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High School Student Wins $5,000 for Reciting Poetry

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TORONTO – April 12, 2011 – Scott Griffin awarded $10,000 in prize money to high school students and their schools at this evening’s first-ever Poetry In Voice/Les voix de la poésie recitation finals, held at the Young Centre for Performing Arts in downtown Toronto’s historic Distillery District. The event was open to the public and was well-attended by hundreds of poetry fans, including students, teachers, media, and members of the arts community.

The three winners are:

1st Prize:

$5,000 awarded to Jonathan Welstead, Grade 12, of Toronto, Ontario
$2,500 awarded to Upper Canada Colleges library, $500 of which is earmarked for the purchase of poetry books.

Jonathan recited “To a Mouse” by Robert Burns, “The Windhover” by Gerard Manley Hopkins, and “Preludes” by T. S. Eliot.

2nd Prize:

$1,000 awarded to Anna Jiang, Grade 12, of North York, Ontario
$500 awarded to Victoria Park Collegiate Institutes library for the purchase of poetry books.

Anna recited “Journey of the Magi” by T. S. Eliot, “L’esprit et l'eau” by Paul Claudel, and “A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a Late Famous General“ by Jonathan Swift.

3rd Prize:

$500 awarded to Spencer Slaney, Grade 10, of Sudbury, Ontario
$500 awarded to Lockerby Composite Schools library for the purchase of poetry books.

Spencer recited “Spleen” by Charles Baudelaire, “Jabberwocky” by Lewis Carroll, and “Annabel Lee” by Edgar Allan Poe.

Poetry In Voice winners with Scott Griffin

Presenting the 2011 Poetry In Voice/Les voix de la poesie winners:
Scott Griffin with (left to right) Spencer Slaney, Jonathan Welstead and Anna Jiang

Margaret Atwood, attending the event, noted, “Poetry In Voice takes poetry back to its oral roots — its connection with the voice, with heard rhythm — while connecting with an ancient tradition that has recently been revived in several forms: Poetry as performance. Memorizing a poem is a way of knowing it inside out — in all five of its dimensions.”

Soulpepper Theatre founding artistic director Albert Schultz hosted the evening, which opened with remarks in English and French by Scott and Krystyne Griffin, highlighting the bilingual aspect of the competition. In describing the importance of recitation, Scott Griffin commented: “Poems committed to memory inspire greater appreciation of this art form and public recitation promotes student confidence.”

The judging panel included an impressive mix of Ontario and Quebec poets and actors: Karine Glorieux, novelist; Robert Lalonde, actor and Governor General’s Literary Award–winning writer; Diana Leblanc, Soulpepper Theatre founding artist; Dennis Lee, Governor General’s Literary Award–winning poet; Karen Solie, Griffin Poetry Prize–winning poet; and Élise Turcotte, Governor General’s Literary Award–winning poet.

A jazz trio featuring recent graduates from Rosedale Heights School of the Arts played throughout the evening.

The following twelve Ontario students represented their respective schools in the competition finals:

  • Amelia Druskis, Grade 12, Bayridge Secondary School, Kingston
  • Suzanna Alsayed, Grade 11, Cawthra Park Secondary School, Mississauga
  • Mélodie Cyr, Grade 9, Collège Notre-Dame, Sudbury
  • Lily MacLeod, Grade 12, Lawrence Park Collegiate Institute, Toronto
  • Spencer Slaney, Grade 10, Lockerby Composite School, Sudbury
  • David Castillo, Grade 12, London Central Secondary School, London
  • Estera Musiala, Grade 12, R.H. King Academy, Scarborough
  • Brogan Carruthers, Grade 12, South Carleton High School, Richmond (Ottawa)
  • Victoria Campbell, Grade 11, Toronto French School, Toronto and Mississauga
  • Malvika Chowdry, Grade 11, Trafalgar Castle School, Whitby
  • Jonathan Welstead, Grade 12, Upper Canada College, Toronto
  • Anna Jiang, Grade 12, Victoria Park Collegiate Institute, North York

Poetry In Voice competitors with Scott Griffin

Presenting the 2011 Poetry In Voice/Les voix de la poesie competitors:
Scott Griffin with (left to right) Suzanna Alsayed, Lily MacLeod, David Castillo, Amelia Druskis,
Mélodie Cyr, Victoria Campbell, Estera Musiala, Jonathan Welstead, Brogan Carruthers,
Spencer Slaney, Malvika Chowdry, and Anna Jiang

This contest begins at the classroom level and moves on to school-wide competitions. After winning their school competitions, the student champions listed above advanced to this evening’s recitation finals.

