Image from The Song and The Sorrow+ My Dead Dad’s Porno Tapes

The Song and The Sorrow+ My Dead Dad’s Porno Tapes

This screening took place on Thursday, February 7, 2019 at 12:00 pmYukon Arts Centre

The Song and The Sorrow Dir. Millefiore Clarkes, 2018, Prince Edward Island, 42 min “Elvis covered his songs. I mean, everybody did his songs… But any time I tried to tell him how great he was he felt like he didn’t deserve it.” – Anne Murray Juno-award-winning musician Catherine MacLellan steps onto the stage, guitar in hand. It’s taken a long time—decades—but she is finally ready to sing her father’s songs.The daughter of Canadian folk legend Gene MacLellan, Catherine grew up surrounded by her father’s music. An immensely talented songwriter, he penned some of the biggest hits of the 1970s, including “Snowbird” and “Put Your Hand in the Hand.” Archival interviews and musical clips show him looking rakish in an eye-patch and bell bottoms. He was a rising star in the Canadian music industry but turned his back on the spotlight as it pursued him. Catherine remembers a funny and sweet father who was becoming a close friend as she entered her teen years. Gene committed suicide when she was 14. The Song and the Sorrow follows Catherine as she tries to come to terms with her father and his legacy while facing her own struggles with mental health. She reaches out to family, friends, and musicians like Anne Murray, Lennie Gallant and the late Ron Hynes, who knew and played with Gene. They recall a generous and talented man who was never at ease with fame or money. And for the first time, Catherine’s family faces the unspoken spectre of Gene’s struggle with bipolar disorder. For Catherine MacLellan, the silence and avoidance has gone on long enough. Now, she seeks to celebrate her father and his music while encouraging people to talk openly about mental illness, hoping others can take strength and solace from her story. Director Millefiore Clarkes in attendance. Screens with: My Dead Dad’s Porno Tapes Dir. Charlie Tyrell, 2018, Ontario, 14 min Filmmaker Charlie Tyrell seeks to better understand his emotionally distant late father through the personal belongings he left behind … including a stack of VHS dirty movies.

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