Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 7 Nov 2019, p. 37

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37 | The IFP -H alton H ills | T hursday,N ovem ber 7,2019 theifp.ca coupon TIRES! All Sizes All Brands We are Diesel Vehicle Specialists! Fleet Maintenance/Programs Available all auto & truck service JuSt ASk!Best Pricing on All Products 20 Armstrong Avenue, Georgetown We have Anco All Season Wiper Blades! only $7.49/ea installed. Vehicles + TAX Most Vehicles $3995 only • Oil Change • Antifreeze Check • Lubrication • 52 point inspection • Battery & Wiper Blade Check • FREE FLUID TOP UPS FAll Special!* * Up to 6 Ltr. Limited time offer • Upgrade to synthetic for $15 extra. Certified Mechanics on Duty 905-877-1237 JuSt Boost your starting power with DeKa Batteries! Car & Truck, ATV, RV, Motorcycles, Snowmobiles & More! Car & Truck, A , RV, Motorcycles, Silver 2018 Halton Hills Thank You for your trust & continued support! ✃ ✃ Not every story is wor- thy of the silver screen, but our personal stories give context to our identities and why we are the way we are. Judy Maddren, a for- mer CBC Radio announc- er, will be at the Halton Hills Public Library as part of the Halton Hills Lecture Series. "There's always more to someone's story," Mad- dren said. "When we hear that, our empathy and our humanity is allowed to come to the surface." While storytelling is Maddren's career, turning the microphone on with her family, Maddren said, revealed new perspectives. "I discovered in the 1980s, the things I didn't know about my grand- mother when I recorded her on a cassette tape," Maddren said. To her own children, she said, she could almost see their eyes rolling as she would start telling a story about something like her first apartment. "They think they've heard everything, and I feel like I've talked too much," Maddren said. "But they don't." Maddren said people were conditioned against dominating conversations or sharing too much, but through telling stories people gain understand- ing of themselves and oth- ers. "A lot of women the gen- eration ahead of me, who, I'd say, were confined to the home, though they wouldn't see it that way," Maddren said. "They've raised a family, and didn't make money, and they will say 'I haven't really done anything.'" But stories may lay be- neath the surface. "It's supremely satisfy- ing to interview a woman and learn about the risks she took for her family, what she gave up, and how she really turned out well- adjusted people who are contributing to the world," Maddren said. Personal stories come from many sources. "Some people keep a journal and that's very pri- vate," Maddren said. "We all have stuff we don't real- ly want to share." Looking at her own journal from her time at the University of Guelph, Maddren said she couldn't recognize herself. "We curate our memo- ries to a degree. We toss the stuff that doesn't fit with who we want to be," Maddren said. But revisiting memo- ries can spark new under- standing, especially when shared with family. "That's what I love in sound portraits," Maddren said. "When somebody tells me something and I start to dig, other stuff comes out." Compared to other me- diums, Maddren said ra- dio makes the listener work. "You have to connect," she said. "It's not just given to you." After retiring from the CBC, Maddren and fellow CBC alumnus, Alannah Campbell, formed Sound- portraits, a small studio that produces audio mem- oirs. "It's a less expensive medium for a family," Maddren said. While a video memoir generally requires more than one camera, and thus more than one person, the experience loses its inti- macy. "This allows me to con- nect with somebody on a comfortable but intimate level," Maddren said. In addition, she said the voice is the instrument of the soul. "Our voice changes the least," Maddren said. "It's the closest thing you get to a person's essence." More information about Soundportraits is available at soundpor- traits.ca. Maddren will speak at the John Elliott Theatre (9 Church St.) on Nov. 27 at 10 a.m. FORMER CBC ANNOUNCER TO TALK STORYTELLING AT HALTON HILLS LECTURE SERIES BRYAN MYERS bmyers@metroland.com Judy Maddren, a former CBC announcer, will speak at the Halton Hills Public Library about the importance of storytelling. Judy Maddren photo WHAT'S ON

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