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February 2012
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January 2012
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December 2011
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November 2011
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October 2011
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September 2011
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August 2011
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July 2011
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June 2011
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May 2011
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April 2011
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March 2011
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February 2011
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January 2011
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December 2010
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November 2010
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The Walrus National Gallery Debate

7 pm, Wednesday, May 2, 2012 at the National Gallery of Canada (380 Sussex Drive), Ottawa
The Walrus National Gallery Debate
Art in Daily Life: Essential or Irrelevant?
Who decides? Who pays? Who cares?

The National Gallery’s CEO Marc Mayer and art critic Sarah Milroy will face-off against the Winnipeg Art Gallery’s Executive Director Stephen Borys and the Globe and Mail’s Kate Taylor. Our moderator will be Carol Off, CBC radio host for As it Happens, and our provocateurs will include Peter Simpson of the Ottawa Citizen, and others.

This event is sold out. Visit walrusmagazine.com/ottawa at 7 pm EST on Wednesday, May 2 to view a live stream of the debate — and visit The Walrus SoapBox at any time to join the discussion.

The Walrus National Gallery Debate sponsors

The Walrus Foundation & Hot Docs Present Brigitte Poupart’s Over My Dead Body

10 pm, Friday, April 27 at TIFF Bell Lightbox 4 (350 King Street West), Toronto
4 pm, Sunday, April 29 at the ROM Theatre (100 Queen’s Park), Toronto
Over My Dead Body

With masterworks like Pornography of the Soul and A Little Tenderness for Crying Out Loud!, queer Montreal choreographer and wild child of the international dance scene Dave St-Pierre has shocked audiences with raw aesthetics, violent physicality, and the astonishing beauty of naked humanity, provoking comparisons to Pina Bausch’s theatre of cruelty. Now, only thirty-four, St-Pierre’s health is seriously declining: his cystic fibrosis has worsened, plastic tubes connect him to an oxygen tank, and without a transplant he will die. As the months pass and he waits for the call about a donor that could save his life, director Brigitte Poupart — his “soul sister” and longtime collaborator — gathers stunning excerpts from his danceworks, beautifully composed images and tableaux, scenes from the hospital and operating room, interviews, graphics, and text and brilliantly manipulates them into a portrait of an artist facing death and a powerful, immersive work of contemporary documentary cinema. — Lynne Fernie

Click here to purchase tickets

The Walrus McGill Talks at the Segal Centre

6 pm, Tuesday, April 3, 2012 at the Segal Centre for Performing Arts (5170 Chemin de la Côte-Ste-Catherine), Montreal
The Art of Cultural Diversity
The Walrus McGill Debate at the Segal Centre

Join us for ninety lively minutes of thought-provoking ideas featuring:

Jenny Burman — Art History and Communication Studies, McGill

Cameron Charlebois — Canada Lands Company

Maurice Forget — Fasken Martineau

Manon Gauthier — The Segal Centre

Nantali Indongo — Nomadic Massive

Anne-Marie Jean — Culture Montréal

Anne Lagacé Dowson — Tolerance Foundation

Eric M’Boua — Diversité artistique Montréal

Noah Richler — Author, broadcaster

Will Straw — McGill Institute for the Study of Canada

and more

Standard admission: $15; students: $10
Click here to purchase tickets

Enbridge Presents The Walrus Talks: The Art of the City at High Performance Rodeo

7 pm, Tuesday, January 24, 2012 at EPCOR Centre for the Performing Arts, Calgary
The Art of the City at High Performance Rodeo

Ninety minutes of lively, thought-provoking ideas featuring:

Visit hprodeo.ca to purchase tickets

The Fourth Annual Walrus Foundation Gala

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012 at the Fermenting Cellar, Toronto

Once a year, The Walrus Foundation holds a gala fundraising dinner that the Globe and Mail has referred to as “a legendary bash.” The annual Walrus Foundation Gala attracts the folks that matter in the arts, business, and political worlds, and is widely considered to be an essential event on the social calendar. Our gala features a unique, creative, one-of-a-kind silent auction, top raffle prizes including a $20,000 trip aboard The Walrus Expedition, and great music. In 2011, The Walrus Gala garnered full-colour photo spreads in both national newspapers as well as Hello! Canada magazine; our partners enjoyed access to other movers and shakers; and we kept costs low and raised $249,000 for the work of The Walrus Foundation.

