Fil Fraser
{{Short description|Canadian broadcaster and writer (1932–2017)}}
Felix Blache-Fraser {{post-nominals|CM|AOE}} (August 19, 1932 – December 3, 2017) was a Canadian broadcaster, non-fiction author, film producer, film festival founder, public servant, and educator in Alberta.
Broadcasting and journalism
Born in Montreal in 1932, Fraser began his career in broadcasting in 1951, when hired at the age of nineteen by Foster Hewitt for his radio station CKFH in Toronto. In 1952, he worked as a radio announcer in Timmins, Ontario, for six months before being hired as assistant news editor at CKBB radio in Barrie, where he became the station's sports director and play-by-play announcer, calling games for the Barrie Flyers.{{Cite web|title=Fil Fraser {{!}} The Alberta Order of Excellence|url=https://www.lieutenantgovernor.ab.ca/aoe/arts/fil-fraser/index.html|website=www.lieutenantgovernor.ab.ca|access-date=2020-05-25}}
In 1955, Fraser moved back to Montreal, where he attended McGill University and hosted an all-night show at CKVL in Verdun. In 1956, he worked as a news editor at CFCF radio, eventually becoming chief writer.{{cite web|url=http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/index3.html?url=http%3A//www.broadcasting-history.ca/personalities/personalities.php%3Fid%3D488|title=Pioneer: Fraser, Fil (1932- )|last=Wedge|first=Pip|work=The History of Canadian Broadcasting|publisher=Canadian Communications Foundation|accessdate=February 23, 2014}}
Fraser moved to western Canada in 1958, and initially worked in public relations for Saskatchewan Government Insurance. However, he also remained involved in radio broadcasting, hosting between-period hot stove league discussions on junior hockey broadcasts and sometimes doing play-by-play announcing. In 1960, he founded a newspaper called the Regina Weekly Mirror.
He moved to Edmonton in 1965, where he became program manager and senior producer of the Metropolitan Edmonton Educational Television Association (MEETA), Canada's first educational television channel, which aired on CBXFT. Fraser subsequently became producer/host of Newsmakers, a weekly public affairs program on ITV Global Edmonton, and then served as president and CEO of VisionTV, Toronto.{{cite journal|last=Wyman|first=Marlena|date=Summer 2003|title=The Provincial Archives of Alberta, Fil Fraser and the AV Preservation Trust Fund|journal=Archives Society of Alberta Newsletter|publisher=Archives Society of Alberta|location=Calgary|volume=22|issue=4|url=http://www.archivesalberta.org/vol22_4/paa.htm|accessdate=February 22, 2014}}
In 1974, Fil moved over to the ‘opposition', to host a one-year run of his own eponymous talk show on Dr. Charles Allard's newly-launched CITV private television station, and also began what would become a five-year stint as host of a talk show on CJCA-AM radio Edmonton. In 1980 he took his talk-show host talents across town to CKXM-FM Edmonton, which had just changed its call-sign from CFRN, to avoid confusion with the AM station that used the same call letters. This series ran for three years; in 1983 he became host of Alberta Morning, the daily program that ran on CKUA-AM, then operated by Access Alberta. Later, in 1987, he became Director of Development for Access Alberta, in Edmonton.{{Cite web|url=http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/personalities/fraser-fil|title = Fraser, Fil | History of Canadian Broadcasting}}
Fraser served on the Alberta Task Force on Film and the Federal Task Force on Broadcasting Policy (Caplan/Savageau) and was the Governor of the Canadian Journalism Foundation as well as a member of the Canadian Association of Black Journalists.
