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Colleen Thibaudeau

  • Colleen Thibaudeau’s “Beatie’s Palaces” from The Martha Landscapes

    November 12th, 2014

    Here is Colleen’s poem “Beatie’s Palaces” from The Martha Landscapes (1984), now back in print and available from Brick Books.

    Beatie’s Palaces

    “Jeez, you got good leaves.” says Beatie.
    Leaves are her luxury; no trees, no leaves on the cinderhill
    where she lives by the dump.

    Mother Madam Witch
    wind lashes trees for her
    we all fall down

    Without asking she grabs the rake; she eyes
    our corner lot. Beatie is by far the best raker, maker;
    her house begins to grow, a rich emerald carpets
    every room. “Thirteen rooms maybe,” she says tersely,
    “anyways a room for each of you.” Palaces
    are what Beatie makes, raking.
    And I can still see, squinting through a chink of time,
    Beatie’s hands, short-fingered,
    (chipped, the polish on her nails, but she’s “allowed”),
    her short, strong hands lengthening fiercely into our rake,
    small lady of the strangely long arm, she manoeuvers
    right round the corner onto East.

    “I sure like your leaves,” says Beatie.
    Grade Seven will be her last year at school.
    She flies around, adjusting the wind-bruised walls;
    her red sweater is nubby and too small,
    her skirt hitches up, her legs are chapped,
    her pushes are energetic:
    “In there. In. And don’t come out till I say so.”
    We fall separately onto our too-short leaf beds,
    try not to annoy Beatie, amazed and proud
    she likes our leaves.
    What did we dream of there on Beatie’s palace beds?
    Infinite luxury, oriental harems… Abruptly,
    “All right, you can come out now.”
    “What’s for supper?” one of us asks audaciously.
    “Macaroni with catsup,” says Beatie positively, “and don’t ask
    for seconds, because you’ll get none.”
    We look with respect at Beatie, who hands out leafplates
    in the big kitchen room. Even the kids taller than Beatie
    look with respect and envy at the short, leaf-stained fingers
    and the ruby glass ring – (she has privately ‘promised’
    it to each of us ‘if we are good’):
    Beatie doesn’t shift her ring around, finger to finger,
    about thirteen, she is already married to life.

    *

    We got called in to supper
    to do homework
    to practise
    to get our hair washed.
    Beatie didn’t go home till it got good and dark.
    Beatie didn’t have to.
    She raked by streetlight with a harp sound attached to the long arm,
    We missed it when it stopped,
    for it had gotten into our blood, the idea of Beatie raking, making.
    From the window (a last look before the wind scatters),
    there is Beatie’s palace glowing gold and green.

    Mother Madam Witch
    wind lashes trees for her
    we all fall down

    Colleen Thibaudeau, 1984

    ( ( ( o ) ) )  Listen to Jean McKay read “Beatie’s Palaces” here.

  • Colleen Thibaudeau in Grey County: “Big Trees”

    April 12th, 2014

    To celebrate National Poetry Month, the community news website The Flesherton has published Colleen’s poem “Big Trees” about her childhood days in Grey County, Ontario.

    Big Trees

    Our backyard is beautiful to-night:
    I could replant every tree
    put it into its proper saucer of snow:
    mr by mrs/ great-uncle by great-aunt;

    I light out from an old photo, cross careless
    before paving days into your yard
    where winds are rocking a hammock,
    wintertime moonlight & twigs,

    (broom & unbuckle) and in handknit stockings from Ireland
    now I’m skating icicletoed on the kitchen lino
    past the black & silver kitchen stove
    — just let it blast my middle — till

    I see her, graybrown tree of the past,
    rocking with her crochetflowers laid in rows,
    and I see him, flannel shirt, grey sweatercoat,
    newspaper & Bible, glasses there at hand.

    *

    you know, I was so small then, I let
    your winds & waters rock me round
    and couldn’t talk enough to tell you
    – Big Trees, I like to be with you to-night.

    Colleen Thibaudeau, 1971

    “Big Trees” appears in The Artemesia Book (1991), available from Brick Books. For more about Colleen’s early days in Grey County, see Colleen Thibaudeau: A Biographical Sketch by Jean McKay.



     

  • Poetry Stratford celebrates Four Women for National Poetry Month 2013

    April 12th, 2014

    On April 21, 2013, Poetry Stratford featured the four poets from the Red Kite Press anthology Four Women: Gloria Alvernaz Mulcahy, Penn Kemp,  Marianne Micros, and Colleen Thibaudeau. Gloria, Penn, and Marianne read their own work, and poet Patricia Black read the late Colleen Thibaudeau’s poems. Here is one of Colleen’s “Inwhich” poems from Four Women:

    Inwhich I Decide To Look Once More at the Story of Never Meeting Pete & Doris, But Solving the Puzzle of the Valuable Little Stamp My Mother Has Pressed Into My Hand

    I am once more in the street and just at that time of day
    which the poets of the future will make much of.
    The violet hour of the pearly exhaust fumes
    (can’t you hear them chanting?) like the inside
    of a fresh-water clamshell, the sky (once long-ago
    their grandfather showed them where they had been).
    Soon the greenish fluorescent lights of the great city
    will stratify, very regular (lichen bands), very exact,
    the steep, straight-up mountainsides of the great downtown.
    Luminous lichen bands.  In the darkness they will hear
    the small incessant torrents of electricity falling.