On January 18th, 2012, The Walrus Foundation Gala returns for its fourth year, and it will be better than ever. Our honourary gala chair is Rupert Duchesne, president and CEO of Groupe Aeroplan. The theme of the 2012 Gala is The Walrus Travels.

This is a unique opportunity to partner with a trusted, optimistic, intelligent Canadian voice. Join the Walrus Foundation, The Walrus magazine, and platinum sponsor Bennett Jones LLP, gold sponsors Aimia, RBC, and Thomson Reuters, silver sponsors TD, Enbridge, Manulife, Labatt, Rogers, Air Canada, National Bank, CIBC, Adventure Canada, and others, and become a sponsor of the 2012 Walrus Foundation Gala.

This event is sold out. Please contact david.leonard@walrusmagazine.com for sponsorship information.

Hot Art @ Indigo: Rachel Giese in conversation with Joshua Knelman

7 pm, Thursday, December 8, 2011 at Indigo Books, Manulife Centre, Toronto
Hot Art

The Walrus Leadership Dinner: “Legal Services: Whither the Billable Hour? Billable Hours versus Alternative Billing

5:30 pm, Tuesday, November 15, 2011 at the Ritz Carlton (181 Wellington Street West), Toronto
Leadership logos

Three times a year, The Walrus Foundation assembles sector leaders for an intimate, private dinner where they discuss the present and future of their industries. Our Leadership Dinners are a chance for Canada’s top CEOs, lawyers, high-level executives, analysts, academics, and pundits to gather and take part in conversations that shape the policy decisions of tomorrow.

The dinner — sponsored by Manulife — will be hosted by Honourary Chair Jean Cumming of Lexpert® (and a member of The Walrus Foundation Advisory Council) and Shelley Ambrose, co-publisher of Canada’s best magazine, The Walrus. The conversation will be moderated by Steve Paikin, host of Canada’s best current affairs program, The Agenda on TVO, and will be preceded by a reception sponsored by Fasken Martineau.

The Walrus Law Leadership Dinner is limited to just eighty seats in a private dining room. This is an off-the-record opportunity for leaders in the legal sector to be in the same room with other key decision makers — those who will determine the future of the relationship between law firms and clients in Ontario and Canada at a time when everyone is looking for efficient, successful outcomes.

Brief remarks will be made by David Corbett (firm managing partner for Fasken Martineau), David Allgood (executive vice-president and general counsel for RBC), Martine Turcotte (chief legal and regulatory officer and vice chair, Québec for Bell Canada), Bill Ainley (senior partner in mergers and acquisitions, corporate finance and securities, and energy practices for Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP), Jennifer Warren (senior vice president and general counsel for CIBC), Jody Becker (2011 Canadian General Counsel Award winner and vice president and general counsel for EllisDon), Jean Cumming, and other experts in the field. Then, because The Walrus Law Leadership Dinner is participatory in nature, you will have your turn to join the conversation about the future of the billable hour.

The Walrus Leadership Dinners consistently attracts attendees and guest speakers at the highest levels of their respective fields, and have become a cornerstone of many corporate calendars. These dinners always sell out and are a rare opportunity for our guests to network in an intimate dinner setting with their peers: Canada’s true movers and shakers.

5:30 pm: cocktail reception sponsored by Fasken Martineau
6:30 – 8:30 pm: dinner and discussion sponsored by Manulife

Individual ticket: $1,000 (charitable tax receipt for $900)

For tickets, please email sana.arshad@walrusmagazine.com or call (416) 971-5004 ext. 227

Amgen Presents The Walrus Leadership Dinner: “Health Sector: Withstanding the Boomer Bubble — How Do We Build a Sustainable Health System?

