Catherine
was a powerful Toronto career woman.
She
was the first woman to have her own
advertising agency. She entered the career world of Toronto when there
were very
few woman, soe she had little or
almost no competition from other women. She handled famous accounts;
The Park Plaza
Hotel, Ravi Shankar who was an
Indian musician, and the cosmetics firm of Max Factor.
I
saw her for the first time when she
arrived in a black tax cab for a
visit to our suburban house at 14 Hansen Street, Pointe Claire,
Montreal. She certainly
looked different from all our other
suburban mothers in her black business suit, with its fitted jacket and
tight pencil skirt.
The
historical family story on her
seemed suspect to me, even when I was a child. "She never married," said
Mom, " Because she
was so sad after her brother died."
Uncle Murray died of leukemia, in his twenties, when he was still a
medical student
in Toronto. This had no connect to
me.
My
dad told me a couple of stories about her. "I was in Mexico City, and
went to a Canadian Embassy Party,
and saw Aunt Cathy there! What s surprise." In that my father rarely
went to Mexico,
this story baffled me. It was his
membership in 101 Men's Clubs that allowed his invitation, but Cathy?
It
must have been a July 1st party, our
Canada Day Party. I was impressed with the travel adventures of my own
ancestors,
though many were selfish people, who
were people, who were almost never there, when I suffered money or
medical problems.
(Though I do not like to malign my
own family, it's an insult to the friends and lovers who have loved me
not to mention this.)
Later
on I would see her home in Toronto, a
large apartment, with a corridor that ran the length, like a train, but
full of antique
furniture, spindly and conservative.
She had a large office of her own in the Park Plaza Hotel, I think, within
walking distance of her luxurious apartment in downtown Toronto.
For
all her love of her own brother, she
avoided my beloved grandmother,
Violet, whose youthful scandals gave some more conservative relatives a
reason to avoid her.
Of course, from the tone of my
writing,I always am with my grandmother, whom I admire endlessly, and is
always with me.
I
saw little of her, as my more humble
relatives, Aunt Jen and Uncle Lou, were more hospitable to a young teen
working as an
usherette at the Imperial Theatre on
Yonge Street.
There
was no trace of a boyfriend anywhere in Aunt Cathy's life, though
there was a long time female
assistant, who poured tea for us, and even travelled with Catherine to
Europe. It made me sad
to think that Catherine perhaps
stayed away from other relatives because she preferred females to males
as lovers. I kept
my thoughts to myself.
I
liked my first picture of my notable Toronto aunt. Opening the taxi
door, and appearing in regal
splendour to Mom and me in our mother-and-daughter t-shirts, pedal
pushers from Eaton's basement
sales, and rubber flip flop shoes
from Woolworth's.
Of
course, she wore high heels, and carried a light briefcase. Her
hair was done in a chignon, and she
wore light make-up with red lipstick. I was very impressed, she seemed
to
have landed from a different planet.
The planet of Toronto Career Women.
A
place that I would never make it to,
yet record for posterity. Sitting in
a large computer room in Hong Kong, wondering whether I would ever see
my native land
again, still wearing cheap clothing,
and only my hair the same as Aunt Cathy's, pulled back in a chignon,
showing my unmade-up
face.