List of notable people originating from Toronto
This is a list of notable people who are from Toronto, Ontario, or have spent a large part or formative part of their career in that city.
- Andrew Bachelor – actor, comedian, and internet personality
- Aaron Badgley – music journalist and radio host
- Jay Bahadur – journalist and author, known for his reporting on piracy in Somalia
- Frederick Banting – medical scientist and doctor, co-discoverer of insulin, 1923 Nobel laureate
- Dalano Banton – NBA player, currently plays for the Portland Trail Blazers
- RJ Barrett – NBA player, currently plays for the Toronto Raptors
- Thomas J. Bata – businessman
- Robert Bateman – painter
- Eric Bauza – voice actor (Bunnicula, Looney Tunes Cartoons, Tiny Toons Looniversity)
- Isabel Bayrakdarian – opera singer
- Jake Beale – voice actor
- Samantha Bee – actress and comedian
- Jeanne Beker – fashion television personality and reporter
- John Wilson Bengough – cartoonist
- Alfred David Benjamin – Australian-born businessman and philanthropist
- Anthony Bennett – NBA player
- Christine Bentley – CTV news anchor
- Nikki Benz – pornographic film actress
- Pierre Berton – author, historian, journalist and TV personality
- Charles Best – medical scientist, co-discoverer of insulin
- Sim Bhullar – professional basketball player
- Alfred J. Billes – co-founder of Canadian Tire
- J. William Billes – co-founder of Canadian Tire
- Josh Binstock – Olympic volleyball player
- Conrad Black – media mogul
- Jully Black – R&B singer
- Rachel Blanchard – actress
- Lloyd Bochner – actor (Dynasty)
- Andy Borodow – Olympic wrestler
- Devon Bostick – actor, known for playing Rodrick in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series
- Hédi Bouraoui – poet, novelist and academic
- John McEntee Bowman – founding president of Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corp.
- Liona Boyd – classical guitarist, composer, songwriter and singer
- Shary Boyle – artist
- Diana Braithwaite – electric blues singer, songwriter and screenwriter
- Cindy Breakspeare – Miss World 1976 and mother of Grammy-winning reggae musician Damian Marley
- Christopher Britton – actor, stage actor, and voice actor
- Daniel Brooks – theatre director, actor and playwright
- Chester Brown – alternative cartoonist and Libertarian Party of Canada candidate
- Clifton Brown – kickboxer
- Billy Bryans – musician
- Rob Burgess – tech CEO
- Marty Burke – former NHL player
- Theresa Burke – journalist
- Matthew Burnett – record producer
- Martha Burns – actress
- Jackie Burroughs – actress
- Jim Butterfield – computer programmer
- Mikey Bustos – youtuber
- Daniel Caesar – singer
- Barry Callaghan – historian
- Morley Callaghan – journalist, writer
- June Callwood – social activist, journalist
- Bill Cameron – journalist
- Christian Campbell – actor
- Neve Campbell – actress (Party of Five, Scream series)
- Nicholas Campbell – actor (Da Vinci's Inquest)
- Sterling Campbell – former MPP
- John Candy – comic actor
- Jim Carrey – actor and comedian
- Shelley Carroll – municipal politician
- Anson Carter – professional hockey player
- Luciana Carro – actress
- Gino Cavallini – former NHL player
- Lucas Cavallini – soccer player
- Paul Cavallini – former NHL player
- Michael Cera – actor, singer, musician
- Patrick Chan – figure skater
- Christopher Chapman – film director, writer, and cinematographer
- Ann Y. K. Choi – author
- Hayden Christensen – actor
- Choclair – hip hop musician
- Ping Chong – contemporary theatre director
- Olivia Chow – 66th Mayor of Toronto, Former New Democratic Party Member of Parliament, former Toronto city councillor
- George Chuvalo – boxer
- Jerry Ciccoritti – film, TV, and theatre director
- Casey Cizikas – NHL player
- William Robinson Clark – theologian, Fellow and President of the Royal Society of Canada
- Austin Clarke – writer