The competition will expand in 2012 to include all of Ontario and Quebec, and branch out to schools across the country in 2013. Schools that are interested in participating next year are invited to contact info@poetryinvoice.com.

Poetry In Voice/Les voix de la poésie (PIV/LVP) is the latest initiative by Scott Griffin, Chairman and Founder of The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry, along with Trustees Margaret Atwood, Carolyn Forché, Robert Hass, Michael Ondaatje, Robin Robertson, and David Young. The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry raises awareness of the crucial role poetry plays in our cultural life, a mission shared by Poetry In Voice.

To obtain high-resolution photos of the event and participants visit our Media Resources page.

 

Photo credit: Tom Sandler


Jerome Rothenberg

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Jerome Rothenberg
b. 1931

Born and raised in New York City, Jerome Rothenberg studied at City College of New York, the University of Michigan, and Columbia University. He is the author of over 70 books of poetry and is also an acclaimed anthologist. His 1968 anthologyTechnicians of the Sacred is a classic of “ethnopoetics,” the name he gave a new approach to folk songs, oral traditions, and ritual poetry from around the world.

Né et élevé à New York, Jerome Rothenberg étudie à City College à New York, à l’université de Michigan et à l’université de Columbia. Auteur de plus de soixante-dix recueils de poésie, c’est également un anthologiste acclamé. Son anthologie de 1968 Technicians of the Sacred est un classique de la technique «ethnopoétique», le nom qu’il donne à une nouvelle façon d’appréhender chansons folkloriques, traditions orales et poésie rituelle à travers le monde.

Poetry In Voice launches in Quebec

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The Griffin Trust launches poetry recitation contest in Quebec, with the support of poet Pierre Nepveu

TROIS-RIVIÈRES, 4 October, 2011– Following its successful launch in Ontario by The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry, high school poetry recitation contest Poetry In Voice/Les voix de la poésie is now opening its doors in Quebec before reaching across Canada in 2013.

The initiative, founded byScott Griffin — philanthropist and Chairman of The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry — aims to introduce students to the most beautiful poems ever written in English and in French.

The contest is open to secondary school and CEGEP students and requires that they memorize poems and recite them on stage. Student participation in Poetry In Voice is designed to develop a life-long love of poetry while it promotes excellence, helps build self-confidence, and improves public-speaking skills.

Pierre NepveuAccording to Pierre Nepveu, “Poetry In Voice is an educational program of the highest order and a marvellous introduction to poetry. Reading and reciting poems allows young people to discover another way to approach language, to develop a sense of its expressiveness, its rhythm, its music and the power of its images at a time when most of the language around them is purely utilitarian and focused on communication. All poetry, however literary, is written to be read aloud. And Poetry In Voice wants to teach a new generation how to speak verse and make it sing.”

The anthology currently has hundreds of poems and will continue to grow over the years. The poems in French were chosen by Pierre Nepveu and include classic, modern, and contemporary works by poets such as Émile Nelligan, Victor Hugo, Paul Verlaine, and Hélène Dorion.

The poems in English were reviewed by members of The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry, among them writers and poets Margaret Atwood and Michael Ondaatje. The English-language poets include Poe, Whitman, Brontë, Keats, and many others. Margaret Atwood notes, “Poetry In Voice takes poetry back to its oral roots — its connection with the voice, with heard rhythm — while connecting with an ancient tradition that has recently been revived in several forms: Poetry as performance. Memorizing a poem is a way of knowing it inside out — in all five of its dimensions.”

The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry

The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry was founded in April 2000 by Chairman Scott Griffin, along with Trustees Margaret Atwood, Carolyn Forché, Robert Hass, Michael Ondaatje, Robin Robertson, and David Young. By funding the Griffin Poetry Prize — the world’s largest prize for a first edition single collection of poetry written in, or translated into, English — The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry aims to spark the public’s imagination and raise awareness of the crucial role poetry plays in our cultural life.

Pierre Nepveu taught literature at Université de Montréal for thirty years. Poet, novelist, and essay writer, Professor Nepveu has published well over a dozen books including several collections of poetry, two of which earned Governor General’s Literary Awards. He is also the co-author of La poésie québécoise, des origines à nos jours, a much-loved Quebec poetry anthology; reprinted in 2007. His biography of Gaston Miron, Gaston Miron, La vie d’un homme, has just been published by les Éditions du Boréal.

