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Victoria choir director among new Order of Canada appointees

Also on the list of 83 Canadians deemed to have made extraordinary contributions to the nation are artists, activists and academics.

Choir director Madeleine Humer of Victoria is among those named to the Order of Canada on Thursday, a list that also includes pop-punk star Avril Lavigne, magician David Ben, former Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz and longtime journalist Joyce Napier, recently appointed Canada’s ambassador to the Vatican.

Humer is a longtime music educator who directed choirs at Glenlyon-Norfolk School prior to founding the Victoria Children’s Choir in 2001. She grew the VCC to a level where it is now considered one of the top choral and music organizations in the country.

The former University of Victoria student completed her music degree at the Church Music School in Vienna, Austria, where she performed for many years as a concert soloist.

Before her retirement in 2020, she fostered long-term relationships between the choir and the Victoria Operatic Society, the Victoria Symphony, and the Pacific Baroque Festival, impacting the lives of thousands of children in the process.

Lavigne, who rose to fame as a teenager with hits such as “Complicated” and “Sk8er Boi,” joins a long list of entertainers who have been named to the Order. The Napanee, Ont.-born singer-songwriter was also inducted into Canada’s Walk of Fame last year.

Also on the list of 83 Canadians deemed to have made extraordinary contributions to the nation are artists, activists and academics.

Cree actress, producer and advocate Tina Keeper of Winnipeg, who will also be named a member of the Order of Canada, is taking the honour as a chance to reflect on her roots.

“My late father, who just passed last year at the age of 94, was made a member of the Order of Canada in 1992,” she said. “It feels like a very special honour for me.”

Her father, Joseph Irvine Keeper, was a founder of the Manitoba Métis Federation.

He blazed a trail she’s proud to follow, said the 62-year-old Keeper.

Keeper is perhaps best known for starring in the 1990s CBC drama “North of 60,” but was also a member of Parliament in the mid-aughts, and has since moved to producing, including the CTV comedy “Acting Good.”

“I’m grateful for all these opportunities I’ve had to be part of partnerships in trying to move Canada along into reconciliation,” she said. “That has always been important. It was important to my parents.”

Also on the list is U.S.-Canadian submersible expert Patrick Lahey, the first deaf NHL player Jim Kyte, and Christi Belcourt, a Métis visual artist, environmentalist and social justice advocate who devotes much of her time to supporting Indigenous language revitalization. Many of her intricate artworks can be found in public art collections across North America, Rideau Hall said.

Singer-songwriter Daniel Lavoie, best known for his hit song “Ils s’aiment,” and Pierre Chastenay, a trained astronomer and host of Télé-Québec’s popular TV show “Le code Chastenay” are among the inductees from Quebec.

As for Ben, he says he’s proud to be among several magicians who have been invited to the Order of Canada over the years, noting that includes several accomplished Canadians who dabbled in the art but are famous for other reasons.

The late philanthropist Allan Slaight, who was invested as a member in 2001, started his career as a magician before making his fortune in radio, while broadcaster Patrick Watson — a companion of the Order of Canada — co-wrote and directed several productions with Ben.

“Unbeknownst to most people, the 20th century — as far as magic goes internationally — was really Canada’s century. The greatest magicians, the ones who had the greatest impact on the evolution of magic as a performing art or craft were Canadian,” said the 63-year-old Ben.

The Governor General’s office, in announcing Ben’s appointment, lauded his work preserving the history of magic.

“I befriended so many octogenarians when I was in my youth that I represent sort of a bridge between multiple generations,” Ben said.

Ben recalled meeting one such mentor, a septuagenarian, when he was just 18.

“I literally was invited back to his home every weekend for a number of years, where he just passed on his knowledge so that it would not disappear. It would live for future generations. And so I’ve sort of embarked on a similar path.”

A balance must be struck, Ben said, when it comes to passing on magicians’ knowledge. Much of it has been lost, he said, because of the competitive nature of early sleight-of-hand artists.

“One of my fortes is reconstructing long-lost secrets from my predecessors,” said Ben, who shares his secrets for free with magicians who fly in from around the world to meet him in his home in Toronto — if he feels they’re ready to learn.

“One of the measuring sticks is, you can tell if someone is ready for the knowledge…by the questions they ask.”

Investment ceremonies will be held in the coming months.