    Colleen Thibaudeau, 1999

     

    April 21, 2013: Gloria Alvernaz Mulcahy, Patricia Black, Penn Kemp, and Marianne Micros read from Four Women.

     

     

  • Inwhich I Put On My Mother’s Old Thé Dansant Dress

    April 12th, 2014

    Inwhich I Put On My Mother’s Old Thé Dansant Dress

    “Yes,” said Janos, “you can put on a costume!”
    So I go for a favourite, my mother’s old thé dansant dress
    (black georgette and hand-made lace). When I was a child
    I looked through snowy windows, seeing her leave
    for “Tea For Two.” Leaves whirled, the hem dragged
    in the mud when granddaughters sortied out for Hallowe’en;
    and then I rescued, laundered, aired, and pressed
    (black georgette and hand-made lace). Now it’s a humid Sunday
    in the scorching summer of ’88. Jamie retreats to the doorway.
    Janos, taking the photos, says, “Nearly done now.”
    I think, my whole life-span is in this dress.
    And, as I strew these words,
    rose petals are falling from the matching hat she made.

    Colleen Thibaudeau, 1988

    Colleen’s poem appears in The Artemesia Book (1991), available from Brick Books.

    ( ( ( 0 ) ) ) Listen to Jean McKay read the poem here.

    Colleen Thibaudeau in her mother’s old thé dansant dress, at her home in London, Ontario, 1988. Photo by Janos.
  • Colleen Thibaudeau’s “This Elastic Moment”

    April 11th, 2014

    Many thanks to the editors of Brick (Issue 89, page 182) for printing this poem by Colleen Thibaudeau.

    This Elastic Moment

    Yes we are that too: we are everything who feel it.
    Everything that has meaning has the same meaning as angels: these
    hoverers and whirrers: occupied with us.
    Men may be in the parkgrass sleeping: or be he who sits in his
    shirtsleeves every blessed Sunday: rasping away at his child who
    is catching some sunshine: from the sticky cloud hanging over the
    Laura Secord factory: and teetering on the pales of the green
    iron fence: higher up than the briary bushes.
    I pass and make no sound: but the silver and whirr of my bicycle
    going round: but must see them who don’t see: get their fit, man
    and child: let this elastic moment stretch out in me: till that
    point where they are inside and invisible.
    It is not to afterward eat a candy: picket that factory: nor to
    go by again and see that rickety child on the fence.
    When the band of the moment breaks there will come angelic
    recurrence.

    Colleen Thibaudeau, 1977

    Also in Issue 89 of Brick, Stan Dragland  remembers Applegarth Follies, another London, Ontario publisher:

    “… Colleen Thibaudeau’s Ten Letters, the first chapbook I published [under the forerunner of Brick Books], was printed offset by Mike Niederman at Applegarth Follies. I had set the text in the Baskerville type donated by James Reaney to The Belial Press at the university after he completed his ten-year run of Alphabet. One of Applegarth’s presses was the old foot-pumped jobber on which Reaney had printed his magazine. There was plenty of literary interconnection in London back then.”

    Brick: A Literary Journal Issue 89, Summer 2012
  • Colleening: The Poetry and Letters of Colleen Thibaudeau, March 1-9, 2013

    April 11th, 2014

    On March 1-9, 2013, Colleening, a play by Adam Corrigan Holowitz celebrating the life and poetry of Colleen Thibaudeau, was presented by the Alvego Root Theatre Company at the Arts Project Theatre in London, Ontario. Colleening features many of Colleen Thibaudeau’s poems, some set to music and sung, as well as excerpts from letters Colleen wrote to friends and family throughout her life.

    Patsy Morgan, Chris McAuley, Paul Grambo, and Donna Creighton were the wonderful performers and interpreters of Colleen’s work. Stephen Holowitz and Oliver Whitehead composed the music, adding vibrant settings for Colleen’s words.

    “Colleening” by Adam Corrigan Holowitz; music by Stephen Holowitz and Oliver Whitehead, March 1-9, 2013 at the Arts Project Theatre, London, Ontario.

    For more about Colleening, see JBNBlog’s review: “Mom had often said her lines were too long to be set to music. Not so, mom, as I am sure you are hearing whether it’s Oliver or Stephen who is working with your beautiful words.”

    Penn Kemp in The Beat: “The triumph of this play is that it acknowledges our own local heroes/heroines, and carries on the tradition in such a grand collaboration. Here’s celebrating our talent, both past and present, in this production of Colleening!”

    Kenneth Chisholm in Theatre in London: “Watch this play and you will see a magical show of music, verse and prose like you’ve never seen before in Downtown London.”

