AlbertC
Superstar
Nov 21, 2020
I love this building. I suppose it was a high school at some point in the past? It sure looks like an old high school. I'm so pleased it is being restored. I hope it will be lt up at night.
It's still part of UofT. Currently the school is operated from temporary location, and will return when construction is completed.Oh thank you. I did attend spanish classes there 15 or more years ago in the evening and thought it to be part of U of T at that time.
It would be funny if Antonio Banderas saw the Kirby and the Pokémon mural inside the school building while filming Take the Lead (but obviously did not film that part for legal reasons).It currently is a high/secondary school. Before the renovations, it operated as one that accepts students between Grade 7-12, with tuition required.
The building was also used as the school in the 2006 Film, Take the Lead starring Antonio Banderas.
Reel Toronto: Take the Lead
Toronto’s extensive work on the silver screen reveals that, while we have the chameleonic ability to look like anywhere from New York City to Moscow, the disguise doesn’t always hold up to scrutiny. Reel Toronto revels in digging up and displaying the films that attempt to mask, hide, or—in rare...torontoist.com
There is a bursary fund available to families who cannot afford the tuition fees… but yes, it would be nice to return to the days when the fund wasn't necessary.Warning! A brief historical note: UTS, University of Toronto Schools, has been a school since 1910, based in that building. It was founded as an experimental and model school for the university, in a building shared with the college of education. The reason for the plural, “schools” was that there were supposed to be parallel schools for boys and girls but they never got round to establishing a girls school. It was boys only until the early 70’s when it became coeducational.
The school was partially supported by the province so that fees used to be quite low. One’s family didn’t have to be uber wealthy to attend. That funding was cancelled under the administration of Bob Rae who declared UTS was elitist. That would have been more convincing coming from somebody other than Upper Canada College graduate Rae. Of course, the result of all this is that it is now dependent on high fees and is indeed economically elitist. FWIW, I think it should be publicly funded like other schools, and accessible to all economic levels.