Thursday, November 3, 2011 at Grano Restaurant (2035 Yonge Street), Toronto
Leadership logos

Three times a year, The Walrus Foundation assembles sector leaders for an intimate, private dinner where they discuss the present and future of their industries. Our Leadership Dinners — in the financial, health, and, for the first time, the legal sector — are a chance for Canada’s top CEOs, lawyers, high-level executives, analysts, academics, and pundits to gather and take part in conversations that shape the policy decisions of tomorrow.

The dinner discussion will be moderated by Steve Paikin, host of Canada’s best current affairs program, The Agenda on TVO, and feature comments by Ron Sapsford of the Ontario Medical Association, LDIC’s Michael Decter, Tom Closson of the Ontario Hospital Association, Elyse Allan of GE Canada and others. The Ontario Ministry of Health has been invited to return to The Walrus Leadership Dinner for the third straight year.

The Walrus Leadership Dinner is limited to just fifty seats in a private dining room, and is always sold out. This will be an off-the-record opportunity for leaders in the health sector to be in the same room with other key decision makers — those who will determine the future of health care in Ontario and Canada at a time when an aging population is increasing the strain on our system, and the federal-provincial agreement is set to expire.

The Walrus Leadership Dinner consistently attracts attendees and guest speakers at the highest levels of their respective fields. Because of the high-profile attendees and pertinent conversations, The Walrus Leadership Dinners have become a cornerstone of many corporate calendars. These dinners always sell out and are a rare opportunity for our guests to network in an intimate dinner setting with their peers: Canada’s true movers and shakers. For our corporate partners, this dinner provides incredible brand visibility and unparalleled access to the top echelon of the finance sector.

Individual ticket: $1,000 (charitable tax receipt for $900)

For tickets, please email sana.arshad@walrusmagazine.com or call (416) 971-5004 ext. 227

Tenth Anniversary Party: Scotiabank Giller Light Bash

Tuesday, November 8 in Calgary, Toronto, Vancouver, and Winnipeg
Giller Light Bash

Party for a good cause — literacy. The Scotiabank Giller Light Bash, in support of Frontier College, is an exciting evening where people come together to celebrate Canadian literature and raise money for Frontier College, Canada’s original literacy organization. This signature fundraising event began in Toronto ten years ago as a house party organized by a group of friends, and has continued to evolve over time into a much celebrated and talked about cultural event.

One night. Four locations. Toronto (The Burroughes Building) — Calgary (Amsterdam Rhino) — Winnipeg (Prairie Ink Bakery & Café) — Vancouver (W2 Media Café).

For tickets visit www.gillerlightbash.ca

TD Presents The Walrus Toronto Project Debate at the AGO: “Be It Resolved That Toronto Will Never Be Beautiful

7–8:30 PM, Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Join The Walrus Foundation and The Toronto Project at the AGO for a lively and intelligent debate on the future of Toronto. Four prominent Torontonians in two teams will be debating what it takes to make Toronto beautiful, and whether we have the infrastructure, ideas, and resources to do so. This will encompass politics, the arts, architecture, the business community, culture, and Toronto’s local communities. Featuring Jack Diamond and John Barber vs. Nick Mount and Stephen Marche; moderated by Amanda Lang; including Albert Schultz, Denise Balkissoon, Matt Galloway, and others.

Members $20.50 — Public $22.50 — Students $17. For tickets, call 416-979-6608 or visit www.ago.net/walrus

This Is Not a Reading Series: Dani Couture in conversation with Jen Knoch

Doors open at 7 pm, event starts at 7:30 pm; Wednesday, October 12 at the Gladstone Hotel Ballroom (1214 Queen Street West), Toronto
Algoma by Dani Couture

This Is Not a Reading Series presents author Dani Couture and ECW editor and book blogger Jen Knoch in a conversation about writing, ships, and weather at the launch of Couture’s debut novel, Algoma. Through a guided slideshow, Couture shares the story behind her obsession with freighters and her favourite fleet. Listen to Dani’s “Channeling Algoma” greatest-hits playlist, and get ready to tweet throughout the evening as we feature live feed from the acclaimed David Leonard Weather Service (#DLWS).