- Adrienne Clarkson – journalist, broadcaster and former Governor-General of Canada
- David Clarkson – NHL player
- Paul Clatney – Canadian football player
- Sebastian Cluer – director, producer, writer
- Hampden Zane Churchill Cockburn – recipient of the Victoria Cross
- Andrew Cogliano – NHL player for the Dallas Stars
- Matt Cohen – writer
- Dusty Cohl – filmmaker, co-founder of the Toronto International Film Festival and Canada's Walk of Fame
- Carlo Colaiacovo – NHL player
- Enrico Colantoni – actor (Veronica Mars, Flashpoint)
- John Colicos – actor
- James Collip – scientist
- John Colapinto – journalist, author and novelist[2]
- Alex Colville – painter
- Brian Conacher – former NHL player
- Charlie Conacher – former NHL player
- Pete Conacher – former NHL player
- Roy Conacher – former NHL player
- Kurtis Conner – comedian and youtuber
- Jesse Cook – Juno Award winning guitarist
- Stephen Cook – computer scientist
- Jack Kent Cooke – industrialist
- Adam "Edge" Copeland – Independent, WWE, and AEW professional wrestler
- Barry Cort – former MLB player
- Douglas Coupland – writer, artist
- Alyson Court – actor
- Christina Cox – actress, stuntwoman
- Deborah Cox – singer
- Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter – world's best known geometer
- Laura Creavalle – Guyanese-born Canadian/American professional bodybuilder
- Rob Crifo – Canadian football player
- J. Howard Crocker – educator and sports executive with the YMCA and Amateur Athletic Union of Canada[3]
- Jonathan Crombie – actor
- Neil Crone – actor, comedian
- David Cronenberg – film director
- Jim Cuddy – musician, lead singer of Blue Rodeo
- Henry Czerny – actor
- Sarah Gadon – actress
- Bill Gardner - ice hockey player
- Ed Gass-Donnelly – film director, screenwriter and producer
- Daniel Gaudet – Olympic gymnast
- Frank Gehry – architect
- Jack Gelineau – former NHL player
- General Idea – art collective
- Eric Genuis – pianist and composer
- Jian Ghomeshi – radio and TV broadcaster, writer, musician
- Graeme Gibson – writer
- Sky Gilbert – writer, actor, drag performer
- Shai Gilgeous-Alexander – NBA player
- Paul Gillis – former NHL player
- George Clay Ginty – Union Army Brigadier General
- Mark Giordano – NHL player for the Toronto Maple Leafs
- Ken Girard – former NHL player
- Malcolm Gladwell – writer (Tipping Point, Blink!)
- Natalie Glebova – Miss Universe Canada 2005, Miss Universe 2005
- Brian Glennie – former NHL player
- Fred Glover – former NHL player and coach
- Warren Godfrey – former NHL player
- Ritika Goel – doctor, writer, academic, activist
- Thelma Golden – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player
- Emma Goldman – political activist
- Kat Goldman – singer-songwriter
- Glenn Goldup – former NHL player
- Sasha Gollish – competitive runner
- Larry Goodenough – former NHL player
- Barclay Goodrow – NHL ice hockey player
- Allan Gotlieb – ex-Canadian diplomat
- Sondra Gotlieb – writer
- Glenn Gould – pianist
- Katherine Govier – writer
- Lawrence Gowan – musician, lead vocalist of the band Styx (1999–present)
- Barbara Gowdy – writer, fiction
- Dakota Goyo – actor
- Arthur Edward Grasett – commander of VIII Corps during the Second World War
- Edward Greenspan – lawyer and politician
- Barbara Greenwood – educator and children's author
- Kathryn Greenwood – actress
- John Greyson – filmmaker (Proteus)
- Lynne Griffin – actress
- Shenae Grimes – actress
- Paul Gross – actor, producer, director
- Allan Grossman – politician
- Group of Seven – art collective
- Peter Gzowski – radio broadcaster (CBC Radio's Morningside) and writer
- Ian Hacking – philosopher
- Corey Haim – actor
- George Hainsworth – former NHL player
- Michael Hainsworth – business reporter
- Barbara Hamilton – actress
- Dougie Hamilton – NHL player, currently with the New Jersey Devils
- Moshe Hammer – violinist
