Toronto in winter
By Cindy Loose
Washington Post
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Fashionably dressed locals stroll Mink Row, along Bloor Street, Toronto's upscale shopping district that's akin to New York's Madison Avenue or Chicago's Miracle Mile. Among those blithely ignoring the winter cold: a stately woman in a Chanel coat and hat, pushing a stylish baby carriage that holds a freshly groomed Afghan hound.
A couple of miles away, in an edgier section behind one of Toronto's four Chinatowns, I stumble across the Hungary Thai, a restaurant that features Hungarian and Thai food. I misread it as Hungry Thai and was sufficiently intrigued to walk inside.
After mulling over my recent three-day trip to Toronto, I concluded that the woman pushing a hound and the Hungary Thai formed iconic images of Toronto, more so even than the CN Tower or the Hockey Hall of Fame.
For one thing, more than ever the city is displaying and celebrating its wealth and success. It's a great city in the process of becoming a world-class city, with a new opera house; a new and glittering $270 million addition to the Royal Ontario Museum; a cutting-edge $254 million addition designed by Frank Gehry to the Art Gallery of Ontario, to open later this year; and a new Festival Center that will be the home of the Toronto International Film Festival, considered by many second only to Cannes. The center includes screening rooms, full-size cinemas, a gallery, a library, shops and restaurants.
The city is also building a 150-acre shopping and entertainment complex centered on extensive studios for filmmakers, who last year spent more than $700 million in Toronto, which has become a kind of Hollywood North. Private enterprise has followed the scent of wealth and growth.
Trump, Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons and Shangri-La are building combination luxury hotels and residential condos. Recently opened: the Hazelton Hotel, a five-star boutique hotel with a glamorous restaurant that is getting raves.
Yet Toronto has retained its distinctiveness. You can still easily find the eclectic and the eccentric, such as Graffiti's Bar and Grill, where talented young musicians come from all over Canada to perform in exchange for whatever patrons put into a hat. There are edgy, youthful neighborhoods, historic areas built to the human scale and immigrant neighborhoods that make any nationality feel at home, even a Hungarian Thai.
DAY AND NIGHT, A HOST OF ATTRACTIONS AND THINGS TO DO DEFY THE CHILL
Toronto in winter? Sure, average temperatures are in the 20s. But my hotel, the Park Hyatt, was just across the street from the Royal Ontario's new galleries which, by the way, are built in such a way as to have no right angles. I also walked for miles and found I was never more than steps away from some warm and interesting place. Besides, what's cozier than sitting in a restaurant near a window and watching the snow fall on city streets? No great city can be seen in a few days, but here are my don't-miss picks:
Both the addition and the dinosaur exhibit are wildly popular, so if you happen to arrive when there are long lines, consider popping over to the Bata Shoe Museum (327 Bloor St. West, www.batashoemuseum.ca, admission $12) and hope ROM lines have dissipated while you were gone.
If you're anywhere close to the ROM after dark, check out the light show projected on the side of the new addition. (Ditto for the CN Tower, where a new, computer-driven light show projects images over the 1,815-foot-high spire.)
Mirvish Productions is famed for bringing shows from London, in addition to Canadian premieres. Mirvish currently is showing the only North American production of "Dirty Dancing." Coming in September: the North American premiere of Andrew Lloyd Webber's production of "The Sound of Music."
A new production company, DanCap Productions, is specializing in bringing top Broadway shows to Toronto. Coming soon: "Jersey Boys" and "Avenue Q." While live theater in Toronto used to be an incredible bargain, the tanking of the U.S. dollar has made it less so, although you still may save compared with Broadway prices. A good place to find what's showing: www.onstage toronto.ca.
Among places to check: The Rex Hotel Jazz & Blues Bar (www.therex.ca); Hugh's Room, the premier folk venue in Canada (www.hughsroom.com); Dakota Tavern, a new venue for country (www.thedakotatavern.com); and Graffiti's Bar and Grill, which features some of the city's exciting new singer-songwriters.
Also find what's playing at Now Magazine (www.nowtoronto.com) or Eye Weekly (www.eyeweekly.com).
Don't miss the potato pancakes or the pirogi at the European Deli, or the tarts at Carousel Bakery.
The secrets of Chinatown were unveiled to me by one such expert, Shirley Lum; you'll see things you never guessed were there, and it's worth the price of a tour just to learn what to buy in a Chinese bakery. A 2 1/2-hour tour for 12 begins at $22 per person. Details: 416-923-6813, www.torontowalksbikes.com.
Another guide, Bruce Bell, knows the history of the city cold and will focus on a particular section or give an overview, on foot or by a combination of walking, public transport and cabs.
If you pass through the Toronto University campus, ask him to show you the "Harry Potter"-like dining room in Hart Hall. Details: 647-393-8687, www.brucebelltours.ca.