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CBC Televisions wins 1971 Michener Award
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John Cameron Graham
CBC-TV
1971
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May 12, 1972. CBC Television was the recipient of the
1971 Michener Award for
the acclaimed documentary series - The Tenth
Decade. This was only the second time the best of Canada's
meritorious public service journalism was honoured since the inception of the Michener award program in 1970.
The trophy was presented to Cameron Graham, representing CBC
Television, during a ceremony at Rideau Hall held under the auspices
of Governor General Roland Michener after whom the award was
named.
The Tenth Decade was a series of eight one-hour film
documentaries made under the supervision of executive producer
Cameron Graham. The programs were broadcast on the CBC-TV network from October 27 to
December 22, 1971.The documentaries charted the political decade up
to the Centennial year, and the Parliamentary conflict between John
Diefenbaker and Lester Pearson as leaders of the two major parties.
Honourable Mentions:
London Free Press, the Ottawa Citizen, and the
Windsor Star for articles produced jointly on the Niagara
Escarpment and on the problems being encountered on its preservation
despite the policy of the Ontario Government;
The Ottawa Citizen for the published results of their investigation into
the Parcost scheme under which the Ontario Government encourages
doctors to prescribe, and pharmacies to supply generic, as opposed
to brand name drugs.
The Story Behind 'The Tenth Decade'
The series offered a valuable perspective on the period from 1957
to 1967 from the vantage point of the two protagonists including
archival footage from both political camps and interviews with the
two adversaries. Maclean's magazine (December 1971) said the show
contained extraordinary revelations about what kind of country
Canada really has been - gauche, provincial, pretentious, absurd,
and incredibly colonial banana republic.
The first segment, 'Prologue To Power', introduced both Diefenbaker
and Pearson and traced their backgrounds, ending with the June 1957
election that brought Diefenbaker's Conservatives to power and ended
the twenty-two years of Liberal domination in the House of Commons.
The second episode, 'From Victory To Triumph', took the Tories from
the narrow margin of their first minority government to the
landslide of March 1958, and outlined the Pearson's succession to
the leadership of the Liberal Party after the resignation of Louis
St. Laurent.
Part three, 'The Power And The Glory', traced the four years of that
government and the return of the Conservatives to a minority status
in the Commons in 1962.
The fourth part, 'Treason And Transition'
outlined the ten months of that fragile minority, marked by
Diefenbaker's anti-nuclear arms stance and the issue of the Bomarc
missile, and the 1963 election that returned the Liberals to the
government and made Pearson the Prime Minister.
As the title of the fifth program suggested, 'Search For A Mandate'
concerned the Liberals' efforts to build their political fortunes
from a minority, but the period from one election to the next in
1965, also to a minority, were marked by budget conflicts, the war
in Vietnam, and domestic scandal. The second Liberal government,
documented in part six, 'No Joy In Heaven', was plagued with scandals
like the Munsinger affair, and had to try to face the growing unrest
in Québec. 'Celebration And Success', the title of the seventh chapter,
referred principally to the hoopla over the Centennial in l967, and
not necessarily to the deposition of John Diefenbaker as head of the
Progressive Conservative Party that same year.
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Writer/Director
Munroe Scott & Cameron Graham at the film editing table |
Finally, as described in the last program, 'The End Of An Era',
Pearson resigned, too, to be succeeded by Pierre Trudeau, and a
new political regime began with the 1968 defeat of the Conservatives
under Robert Stanfield and the formation of a majority Liberal
government.
Writers for The Tenth Decade included Ed Reid, Christopher Young,
and Brian Nolan, and the commentary was spoken by actor Jon Granik.
Series outline and research - Peter Newman and Christopher Young.
The film editors were Jim Williams, Lloyd Matthews, and Peggy
Chandler with music composed by Larry Crosley.
Cameron Graham had previously produced individual documentaries on
Diefenbaker's decline in power (Hail And Farewell, 1967), and on the
acc-ession to power of Pierre Trudeau in the Liberal Party and as
Prime Minister (The Style Is The Man Himself, 1968). The Tenth
Decade was his first extended production of this type. It was
heralded as a major effort in the development of television as a
tool for writing Canadian political history.
Judges for the 1971 Michener Award:
Davidson Dunton, chair of the judging committee; Yves Gagnon,
Director of the School of Communications at Laval university; Norman
Mcleod, retired correspondent for UPI; and Sam Ross, retired radio
journalist from Vancouver.
The Michener Award, founded in 1970 by the late Right Honourable
Roland Michener, then Governor General, goes to a news organization.
The judges’ decisions are heavily influenced by the degree of
public benefit generated by the print and broadcast projects
submitted for consideration.
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