Sunday, May 20, 2007

NON-WORKINGMONKEY IN CANADA, DAY 9: I Wonder If It Is Easier To Name Famous Belgians Than It Is To Name Famous French Canadians

Nice lot, the Canadians (with a few obvious exceptions Who Shall Remain Nameless). They don't show off very much, even if they do play a version of hockey that involves padding and skating about on the ice a bit like ladies.

But I digress. The Canadians' lack of showy-offness means that there are many Canadians moving among us who you may not realise are Canadian! Examples include:

Alexander Graham Bell
Pamela Anderson
Neil Young
Mike Myers
Jim Carrey
Michael J Fox
William Shatner*
Dan Aykroyd
Shania Twain

Regular readers will be aware that through a set of circumstances too strange to relate here, I have an "intimate friendship" with a French Canadian pathologist. (I shall not enter into the whole Québécois/Quebecer thing, as there is quite enough of that over at Wikipedia, and it is a debate that can be explained only if you consider the five long months of the Canadian winter.) But it is the French Canadians who are most humble of all! Only yesterday, I sat on the terrace of a Resto-Bar with the pathologist, wrapped head-to-toe in a beaver skin coat.

Me: Name three famous French Canadians.

Pathologist: Céline Dion.

Me: And?

Pathologist: Pierre Trudeau?

Me: And?

Pathologist: You won't have heard of the rest. Language barrier.

This is utterly mysterious to me, and yet when I consider the Cult of Dion, I realise that there is no need for any other famous people in the entire of Quebec! In yesterday's papers alone there were seventeen mentions of her; the night before, she was on the State-owned television station having a dinner party; later that evening she was on a commercial television station, talking about her dinner party and why she liked women! (Not Like That.) In all the shops and bars she sings; on all the magazine covers she smiles; on all the posters in all the shops she appears, clasping her son who looks like a girl, or her husband who looks like a Smurf!

In fact, Céline Dion (if you do not know who she is, she looks like a long-faced horse and sings like she has an avocado stuck in her throat) is like Posh 'n' Becks but times one million. She seems nice enough, but if I am to move here (which I might), I need another famous French Canadian to admire. Anyone got any suggestions? (You may find this useful as a prompt, as it were.)


* A close friend of mine once mistakenly thought Shatner was moving into his tiny Cotswold village. To celebrate the arrival of his famous new neighbour, he created the "Plum Shatner", a confection involving custard and pastry. It was only later that he discovered his new neighbour to be Patrick Stewart.

11 comments:

Salvadore Vincent said...

Alexander Graham Bell? Surely ye jest, lassie?

Anonymous said...

You could have also mentioned Raffi and Keanu Reeves. Neither of which are of the french canadian sort, thank god.

vapidly vibrant said...

Louise Arbour might be a good contender. (And apparently there's a movie about her too!)

Other Canadians you might heard of: Margaret Atwood (writer), Romeo Dallaire (general), Michel Tremblay (writer - they made us believe back in school that he is an international playwright... time to test the veracity of this!), Bryan Adams (although i'd rather forget about that one...), and... um... actually, the thought of Bryan Adams has suddenly stunted any will i have to think of other fellows Canucks...

(p.s. am loving that you are enjoying your stay in Good Ol'Montreal, eh!)

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Fear not dear Vapid, for the issue here is not of Canadians that we KNOW, but of people that we do not know are Canadians and - more importantly - famous French Canadians! As an aside, I believe I have seen a play by the Tremblay of which you speak.

Salvatore - I know. I thought so too. Apparently not.

J-boy - have you ever made a pig smoke?

Salvadore Vincent said...

So being born and brought up in Scotland, spending less than two years in Canada in his 20s before moving to the US where he spent his last 40 years as a US citizen makes him Canadian? Next these crafty Canucks will be telling you that he actually invented the telephone...

Sarah said...

You forgot the ever lovely Avril Lavigne (not a fan).

I'm not a big fan of Celine either.

But I'm quite a bit sad at your description of hockey. :'( It's one of the roughest sports out there, not at all ladylike. Also the most difficult sports championship in the world to win. And my team (the Ottawa Senators) is in the very final round. Although if you were here any time in the last week you probably know that as even in Montreal (when I was there) people were cheering for the Sens and decked out in jerseys.

Anyhow I digress. Glad you're back safely (I think you're back?).

-Sarah

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Salvadore. Calm down dear, it's only a blog.

Sarah - In my country, this is called the 'irony'!!! The only time I watched hockey in Canadia was on the television two weeks ago. It was VERY SCARY.

Salvadore Vincent said...

I am calm now, thank you. It was a little like when the father in Goodness Gracious Me claimed that everyone famous was Indian.

But in a purely non-pedantic way I am still intrigued as to how the Canadians might claim Mr Bell as one of their own.

Sarah said...

Thank GOODNESS.

I was wondering what game you were watching. Haha :P

bluefluff said...

Tsk. Nobody has mentioned Leonard Cohen*? I suppose you're all too young.

*Born 21.9.34 in Westmount, Montreal, Quebec.

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

But darling, everyone knows Cohen is Canadian. We just choose not to talk about him.

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