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Jennifer posted a condolence
Monday, July 31, 2023
Apologies for the late addition here. I've only just learned of Mary Jane's passing. Those of us who study Canadian television will miss her so much. She was a legend, and always such an important supporter and friend to us. This is what I've circulated to our scholarly association, in memory and with great respect to Mary Jane.
"With a heavy heart, I want to acknowledge the recent passing of pioneering Canadian TV scholar, Dr. Mary Jane Miller. Mary Jane was a central figure in establishing television studies in Canada and in documenting CBC TV's early production histories. Her book Turn up the Contrast: CBC Television Drama Since 1952 (1987) has been considered a foundational text in the field for over 35 years. In addition to her many important scholarly publications and contributions to television research, Mary Jane was also a groundbreaking advocate for scholarly access to television recordings and collections of ephemera for the development of the field. Her essay, "Archives from the Point of View of a Scholarly User" (1992) describes in detail her platonic ideal for a functionally accessible Canadian television archive that we've never had. In its absence, Mary Jane was known for her incredible generosity with fellow television scholars in sharing her personal collection of off-air TV recordings, which has supported TV scholars and facilitated a number of notable research projects. Dedicated to keeping her personal collection of TV recordings accessible, she decided to store it outside of archives so that it can meaningfully circulate and continue to be shared with new generations of TV scholars."
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Mike Shannon posted a condolence
Monday, July 25, 2022
Please accept my deepest sympathy for your loss. In 1974/75; I was one of her students. MJ was one of the most progressive teachers on the planet. Her final exam for our 4th year was to spend a week; read a play(Me), and write an essay response. A 'take home' exam without the anxiety that most of the time caused my poor responses. Thank you for sharing exemplary teaching skills professor Miller.
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Tess uploaded photo(s)
Saturday, July 9, 2022
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We are deeply saddened to hear the passing of auntie Jane. Our family from the Philippines are truly grateful for all the help and assistance she was able to give us. I remember her and uncle Jack sending postcards to us in every occasion. It was a wonderful experience to meet both of them personally last 2008 during their cruise trip. It was a core memory for us. Both of them were extraordinary people in our lives and their memories will remain forever in our hearts.
Our deepest condolences to her family and loved ones.
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Maria Tolentino uploaded photo(s)
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
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Oh, so sorry to hear this sad news! We love you and appreciate you so much Mom Jane! Your lives with Papa Jack has touched so many including us Tolentino family of Philippines and now here in Michigan! Thanks to so many philanthropic works you did and we are so thankful and grateful. We will miss you a lot! Praying for family and loveones.
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Julie Bertoia posted a condolence
Monday, July 4, 2022
My sincere condolences to Mary-Jane's friends and family. I am thinking of you all during this difficult time.
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MIchael Owen posted a condolence
Thursday, June 30, 2022
MJ was a wonderful colleague and friend to all at Brock, With Jack, MJ consistently championed scholarship and research in the arts.
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Richard Cummings posted a condolence
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
A briiliant mind, a compassionate person and the best damned teacher you could want.
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Liz Clarke posted a condolence
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Articulate, incisive. Challenging and encouraging in equal measure.
I often tell this story to my own students: Fall of 1982 ... I got a "terrible" grade on the first paper I handed in at Brock University, a diagnostic assignment in MJ's course. I burst into tears - it was a writing assignment and I'd been editor of the high school newspaper so ... what happened? I went to see MJ to discuss this grade. How could I get a C- on this paper? In that one conversation, I learned what would be expected of me in terms of quality. I learned to distinguish between being clever and being clear. She was both firm and kind. That conversation lit the fire that caused me to become a writer instead of a hack.
MJ also taught the thesis course that I took towards the end of my time at Brock (1985-86) and that was intense. There were only four students in the course so at least 25% of her considerable focus was on me at any given time. (Gulp.) During our weekly seminar sessions, MJ was always able to dangle an intriguing ideational carrot just slightly out of our collective reach, urging us to make a conceptual leap or untie a mental knot that held us back.