 

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For further information, please refer to:

Sepideh Anvar

Tel: (514) 677 0927

Email: sepideh@lesvoixdelapoesie.com

 

Sign up your school:

info@poetryinvoice.com

$3,000 in prizes added to provincial level

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Poetry In Voice is pleased to announce that the champion of the 2012 Ontario Finals and the champion of the 2012 Quebec Finals will each win $1,000. In addition, both champions’ school libraries will win $500 for the purchase of poetry books.

Damian Rogers speaks to The Grid

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Our creative director, Damian Rogers, speaks to Toronto weekly The Grid about poetry, rock and roll, and the value of reciting the classics.

Read the article >>

2012 Quebec Finals

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Tuesday April 3rd, 2012

La finale au Québec 2012

Watch the Slideshow

On the evening of Monday, April 2nd, in Montreal, an audience of poets, poetry lovers, teachers, students, and parents met at La Maison Théâtre to watch the Poetry In Voice Quebec finalists recite poetry. All of the competitors were excellent; the judges had their work cut out for them in choosing a winner. The finalists recited poems by Shakespeare, Rimbaud, Gaston Miron, Erin Mouré, and others. One of the highlights of the evening was when a young finalist recited “Au bout du quai...” by Andrée Lacelle, while the poet herself was seated in the audience.
 

Le jury de la finale au Québec

Pierre Nepveu, the editor of the Poetry In Voice anthology in French, was there and was delighted to see so many young people mastering the age-old art of poetry recitation. Guy Marchamps, also a poet, hosted the evening with humour and lively support for the young finalists.

The panel of judges included France Boisvert, Catherine Lalonde, Bronwen Low, Jeanne Painchaud, Sina Queyras, and Carmine Starnino, all poets or poetry scholars. The high quality of the recitations made it difficult for them to choose a single winner.

Eve Mangin

Eve Mangin of Collège Lionel-Groulx won first prize and $1,000 as well as $500 for the library of Lionel-Groulx for the purchase of poetry books. Eve and second- and third-place winners Liana Cusmano from Vincent Massey Collegiate and Josh Cape from Selwyn House will all travel to Toronto to take part in the Grand Finals on April 17th. We wish them good luck and look forward to watching them perform in Toronto!

 

 

Watch the Slideshow

Pierre Nepveu and Nicole Brossard accepted into the Order of Canada

Announcing new prizes for 2013

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nouveaux prix

Monday, June 4, 2012

We are introducing three new prize streams for the 2012-2013 National Finals.

 

ENGLISH PRIZE

For the best combined score of three recitations in English.

FRENCH PRIZE

For the best combined score of three recitations in French.

BILINGUAL PRIZE

For the best combined score of one poem in English and one poem in French.

The English, French, and Bilingual Champions will each go home with $5,000 and their school libraries will each receive $1,000 ($500 of which is reserved for the purchase of poetry books).

A runner-up in each category will take home $1,000 and their school libraries will each be awarded $500 for the purchase of poetry books.

Semifinals will take place online; more details will be posted in the fall.


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New third-place prizes announced for 2013 National Finals

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New third place prize

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Poetry In Voice is pleased to announce a third-place prize for the 2013 National Finals. Students in third place in each of the prize streams will win $500. In addition, their school libraries will win $250 each for the purchase of poetry books.

2013 Online Semifinals judges

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Online Semifinals Judges

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

We are thrilled to announce the names of the 22 accomplished poets and writers from across Canada who will be judging the inaugural Online Semifinals.

English-language recitations will be judged by Stephanie Bolster, Alice Burdick, Brad Cran, Michael Crummey, Jon Paul Fiorentino, Ariel Gordon, Tracy Hamon, Susan Holbrook, Gillian Jerome, David O’Meara, Nikki Reimer, Stuart Ross, Carmine Starnino, Rhea Tregebov, and Zachariah Wells.

French-language recitations will be evaluated by Yves Antoine, Éric Charlebois, Rino Morin Rossignol, Jeanne Painchaud, Swann Paradis, Aurélie Resch, and Gaston Tremblay.

Collectively, the judges will review recitation videos submitted by this year’s school champions. They will evaluate each student’s physical presence, voice and articulation, appropriateness of dramatization, evidence of understanding, and overall performance.

The top 39 student competitors selected by the judges will be invited to attend the National Finals in Toronto on May 14 & 15, where they will compete for nearly $25,000 in awards and school stipends.

To find out more about our Online Semifinals judges, click here.

Winners from across Canada

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Online Semifinals Winners

We are delighted to announce the Online Semifinalists who are invited to compete at the 2013 Poetry In Voice National Finals.