- Rick Hampton (born 1956) – former NHL player
- Ned Hanlan – rower
- Yuzuru Hanyu – figure skater
- Stephen Harper (born 1959) – 22nd Prime Minister of Canada
- Billy Harris (1935–2001) – former NHL player
- Billy Harris (born 1952) – former NHL player
- Lawren Harris – Group of Seven artist
- Richard Harrison – poet
- Don Harron – comedian, actor, director, radio/TV host, author and composer
- Leon Hatziioannou – Canadian football player
- Asante Haughton – mental health worker and activist
- Dale Hawerchuk – former NHL player
- Brent Hawkes – clergyman, gay rights activist
- Ronnie Hawkins – musician
- Jeff Healey – musician
- Steven Heighton – novelist, poet
- Alan Milliken Heisey Sr. – politician, author, publisher
- Karl Brooks Heisey – mining engineer and executive
- Lawrence Heisey – publisher
- Katherine Henderson – president and CEO of Curling Canada and Hockey Canada[7]
- Murray Henderson – former NHL player
- Adam Henrich (born 1984) – ice hockey player
- Michael Henrich (born 1980) – ice hockey player
- Sheila Heti – author
- Foster Hewitt – sports broadcaster (Hockey Night in Canada)
- W. A. Hewitt – sports executive and journalist, Hockey Hall of Fame inductee[8]
- Dan Hill – singer-songwriter
- George Hislop – gay activist
- Lionel Hitchman – former NHL player
- Abby Hoffman – track and field
- Joshua Ho-Sang (born 1996) – ice hockey player
- Nadia L. Hohn – children's book writer
- Clive Holden – poet, film director and visual artist
- Laurie Holden – actress (The Walking Dead)
- Jason Hook - Guitarist
- Mike Hoolboom – filmmaker
- Kenny Hotz – actor (Kenny vs Spenny)
- Lauren Howe – Miss Universe Canada 2017
- Andrew Huang – musician / Youtuber
- Jack Hughes (born 2001) – NHL player
- Stuart Hughes – actor
- Walter Huston – Academy Award-winning actor (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre)
- William Hutt – actor (Stratford Festival)
- Zach Hyman – NHL ice hockey player
- George Lagogianes – news anchor, reporter and TV personality
- Don Lake – actor and writer
- Maurice LaMarche – voice actor (Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, Tiny Toon Adventures)
- Heath Lamberts – theatre actor
- Laurene Landon – actress
- Michele Landsberg – journalist, author, public speaker, feminist and social activist
- Tory Lanez – rapper
- Richie Laryea – soccer player
- Mel Lastman – 62nd Mayor of Toronto; businessman
- Henry Lau – singer, musician, actor, and ex-member of South Korean boy band Super Junior M
- Ashley Lawrence – soccer player for the Canada national team[11]
- Jack Layton – politician, leader of the federal New Democratic Party
- Mike Layton – municipal politician, son of Jack Layton
- Michael Lazarovitch – actor
- Stephen Leacock – writer, humourist
- Christine Peng-Peng Lee – Olympic and NCAA gymnast
- Dennis Lee – children's author, poet
- Geddy Lee – musician, lead singer of Rush
- Mark Lee – musician, member of South Korean band NCT (group), Canadian South Korean singer
- Sook-Yin Lee – media personality
- Michael Lee-Chin – businessman, investor
- Manny Legace – former NHL player
- Peter C. Lemon – recipient of the Medal of Honor
- E.J. Lennox – architect
- Sean Leon – rapper
- Dan Lett – actor
- David Levin – Israeli ice hockey player
- Baruch Levine – singer and entertainer
- Alex "Mine Boy" Levinsky (1910–1990) – NHL hockey player
- Tamara Levitt – author, mindfulness instructor, and voice over artist most widely known as the narrator for the Calm app
- Dan Levy – TV host and actor
- Avi Lewis – documentary filmmaker and radio/TV broadcaster
- Dana Lewis – journalist
- Glenn Lewis – R&B singer
- Ivor Lewis – sculptor
- Larnell Lewis – musician
- Marc Lewis – neuroscientist and author
- Sharon Lewis – journalist
- Stephen Lewis – former UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, former politician, humanitarian and academic
