Toronto Star

‘He couldn’t have been nicer’

Stratford museum gets surprise visitor to Bieber exhibit — Justin Bieber

- VICTORIA AHEARN

STRATFORD, ONT.— Justin Bieber’s grandparen­ts are known to frequent an exhibit on him in his hometown of Stratford.

But on Friday the venue got an unexpected visit not just from them — but also from the pop superstar himself.

John Kastner, general manager of the Stratford Perth Museum, said he got a text from Bieber’s grandparen­ts about half an hour before they arrived around noon on Friday.

“Reception called and said, ‘Justin’s grandparen­ts are here and they have somebody with them’ — and I went downstairs and there was Justin Bieber.”

Sporting a plaid hoodie, khaki pants, shaggy bleached hair and a bit of beard scruff, Bieber spent about 45 minutes in the exhibit.

During his visit, there were only two patrons.

“He couldn’t have been nicer,” Kastner said. “He couldn’t have been more humble, he couldn’t have been more appreciati­ve.

“He kept saying how fantastic it was, how much he appreciate­d us doing it, what a great job we did.” The Steps to Stardom collection opened Feb. 18 and profiles his rise to fame. It has artifacts including Bieber’s Grammy Awards as well as mementos from his childhood in the southweste­rn Ontario city.

The “Sorry” singer was particular­ly excited by seeing the drum set he used to play as a child busker in Stratford. He was 9 when he received it as a gift from three local residents, who held a fundraiser to buy it for him.

He was also thrilled by an old hockey bag of his.

“We have a big blackboard where people can put messages on there to him and he signed right across the top and said, ‘Justin was here,’ and then put a big heart,” said Kastner.

“We’re going to urethane that over so that stays on the board for all eternity.”

Kastner said Bieber’s grandparen­ts, Bruce and Diane Dale, were at the museum nearly every day for the two weeks prior to the exhibit launch.

They continue to visit it, about once a week, but this was Bieber’s first time taking it in.

“He said a couple of times, ‘Looking at this stuff gives me goosebumps. I never thought there would be a museum exhibit about me,’ ” Kastner said.

The exhibit, which has been a boon for the museum, runs until the end of the year.

“This museum, in 2013, did 853 people in the year,” said Kastner, “And on Family Day weekend, we did 1,000 people.”

 ?? JOHN KASTNER/HANDOUT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Stratford Perth Museum manager John Kastner and Justin Bieber with a cardboard Bieber cutout.
JOHN KASTNER/HANDOUT/THE CANADIAN PRESS Stratford Perth Museum manager John Kastner and Justin Bieber with a cardboard Bieber cutout.

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