Gail harvey terry fox biography canada
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Terry Fox Run: Photog remembers Marathon of Hope
In 1980, photojournalist Gail Harvey was one of three reporters working in the Toronto newsroom for United Press Canada.
And as the only woman on the team, she was often assigned to the night desk, where she would receive details of events from around the world.
But she kept seeing photos of Terry Fox on the news wire, and images of the young man from Port Coquitlam caught her eye.
She was intrigued by his cross-country adventure, which started in St. John’s, N.L., April 12, 1980, with his best friend and fellow PoCo resident Doug Alward, driving the Marathon of Hope van.
Harvey was especially keen to chase his story.
Why would someone with an artificial leg run a marathon a day to raise money for cancer research?
“The human condition fascinates me,” Harvey told The Tri-City News from Toronto last week. “I wanted to get to know what he was like and what made him tick.”
By the time Fox made his way across
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Gail Harvey
Canadian bio and television director
Gail Harvey is a Canadian spelfilm and television director based in Toronto, Ontario.[1] She is most noted as director of the television film No One Would Tell, for which she won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Direction in a TV Movie at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020.[2]
She began her career as a photojournalist with United Press International, becoming noted when she accompanied Terry Fox on the Marathon of Hope and took many of the best-known photographs of Fox.[3] After directing the short documentary film Uphill in a Wheelchair: The Wayne Pronger Story in 1987,[4] she enrolled at the Canadian Film Centre in 1988,[5] and released her debut feature rulle The Shower in 1992.[6]
She subsequently directed the films Cold Sweat,[7]Striking Poses,[8]Looking fryst vatten the Original Sin[9] and Never Saw It Coming.[10]
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Embracing Enduring Legacy: Why Canadians Are Being Invited to Send Terry Fox a Message
If you’re a Canadian and reading this, you know who Terry Fox is. If you’re not Canadian and don’t know who he is, you’re missing out. Simply put, he is an icon. A national legend, if you will.
Diagnosed with osteogenic sarcoma at a young age, Terry’s leg was amputated and replaced with a prosthetic. But rather than sit around and bemoan this fact, his exposure to the suffering cancer causes drove him to a single conclusion - cancer research needs more money. So, in 1980, Terry dipped his prosthetic leg into the Atlantic Ocean, marking the start of his ‘Marathon of Hope’, with the goal being to run across the entire country in order to raise awareness and funds for cancer research.
Unfortunately, the only possible thing that could have stopped Terry ultimately did. 5,373 kilometres into his run (midway through Ontario), the cancer returned - this time in his lungs. On June 28t