 

 

ENGLISH STREAM

School / Teacher Student City
Canterbury High School
Deborah James
Alexandra McGowan Ottawa
École secondaire Étienne-Brûlé
Jeffrey Hughes
Eleni Kolovos Toronto
Father James Whelihan
Tyler Perry
Caitlin Botros Calgary
Gorsebrook Junior High
Andrea Klug-Bryson, Basil Rose
Wanda Hannah Beck Halifax
Heritage Woods Secondary School
Tara Olchowy
Colin Fehr Port Moody
Little Flower Academy
Mary Duffy
Dede Akolo Vancouver
London Central Secondary School
Glenna Atkinson, Ola Nowosad
Michelle Ha London
Mary, Mother of God School
Patricia Armstrong Egan
Barbara Egan Toronto
Michael Power/St. Joseph High School
Anthony De Sa
Pearl Zaki Etobicoke
Port Moody Secondary School
Wendy Hawkin
Maxine Owers Port Moody
St. Andrew’s Regional High School
Michele Sanders
Sarah Gibbs Victoria
St. James All-Grade School
Bonita Wheeler
Monica Rotchford Lark Harbour
St. John’s-Ravenscourt School
Mark Duncan, Ray Grynol
Peirce Dickson Winnipeg
Tantramar Regional High School
Joceline Young
Victoria Sommerville-Kelso Sackville
Toronto French School
Caryl A. Grimsley
Kathleen Chen Toronto
Vancouver Technical Secondary School
Denise Clark
Kyla Kane Vancouver
West Point Grey Academy
Tracey Lee, Wendy McGee
Samantha Starkey Vancouver
Westmount High School
Layla Khanji, Ryan Ruddick
Alexandria Brault Westmount

 

BILINGUAL STREAM

School / Teacher Student City
Canterbury High School
Deborah James
Sam Downs Ottawa
Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf
Rosalie Lessard
Ivan Fonseca Montréal
Crofton House School
Frankie Cena
Arrthy Thayaparan Vancouver
École internationale de Montréal
Marie-Claude Breton, Marlène Sohier
Victor Lewis Montréal
École secondaire du Sommet
Lucie Michaud
Shannon Couillard Halifax
Langley Christian High School
Cynthia McCarthy
Ben Budlong Langley
Lycée Français de Toronto
Richard Sanger, Florian Soletti
Elisabeth Sohier-Poirier Toronto
Lycée Louis Pasteur
Céline Chevalier-Sirodot
Maelys Beliazi* Calgary
Mount Douglas Secondary School
Ben Greene
Nathan How* Victoria
Port Moody Secondary School
Wendy Hawkin
Dena Tabyanian Port Moody
Porter Creek Secondary School
Marie Edith Daigle
Surat Jalalov Whitehorse
St. John’s-Ravenscourt School
Mark Duncan, Ray Grynol
Stephanie Fennell Winnipeg
Toronto French School
Caryl A. Grimsley
Khalil Mair Toronto
Westmount High School
Layla Khanji, Ryan Ruddick
Aisha Nafees Westmount

 

FRENCH STREAM

School / Teacher Student City
Collège Durocher Saint-Lambert
Christine Verville
Juliette Lafrenière Saint-Lambert
Collège Lionel-Groulx
Agnès Grimaud
Anne Leblanc Sainte-Thérèse
Collège Saint-Hilaire
Marie-Andrée Arsenault
Léa Trudel Mont-Saint-Hilaire
Crofton House School
Frankie Cena
Natasha Jadavji Vancouver
Cégep du Vieux Montréal
Nathaly Ledoux
Emmanuelle Gauthier Montréal
École internationale de Montréal
Marie-Claude Breton, Marlène Sohier
Cathy Guo Montréal
Gorsebrook Junior High
Andrea Klug-Bryson, Basil Rose
Madina Sutton Halifax
Lycée Français de Toronto
Richard Sanger, Florian Soletti
Tess Exshaw Toronto
Villa Sainte-Marcelline
Françoise Assaad
Sarah Kordlouie Westmount

 

* Unable to attend

 

Students from across Canada submitted videos of their recitations, and our panel of 22 poet judges weighed each performance and selected the top students.

Finalists will travel to Toronto and compete for nearly $25,000 in awards and school stipends on May 14 & 15. Please join us to cheer them on!

Thank you to all who competed and good luck to our finalists!

Nine students advance to tomorrow night’s National Finals event

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Day 1 2013 Finals

Watch the Slideshow

Today at the Isabel Bader Theatre, nine students were selected from a pool of 39 to advance to the main event of the 2013 Poetry In Voice National Finals, which will take place tomorrow night at 7pm.

Caitlin Botros from Father James Whelihan School, Kyla Kane from Vancouver Technical Secondary, and Dede Akolo from Little Flower Academy advanced in the English prize stream.

