265:. She was working as a scriptwriter at the NFB when he arrived there in 1950. She had decided to leave the NFB, and Irwin had initially invited her to dinner to try to persuade her to stay, from which had blossomed a friendship which turned to romance, and they married later the same year. Page later commented that her success as a poet would not have been possible without Irwin's support.
180:. He was initially the magazine's associate editor, becoming the full editor in 1945, although even before this point he was regarded as being the driving force behind the publication. He is credited with having brought a new generation of Canadian artists and writers to prominence at
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elements in the NFB. However, Irwin made important changes that helped to revive the fortunes of the NFB. He re-wrote the
National Film Act, making the organisation independent of government control. He also decided to move the NFB's headquarters from
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in
February 1950 when he became the Government Film Commissioner, in charge of the National Film Board. He had been recruited to try to restore the Board's public image and combat the perceived threat of
219:, an organisation with which he continued to be associated through to the 1960s. In 1948 he suffered a personal loss when his wife Jean, whom he had married shortly after leaving university, died of
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within the organisation. Some NFB staff were concerned about Irwin's appointment, both because of his complete lack of any experience in the film industry and because
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until his retirement in 1971. A biography of Irwin was published in 1993, as well as a lengthy interview at his hundredth birthday in May 1998.
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He died in
Victoria in 1999, at the age of 101. He was survived by Page and by his three children from his first marriage.
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517:"Profile: At 87, P. K. Page is Moving Ahead, Still Challenging Herself and Inspiring Artists Everywhere"
552:. Chapter excerpt, David MacKenzie, "Have you done your homework? The making of a national magazine,"
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In addition to his journalistic career in this period, during the 1930s he worked with the
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he served abroad, before returning to Canada after the end of the conflict to attend the
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before retiring from diplomatic service in 1964. He then worked as publisher of the
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Government Film
Commissioners and Chairpersons of the National Film Board of Canada
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556:, Winter 1993, pp. 8-11. Review by Brad Bird, "Irwin's integrity comes through,"
149:, on 27 May 1898 to Reverend Alexander J. Irwin and Amelia (Hassard). During the
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It was also at the NFB that Irwin met his second wife, the writer and poet
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Irwin left the
National Film Board in 1953, to take up work for the
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157:. He became a journalist while still a student, working at
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journalist and diplomat. He is best known for his work on
389:"Arthur Irwin and P. K. Page Have a Room of Their Own"
654:Writers from the Regional Municipality of Waterloo
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486:"The Poetry of P. K. Page Was 'Daring in Scope'"
544:(Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1993).
215:. In the 1940s he also began working for the
163:for $ 30 a week. He subsequently moved on to
119:(May 27, 1898 – August 9, 1999), was a
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669:High commissioners of Canada to Australia
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569:Robert Fulford, "Witness to a Century,"
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272:. He served as High Commissioner to
176:The same year, he began working for
484:Martin, Sandra (January 17, 2010).
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684:Ambassadors of Canada to Guatemala
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597:Government Film Commissioner and
425:"NFB Profiles - Irwin, W. Arthur"
387:Mendleson, Rachel (May 2, 2009).
16:Canadian journalist and diplomat
694:Officers of the Order of Canada
679:Ambassadors of Canada to Mexico
674:Ambassadors of Canada to Brazil
515:Litwin, Grania (May 25, 2004).
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554:University of Toronto Magazine
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270:Department of External Affairs
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689:Maclean's writers and editors
644:Canadian magazine journalists
601:National Film Board of Canada
459:National Film Board of Canada
429:National Film Board of Canada
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131:National Film Board of Canada
639:University of Toronto alumni
573:, 23 May 1998, pp. C-1, C-8.
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560:, Sun 12 Dec 1993, p. M-4.
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542:Arthur Irwin: A Biography
341:The Canadian Encyclopedia
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364:collectionscanada.gc.ca
239:sister publication, the
204:who believed his job at
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336:"Irwin, William Arthur"
133:(NFB), and as Canadian
87:Journalist and diplomat
659:Canadian centenarians
171:1925 federal election
155:University of Toronto
202:Canadian nationalist
113:William Arthur Irwin
33:William Arthur Irwin
599:Chairperson of the
160:The Mail and Empire
571:The Globe and Mail
491:The Globe and Mail
145:Irwin was born in
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608:Succeeded by
583:Cultural offices
540:David MacKenzie,
135:high commissioner
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332:Berton, Pierre
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217:United Nations
200:. Irwin was a
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524:. Retrieved
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147:Ayr, Ontario
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59:(1999-08-09)
47:Ayr, Ontario
43:May 27, 1898
634:1999 deaths
629:1898 births
591:Ross McLean
526:February 2,
497:February 2,
464:February 2,
434:February 2,
400:February 2,
362:Collections
347:February 2,
226:Irwin left
98:(1916-2010)
76:Citizenship
623:Categories
605:1950-1953
521:Canada.com
305:References
263:P. K. Page
96:P. K. Page
39:1898-05-27
394:Maclean's
286:Guatemala
274:Australia
247:communist
237:Maclean's
233:communism
228:Maclean's
206:Maclean's
182:Maclean's
178:Maclean's
166:The Globe
126:Maclean's
256:Montreal
121:Canadian
103:Children
79:Canadian
65:Victoria
548:
455:"1950"
282:Mexico
278:Brazil
252:Ottawa
221:asthma
92:Spouse
291:Times
546:ISBN
528:2010
499:2010
466:2010
436:2010
402:2010
349:2010
196:and
54:Died
29:Born
254:to
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