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Canadian Urbanism Uncovered

Will Munro, 1975-2010: Toronto has lost a great city builder

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Very sad news today. After a long illness that he fought longer and harder than any doctor expected, Toronto has lost Will Munro. Will was a cultural force in this city and helped change the way we think about Toronto’s geography and expanded ideas of where various communities are supposed to live and play.  Along the way he created new spaces for untold numbers of people (many of whom may never even knew of him or that he was behind the event or place they were enjoying). He was an artist; a volunteer; a community councillor; a DJ, an impresario; an entrepreneur; and a friend to many and civic glue to so many more. He would occasionally DJ our Spacing events, yet in the middle of it have to run back to the Beaver Cafe on Queen to set up the turntables for a night that was unfolding there. He was constantly doing three things at once and was always hard to reach because he was always — always! — in the middle of making something or making something happen. This energy put up the most formidable force against cancer and, at times, it seemed impossible it could ever beat him. Will Munro is a city builder in the widest and best sense and Toronto would be a different city today if not for him. His spirit will live on in it. Below is the “Placemaker” feature Bert Archer wrote about Will that appeared in the Spring-Summer 2009 issue of Spacing. — Shawn Micallef


The evolution of the big gay dance party

Will Munro changed where and how Toronto’s gay community celebrated public life in the city

by Bert Archer /// photo by Carlos Weisz

The world moves in a mysterious way, its cities reform, and though there are any number of ultimately undecipherable forces at work in the way any city evolves, there are almost always people who act as conduits. Sometimes it’s through direct influence, like Gian Naaz opening the Naaz Theatre at Gerrard and Coxwell in 1971, or City Councillor Kyle Rae expelling the financial underperformers from Yonge and Dundas and replacing them with a public square.

Other times, it’s more circumspect, like the way Jane Jacobs glamourized the Annex through her writing and her presence, or the way Geoff Polci and Alana Duggan, by opening Crema Café in the Junction, pushed the neighbourhood over the edge it had been teetering on for years, making it the sort of place people would finally admit to living in. Or the way Will Munro queered the city west of Yonge.

As he’ll be the first to tell you, he wasn’t the first. A quick browse through Rick Bébout’s online opus, Lives, times, & place (rbebout.com), or a trip through the Xtra, NOW, and Eye Weekly archives with the search term “Denise Benson” will tell you how long people have been leaving the gaybourhood.

Benson, who moved to Toronto in 1986, didn’t know about George Hislop, Peter Pan, and Charlie Pachter when she started her dyke nights at the Caribou above Sneaky Dee’s, and later at the Claremont where the Starbucks at Queen and Claremont is now, or later still at the Boom Boom Room across the street. And though she did know about various era-bridging forces like Bruce LaBruce, or El Convento Rico on College, the media, including the gay press, didn’t pick up on any trends.

It was only when Will Munro started Vaseline (later “Vazaleen,” after some pointed letters from Procter & Gamble) at the El Mocambo that the whole press machine started to take notice that there was same-sexing happening off Church Street, and that there was this thing called queer which, once you got over the initial strangeness, seemed a little on the sexy side. At least when it involved young people. Within a year of Munro’s starting up his monthly nights, the National Post, the Globe and Mail, and the Toronto Star (in that order) had mentioned it in one way or another. By the time Munro had taken his night to Ottawa for the second time, in 2004, the Citizen ran a 1,200-word story called “Everybody do the Vazaleen.” Meanwhile, back in Toronto, the Star ran a 1,500-word piece in September (i.e., not hooked to Pride coverage) on a new gay generation “finding places to live and play” off the Church strip.

You could say it was timing. You could say it was how genuinely open Munro threw his arms — to men, women, trans, gay, straight, other — and how wide the media’s arms, and the city’s, too, were open to embrace his polymorphous non-disco DJing and band-booking at Spadina and College. Whatever the case, all of a sudden, you started seeing stories using cultural references like Go West, West Side Story, or clever wordplay turning Queen West into Queer West, to evoke this thing that was happening to the city and, apparently, to the sexuality of its citizens.

You might, if you had a mind to, distill it down into the space between two verbs. When asked why she started spinning discs to create a little centripetal dyke space, Benson says, “I created the spaces because I needed them.” According to Munro, 34, Vazaleen got started because, “I wanted a place to hear the music I like.”

As he sits drinking a pot of tea in the queer-friendly café space at the Gladstone, three doors down from his new venture, The Beaver, which he took a share of in 2006 with longtime friend Lynn McNeill (whose family bought the place, and who was the longtime queer punk presence behind the bar at Lee’s Palace), friends drop by the table to say hi. It’s like talking to Al Waxman in Kensington Market. “I’ve always lived in the west end,” says Munro, who moved to Toronto in the mid-90s from small-town Ontario to go to what was then OCA. “It’s where I feel most comfortable.”

And comfortable is just why this next phase of Munro’s queer sphere of influence is probably here to stay. This little café that’s become as much a physical hub as Vazaleen was a social and cultural one. Though only just into his 30s, Munro’s already evolved from the frenetic pleasures of the monthly blowout into the sustainability of a place to hang your very cool hat. It’s an evolution helped along by a recent diagnosis — one he’d rather not dwell on here — that’s brought him a good deal closer to his own mortality than most guys his age. “The Beaver’s a place you can go and just hang out,” he says. “You can get a coffee, or some good food. And it’s a place that queer kids can work.”

According to the website, they’re “the prettiest kids in town.” He still hosts nights there, and he loves the new-old-revived Queer Street West, but he doesn’t want to claim too much credit. He just did what he did, did what he wanted, and the city followed. Tea cold, conversation finished, he gets up to leave, and though I don’t follow, I figure that when he walks down his street, he smiles at everyone.

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10 comments

  1. I went to school with Will and DJ’d with him early on in his career. He will be missed…..Rest in peace Will….

  2. Extremely sad. I don’t know what to say. My condolences to his loved ones and friends. And all of us, I guess.

    RIP, Will.

  3. For those who may have only heard the name Will Munro, or briefly crossed paths in person, this certainly shines some light on him and puts things into perspective. 

  4. I was blessed to meet Will through friends. There are very few people in my life that have really impressed me. Seeing is believing… Will was it.

  5. MIANNI,

    Agreed. Just found out about him now and I admire the work he has done and wish his family my condolences. So many individuals in Toronto receive little to no credit for their hard work. Thank you Spacing.

  6. Will was someone who would always stop and say hi, even tho you knew he was busy. I used to love running into him postering the city just for that.

    Heartfelt condolences to all family and friends.

  7. Will Munro was a gay man who loved dykes and transpeople. There are not enough people like Will in the world. And now he is gone!

  8. Will’s vazaleen made me finally feel queerly at home as a newcomer to Canada. I’ll never forget that and will always be grateful for how he queered this city. Is anyone planning a public memorial event? My condolences to his family and friends.

  9. just for the record, he lived in Meadowvale… hardly “small town Ontario”.