Photo Exclusive: Burtysnky at the Theatre

Edward Burtynsky photographs the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto
The Royal Alexandra Theatre, photograph by Edward Burtynsky. Click here for larger image.
Robert Brockhouse’s new book, The Royal Alexandra Theatre: A Celebration of 100 Years, is as much a history of a famous building as it is an account of a century of Toronto’s cultural development. When Cawthra “the boy millionaire” Mulock opened his Royal Alexandra in 1907, Toronto had a population of less than half a million and was just the second largest city in Canada; Brockhouse’s meticulously research tells the story of how a city and its most famous stage grew up together. Throughout, the book is lavishly illustrated with archival photographs and candid shots. Its crowning glory, though, is a new commissioned photo essay by Edward Burtynsky, which captures the theatre in its stately glory and the backstage area in its charming squalor. Thanks to Mirvish Productions, McArthur & Company, and Edward Burtynsky, we’re pleased to present a few of these new photographs here.
2 comment(s)

Martial Arts EquipmentOctober 23, 2008 15:50 EST

I have been there! very nice place!

Lindsay PriceOctober 31, 2008 07:07 EST

Beautiful pictures. It's such a boring cliche, but they make me fall in love with 'the theatre' again...

Comment on this article
  
I agree to walrusmagazine.com’s comments policy.

Canada & its place in the world. Published by
the non-profit charitable Walrus Foundation
TwitterFacebookRSS
On newsstands now
New Issue on Sale
March 2012
Subscribe online for as little as $2.49 an issue. Visit The Walrus Store
to buy prints of our covers
The Walrus Laughs
Search the web, support the Walrus Foundation
COPA