ALGOMA: A year after watching his brother go through the ice, twelve-year-old Ferd refuses to believe Leo is gone. Convinced his brother is still alive, Ferd enters into a campaign of letters to persuade his brother to come home, “mailing” notes in any pool of water he can find. Soon, sopping notes begin to appear around the house — folded squares of paper in the rain reservoir, kitchen sink, and washing machine. Ferd’s mother, Algoma, finds the letters and keeps them to herself in an attempt to hide them from her increasingly distant husband. Gaetan, a bartender who obsessively records the weather, rejects his family’s increasingly erratic behaviour and disappears one night leaving behind his weather journal, a newly pregnant wife, and a son consumed with talking to the dead. For more information on Algoma, visit blackbearonwater.com/algoma or invisiblepublishing.com.

DANI COUTURE is the author of two collections of poetry: Good Meat (Pedlar Press, 2006) and Sweet (Pedlar Press, 2010). Sweet is currently shortlisted for a ReLit Award and was named one of Maisy’s Best Books of 2010 by Maisonneuve magazine; it was also nominated for the Trillium Book Award for Poetry in 2011. Dani also received an Honour of Distinction from The Writers’ Trust Dayne Ogilvie Grant. For two years, Dani curated Animal Effigy, an online photo essay on urban faux animal tracking. Her writing has appeared in a number of publications including the Globe and Mail, Grain, The Walrus, and several anthologies. In 2007, her short story “The Port-Wine-Stain-Removal Technique” won first place in the fiction category of This Magazine’s Great Canadian Literary Hunt. Algoma is Couture’s debut novel.

JEN KNOCH is an editor at ECW Press and a secret scribe of teen pop culture books. She also runs popular book blog The Keepin’ It Real Book Club, which features reviews, recommendations, videos, and special projects like the Canada Reads spinoff Civilians Read.

The David Leonard Weather Service (#DLWS) is a network of Twitter correspondents posting the weather they see right now. Real-time, crowd-sourced weather. According to his Twitter bio, David Leonard is a reader, enviro, vinyl junkie, soccer fan, and the accidental creator of an eponymous crowd-sourced weather service (the #DLWS), Walrus, dilettante.

This Is Not A Reading Series (TINARS) offers a ground-breaking theatrical dimension to the appreciation of fine writing. Employing music, comedy, psychodrama, dance, multimedia performance, lectures, dialogue — everything but reading — TINARS investigates the creative process behind literary works.

Admission is $5 or free with a book purchase. Click here for more information

The Walrus at Word On The Street

Sunday, September 25th at Queen’s Park, Toronto
Word On The Street 2011

The Word On The Street is a national celebration of literacy and the written word. On one extraordinary Sunday each September, in communities coast to coast, the public is invited to participate in hundreds of author events, presentations and workshops and to browse a marketplace that boasts the best selection of Canadian books and magazines you'll find anywhere. There is always plenty to see and do at Canada's largest book and magazine festival, and best of all, The Word On The Street and all of its events are free!

The Walrus Foundation Garden Party

Sunday, June 26, 2011 at the home of Diane and Matthew Barrett, Oakville, ON
Garden PartySandler PhotographyClick the image to launch a gallery of event photographs

The Walrus Foundation Garden Party, hosted this year by Diane and Matthew Barrett, is an annual gathering of supporters to celebrate the progress and future of The Walrus magazine.

Ain’t Too Proud to Beg: A Joyland Fundraiser Sponsored By The Walrus

8 pm, Thursday, May 19, 2011 at Supermarket, 268 Augusta Ave., Toronto
Joyland

The Walrus National Gallery Debate — Group of Seven: History or Living Legacy?

