Showing posts with label Toronto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toronto. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2022

A Taste of Toronto

My youngest sister won four tickets from the Canadian Automobile Association (CAA) to see Harry Potter and the Cursed Child in Toronto. So, another of my sisters and I drove to Kingston to meet up with my youngest sister and our brother-in-law. We then headed off to a hotel in North York. We had a beautiful fall day for the drive and arrived in North York with plenty of time for a drink at a local bar before heading downtown for supper and the show. 

We had a bit of a problem figuring out the subway, well not the subway actually, but how and where to pay your fare. We had three Presto cards but we needed four and the machine on the upper level only allowed you add money to the cards. Any way we put money on the cards we had and headed downstairs; there we found another machine where you could actually get the cards too. A little signage about where and how to pay your fare certainly would have helped. 

We had dinner at a restaurant called Three Brasseurs (Three Brewers). We ordered two Flammkuchen, one all meat and a BBQ chicken. They were very good.  We had another drink with our meal, if we hadn't been going to a show, we all probably would have had another drink. After dinner we walked over to the box office to get our tickets.  The prize also included a $10 voucher for a drink or a snack and a ticket for a reception to be held in the main lobby after the show. The CAA agent told us after the show that they had over 20,000 entries and chose 50 winners. The show tickets were over a $120 each so not a bad prize. 

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child takes place after all of the movies. Harry is sending his youngest son, Albus Severus Potter, off to his first year at Hogwarts. Young Albus befriends Scorpious Malfoy. The play is really about the problem of the relationships between sons and fathers. Albus and Scorpious cause some serious problems by going back in time trying to bring Cedric Diggery back to life. They have amazing effects in the show, some of which they won't tell you how they do them, but it was all very well done. There were wands that produced fire, transformations after characters had drunk polyjuice, and even people levitating.  The dementors were really cool. If you have the chance to see the play, I would highly recommend it. Not sure you'll get all of the same effects; the CAA Ed Mirvish theatre underwent a $5 million dollar upgrade and renovation specifically to be able do all the lighting and effects the play demands.  The new decor of the theatre was very classical though, a dark blue with gold accents. Unfortunately, we weren't allowed to take pictures or videos during play. 

Ed Mirvish Theatre


Petronuses painted on the walls

Light fixture in the upper mezzanine


Death Eater

It's a long play, three hours and a 20-minute intermission but the time went by quickly, the play never seemed to drag. At intermission, my sister and I got lucky heading upstairs to the ladies instead of getting in line downstairs. As we went to the ladies upstairs, we noticed a small bar on that level so we redeemed our drink voucher there; impeccable timing we hardly had to wait at either the ladies or the bar. After the play, there was a reception as part of the prize, some of the actors came out and mingled with the crowd. CAA put on quite a nice spread of food: cheese, crackers, pizza, fruit kebobs, cookies, tarts as well as hot hors d'oeuvres, mini burgers, spring rolls and sushi. If it hadn't have been so late, we could have made it dinner. We got back to the hotel after midnight.

We didn't rush in the morning so as not to hit the morning traffic. We walked down to Starbucks for breakfast sandwiches and coffee and afterwards checked out of the hotel. On the way home we stopped at the Air Force Museaum in Trenton. The Presence in Absence Sculpture was at a service centre that we stopped at on the way to the museum.

North York Sculpture

Chalk art drawing

Mel Lastman Square

Flowers in November

TO Chair

Presence in Absence sculpture

In 2014, we had an Ad Astra stone dedicated to our father laid in the Air Park of the Air Force Museum. All of my sisters and some other family members were able to attend the dedication. I don't think any of us had been there since then. The late husband of another of my sisters also has a stone there. At the dedication, we really didn't have much time to walk through the museum and since military members and veterans get in for free, we decided to stop on the way home. Turns out the member or veteran can also have one guest so none of us had to pay.

Ad Astra stone dedication - Sep 2014

Ad Astra visit - Nov 2022


High Flight poem


My father's stone

NDT Memorial

My brother in law's stone

Brass Poppies

After looking around the Air Park, we took some time to look around inside the museum. One of the displays at the museum is a memorial to the service members we lost in Afghanistan. After we closed out the mission, the memorial from Camp Mirage, the main base we had there, was repatriated to Canada. One of the soldiers we lost in Afghanistan, worked for me in Gagetown, Sgt Craig Gillam. I bought a poppy for his plaque.



Olympic jersey

Avro Arrow model


Sgt Gilliam - Lest We Forget

Camp Mirage Memorial

Stained glass Rondels 

It was a nice break, and it made the trip back to Kingston seem shorter. It was just a quick stop in Kingston and then it was the last leg back home to Ottawa. It was a wonderful little journey; my first time in a large crowd since COVID hit. I wore a mask throughout the play and many others did too. I hope we have a good winter and hope that we will put the worst of this pandemic behind us.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

True Colours - Sing Me the Blues

This week's colour isn't just one colour but a range of colours.


I thought it would be difficult to find the range of colours in just one object but it didn't turn out to be that difficult. Many pieces of art work that have sky in them will have this range of blues.

My sister and I went to Toronto on the weekend to see War Horse with our youngest sister and my Dad's half sister.


We stayed with my Dad's half sister and it was at her place where I found my first two selections. The first is a graphic representing the ski resort at Canmore, Alberta.

Canmore Ski Resort
The second is a glass pitcher and gazing ball that were on a shelf in her kitchen. The pitcher when put up into the light looks all one shade of blue but when it was sitting on the shelf it appeared to be darker on the bottom.

Glass Pitcher and Gazing Ball

From my own things, I found a little oil lamp that I was given for my birthday one year. It's never been lit and probably never will since an inquisitive little black dog knocked it off the coffee table and it now has a hairline crack in it.

Oil Lamp
Lastly, I did look to the sky. My sister and I had taken the train to Toronto. Our return trip was on a warm sunny spring day and as we passed by Lake Ontario, the water and sky almost became one, filling our view with many shades of blue.

Lake Ontario - view from the train
War Horse was awesome by the way. If you ever have the chance to go see it, it is well worth the money.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Taste of Toronto

My sister and I travelled to Toronto by train this past Friday to see Billy Elliot.  Tucker and Beckett stayed with their Westie cousin Toby. The train ride was nice; I hadn't been on one here in Canada for years. We had a little delay when a freight train broke down on the tracks in front of us but they got the freight train moved off the line after only about 10 minutes. We arrived in Toronto at about 1:30 pm and made our way to the hotel, the Sheraton Toronto Centre. Across the street was the Toronto City Hall - Nathan Phillips Square, the ice rink and Old City Hall. After checking in we went down to the Eaton Centre grabbed a quick bite to eat and then just wandered around for a while. We went back to the hotel to get freshened up for dinner, then it was off to Big Daddy's Crab Shack.

After dinner, we made our way by the subway to the Canon Theatre where the Toronto run of Billy Elliot is playing. The theatre is very ornate and was originally built as a movie theatre; you won't see them like that any more. The musical was wonderful, too bad you can't take any video. The kids in the play are just fantastic dancers and singers. The boy, who starred as Billy on the night we saw the play comes from Burlington, Ontario and is only 12 years old.


After the play, we went back to our hotel for a couple glasses of wine. The wine was aptly named "Girls Night Out". The next morning we went to a restaurant called Eggspectation for breakfast, then after a bit of window shopping, back to the hotel to check out in time to go back to Union Station in time to get our train home.  We were again delayed, this time by problems with signal lights and arrived back home about half an hour late.  It was, even with the train delays, a great weekend, one to remember.

It was only a taste of Toronto, would have been nice to have another day or two. Maybe next time.