The Globe and Mail - Kate Taylor Columns News Archive
The latest columns by Kate Taylor published by The Globe and Mail
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- How Telefilm can make movies, not just deals
- If Mozart embodies the CBC, why not Madonna?
- Hey Sheila, how about a little poetry?
- There's a masterpiece. I feel faint. Where's my hammer?
- I turn on Corner Gas, I get the Sears wishbook?
- What Howie Meeker and Atwood have in common
- Stereotypes confirmed in top 100 Canadian books
- Canadian stereotypes confirmed in list of top 100 books
- Google my book? I should be so lucky
- Google my book? I should be so lucky
- Google my book? I should be so lucky
- The ROM's new rooms The Royal Ontario Museum is unveiling 10 galleries, offering an early glimpse of what its $233-million expansion really means. KATE TAYLOR takes a good look around
- Write a sonnet, get a babe
- Google my book? I should be so lucky
- Stereotypes confirmed in top 100 Canadian books
- Canadian stereotypes confirmed in list of top 100 books
- What Howie Meeker and Atwood have in common
- I turn on Corner Gas, I get the Sears wishbook?
- There's a masterpiece. I feel faint. Where's my hammer?
- Ring-a-ding dullsville
- This year the revolution has been digitized
- The ROM's new rooms The Royal Ontario Museum is unveiling 10 galleries, offering an early glimpse of what its $233-million expansion really means. KATE TAYLOR takes a good look around
- Write a sonnet, get a babe
- Hey Sheila, how about a little poetry?
- Next year's big issue: Digital TV
- QUEBEC'S UP: ANGLO CANADA? NEVER MIND
- If Mozart embodies the CBC, why not Madonna?
- How Telefilm can make movies, not just deals
- QUEBEC'S UP: ANGLO CANADA? NEVER MIND
- A celebrity game of peekaboo
- On the block? Culture's barely on the radar
- Court martial this
- 142 Tory words, but wait . . . a good idea
- Enter stage right: a condo boom Rampant development is pushing small theatre companies out of their homes and into uncertain futures
- This year the revolution has been digitized
- Child-minding magic
- FORTY SHADES OF BLUE
- Enter stage right: a condo boom Rampant development is pushing small theatre companies out of their homes and into uncertain futures
- This year the revolution has been digitized
- Backstage genius must appear on stage
- Next year's big issue: Digital TV
- A celebrity game of peekaboo
- NOW PLAYING These selected mini-reviews, rated on a system of 0 to 4 stars, are by Rick Groen and Kate Taylor. Full reviews appeared on the dates indicated.
- Actors won't be toasting this policy
- Post-Gomery, will funding slow down?
- A thriller for the digital age
- NOW PLAYING
- They've monkey'd with George
- A close, personal look at a legend
- NOW PLAYING These selected mini-reviews, rated on a system of 0 to 4 stars, are by Rick Groen and Kate Taylor. Full reviews appeared on the dates indicated.
- For museums, breaking up art collections is hard to do
- Post-Gomery, will funding slow down?
- THE FILMS OF HONG SANG-SOO
- A close, personal look at a legend
- NOW PLAYING
- NOW PLAYING These selected mini-reviews, rated on a system of 0 to 4 stars, are by Rick Groen, Liam Lacey and Kate Taylor. Full reviews appeared on the dates indicated.
- THE FILMS OF HONG SANG-SOO
- NOW PLAYING These selected mini-reviews, rated on a system of 0 to 4 stars, are by Rick Groen, Liam Lacey and Kate Taylor. Full reviews appeared on the dates indicated.
- CBC's plans beg the question
- NOW PLAYING
- CBC's plans beg the question
- Long-distance relationships never work
- A stolen childhood, reclaimed by children
- For museums, breaking up art collections is hard to do
- Long-distance relationships never work
- A stolen childhood, reclaimed by children
- A manageable madness
- North of the truth
- Charm fades fast
- NOW PLAYING
- Haggis: as Canadian as apple pie
- GARY YATES He was once a street magician. Now he's a director. But he still relies on sleight of hand
- A manageable madness
- North of the truth
- NOW PLAYING These selected mini-reviews, rated on a system of 0 to 4 stars, are by Rick Groen, Liam Lacey and Kate Taylor. Full reviews appeared on the dates indicated.
- The condescension is what offends
- Will these hobbits ever find broadway?
- NOW PLAYING
- NOW PLAYING These selected mini-reviews, rated on a system of 0 to 4 stars, are by Rick Groen, Liam Lacey and Kate Taylor. Full reviews appeared on the dates indicated.
- GARY YATES He was once a street magician. Now he's a director. But he still relies on sleight of hand
- The condescension is what offends
- Sleighs not seats for snow show
- Hinton makes a bold play For the first time, the National Art Centre is planning an all-Canadian season. It's a daring move, writes KATE TAYLOR, but artistic director Peter Hinton says audiences are ready
- NOW PLAYING
- NOW PLAYING
- Robert Lepage's great direction matched by witty writing
- Don't care what Pam thinks? Stop asking
- The Collector It started as 'some yellow china in the living-room cupboard,' Helen Gardiner tells KATE TAYLOR. Now, in the middle of a $20-million expansion, the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art is ready to welcome the world
- Hinton makes a bold play For the first time, the National Art Centre is planning an all-Canadian season. It's a daring move, writes KATE TAYLOR, but artistic director Peter Hinton says audiences are ready
- Sleighs not seats for snow show
- Cirque on a human scale
- Robert Lepage's great direction matched by witty writing
- Don't care what Pam thinks? Stop asking
- The belief that dares not speak its nom
- The Collector It started as 'some yellow china in the living-room cupboard,' Helen Gardiner tells KATE TAYLOR. Now, in the middle of a $20-million expansion, the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art is ready to welcome the world
- Helen Gardiner: The Collector
- Cirque on a human scale
- Two plots too many
- Git along, little ironies
- With TV hitting cellphones, can Cancon survive?