- Tau Lewis -- artist
- Alex Lifeson – musician, guitarist of Rush
- Lights – musician
- Thea Lim – writer
- Elena Lobsanova – ballet dancer
- Jason Logan – illustrator, writer, graphic designer, and art director
- Robert K. Logan – author and academic
- Bob Lorimer – former NHL player
- Steve Ludzik – former NHL player
- James Lumbers – painter
- Erica Luttrell – actress
- Laurie Lynd – Canadian screenwriter and director
- George Seymour Lyon – gold medalist in golf at St. Louis Olympics 1904; reigning champion for 112 years
- Raine Maida – folk singer
- Eddie MacCabe – sports journalist and writer[12]
- Ann-Marie MacDonald – playwright, novelist, actor and journalist
- J. E. H. MacDonald – Group of Seven artist
- Norm Macdonald – comic actor (Saturday Night Live)
- Daniel MacIvor – playwright, actor and theatre/film director
- Steve Mackall – voice actor
- William Lyon Mackenzie – first Mayor of Toronto; first president of the Republic of Canada; a leader in the Upper Canada Rebellion
- John Macleod – biochemist and physiologist
- Margaret MacMillan – historian and expert of leader international relationships
- Maestro – hip-hop musician
- Daniel Magder – actor
- Christine Magee – spokesperson and co-founder of Sleep Country Canada
- Arnaud Maggs – artist
- Jamaal Magloire – former NBA player
- Kevin Maguire – former NHL player
- Victor Malarek – journalist
- Giorgio Mammoliti – municipal politician
- Manafest – Christian rapper/singer-songwriter
- Erik Mana – magician
- Howie Mandel – actor, comedian, writer, producer
- Dylan Mandlsohn – stand-up comedian
- Peter Mansbridge – CBC News chief correspondent
- Jay Manuel – make-up artist/fashion photographer
- Lisa Marcos – actress (Played, The Listener)
- Simon Marcus – kickboxer
- Hector Marinaro – soccer coach and former forward
- Rob Marinaro – soccer coach and former goalkeeper
- Amanda Marshall – singer-songwriter
- Ruth Marshall – actress (Flashpoint)
- Mae Martin – comedian, writer, actor (Feel Good)
- Russell Martin – MLB player
- Dennis Maruk – former NHL player
- Ron Marzel – lawyer
- James Mason – banker, Senator and soldier
- Mark Masri – tenor and gospel singer
- Mena Massoud – actor
- Raymond Massey – actor
- Vincent Massey – 18th Governor-General of Canada
- Walter Massey – actor
- Pat Mastroianni – actor (Degrassi franchise)
- Cameron Mathison – actor
- Bruce Mau – designer (S,M,L,XL)
- James Mavor – economist and social figure
- Brad May – former NHL player
- Rachel McAdams – actress
- Wallace McCain – McCain foods and Maple leaf foods
- Sheila McCarthy – actress
- Eric McCormack – actor (Will and Grace)
- Ernest McCulloch – cellular biologist
- Dean McDermott – actor and reality show personality (Tori & Dean: Inn Love)
- Bruce McDonald – film director
- Kevin McDonald – comedian, actor, member of The Kids in the Hall
- Michael McGowan – film director
- Don McKellar – actor, screenwriter and film director
- Ella N. McLean, Countess Norraikow – author and metaphysician
- Seaton McLean – film and TV producer
- Marshall McLuhan – academic and writer (Understanding Media)
- Evgenia Medvedeva – Russian figure skater
- Gerry Meehan – former NHL player
- Shawn Mendes – musician, singer
- Heather Menzies – actress (The Sound of Music)
- Lindsay G Merrithew – actor, producer, fitness entrepreneur
- Lorne Michaels – producer and creator of Saturday Night Live
- Michie Mee – hip hop musician
- Rick Middleton – former NHL player
- Ramona Milano – actress (Due South)
- Greg Millen – former NHL player
- David Mirvish – theatrical impresario
- Ed Mirvish – theatrical impresario, founder of Honest Ed's
- Rohinton Mistry – writer
- Stacie Mistysyn – actress (Degrassi franchise)
- Joni Mitchell – musician
- Kim Mitchell – musician
- Shay Mitchell – actress
- Colin Mochrie – actor and improvisational comedian (Whose Line Is It Anyway?)
