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Listed as a "Manitoba Star Attraction" by Travel Manitoba. [20] [21] Received Rand McNally's "Best of the Road" Attraction in the 2010 Road Atlas. [22] [23] Voted "Best Place for a Children's Party", "Best Place to Take Your Child on a Crummy Day", and "Best Indoor Play-Place" by readers of Winnipeg Parent Newsmagazine in 2011. [21]
Manitoba Theatre for Young People (MTYP) is a theatre for children and young adults in The Forks area of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. [1] As of 2012, MTYP's annual attendance regularly exceeds 100,000. [2] Within the theatre complex are two performance venues: a 315-seat Main Stage and a smaller hall. [2]
Oct. 15—The 33rd KOATs for Kids drive is set to launch Monday. The annual drive spearheaded by KOAT-TV aims to collect coat donations across the state and provide them to New Mexico children in ...
The Pantages Playhouse Theatre (French: Théâtre Pantages Playhouse) is a former vaudeville theatre in downtown Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The two-storey building features a decorative façade with a lit marquee across the front, as well as classical decorative elements such as columns, brackets, frieze and cornice. The building continues to ...
The Freeze Frame International Film Festival is an annual film festival, which takes place in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. [1] The festival presents an annual program of children's films, in both English and French, at the Franco-Manitoban Cultural Centre.
Let's Go was a Canadian children's TV series taped at the CKY-TV studios in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It premiered September 1, 1976 and ran for 214 episodes through 1987. The series was developed through the Manitoba Theatre Workshop, some of whose students, including Michael Hearn (as Mikey Simpson) were featured in the cast.
Volleyball at Kildonan Park. Kildonan Park is a park in the West Kildonan area of northern Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.. Established in 1909 as a 73-acre (30 ha) park, [1] it features the Peguis Pavilion, Rainbow Stage, the Witch's Hut, an Olympic-sized outdoor swimming pool, duck pond, and soccer field as well as picnic tables and barbecue pits.
In 2011, 2012, and 2013, the festival received $100,000 of federal funding from the Canada Arts Presentation Fund. [5] [6] [7] Musician Bill Merritt, a Canadian rock bassist, was director of the Festival, which he co-founded. He died at age 66 from brain cancer on March 25, 2014 at Riverview Health Centre, Winnipeg.