Toronto Star

Gord Downie named Newsmaker of the Year

The Canadian Press survey shows that he made an impact beyond his music

- DAVID FRIEND THE CANADIAN PRESS

Gord Downie’s spirited fight with terminal brain cancer struck a chord with Canadians in 2016.

Whether he was packing arenas for the Tragically Hip’s summer tour or igniting a renewed dialogue on reconcilia­tion with aboriginal­s, the poetic singer-songwriter’s relentless energy offered hope in the starkest of circumstan­ces.

His widespread impact on Canadian culture inspired news editors and directors across the country to name him The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year.

Downie received 26 votes (39 per cent) in the annual survey, marking the first time in the Newsmaker’s 70-year history that an entertaine­r has been selected for the title.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was second with 18 votes (27 per cent), while Fort McMurray fire Chief Darby Allen and four-time Olympic medallist Penny Oleksiak tied with eight votes each (12 per cent).

It was Downie’s public struggle with mortality that seemed to connect most deeply with voters.

His stage performanc­e, captured vividly during the Hip’s televised final tour stop in Kingston, Ont., was a celebratio­n of life juxtaposed against the looming promise of death.

“The outpouring of support and grief for Downie was unpreceden­ted, and the kind of shared cultural experience that doesn’t happen often,” wrote Treena Wood, program director at CKWX News 1130 in Vancouver. “Everyone will remember where they were when they watched that final concert.”

When Downie’s health condition was revealed in May — only a few weeks after the Fort McMurray wild- fires left many Canadians heartbroke­n — it felt like another kick in the gut for the nation.

“He represents all those dealing with carnage in their lives,” said Dori Modney, news director at CHLB and CJBZ Radio in Lethbridge, Alta.

“Whether it’s the wildfire or the downturn in the economy, many people have soldiered on, in spite of their world crashing around them.”

Downie’s situation was unique in that he was still healthy enough to perform. That gave him an opportunit­y to shape his own final act. When the Hip’s managers sat alongside Downie’s neuro-oncologist Dr. James Perry at a press conference in May — absent the band — it became clear that Downie had a plan. Despite battling glioblasto­ma, an incurable and rare form of cancer, the 52-year-old father of four was going to stick with the long-standing adage of the entertainm­ent industry: The show must go on. The Man Machine Poem tour became Canada’s hottest summer ticket. The Hip struck an agreement with the CBC to air the band’s climactic final show in Kingston, their hometown. The concert was a TV ratings hit, drawing an estimated audience of more than four million Canadians. In all, 11.7 million Canadians tuned in for at least a portion of the broadcast on TV, radio or online and thousands more gathered across the country for public screenings.

Many of them, not even Hip fans necessaril­y, got swept up in Downie’s story as a cancer fighter who refused to surrender quietly.

At the show, an impassione­d Downie used the national platform to call for more attention to the inequities faced by indigenous people, particular­ly in the North. “What’s going on up there ain’t good,” he said.

The singer-songwriter would soon lift the veil on Secret Path, a solo multimedia project that recounts the life of 12-year-old Chanie Wenjack, who died in 1966 after running away from a residentia­l school.

This month, Downie was anointed the “Man Who Walks Among the Stars” at an Assembly of First Nations ceremony in Gatineau, Que.

“We must walk down a path of reconcilia­tion from now on. Together and forever,” he said after the event.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Gord Downie has been voted The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year for 2016. The terminally ill singer toured the country as a farewell.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Gord Downie has been voted The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year for 2016. The terminally ill singer toured the country as a farewell.

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