7 pm, Wednesday, May 11, 2011 in the auditorium at the National Gallery of Canada, 380 Sussex Dr., Ottawa
The Walrus National Gallery Debate

When the Group of Seven started exhibiting their paintings in the 1920s, they were denounced as “an affront to common decency.” Since then, they’ve achieved iconic status, but are they relevant today, and if so, what’s their legacy? In this lively debate, critically acclaimed author Ross King, and Tom Smart, former director of the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, squared off on the Group of Seven’s place in Canadian history. Moderated by renowned CBC Radio broadcaster Shelagh Rogers

The Walrus Financial Leadership Dinner: Pension Reform

Wednesday, April 6, 2011 at Grano Restaurant (2035 Yonge Street), Toronto

Twice a year, The Walrus assembles just fifty sector leaders for an intimate dinner where they discuss the present and future of their industries. Our Leadership Dinners are a chance for Canada’s top CEOs, government officials, high-level executives, analysts, academics, and pundits to gather and take part in closed-door conversations that shape the policy decisions of tomorrow. On April 6, 2011, the focus will be the financial sector, and in particular, pension reform. This is a rare opportunity for the true leaders of the pension sector to talk about:

  • Securing Our Future
  • Finding the Best Pension Solutions for Ontario

The dinner discussion will be attended by Alex Mazer, director of policy for the Ontario Ministry of Finance. It will be moderated by veteran broadcaster Steve Paikin of TVO’s The Agenda, and will feature comments by:

  • Craig Alexander, senior vice-president and chief economist for TD Bank Financial
  • Keith Ambachtsheer, director of the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management
  • Tom Reid, senior vice-president, group retirement services at Sun Life Financial Canada
  • Susan Eng, vice-president of advocacy for CARP

The Walrus Leadership Dinner is limited to just fifty seats in a private dining room. It will be an off-the-record opportunity for leaders in the finance sector to be in the same room with other key decision makers — those who will determine the future of pensions in Ontario and Canada at a time when everyone is looking to both the public and private sector for solutions to the pension question. The Walrus Leadership Dinners are participatory in nature. Once the stage has been set by brief remarks, the floor is open and every attendee has the opportunity to stand up and join the discussion, ask a question or comment. Join your colleagues, including the most senior executives from the finance sector.

The Walrus Leadership Dinner consistently attracts attendees and guest speakers at the highest levels of their respective fields. Because of the high-profile attendees and pertinent conversations, The Walrus Leadership Dinners have become a cornerstone of many corporate calendars. These dinners always sell out and are a rare opportunity for our guests to network in an intimate dinner setting with their peers: Canada’s true movers and shakers.

GranoLifford Wine Agency

Shelley Ambrose @ TEDxYYC

Friday, April 1, 2011 at the Grand Theatre & Lounge, 608 1st St. SW, Calgary
Shelley Ambrose @ TEDxYYC

In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TED Talks videos and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group.

The 2011 TEDxYYC conference will feature a lecture by Calgarian Shelley Ambrose — the executive director of The Walrus Foundation and co-publisher of The Walrus. Shelley worked as a reporter for the Globe and Mail and the Windsor Star before serving for more than a decade as a producer for CBC Radio’s Morningside and later for The Pamela Wallin Show. After three years in public affairs at the Canadian Consulate in New York, organizing media and events and building the Canadian brand, she returned to Canada in 2006. She has produced hundreds of events, including forums, lectures, festivals, book tours, Arctic tours, royal visits, and Bill Clinton’s 60th birthday celebrations in Toronto and New York.

Visit tedxycc.com for more information

TD presents

The Walrus McGill Annual Debate at the Segal Centre: “If You Build It, Will They Come?

6 pm, Wednesday, March 30, 2011 at the Segal Centre for the Performing Arts, 5170 ch. de la Côte-Ste-Catherine, Montreal

The Walrus McGill Annual Debate at the Segal Centre

Shelley Ambrose @ TEDxWaterloo

March 3, 2011 at Centre in the Square, Kitchener, Ontario

Shelley Ambrose @ TEDxWaterlooIn the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks videos and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group.

