For more than two decades, Robert Fulford has been putting his remarkable and indelible stamp on Canada. A prolific writer, an insightful critic and always an engaging thinker, he has covered virtually every aspect of the arts, paying particular attention to literature, film (under pseudonym Marshall Delaney) and the graphic arts.
Robert Fulford started his career in journalism as a sports writer on The Globe and Mail in 1950, when he was eighteen. Since then he's been a news reporter, a magazine editor, a critic of literature, art, and films, and a radio and television broadcaster at the CBC TV Ontario. For 19 years, from 1968 to 1987, he was editor of Saturday Night. He's received 13 National Magazine Awards, he has been granted honorary degrees by three universities, and in 1984 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. He wrote about his experiences in a book of memoirs, Best Seat in the House, published in 1988.
These days he writes a weekly column for The Globe and Mail, appears regularly on CBC radio's Morningside, and writes for a long list of publications, from Toronto Life to the New York Times Book Review.
Mr. Fulford writes a new speech for every audience, taking great care to deliver relevant, thought provoking and original perspectives on the arts, the media, political correctness, and current affairs.
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