John Fraser (journalist)

John Fraser (journalist)

John Anderson Fraser (born June 5, 1944) is an award-winning Canadian journalist, author, and Master or chief administrative officer of Massey College, a self-governing interdisciplinary graduate college affiliated with the University of Toronto. He is married to Elizabeth MacCallum and has three daughters as well as an Irish terrier, Mollie Bloom. He is a committed Anglican and has served as both a Sunday school teacher and as rector's warden at his church, St. Clement's-Eglinton in Toronto. Until mid-2008, he was also Chair of the Canadian Journalism Foundation and teaches a course in Canadian newspaper history SMC311H1 at St. Michael's College at the U of T.

Biography

During his teenage years, when his parents were afflicted with a variety of mental health and economic problems, Fraser attended four high schools: Toronto's Upper Canada College, Oakwood Collegiate Institute, Lakefield College School in Lakefield, Ontario, and Jarvis Collegiate Institute. A classmate of his at Upper Canada College was Conrad Black who, years later, was his employer when Fraser was editor of "Saturday Night" magazine. He subsequently received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Memorial University and a Master of Arts degree from the University of East Anglia.

At 16, he started summer work as a copy boy and junior reporter at the "Toronto Telegram" and in following summers worked as a journalist at the "Sherbrooke Daily Record" and the "St. John's Evening Telegram". In 1971, he was named music and dance critic for the "Toronto Telegram" and, after that newspaper's demise was briefly in the same position at the "Toronto Sun". He has also written regular columns for the "Toronto Star" and the "National Post". From 1972 to 1987, he was a dance critic, theatre critic, China correspondent, Ottawa bureau chief, national columnist, national editor and London correspondent at "The Globe and Mail". From 1987 to 1994, he was the editor of "Saturday Night" magazine where he pioneered the use of mixed circulation with inserted copies in "The Globe and Mail" and other newspapers in the old Southam Newspaper Group across Canada. He also began a "Saturday Night" imprint of books with the publishers HarperCollins Ltd. that produced nearly two dozen titles in five years. His journalism has been published in many leading international journals and newspapers, including "The New York Times", "The Washington Post", the "Christian Science Monitor", "The Guardian", "The Daily Telegraph", "Time", "The New Republic", "George", "The Spectator", "Paris Match" and the "Far Eastern Economic Review". Twice during his reporting career he became the subject of international media attention: in 1974 when he was instrumental in the dramatic defection of ballet super star Mikhail Baryshnikov, and in 1978 when he addressed tens of thousands of citizens in Beijing during the short-lived and brutally suppressed Xidan Democracy Wall movement.

In 1995, he was elected the master of Massey College and chair of its governing corporation to a seven year term and was subsequently re-elected to another seven year term. Among his achievements at Massey have been a $3.5-million renovation to the Robertson Davies Library, St. Catherine's Chapel and handicap access to the college. Other achievements include increasing its endowment to approximately $12,000,000 ($7,577,184 in the college's 2005 tax return and $4,000,000 held for student bursaries at the U of T's School of Graduate Studies). Other achievements include tripling the number of senior fellows and increasing the number of non-resident junior fellows; creating bursary support to non-resident junior fellows; pioneering academic support programs for "Writers in Exile" and "Scholars at Risk"; and establishing the Quadrangle Society in 1997 which extended the college's mandate to be a bridge community between "town and gown". The Quadrangle Society originally started with 99 (one fewer member than the Junior Fellowship at the suggestion of the then don of hall, Marc Ozon) and has now expanded to over 200. He has taught university courses at York University (drama criticism) and the University of Toronto (Canadian culture, and currently the history of Canadian newspapers).

He has received honorary degrees from Memorial University of Newfoundland (D.Litt.), University of King's College in Halifax, N.S. (D.C.L.), and York University in Toronto (LL.D.). He has twice received medals from the Queen (Silver Jubilee, 1977; Golden Jubilee, 2002). In journalism, he has won three National Newspaper Awards, seven National Magazine Awards, and "Editor of the Year" from the Canadian Magazine Editors Society. His book, "" was a Book-of-the-Month Club main choice in 1981 and nominated for the Governor General's Literary Award in non-fiction. A book on the American Ballet Theatre and Mikhail Baryshnikov, "Private View", was a Book-of-the-Month Club alternate choice in 1989 and won a "Dance Magazine" "book of the year" award. In 2001, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada.

elected bibliography

* Kain and Augustyn 1977
* The Chinese: Portrait of a People 1981
* Telling Tales 1985
* Private View: Inside Baryshnikov's American Ballet Theatre 1989
* Saturday Night Lives! Selected Diaries 1995.
* Stolen China 1999
* Eminent Canadians: Candid Tales of Then and Now 2002
* Mad About the Bay (with Elizabeth MacCallum) 2004


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