Death
Fil Fraser died in Edmonton on December 3, 2017 of heart failure, aged 85. He was survived by his wife, Gladys Odegard; his four children, three siblings and extended family. He was predeceased by his parents, Felix and Marguerite Blache-Fraser, and three siblings.{{cite news|url=http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/edmontonjournal/obituary.aspx?n=fil-fraser&pid=187479590|title=Fil Fraser's Obituary on Edmonton Journal|newspaper=Edmonton Journal|accessdate=16 December 2017}}
Film
In the 1970s, Fraser formed a production company to produce educational television films. He then went on to produce four feature films, from 1977–82, including Why Shoot the Teacher? (executive producer), Marie-Anne, The Hounds of Notre Dame (producer), and Latitude 55° (executive producer). He was a founding member of the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television.{{citation needed|date=December 2017}}
He organized the first Alberta Film Festival in 1974, which later became the Alberta Motion Picture Industry Association, and founded the Banff International Television Festival in 1979.{{cite web|url=http://www.metrocinema.org/fest_view/54/|title=Why Shoot the Picture? The Films of Fil Fraser|work=Metro Cinema Edmonton|accessdate=February 22, 2014}}
Writing
Fraser's published non-fiction works include Alberta's Camelot: Culture and the Arts in the Lougheed Years (2003), which looked at how programs by the government of former premier Peter Lougheed helped the provincial arts sector to flourish from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s.{{cite news|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/alberta-arts-on-the-cusp/article733276|title=Alberta arts on the cusp|last=Gill|first=Alexandra|date=17 March 2009|work=The Globe and Mail|accessdate=23 February 2014}}
His 2006 book, Running Uphill: The Fast, Short Life of Canadian Champion Harry Jerome, looked at the pioneering Black Canadian track star Harry Jerome.{{cite journal|last=Lem|first=Val Ken|date=22 June 2007|title=Running Uphill: The Fast, Short Life of Canadian Champion Harry Jerome|journal=Canadian Materials|publisher=The Manitoba Library Association|volume=XIII|issue=22|url=https://www.umanitoba.ca/outreach/cm/vol13/no22/runninguphill.html|access-date=23 February 2014|archive-date=1 March 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140301161418/https://www.umanitoba.ca/outreach/cm/vol13/no22/runninguphill.html|url-status=dead}} In 2009, he completed the book How the Blacks Created Canada, part of a series of books from publisher Dragon Hill about how different cultural groups have contributed to the development of Canada.{{cite journal|last=Peters|first=Joanne|date=1 October 2010|title=How the Blacks Created Canada.|journal=Canadian Materials|publisher=The Manitoba Library Association|volume=XVII|issue=5|url=http://umanitoba.ca/outreach/cm/vol17/no5/howtheblackscreatedcanada.html}}{{cite news|url=http://www.therecord.com/living-story/2628278-books-how-the-blacks-created-canada/|title=Books: How the Blacks Created Canada|last=Fear|first=Jon|date=29 October 2010|work=Waterloo Region Record|publisher=Metroland|accessdate=24 February 2014}}
Public service and academia
Fraser served as Chief Commissioner for the Alberta Human Rights Commission from 1989 to 1992 and served on the Spicer Commission.{{cite book|last=MacGregor|first=Roy|authorlink=Roy MacGregor|title=Canadians|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w1rTS8itVe4C&q=fil+fraser&pg=PT109|date=2 May 2008|publisher=Penguin Canada|isbn=9780143181620}}
A writer and educator in the field of alcoholism and addictions, he served as head of alcoholism prevention programs for both Alberta and Saskatchewan.{{cite book|last=Takach|first=Geo|title=Will the Real Alberta Please Stand Up?|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IJSnAgAAQBAJ&q=fil+fraser&pg=PA109|date=2 December 2010|publisher=University of Alberta|isbn=978-0888645432|page=109|chapter=Rednecks or Radicals?}} He was an adjunct professor in State and Legal Studies at Athabasca University.
Honours
Fraser was a member of the Order of Canada and received the Alberta Achievement Award. In 2015, he was made a member of the Alberta Order of Excellence.{{cite web|url=http://www.lieutenantgovernor.ab.ca/aoe/arts/fil-fraser/index.html|title=Fil Fraser - The Alberta Order of Excellence|website=Lieutenantgovernor.ab.ca|accessdate=16 December 2017}}
Bibliography
- {{cite book|last=Fraser|first=Fil|title=Alberta's Camelot: Culture and the Arts in the Lougheed Years|year=2003|publisher=Lone Pine Publishing|isbn=1-55105-393-4}}
- {{cite book|last=Fraser|first=Fil|title=Running Uphill: The Fast, Short Life of Canadian Champion Harry Jerome|year=2006|publisher=Lone Pine Publishing/Dragon Hill Publishing|isbn=978-1-896124-13-1}}
- {{cite book|last=Fraser|first=Fil|title=How the Blacks Created Canada|year=2010|publisher=Lone Pine Publishing/Dragon Hill Publishing|isbn=978-1-896124-43-8}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Official website|http://www.filfraser.ca/}}
- {{YouTube|Bt12rkV8A7g|Fil Fraser - Alberta Culture Vignette}}
- {{IMDb name|0292124}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Fraser, Fil}}
Category:Black Canadian broadcasters
Category:Black Canadian filmmakers
Category:Film producers from Quebec
Category:Film festival founders
Category:Canadian television executives
Category:Writers from Montreal
Category:20th-century Canadian civil servants
Category:Academic staff of Athabasca University
Category:Members of the Alberta Order of Excellence
Category:Members of the Order of Canada
Category:Black Canadian non-fiction writers
Category:20th-century Canadian non-fiction writers
Category:McGill University alumni