Edmonton Journal

Montreal honours Kate McGarrigle

Late singer’s famous kids join in tributes and songs at ceremony

- Nelson Wyatt

MONTREAL — The rich voices of some of Canada’s most renowned singers filled a tiny Montreal square as relatives and friends of musician Kate McGarrigle gathered to see the spot renamed in her honour.

McGarrigle, who gained fame with her sister as the folksingin­g duo Kate and Anna McGarrigle, died in 2010 of cancer.

Kate McGarrigle’s children, Rufus and Martha Wainwright, have carried on the family’s musical legacy and were both present along with their aunts Anna and Jane for the ceremony in the city’s Outremont borough.

A portrait of Kate McGarrigle cast its eyes toward the podium as family and city officials praised the singersong­writer.

Rufus Wainwright described his mother’s songs as “rare precious pearls.” He also recalled her sense of humour, even when giving profession­al advice as his career blossomed.

“She was a hungry and ambitious profession­al who actually told me once after my first album garnered a fair bit of positive press, ‘Rufus, why can’t you be more like Ricky Martin and actually sell some records?’ ”

Although his mother projected a bohemian image, Wainwright noted she studied engineerin­g at McGill University in the 1960s, something rare for a woman at the time, and eventually graduated with a science degree before becoming “a genius musician.”

“Beyond the ambition, technical know-how and an intricate awareness of the many layers of music, my mother was a true and tortured romantic in the traditiona­l sense, and it’s safe to say that in the end was probably most fulfilled inhabiting the role of hippie-dippy type.”

Anna McGarrigle recalled her sister’s attachment to the neighbourh­ood and choked up slightly as she finished brief remarks reflecting on the tribute.

“I’m speechless,” she said during the ceremony last week, which ended in a song from the entire family.

Place Kate-McGarrigle sits near where McGarrigle lived before her death. The short corridor lies between two buildings in Outremont and has patches of green and trees.

There are a few benches and a chair-like sculpture by American multidisci­plinary artist Robert Wilson. It was donated by McGarrigle’s family.

The artwork, titled Kate & Nora, is comprised of two chairs placed close together as if by two confidante­s.

Jane McGarrigle, Kate’s eldest sister and a musician in her own right, explained that Nora was Kate’s more sedate alter ego as a child.

Jane McGarrigle remembered her younger sister as “wild, wilful and fearless from her earliest days” and not shy about taking on bigger boys in a scrap and sending them running.

“Not to put too fine a point on it, she was a holy terror as a child,” McGarrigle said to chuckles from the crowd.

The dedication of the square was the cornerston­e of several tributes to McGarrigle.

A photo exhibit on her early career has been installed in the windows of several neighbourh­ood shops until Sept. 8, and a concert documentar­y was to be screened Wednesday evening.

A benefit concert is also scheduled for Thursday with the proceeds going to cancer research.

Naming a square for McGarrigle was only fitting, said borough Mayor Marie CinqMars.

“Our borough wanted to underscore, in its own way, the artistic contributi­on of this great singer and musician,” said Cinq-Mars.

Elaine Ayotte, who is responsibl­e for culture in the Montreal government, said McGarrigle had made significan­t contributi­ons to the city’s cultural reputation.

“She was a tremendous artist and we are sad to have lost her.”

Although touched by the outpouring of affection for her mother, her daughter also said she remembers her in quieter ways as well.

Martha Wainwright said while she sings a lot of McGarrigle’s songs in her own shows, she also likes to cook a lot of the dishes her mother used to make. McGarrigle is also reflected in the way she brings up her young son.

“In my mothering, I try and think what she would have done.”

 ?? Peter Obendrauf/ Postmedia News ?? Singers Rufus Wainwright, left, and sister Martha sit next to a poster of their late mother, Kate McGarrigle, at a Montreal ceremony.
Peter Obendrauf/ Postmedia News Singers Rufus Wainwright, left, and sister Martha sit next to a poster of their late mother, Kate McGarrigle, at a Montreal ceremony.

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