The 2011 TEDxWaterloo conference will feature a lecture by Calgarian Shelley Ambrose — the executive director of The Walrus Foundation and co-publisher of The Walrus. Shelley worked as a reporter for the Globe and Mail and the Windsor Star before serving for more than a decade as a producer for CBC Radio’s Morningside and later for The Pamela Wallin Show. After three years in public affairs at the Canadian Consulate in New York, organizing media and events and building the Canadian brand, she returned to Canada in 2006. She has produced hundreds of events, including forums, lectures, festivals, book tours, Arctic tours, royal visits, and Bill Clinton’s 60th birthday celebrations in Toronto and New York.

Visit TedxWaterloo.com for more information.

Finding the Words Book Launch

7:30 pm, February 16, 2011 at Duggan’s Brewery, 75 Victoria St., Toronto
Finding the Words

Another Ventriloquist Fundraiser

6–9 pm, February 5, 2011 at Type Books, 883 Queen St. West, Toronto

Another Ventriloquist

The Walrus Foundation Gala

Wednesday, January 19, 2011 at the Fermenting Cellar (Distillery District, Toronto)
The Walrus Gala

Once a year, the charitable non-profit Walrus Foundation holds a gala fundraising dinner in Toronto. The Walrus Gala attracts the folks that matter in the arts, business, and political worlds, and is widely considered an essential event on the social calendar.

Our gala features a unique, creative, one-of-a-kind silent auction, top raffle prizes including a $15,000 trip aboard The Walrus Expedition, and top-notch entertainment from some of Canada’s best.

On January 19th, 2011, The Walrus Gala returns for its third year. Sign up today for a ticket or a table, and ensure you don’t miss an event the Globe and Mail has referred to as “a legendary bash.”

The Walrus Foundation Presents

The Last Great River: The Present and Future of the Mackenzie River Delta

7:30 pm, Tuesday, January 18, 2011 at the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre, 4750 58th St., Yellowknife
The Last Great Water Fight: The Present and Future of the Mackenzie River Basin

The Walrus Reads With David Sedaris

7:30 pm CST, Monday, November 22, 2010 at McNally Robinson in Grant Park, Winnipeg
David Sedaris© Robert Banks

Something new from the beloved David Sedaris: a book of acerbic, outrageously funny fables, featuring animals with unmistakably human failings. Join us for a reading and signing session for his latest book, Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk: A Modest Bestiary.

Featuring Sedaris’s unique blend of hilarity and heart, this new collection of keen-eyed animal-themed tales is an utter delight. Though the characters may not be human, the situations in these stories bear an uncanny resemblance to the insanity of everyday life.

In “The Toad, the Turtle, and the Duck,” three strangers commiserate about animal bureaucracy while waiting in a complaint line. In “Hello Kitty,” a cynical feline struggles to sit through his prison-mandated AA meetings. In “The Squirrel and the Chipmunk,” a pair of star-crossed lovers is separated by prejudiced family members.

David Sedaris is a regular contributor to The New Yorker and Public Radio International’s This American Life. He is the author of the books When You Are Engulfed in Flames, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, Me Talk Pretty One Day, Naked, and Barrel Fever.

An Evening With The Walrus at IFOA

Thursday, October 28, 2010 at the Harbourfront Centre in Toronto
IFOA

An evening of events hosted and/or moderated by the people behind Canada’s most-honoured magazine.

Reading: Franzen, Gruen, Heighton, HodginsJonathan Franzen, Sara Gruen, Steven Heighton, and Jack Hodgins read from their latest books. Hosted by Walrus editor and co-publisher John Macfarlane. This event also includes a door prize of a library worth $500 donated by HarperCollins Canada. Fleck Dance Theatre (207 Queens Quay West), 8 pm EST

Round Table: Coming of Age Through StorytellingPatricia Engel, Adam Gopnik, and Andrea Levy discuss the rite of passage for both their characters and themselves at this round table discussion moderated by Walrus managing editor Jared Bland. Lakeside Terrace (235 Queens Quay West), 8 pm EST

