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THE TOUR INCLUDES:
- nine
nights deluxe accommodations at premier hotels
in each city (The Prince of Wales in Niagara;
Parlour Inn & Suites in Stratford; Royal York
Hotel in Toronto)
- Top
category seats for ten performances as listed
- Full
breakfast daily plus four dinners, one lunch and
one High Tea
- four
custom (private) tours (Niagara, Stratford, Toronto
& the Art Gallery of Ontario)
- private
airport-hotel transfers
- On-site
tour direction by an Aria Tours representative
Cost: $5475 US
Single Supplement: $1100 US
Balance Due: June 25, 2009
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OPTIONS
FLIGHTS
We will be happy to make any flight arrangements,
including reward travel with your preferred carrier,
for $75 per person. Inbound flight should be booked
to arrive Toronto or Buffalo early afternoon on
October 2; the outbound flight should depart from
Toronto or Buffalo early afternoon or later on October
11.
AIRPORT-HOTEL
TRANSFERS
We include airport-hotel
transfers (group) on the published tour dates. Transfers
are not included for early arrivals or extended
stays, although we can easily make these arrangements
for you.
TOUR
ADDITIONS
The itinerary can be customized to meet your needs
and desires. Please call us to discuss any changes
or amendments you wish to make.
INSURANCE
We strongly recommend that all tour members purchase
cancellation insurance upon registration. We can
assist you with this, though you are welcome to
purchase a policy at your own discretion. If you
would like information on the policies offered by
our supplier, please contact us for details, or
click HERE
for an insurance brochure and application.
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One
of our most popular itineraries, this tour brings you to
two of the most charming towns in North America, as well
as to Canada's cultural heart. Along the way, you will stay
at the finest hotels in each city, enjoy exquisite meals
in five of Ontario's top restaurants, and witness performances
at the best opera and theatre venues in the country— from
the very best seats in each house. And this year's tour
featurs a very special NOEL COWARD extravaganza at the Shaw
Festival.
Niagara-on-the-Lake,
often called the loveliest town in Ontario, has a long and
distinguished history. Site of the old Neutral Indian village
of Onghiara, it was settled at the close of the American
Revolution by loyalists coming to Upper Canada. In 1792,
Newark - as it was named by Governor Simcoe, became the
first capital of the newly-created colony of Upper Canada.
American forces all but destroyed the town by fire during
the war of 1812, but it was soon rebuilt and became an active
commercial centre, with a busy shipping and ship-building
industry, as well as many shops and warehouses. Today, over
two hundred years after its founding, Niagara-on-the-Lake
hums with a different kind of traffic. Its many attractions
include historic sites - Fort George and the Historical
Society Museum, the marina, a lovely heritage business district,
golf courses, parks and beautiful farmland, agricultural
markets and world famous Niagara wineries. And of course,
the Shaw Festival with its three theatres is based here.
The Shaw Festival was founded in 1962 by Niagara-area lawyer
and playwright Brian Doherty. During the summer, Mr. Doherty
organized eight weekend performances of Don Juan in Hell
and Candida by Bernard Shaw under the title “Salute to Shaw”.
For this event, the Assembly Room in the historic Court
House on Queen Street was converted into a small theatre.
Today the Festival produces 10 to 12 plays each season,
with over 800 performances in 3 theatres, to audiences totalling
about 300,000 people.
That
Stratford is the home of the largest classical repertory
theatre in North America is ultimately attributable to the
dream of one man, Stratford-born journalist Tom Patterson.
In the early 1950s, seeing the economy of his home town
endangered by the withdrawal of the railway industry that
had sustained it for nearly 80 years, Patterson conceived
the idea of a theatre festival devoted to the works of William
Shakespeare. On October 31, 1952, work began on a concrete
amphitheatre at the centre of which was to be a revolutionary
thrust stage created by internationally renowned theatrical
designer Tanya Moiseiwitsch. From that stage, on the night
of July 13, 1953, actor Alec Guinness spoke the opening
lines of Richard III: "Now is the winter of our discontent
/ Made glorious summer by this son of York." Those words
marked the triumphant end of what had sometimes seemed a
hopeless struggle against the odds to turn Patterson's dream
into a reality and the beginning of an astonishing new chapter
in Canadian theatre history. As celebrated novelist Robertson
Davies opined, the founding of the Stratford Festival was
an achievement of historic importance not only in Canada
but wherever theatre is taken seriously, that is to say,
in every civilized country in the world.
Toronto,
on the north shore of Lake Ontario, is the largest of Canada's
vibrant urban centres. It is the hub of the nation's commercial,
financial, industrial, and cultural life, and is the capital
of the Province of Ontario. People have lived here since
shortly after the last ice age, although the urban community
only dates to 1793 when British colonial officials founded
the 'Town of York' on what then was the Upper Canadian frontier.
That backwoods village grew to become the 'City of Toronto'
in 1834, and through its subsequent evolution and expansion
Toronto has emerged as one of the most liveable and multicultural
urban places in the world today. And of course, it is home
to the Canadian Opera Company, the largest producer of opera
in Canada and one of the largest in North America. The company
enjoys an international reputation for artistic excellence
and creative innovation, and now has a new home, the Four
Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts.