- Geraldine Moodie – photographer
- Dora Mavor Moore – founder of Canada's professional theater
- Mavor Moore – pioneer of Canadian television
- Rick Moranis – actor, comedian, writer, producer
- Jeffrey Morgan – writer, photographer, authorized biographer (Alice Cooper, Iggy Pop & The Stooges)
- Raymond Moriyama – architect
- Greg Morris – Canadian football player
- Dylan Moscovitch – Olympic medalist pair skater
- James Motluk – filmmaker
- Murray Douglas Morton – lawyer, trustee and chair of Toronto Board of Education, Member of Parliament[13]
- Farley Mowat – writer
- Mr. Attic – hip hop musician
- Rania El Mugammar – writer, educator, activist
- Hope Muir – artistic director designate of National Ballet of Canada
- Craig Muni – former NHL player
- Peter Munk – founder of Barrick Gold
- Robert Munsch – children's author
- Mike Murphy – former NHL player
- Anne Murray – singer
- Mathew Murray – writer, web series creator
- Barton Myers – architect
- Mike Myers – comic actor (Saturday Night Live, Austin Powers)
- Alannah Myles – singer
- Mysterion the Mind Reader – mentalist
- Moshe Safdie – architect
- Morley Safer – journalist (60 Minutes)
- F. A. Sampson – war hero (RCAF WWII)
- Saukrates – hip hop musician
- John Ralston Saul – writer
- Booth Savage – actor
- Tyrone Savage – actor (Wind at My Back)
- Monika Schnarre – supermodel and actress
- Kim Schraner – actress (Spynet)
- Albert Schultz – actor, director and the founding artistic director of Toronto's Soulpepper Theatre Company
- Linda Schuyler – television producer (Degrassi franchise)
- Caterina Scorsone – actress
- Emma Priscilla Scott – educator and author
- Sara Seager – astronomer and planetary scientist
- Michael Seater – actor
- Lance Secretan – leadership theorist, writer and consultant
- Derek Sharp – lead singer for The Guess Who
- Isadore Sharp – businessman
- Ken Shaw – former CTV news anchor
- Domee Shi – Academy Award-winning director (Bao, Turning Red)
- Howard Shore – Academy Award-winning film composer (The Lord of the Rings)
- Martin Short – actor
- Frank Shuster – comedian (Wayne and Shuster)
- Joe Shuster – creator of Superman
- Rosie Shuster – writer
- Steve Shutt – former NHL player
- Jane Siberry – musician
- Khaleel Seivwright – carpenter and activist
- Carmen Silvera – actress ('Allo 'Allo!)
