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The Ward (formally St. John's Ward) was a neighbourhood in central Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Many new immigrants first settled in the neighbourhood; it was at the time widely considered a slum.
Pages in category "Television shows set in Toronto" The following 109 pages are in this category, out of 109 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
Bitten (TV series) Bizarre (TV series) Bliss (Canadian TV series) Blue Murder (Canadian TV series) The Bob McLean Show; Bomb Girls; The Bonnie Prudden Show; Bookmice; The Border (2008 TV series) The Boys (TV series) The Boys season 1; The Boys season 2; The Boys season 3; Breakfast Television; Breakout Kings; Britain & Ireland's Next Top Model ...
The Ward can refer to: Ward (disambiguation) The Ward, horror film directed by John Carpenter; The Ward (2000 video game), point and click adventure video game developed by Fragile Bits; Children's Ward, British children's television drama series; The Ward, Toronto, neighbourhood in central Toronto; Dementium: The Ward, game for the Nintendo DS
Remedy is a Canadian medical drama series which premiered on Global on February 24, 2014. [1] It ran for two seasons. The series starred Dillon Casey as Griffin Conner, a medical school dropout working as an orderly at the fictional Bethune General Hospital in Toronto, where his father Allen (Enrico Colantoni) is the chief of medical staff.
Take a Chance was a Canadian quiz show by Roy Ward Dickson adapted from radio. It was one of the first series on CTV when the network began in 1961. The program was produced in the Toronto suburb of Scarborough at CFTO-TV studios and was broadcast Mondays at 9:30 PM (EST). [2]
Guess What is a Canadian game show that aired from 1983 to 1987. The show was created by Nick Nicholson and E. Roger Muir, the pair behind The Newlywed Game and a series of long-running Canadian productions such as Definition, and was a production of Glen-Warren Productions for CTV. Robin Ward served as the host while Nick Hollinrake announced.
The show itself bears no "created by" credit, although it gives "developed by" credits to Bernard Sahlins and Andrew Alexander. In 1974, Andrew Alexander bought the Canadian rights to The Second City for one dollar, [2] and in 1976, he was the producer of Toronto's stage show, and was looking to expand his company into TV. He called together ...