Reading: Gibb, Min, Tierney, WangerskyCamilla Gibb, Anchee Min, Matthew Tierney, and Russell Wangersky read from their latest books. Hosted by Shelley Ambrose, co-publisher of The Walrus and executive director of The Walrus Foundation. This event also includes a door prize of a library worth $500 donated by Thomas Allen & Son. Studio Theatre (235 Queens Quay West), 8 pm EST

IFOA Noir Reading: Bishop-Stall, Forbes, Gasparini, PerryShaughnessy Bishop-Stall, Elena Forbes, Len Gasparini, and Thomas Perry read from their latest books. The Walrus’s Stacey May Fowles hosts. This event also includes a door prize of a library worth $500 donated by Raincoast Books. Click here for more information about this year’s IFOA Noir programming. Brigantine Room (235 Queens Quay West), 8 pm EST

The Walrus Leadership Dinner on Health Policy, sponsored by the Medcan Clinic

Value for Money in Health Care? Moving to the Era of Accountability

6 pm EST, Wednesday, October 20, 2010 at Grano Restaurant, Toronto

The Walrus Leadership Dinner Series are limited to just fifty seats in a private dining room. The annual dinner discussions are off-the-record opportunities for the leaders of the health sector to be in the same room with other key decision makers — those who will determine the future of health care in Ontario at a time when everyone is looking to “bend the cost curve” and looking to both the public and private sector for solutions.

The Walrus Leadership Dinner on Health Policy will feature comments by Dr. Ben Chan — CEO of the Ontario Health Quality Council — and Professor Brian Golden of the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. The moderator of the discussion over dinner is veteran broadcast journalist Steve Paikin, host of TVO’s The Agenda.

The Walrus Leadership Dinners are participatory in nature. Once the stage has been set by brief remarks, the floor is open and every attendee has the opportunity to stand up and join the discussion, ask a question or comment.

MedCanGrano

The Extraordinary Canadians Tour: The Walrus Co-Presents Joseph Boyden and John Ralston Saul

7 pm CST, Wednesday, October 20, 2010 at Westminster United Church (745 Westminster Ave.), Winnipeg
Extraordinary Canadians

In Extraordinary Canadians — Louis Riel & Gabriel Dumont, Joseph Boyden focuses on two warriors in an earlier battle for recognition of Aboriginal integrity: one a messianic Métis as much concerned with God as with protecting his people, the other a canny military strategist.

As Extraordinary Canadians’ editor, John Ralston Saul’s vision for the series and passion for Canada have made the books an unprecedented success. His own volume, Extraordinary Canadians — Louis-Hippolyte LaFontaine & Robert Baldwin shines a light on two men — polar opposites in temperament — united behind a set of principles and programs that formed modern Canada.

This event was co-presented by Penguin Group Canada, CBC Manitoba and McNally Robinson Booksellers.

The Walrus Reads With Jeff Rubin

7:30 pm CST, Tuesday, October 19, 2010 at McNally Robinson in Grant Park, Winnipeg
The Walrus Reads With Jeff RubinAuthor photo © Greg Tjepkema

What do subprime mortgages, Atlantic salmon dinners, SUVs and globalization have in common? They all depend on cheap oil. And in a world of dwindling oil supplies and steadily mounting demand around the world, there is no such thing as cheap oil. Oil might be less expensive in the middle of a recession, but it will never be cheap again. Take away cheap oil, and the global economy is getting the shock of its life.

Jeff Rubin was the chief economist and chief strategist at CIBC World Markets where he worked for over 20 years. He was one of the first economists to accurately predict soaring oil prices back in 2000 and is now one of the world’s most sought-after energy experts. He lives in Toronto.

Join us for a speaking and signing session involving his book Why Your World is About to Get a Whole Lot Smaller (Random House of Canada).

The Walrus RBC Conversation Series

5:30 pm EST Monday, October 4, 2010 at the Young Centre for the Performing Arts, Toronto

The WalrusRBC CMHPYoung Centre for the Performing Arts

At The Young Centre for the Performing Arts in Toronto, The Walrus partnered with RBC to launch an exciting new series of on-stage conversations.