- John Graves Simcoe – first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada; founder of the town of York (now Toronto)
- Al Sims – former NHL player
- Gail Simmons – food author, cookbook writer and judge on TV series Top Chef
- Gordon Sinclair – journalist, writer and commentator
- Lilly Singh – actress, motivational speaker, model, rapper, vlogger, comedian and founder of Girllove
- Darryl Sittler – former NHL player
- Rachel Skarsten – actress (Birds of Prey, Lost Girl)
- Inga Skaya – Miss Universe Canada 2007[citation needed]
- Josef Škvorecký – writer
- Amy Sky – country singer
- Willis C. Silverthorn – Wisconsin politician
- Colin Simpson – author
- Chantal Singer – internationally ranked competitive water skier
- Smiley – rapper
- Glenn Smith – former NHL player
- Gregory Smith – actor
- Reginald "Hooley" Smith – former NHL player
- Sid Smith – former NHL player
- Steve Smith – comedian, actor and writer
- Sonja Smits – Canadian actress
- Snow – musician
- Michael Snow – artist
- James Sommerville – hornist and conductor
- David Soren – film director
- Jason Spezza – NHL player
- Fred Stanfield – former NHL player
- Larry M. Starr – consultant, academic administrator, university professor, and research scientist
- Jessica Steen – actress
- Shelley Steiner – Olympic fencer
- Mark Steyn – journalist
- Amanda Stepto – actress (Degrassi franchise)
- Rob Stewart (actor) – actor
- Rob Stewart (filmmaker) – filmmaker
- Stephen Stohn – television producer (Degrassi franchise)
- Elvis Stojko – former Olympic figure skater
- John Strachan – first Anglican Bishop of Toronto; founder of Trinity College at the University of Toronto
- David Stratas – Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal
- Diane Stratas – former Member of Parliament for Scarborough Centre (electoral district)
- Teresa Stratas – opera singer
- Trish Stratus (born Patrica Stratigias) – former WWE wrestler and fitness model
- Tara Strong – voice actress, actress and singer (Rugrats, New Batman Adventures, Teen Titans, The Fairly OddParents, The Powerpuff Girls)
- Les Stroud – survivalist
- George Stroumboulopoulos – TV/radio personality and VJ
- Malcolm Subban – NHL player
- P.K. Subban – former NHL player
- Charlotte Sullivan – actress
- Jack Sullivan – journalist for The Canadian Press[16]
- Kevin Sullivan – writer, director and producer (Anne of Green Gables, Road to Avonlea, Wind at My Back)
- Moez Surani – poet
- The Weeknd – singer-songwriter, actor and director
- George F. Walker – playwright
- Pamela Wallin – Senator, former Canadian Consul-General to New York
- Jake Walman – NHL player
- Joel Ward – former NHL player
- Yasmin Warsame – supermodel
- Alberta Watson – actress
- Tom Watt – former NHL coach
- Al Waxman – actor
- Johnny Wayne – comedian (of Wayne and Shuster)
- Kevin Weekes – broadcaster and former NHL player
- Samantha Weinstein – actress
- Stephen Weiss – former NHL player
- Danny Wells – actor (The Jeffersons) and voice actor
- Wendy – member of South Korean girl group Red Velvet
- Ken Westerfield – disc sports (Frisbee) pioneer, competitor, showman, promoter
- Galen Weston – Canada's second wealthiest man
- Galen Weston Jr. – businessman
- Denis Whitaker – commanded 1st Battalion The Royal Hamilton Light Infantry in the Second World War
- Hobart Johnstone Whitley – real-estate developer, "Father of Hollywood"
- Zoe Whittall – Giller Prize-nominated author
- Ben Wicks – cartoonist, illustrator, journalist and author
- Joyce Wieland – filmmaker
- Andrew Wiggins – NBA player, first overall draft pick in 2014
- Brian Wilks (born 1966) – NHL hockey player
- Healey Willan – composer
- Elyse Willems – internet personality, comedian, writer
- Angel Williams – TNA Knockout pro wrestler
- Fred Williams – journalist, historian
- Genelle Williams – actress
- Harland Williams – actor