THE ITINERARY
Friday,
October 2...Departures
for Toronto, transfers to Niagara-on-the-Lake
Departures for Toronto (be certain to schedule your inbound
flight so that you arrive late morning/early afternoon;
if you wish to arrive in advance of this date, the cost
will be $360 per night). Upon arrival at Pearson International
Airport, you will be met and transferred by private shuttle
to our deluxe hotel in Niagara-on-the-Lake, The Prince of
Wales (transfer time: 70 minutes). Note: If you prefer to
arrive in Buffalo, we will include the transfer and make
all arrangements. Upon arrival, we check in to our elegant
rooms and enjoy the afternoon at leisure. In the evening,
we gather and enjoy a Welcome Dinner at the historic Charles
Inn, close to the hotel and overlooking the oldest golf
course in North America.
Saturday,
October 3...Niagara-on-the-Lake
Following breakfast, included daily at each hotel, the morning
is at leisure. In the afternoon, we gather and make the
short walk to the Court House Theatre for the matinée performance
of Noel Coward's Ways of the Heart. After dinner
at leisure, we meet at the Royal George Theatre for the
evening performance of Stephen Sondheim's Sunday in the
Park with George.
Sunday,
October 4...Niagara-on-the-Lake
Enjoy the morning at leisure. In the afternoon, we attend
a matinée performance of Coward's Brief Encounters
at the Festival Theatre. Afterward, we take High Tea at
the Prince of Wales before returning to the Royal George
Theatre for the Coward's Play, Orchestra, Play.
Monday,
October 5...Niagara-on-the-Lake
— Stratford
After check out, we enjoy a private guided tour of historic
Niagara-on-the-Lake and Niagara Falls, stopping for an exquisite
lunch at Peninsula Ridge Estates in Beamsville. Following
lunch, we continue to Stratford and check in at the Parlour
Inn & Suites, a charming property close to the Avon
Theatre. Once settled in to our spacious rooms, the evening
in Stratford is at leisure.
Tuesday,
October 6...Stratford
Following a morning at leisure, we make the short walk to
the Avon Theatre for our matinée performance of Burt Shevelove,
Larry Gelbart and Stephen Sondheim's A Funny Thing Happened
on the Way to the Forum. We then make the one block
walk to enjoy a spectacular dinner at the Church Restaurant.
The setting is heavenly...Afterward, we transfer by private
shuttle to the Festival Theatre for Shakespeare's timeless
A Midsummer Night's Dream. Private shuttle to the
hotel following the performance.
Wednesday,
October 7...Stratford
This morning we offer an optional backstage tour (1 hour)
at the Festival Theatre. In the afternoon, we transfer to
the Festival Theatre for Shakespeare's flawless tragic tour-de-force,
Macbeth. We dine between performances at the award-winning
The Old Prune, and then return to the Avon Theatre for our
final performance in Stratford, Shakespeare's Julius
Caesar.
Thursday,
October 8...Stratford
— Toronto
Following breakfast, check out of our hotel and depart
for Toronto, where we check in at the deluxe Fairmont Royal
York, four blocks from the opera house. This grand landmark
is located in the heart of Canada's largest metropolis,
amidst the city's most important cultural attractions. This
evening, Toronto Symphony Orchestra favourite Maxim Vengerov
displays a new and different facet of his boundless talent
by taking up the baton. His program is filled with excitement,
warmth and colour. Tchaikovsky's "Pathétique" Symphony No.
6, his last and greatest work, speaks from the heart in
the most passionate ways imaginable. The fiery pianist Alexander
Toradze returns to the TSO with the glitter and playfulness
of Concerto No. 2 by Prokofiev.
Friday,
October 9...Toronto
Late morning we meet for a guided tour of the permanent
collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Located in the
heart of downtown Toronto, the AGO is the eighth largest
art museum in North America. The Gallery's collection comprises
more than 36,000 works representing 1000 years of extraordinary
art. The collection includes European Old Masters, Group
of Seven, and Canadian and International contemporary works.
The AGO also houses the world's largest public collection
of works by renowned British sculptor Henry Moore. The gallery
recently received a massive renovation by Frank Gehry. Following
the tour we enjoy lunch at the Gallery. In the early evening
we transfer to R. Fraser Elliott Hall in the Four Seasons
Centre for the Performing Arts for a performance by the
Canadian Opera Company (tba).
Saturday,
October 10...Toronto
Enjoy the final morning of the tour at leisure in Toronto.
In the early afternoon, we enjoy a guided tour of "hidden"
Toronto, with some incredibly interesting historic sites
near our hotel. Our guide is Bruce Bell, and there is no
better guide in this city (or anywhere). In the evening,
we meet for a Farewell Dinner at the award-winning Epic
restaurant in our hotel.
Sunday,
October 11...Departures
Following breakfast, transfers to Pearson International
Airport (35 minutes) or Buffalo Niagara International Airport
(2 hours) are included. Be certain to schedule your outbound
flight for early afternoon or later if possible.
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