The first event in The Walrus RBC Conversation Series was on “Child and Youth Mental Health,” and featured Dr. Simon Davidson (chair of the Child and Youth Advisory Committee of the Mental Health Commission of Canada and chief of psychiatry at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario), Sarah Cannon (executive director of Parents for Children’s Mental Health), and Dr. Brendan Andrade (clinician-scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health). Broadcast legend Valerie Pringle was the moderator of this fascinating conversation about “Solutions to Stigma and Other Barriers to Mapping and Getting Treatment.”

The Young Centre was packed to capacity, and we were delighted to be able to bring this important conversation to the mental health community. RBC and The Walrus will continue to program their Conversation Series. The next event will be in the spring of 2011.

The Walrus Reads With David Bergen

8 pm CST, Thursday, September 30, 2010 at the Prairie Ink Restaurant in McNally Robinson at Grant Park, Winnipeg
The Walrus Reads With David Bergen© Thomas Fricke

When Morris Schutt, a prominent newspaper columnist, surveys his life over the past year, he sees disaster everywhere. His son has just been killed in Afghanistan, and his newspaper has put him on indefinite leave; his psychiatrist wife, Lucille, seems headed for the door; he is strongly attracted to Ursula, the wife of a dairy farmer from Minnesota; and his daughter appears to be having an affair with one of her professors. What is a thinking man to do but turn to Cicero and Plato and Socrates in search of the truth? Or better still, call one of those discreet “dating services” in search of happiness? But happiness, as Morris discovers, is not that easy to find.

David Bergen won the 2005 Scotiabank Giller Prize for his novel The Time in Between. The work also won the McNally Robinson Award of the Year and the Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction, had its film rights sold to Crescent Entertainment and was published around the world. He is the author of five other novels, including: The Retreat, winner of the McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award and the Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction; The Case of Lena S., winner of the Carol Shields Award; See the Child, which the Globe and Mail compared to the work of Richard Ford and John Updike; and A Year of Lesser, winner of the McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award and a New York Times Notable Book. The recent winner of the Writers’ Trust Award for a writer in mid-career, David Bergen lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Join us for his hometown launch of his latest novel, The Matter With Morris — which has already been longlisted for the 2010 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

The Walrus Eats With Doug Saunders

6 pm EST, Wednesday, September 29, 2010 at Toronto’s Campbell House

Join Doug Saunders at The Walrus EatsJoin The Walrus for a lovely salon-style event in one of Toronto’s most historic homes. Enjoy an elegant and intimate dinner from Hearth & Garden at Campbell House, with a sommelier’s selection of fine wines from Lifford Wine Agency, and a cognac service from Remy Martin. Enjoy great food, great wine, and great conversation — all to support the work of the Walrus Foundation.

Featuring award-winning journalist, commentator, and columnist Doug Saunders and his highly-anticipated book, Arrival City: The Final Migration and Our Next World. Saunders is the European bureau chief at the Globe and Mail; his widely read column explores the intellectual and social issues behind the headlines. With Arrival City, he looks at how our world is being reshaped by the large-scale migration of people from rural areas into cities.

Canada & its place in the world. Published by
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The Walrus Foundation National Event Guide

The Walrus RBC Conversation Series
Children and Youth Mental Health: How to Foster Mental Wellness in Our Children
7 pm, Wednesday, May 16 at
Portage Place, Winnipeg

The Walrus HOOPP Pension Debate
Be It Resolved That Canadians Are Incapable
of Saving for Their Retirement Needs Alone

12 pm, Wednesday, May 30 at
Hart House Debate Room, Toronto

The Walrus Glenbow Debate
Calgary’s Cowboy Culture:
Living Legacy or Just History?

6:30 pm, Thursday, June 7 at
Epcor Centre: Max Bell Theatre, Calgary

The Walrus Laughs
The Walrus SoapBox