MJ holds a special place in my heart for helping me see what was possible and for modeling what good teaching looks like and feels like. She is present in much that I do now and, thus, lives on in a way that I think she would appreciate. My condolences to all who were close to her and who feel her loss keenly.
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Gyllian Raby posted a condolence
Friday, June 24, 2022
The Unique MJ MIller
There were numerous aspects to Mary Jane Miller, as I learned in the years following her retirement. At first I knew her merely as Department Chair-- a dauntless leader, firm in her convictions about how things should be done, and that good theatre and truth are connected at a profound level. I respected and shared her view that articulating a theatrical vision is to aspire to the highest order of being. My connection with her began because on my first day of work, I was in the neighbouring office when, teary and wide-eyed, we watched 9/11 in real time on her tiny black and white TV screen. Jack came and joined us. Also, I had an interest in theatre about science and MJ was interested in crossing all media boundaries.
MJ set an example, consciously—she was a teacher in her every move. Her profound sense of duty made her step up for several years after her migraines undermined her desire to Chair the Department of Dramatic Arts. She didn't want to retire until she felt our fledgling department was stable and had found its identity; she cared so very deeply. As a junior hireling, the fact that she eventually arrived at this feeling that we were ready, was to me like a medal ceremony! I was aware of the responsibility she was passing over. MJ was fascinated by a Theatre of Ideas that understood our art form as multidisciplinary and a vital foundaiton to a healthy society. Her favourite conversations, that I witnessed annually at her eggnog Christmas parties, were with Biologists like Mary Frances Richardson and Miriam Richards, or Chemistry colleagues of her beloved husband Jack.
MJ brought a historicist discipline to her research, particularly in Canadian and Indigenous intersections, that is now becoming increasingly important. Just two months ago a colleague from Queen's University asked me for her contact details, fascinated to discuss further some interviews from MJ'sMagnum Opus of 1987, Turn up the Contrast. In this book, MJ evaluated the CBC -- in its entirety to that date! A reviewer, Malcolm Page, commented that the "common sense, intelligence and experience" of the writing made the book " wholly accessible to non-specialists...( he added, intending a compliment that, "it does not read like the work of a professor for a university press"!!) I think this no-nonsense approach illustrated MJ's whole academic project: to make theatre and ideas accessible to and discussable by and important to, everyone." It matters", I remember her saying at department meetings, if it seemed easier to turn a blind eye.
I knew that MJ was a generous soul. It was evidenced in her extended support of students and others in the community over many years, her listening and critical ear, her hosting skills, and her willingness to share her Stratford Festival theatre tickets. Until she retired, however, I never guessed that she had a vigorous spiritual practice that spanned the borders of several faiths and religions. She had seemed such an unsentimental atheist! As I got to know the private MJ outside the University, however, I saw that she never stopped exploring and investigating her ideas of truth, and sharing her thoughts and discoveries with members of Jewish, Christian, Theatre, and multi-cultural Spiritual communities. She and I continued to exchange play-scripts and to discuss the dimensionality of Shakespeare up to the onset of COVID.
Latterly, MJ and I drifted in our communication, just a few cards and updates here and there. I didn't know she was ailing and I didn't get to say goodbye. I am distraught about this. I was imagining her at her beautiful cottage, of which I saw lovely photos, with her cats. The news of her death fixes her forever at that gorgeous place that was her spiritual home, what she called her "genius locii". At the time of her memorial, which I would dearly love to attend, I will be on a backwoods wilderness adventure in the north, looking at the Thom Thompson rocks and vegetation that delighted her. I will visit the Elora stained glass studio that she loved, and I'll go to the Stratford Festival to which she was a devoted subscriber. This will be my MJ Miller pilgrimage. May flights of angels sing thee.
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The family of Mary-Jane Miller uploaded a photo
Thursday, June 23, 2022
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