Christopher Robert Brookes December 18, 1943 – April 10, 2023

April 2023

Chris Brookes‘ sudden death sent shock waves through NL’s cultural community, and far beyond. In a career that spanned theatre, print, and radio, and ranged from St John’s to Toronto to Latin America and back to St John’s again, Brookes was a pioneering and award-winning theatre artist and radio producer and broadcaster. Just a short list of his accomplishments would include: co-founder of The Mummer’s Troupe; battling The Canada Council for better funding terms for collective theatre groups (and succeeding); the purchase of the LSPU Hall which thrives today as Resource Centre for the Arts; field and network production positions with CBC Radio in St John’s and Toronto, garnering multiple awards, including the President’s Award; and establishing Battery Radio, in his house at the foot of Signal Hill, where Marconi received the first rans-Atlantic wireless signal in 1901, where his long-form storytelling was both neighbourhood-based and technologically nimble. A sad loss of an incredibly talented, adept, and generous person.

Photo courtesy Ruth Lawrence

The Southside Hills in History and Song

BY Matthew Hollett

I’M NOT SURE who first referred to them as the “Dear Old” Southside Hills, or if anyone still calls them that. Possibly the name went out of fashion when the huge oil tanks were built. But the nickname seems to have stuck for a while in the early 1900s, a curious term of affection for the imposing hillside that gives shape to St. John’s Harbour.