    Here are the poems and letters featured in Act I and Act II of the play,
    some spoken and some set to music*:

    Act I
    Miniature One
    Childlight Town
    My Grandmother’s Sugar Shell, Ontario Baroque
    Amethysts
    St. Thomas
    Watermelon Summer
    Children in the Storm
    Listening Together
    Miniature Two
    The Obvious Skies
    The Dieppe Gardens Poems
    Sociable People Wondering What I Do
    Going to Winnipeg
    King’s Park, Manitoba
    Letter to Margaret One
    What Happened to the N.Y. Sunday Times
    Letter to Margaret Two
    Aristide Bruant au Honey Dew
    Letter to Margaret Three
    Name Dropping as Skipping Stones
    Letter to Margaret Four

    Act II
    Miniature Three
    About Noon
    London Observations
    Last Night I Dreamed
    Lullaby for the Mother
    Little Anne Running
    All My Nephews Have Gone to the Tar Sands
    Hitchhiking
    Sunday Morning
    Style
    Malcolm Working
    A Page of Rage
    Running Down to Barachois
    Miniature Five
    Canada Trust Tower More bird stuff
    The Tomato Pickers Observed
    The Brown Family
    The Cooper
    Looking at The Artemesia Book
    Miniature Four
    White Bracelets
    Letter One
    Rainy Day in March
    Letter Ten
    Alive

    The play’s collage of poems, letters, and reminiscences also included extracts from other writing about Colleen Thibaudeau or about her family: Stan Dragland’s “Prologue”, Herman Gooden’s “Colleen and Jamie”, Stewart Thibaudeau’s story “The War”, and other selections from “A Biographical Sketch” from earlier interviews conducted by Stan Dragland, Peggy Dragisic, Don McKay and Jean McKay.

    *About the music:

    ♦ Music for the “Miniature” series poems was composed by Stephen Holowitz and Oliver Whitehead.

    ♦  Stephen Holowitz composed music for “Childlight Town”, “Watermelon Summer”, “The Dieppe Gardens Poems”, “Sunday Morning”, “Malcolm Working”, “The Cooper”, and “Rainy Day in March”.

    ♦ Oliver Whitehead composed music for “The Obvious Skies”, “King’s Park Manitoba”, “Aristide Bruant au Honey Dew”, “Lullaby for the Mother”, “Little Anne Running”, and “White Bracelets”.

    Stephen Holowitz and Oliver Whitehead are members of the London jazz group The Antler River Project: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hteyhpy3gcM

  • Colleen Thibaudeau’s “Balloon” for National Poetry Month 2012

    April 11th, 2014

    To honour poet Colleen Thibaudeau (1925-2012), Colleen’s poem “Balloon” was displayed on a billboard near Stanley Street and Wortley Road in London, Ontario. The billboard was a joint project of Poetry London, London Public Library, and Brick Books, in celebration of National Poetry Month.

    “Balloon” was first published in Colleen Thibaudeau’s book of concrete poems, Lozenges: Poems in the Shapes of Things, by the Alphabet Press in 1965.

    April 14, 2012: “Balloon” by Colleen Thibaudeau, 1925-2012
    April 14, 2012: Celebrating National Poetry Month. Jean McKay was on hand to play her fiddle.
    April 4, 2012: Elizabeth Reaney celebrates her grandmother’s poem “Balloon”

     

  • Colleen Thibaudeau Reaney 1925-2012

    April 11th, 2014

    Colleen Thibaudeau, poet and beloved wife of James Reaney, passed away on February 6, 2012 in London, Ontario. Colleen will long be remembered by her family, neighbours, and many friends.

    Colleen Thibaudeau, 1925-2012 Photo by Diane Thompson, 1997

    Links celebrating Colleen and her work:

    Colleen Thibaudeau Reaney, Dec. 29, 1925–Feb. 6, 2012 by James Stewart Reaney, London Free Press, February 6, 2012

    “Greatness in Poetry” by Marty Gervais, February 7, 2012

    “Poet found magic and mystery in the everyday” by Sandra Martin, The Globe and Mail, February 9, 2012

  • Colleen in St.Thomas

    January 24th, 2014

    Colleen’s family moved from Grey County to St. Thomas, Ontario, when she was eight years old.

    Colleen in St. Thomas, Summer 1938, with her sister Shelia.
    Colleen (age 12) and friends tenting in St. Thomas, Ontario, Summer 1938. Colleen is standing, at the far right with her younger sister Shelia (age 4).
  • Colleen’s Childhood in Grey County

    January 24th, 2014

    Colleen spent part of her early childhood in Flesherton, Ontario, where her father was a high school teacher.

    Colleen Thibaudeau (age 7) with her classmates at Flesherton School, Grey County in 1933. Colleen is seated at the end of the second row on the far right, and her friend Diana Goldsborough is beside her.
    Colleen with her brother John, Felsherton, Ontario, Winter 1933

     

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