Joan and I were fortunate to stay with Deb and Hugh Notman, the last male
descendant of the great William Notman, Canada’s most famous
photographer of the 19th century. Above is a self-portrait of
William Notman and a photograph of his studio.
Deb’s mother, former LA Consul General Joan Price Winser,
had five brothers at BCS when I was there. Above is Deb Notman.
In this family picture: Heather Notman, (Hugh’s mother) Paul, Hugh,
daughter Samantha, Chela Cleveland, daughter Morgan,
and Deb (Price) Notman.
Prof. Molly Unger teaches Quebec history and cinema at Abbottsford
University (the University of the Frazer Vallery), which bought a ton
of my books for study in class.
I chatted to Molly’s class, whom I found exceptionally bright. Molly’s husband
Bob is a noted composer and musician.
I signed books at various Chapters (Broadway and Granville, and
Robson and Howe) where they are on sale now.
I was taken around to the stores by Ariana, the grand-daughter of the
famous Michael Preece, the finest TV director in North America,
who arranged for us to meet.
Below is an article about Paul on UFV Today, the blog of the University of the Frazer Valley.
Veteran Canadian filmmaker Paul Almond visits UFV
by Anne Russell on October 17, 2011
Paul Almond visited the History 322 class recently to show his film Act of the Heart.
Paul Almond is a landmark Canadian filmmaker who pioneered the development of the Canadian film industry in the 1950s. In over four decades of film-making he directed 120 dramas for Canadian, British and U.S. TV networks, and created the ground-breaking documentary “7Up”.
In 1970, Almond wrote and directed the feature film “Act of the Heart”, starring his then-wife Geneviève Bujold and Donald Sutherland. The film was the first venture of the fledgling organization that developed into Tele-Film Canada, and launched the careers of both Bujold and Sutherland. The film is important in Canadian history and culture because it uses the Quiet Revolution as the backdrop for the story of a young woman who comes to Montreal from rural Quebec, and encounters cultural, social, political and personal change. As an historical document, the film reflects the upheaval in Quebec in the 1970s, as well as the wider unrest caused by the events of the Vietnam war.
Almond’s films have won 12 Genies, he has received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Directors’ Guild of Canada, and in 2000 was awarded the Order of Canada. A retrospective of his films toured Canada in 2001, and this month he was invited to speak at the Edmonton Film Festival, where “Act of the Heart” was screened as a classic of Canadian film.
Almond graciously accepted an invitation from UFV professor Molly Ungar to visit Hist 322 (Quebec History), show the film to the class, and then meet with students to discuss it. It was an extraordinary opportunity for students to view a film directly related to the area they are studying, but also to meet a creative, enthusiastic, and entertaining intellectual. In the class discussion that followed the film, students wanted to know about the directing process, the motive behind the ending of the film, what the film said about the 1970s, and whether the director would do anything differently in his life, if he were given the chance. Almond brought alive the private world of the writer and director, the Montreal creative scene of the time, as well as the environment of movie stars and deal-making that he knows so well.
I'd love to watch Act of the Heart. Is there anyplace to watch it or buy it? I can't find it anywhere but I may be looking in the wrong places.
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