- Richard Williams – animator (of Who Framed Roger Rabbit and The Thief and the Cobbler)
- Bree Williamson – actress
- Behn Wilson – former NHL player
- Dunc Wilson – former NHL player
- Michael Wilson – former federal Minister of Finance (1984–1991), former Canadian Ambassador to the United States (2006–2009)
- Murray Wilson – former NHL player
- Ron Wilson – former NHL player
- Ross "Lefty" Wilson – former NHL player
- Tom Wilson – NHL player for the Washington Capitals
- Jeff Wincott – actor (Night Heat)
- Michael Wincott – actor
- Katheryn Winnick – actress
- Daniel Winnik – NHL player
- Maurice Dean Wint – actor
- Ralph E. Winters – film editor (Ben-Hur)
- Maria Torrence Wishart – medical illustrator and the founder of the University of Toronto's Art as Applied to Medicine program
- Karl Wolf – pop singer
- Ellen Wong – actress
- Kristyn Wong-Tam – municipal politician
- Jay Woodcroft – ice hockey coach
- Cam Woolley – former safety and traffic news reporter for CP24
- Hawksley Workman – singer-songwriter
- Roy "Shrimp" Worters – former NHL player
- Kathleen Wynne – 25th Premier of Ontario
- ^ "Jeremie Albino : de la ferme à la scène". CJBC, October 30, 2019.
- ^ Medley, Mark (May 2015). "Why won't American publishers touch John Colapinto's new novel?". The Globe and Mail.
- ^ Keyes, Mary Eleanor (October 1964). John Howard Crocker LL. D., 1870–1959 (Thesis). London, Ontario: University of Western Ontario. pp. 22, 146. OCLC 61578234.
- ^ Holland, Oscar (April 8, 2020). "Drake opens doors to his extravagant Toronto mansion". CNN. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
- ^ O'Neil, Lauren (June 7, 2019). "Drake visited his childhood home in Toronto and took photos". blogto.com. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
- ^ Polan, Jonathan (April 18, 2018). "Interview: Ian Flynn, Writer for Sonic the Hedgehog Comic". Gaming Boulevard. Archived from the original on February 13, 2019. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
- ^ "Henderson Leaves Curling Canada". Curling Canada. July 4, 2023. Retrieved July 5, 2023.
- ^ Sullivan, Jack (December 8, 1953). "After 60 Years In Sport: 500 Sportsmen To Honor William "Billy" Hewitt". Winnipeg Free Press. Winnipeg, Manitoba. p. 19.; Sullivan, Jack (December 8, 1953). "Sportsmen Honour W. A. (Billy) Hewitt at Dinner Tonight". The Kingston Whig-Standard. Kingston, Ontario. The Canadian Press. p. 11.
- ^ Napier, Jim (May 14, 2012). "Maureen Jennings". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
- ^ Mandel, Charles (October 7, 2008). "The "Henry Kissinger of hockey" smoothed the way for Summit Series". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved January 31, 2020.
- ^ "Ashley Lawrence". Team Canada – Official Olympic Team Website. June 19, 2015. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ "Edward 'Eddie' William Joseph MacCabe". Ottawa Sport Hall of Fame. 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2021.
- ^ McGregor, Jennifer (December 3, 2001). "Douglas Morton, judge, MP, school board chair". The Toronto Star. p. B7.
- ^ "Dr. Tom Pashby". Canada's Sports Hall of Fame. 2000. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
- ^ Edwards, Samantha (October 10, 2018). "A day in the life of Jessie Reyez, Toronto's next big pop star". nowtoronto.com. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
- ^ "Jack Sullivan". Canada's Sports Hall of Fame. 1983. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- ^ Crabb, Michael (December 25, 2012). "Menaka Thakkar". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 18, 2020.
- ^ "Katherine Uchida". Team Canada – Official Olympic Team Website. June 17, 2019. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
- ^ https://www.sportsnet.ca/cricket/article/cricket-captain-saad-zafar-on-canadas-chances-at-the-world-cup-and-beyond/
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