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Macleans
Leonard Cohen (Profile)
Leonard Cohen is backstage at Hamilton Place, having just performed an epic concert for an ecstatic audience. He's still wearing the hat, and with the double-breasted suit that threatens to engulf his slight frame, the rakish fedora lends him the air of a gangster from a lost age.This article was originally published in Maclean's Magazine on June 23, 2008
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Leonard Eglauch
Leonard Eglauch, (also Eglau or Ecclaugh). Piano teacher, organist, b Germany, d Montreal? ca 1886. He is mentioned first in newspapers in 1842 as a piano recitalist and accompanist in Kingston, Upper Canada (Ontario) and Quebec City and as a teacher in Montreal.
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Leonard Enns
Leonard (Jacob) Enns. Choir conductor, composer, teacher, b Winnipeg 2 Feb 1948; B CH MUS (Canadian Mennonite Bible College) 1969, B MUS (Wilfrid Laurier) 1974, M MUS (Northwestern) 1977, PH D (Northwestern) 1982.
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Leonard Harold Newman
Leonard Harold Newman, geneticist (b at Merrickville, Ont 31 Aug 1881; d at Ottawa 16 Jan 1978). From 1905 to 1923 Newman was secretary of the government-sponsored Canadian Seed Growers' Association, founded by J.W.
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Leonard Heaton
Leonard Dunstan Heaton, pianist, teacher (born 1889 in Hinckley, Leicestershire, England; died 15 August 1963 in Winnipeg, MB).
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Leonard Isaacs
Leonard Isaacs. Administrator, teacher, pianist, conductor, arranger, b Manchester 3 Jan 1909, naturalized Canadian 1973, d Winnipeg 6 Dec 1997; ARCM 1928, B MUS (London) 1934, FRCM 1983. His father was Edward Isaacs, the English pianist-composer and pupil of Busoni.
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Red Kelly
Leonard Patrick “Red” Kelly, CM, hockey player, coach, Member of Parliament (born 9 July 1927 in Simcoe, ON; died 2 May 2019 in Toronto, ON). Red Kelly played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for 20 seasons, winning eight Stanley Cups. He was a star with the Memorial Cup-winning junior team at St. Michael’s College before becoming one of the best defencemen in the NHL with the Detroit Red Wings, with whom he won the inaugural Norris Trophy and four Stanley Cups. In 1960, he was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs. He played there as a centre and was a key figure in another four Stanley Cup victories. A smooth skater and effective playmaker, Kelly scored 281 goals and 542 assists in regular season play, as well as 33 goals and 59 assists in the playoffs. He won the Lady Byng Trophy four times, had a successful career as a coach and served two terms as a Liberal Member of Parliament while still a player. He is a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame, the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame and the Order of Canada.
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Leonard Leacock
Leonard (Henry) Leacock. Pianist, teacher, composer, b London, 28 May 1904, d Calgary 3 Dec 1992; ATCM 1924, LRSM 1935. His family moved to Canada in 1908 and settled in Banff, Alta. He spent the years of World War I in Boston and took his first piano lessons there with a Mrs R. Holbrook.
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Leonard Marsh
Leonard Charles Marsh, social scientist, professor (b at London, Eng 24 Sept 1906; d at Vancouver 10 May 1982). Marsh came to Canada in 1930 after studies at the London School of Economics.
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Leonard Matheson Norris
Leonard Matheson Norris, editorial cartoonist, illustrator (b at London, Eng 1 Dec 1913; d at Langley, BC 12 Aug 1997).
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Leonard Mayoh
Leonard Mayoh. Baritone, choir conductor, b Eagley, England, 8 Jan 1918, d Winnipeg 26 Jul 1978; ARMCM 1947, B MUS (Acadia) 1964.
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Leonard Ratzlaff
Leonard Ratzlaff. Bass-baritone, conductor, teacher, administrator, b Swalwell, Alta, 27 Jan 1949; B Church MUS (Mennonite Brethren Bible College) 1970, BA (University of Winnipeg) 1971, MA (University of Iowa) 1980, DMA (Iowa) 1985.
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Leonard Walter Brockington
Leonard Walter Brockington, first chairman of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. (b at Cardiff, Wales 6 Apr 1888; d at Toronto 15 Sept 1966).
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Leonard Warren Murray
Leonard Warren Murray, naval officer (b at Granton, NS 22 June 1896; d at Derbyshire, Eng 25 Nov 1971). Murray joined the navy in 1911, served in WWI and by 1939 was deputy chief of the naval staff.
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Leonard Wilson
Leonard Wilson. Organist-choirmaster, composer, lecturer, writer, b near Manchester 1911, d Vancouver 22 Apr 1963; LTCL 1929, honorary FTCL 1947. Though his family emigrated to Vancouver when he was 9, Wilson returned to England at 18 for five years of study at the TCL and the RSCM.
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