The Province

Museum opens doors to Beliebers worldwide

ATTRACTION: Steps to Stardom exhibit dedicated to Canadian pop singer features shoes, photos and letters

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

For most tourists of a certain age, the quaint city of Stratford, Ont., is synonymous with its world-renowned Shakespear­ean theatre festival. But for a large number of young pop music-lovers, it’s the mecca for Justin Bieber tours, artifacts and purple-tinged curiositie­s.

Indeed, since the Steps to Stardom exhibit opened Feb. 18 at the Stratford Perth Museum, carloads of young women have been arriving to spend quality time an assortment of Bieber’s Teen Choice Awards surf boards, running shoes, star-studded photograph­s and personal letters, says general manager John Kastner.

“We should have seen this coming, but I didn’t see this coming,” Kastner admitted sheepishly on the eve of the exhibit’s third weekend. “It’s been unbelievab­le, it’s been overwhelmi­ng, it’s been fantastic. Universall­y positive.”

Kastner says the exhibit drew 1,000 visitors on its opening weekend, a huge uptick from the 25 people who dropped by last year at the same time. Traffic has dropped considerab­ly since then — averaging 30 to 35 people a day during the week and about 100 people on the weekend — but Kastner says that’s still higher than the typical February turnout.

The exhibit caters to a very specific audience that is the demographi­c you’d expect, he says, describing their core draw as young women aged “18, 19 to about 25 or 26.”

“I would say that makes up 75 per cent of the people who come through,” he says. “They may have a brother who’s had to drive them, or in some cases we have girls that age who come with parents, or younger kids who come with grandparen­ts.”

He says most make the pilgrimage from the Greater Toronto Area, but the exhibit is also attracting visitors from U.S. college towns near the border, including Buffalo, N.Y., and Ann Arbor, Mich., and further afield. Four 20-year-olds told him on the first weekend that they came from France.

“They flew in Friday, were flying home Monday,” he says incredulou­sly. “And I said: ‘You came for this?’”

It’s hard to overestima­te the dedication of Beliebers. The most popular attraction­s at the museum include an aluminum cut-out of the star positioned in front of a replica of the Avon Theatre where he used to busk — a set tailor-made for selfies.

Then there’s a chalkboard for visitors to write messages directly to Bieber — it’s photograph­ed every hour and the images are posted on Instagram, a well-establishe­d haunt for the social media-friendly singer.

Overall, the show is much more akin to an exuberant fan convention than a contemplat­ive trip down memory lane, Kastner agrees. Previous museum displays have drawn much more staid crowds.

“(Our) Anne Frank exhibit was terrific, very meaningful — we saw people in tears and reflecting and that was a very impactful exhibit. But to see people come in here and really excited, you get this sort of positive energy from them and you have to like these kids,” says Kastner, adding he’s now getting emails from earnest visitors after-the-fact, too, gushing about their experience.

“We were braced for people being goofy. I brought in a security guard for that first weekend. We had to shut the door at one point — we probably had 75 people lined up outside — but the spirit and the mood of people is unbelievab­le. It’s so positive.”

Some make the trek to meet fellow fans they know only through social media, he says, pointing to separate groups of opening-day visitors from Indiana and Montreal who met for the first time in Stratford.

Bieber fans visiting Stratford can also check out his elementary and high schools, the ice cream parlour he’d head to after soccer games, the skate park where he hung out, and, of course, the steps of the Avon Theatre.

 ??  ?? The Justin Bieber exhibit, titled Steps to Stardom, drew about 1,000 visitors to the Stratford Perth Museum on its opening weekend — only 25 people visited last year at the same time. — THE CANADIAN PRESS
The Justin Bieber exhibit, titled Steps to Stardom, drew about 1,000 visitors to the Stratford Perth Museum on its opening weekend — only 25 people visited last year at the same time. — THE CANADIAN PRESS

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