Natasha Jadavji from Crofton House School, Anne Leblanc from CEGEP Lionel-Groulx, and Sarah Kordlouie from Villa Sainte-Marcelline moved ahead in the French prize stream.

Aisha Nafees from Westmount High School, Khalil Mair from Toronto French School, and Elisabeth Sohier-Poirier from Lycée français de Toronto will compete tomorrow night in the Bilingual prize stream.

Throughout the day, students competed against one another in their chosen prize stream. Local poets and educators Marguerite Andersen, Linda Besner, Dani Couture, Jeramy Dodds, Suzanne Legault, Michael Lista, Hoa Nguyen, Sara Peters, Lélia Young scored the students’ recitations.

The students recited a rich selection of poems, including “Chicago” by Carl Sandburg, “Wolf Lake” by Elizabeth Bachinsky, and “Blank Sonnet” by George Elliott Clarke.

When the students weren’t competing, they were attending workshops run by poets Swann Paradis and Stuart Ross. Paradis’s session focused on the rhythm and rhyme of poetry, while Ross had students try new approaches to writing poems.

The competitors travelled from as near as the Greater Toronto Area and as far as Whitehorse, Yukon and Newfoundland to participate in this inaugural National Finals. They were selected from among the candidates who competed in the Poetry In Voice Online Semifinals in the winter.

Tomorrow afternoon, the students will have a private Q&A session with world-renowned poet and author Margaret Atwood. Then in the evening, the top nine students will compete for $25,000 in awards and school stipends and the title of 2013 Champion. 

Tickets to the National Finals are available for purchase online http://recite2013.eventbrite.ca. Any remaining tickets will be available for purchase at the door of the theatre. 

Poetry In Voice names its 2013 National Champions

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Day 1 2013 Finals

Watch the Slideshow

This evening, nine students took Toronto’s Isabel Bader Theatre by storm, and three were named National Champions at the inaugural Poetry In Voice National Finals.

English stream

National Champion: Kyla Kane, Vancouver Technical Secondary School, Vancouver, BC

Second-place winner: Dede Akolo, Little Flower Academy, Vancouver, BC

Third-place winner: Caitlin Botros, Father James Whelihan School, Calgary, AB

French stream

National Champion: Sarah Kordlouie, Villa Sainte-Marcelline, Westmount, QC

Second-place winner: Natasha Jadavji, Crofton House School, Vancouver, BC

Third-place winner: Anne Leblanc, Collège Lionel-Groulx, Sainte-Thérèse, QC

Bilingual stream

National Champion: Khalil Mair, Toronto French School, Toronto, ON

Second-place winner: Aisha Nafees, Westmount High School, Westmount, QC

Third-place winner: Elisabeth Sohier-Poirier, Lycée français de Toronto, Toronto, ON

Each National Champion received $5,000 and $1,000 for their school libraries ($500 of which is reserved for the purchase of poetry books). Second-place winners received $1,000 and $500 for their school libraries, while third-place winners were awarded $500 and $250 for their school libraries.

The students recited a wide range of classic and contemporary poems for a rapt audience of friends, family, teachers, and poetry lovers. Their recitations were judged by poets Herménégilde Chiasson, Kevin Connolly, Lynn Crosbie, Andrée Lacelle, Pierre Nepveu, and actor Fiona Reid. CBC Radio personality Johanne Blais hosted the evening with flair in both English and French.

Registration for Poetry In Voice is free and is now open for 2014 to secondary schools across Canada and CEGEPs in Quebec .

Sign up for 2014


Mgr de Laval-Pavillon secondaire des quatre vents

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School website: 
http://www.ecolemgrlaval.ca

École secondaire Frenette

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School website: 
http://www.esfr.ca/

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2014 Online Semifinals Judges

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Day 1 2013 Finals

Poetry In Voice is delighted to announce its 2014 Online Semifinals judging panel:

Martine Audet, Bathélemy Bolivar, Alice Burdick, Brad Cran, Jon Paul Fiorentino, Ariel Gordon, Jeanne Painchaud, Stuart Ross, Rino Morin Rossignol, and Ian Williams. Good luck to our students and happy judging to our panel!

Read their bios >>

The 2014 Online Semifinals are now closed

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The Online Semifinals are now closed. Many thanks to all of the fantastic students and teachers who took part in the contest this year! Our panel of judges is delighted to be viewing your recitations now.

Results will be posted on our site on Monday March 31. In the meantime, come join us on Facebook and Twitter for more about the National Finals in Vancouver.

Thanks again for taking on the challenge of poetry recitation!

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