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Hamilton’s Warplane Heritage Museum celebrates 50th anniversary with special events | inTheHammer

Hamilton's Warplane Heritage Museum celebrates 50th anniversary with special events | inTheHammer


By Amy Kouniakis

Published June 10, 2022 at 11:06 am

The museum’s Lancaster aircraft will be open to visitors for interior tours during SkyFest50. (Photo: Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum Fecbook)

One of Hamilton’s most popular attractions is celebrating a milestone anniversary this summer and they’re celebrating with a really big event.

The Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum (CWHM) is marking its 50th Anniversary later this month with a special two-day event that invites guests to get up close and personal with some of the museum’s aircraft and their crews.

The CWHM started out as a restoration project for a group of friends who were aviation enthusiasts back in 1972.

In its five decades, the museum has grown into an internationally renowned collection of 50 aircraft that were flown by Canadians and Canadian military services from the beginning of the Second World War to today.

To celebrate the ongoing legacy of Hamilton’s beloved museum, SkyFest50 will run from June 25 to June 26 and will feature fly-bys of the museum’s Firefly, Dakota, B-25 Mitchell, and Canso.

Aircraft like the Mosquito, Hurricane, Spitfire, P-51 Mustang, P-40 Warhawk, and P-39 Aircobra will also be making appearances at this year’s SkyFest.

The museum’s legendary Lancaster will be open for interior tours for the event but is currently undergoing some preventative maintenance to replace one of its engines so it won’t be taking to the skies for at least a few more weeks.

In addition to SkyFest50, the CWHM is hosting a homecoming event on June 18th for past and present members, staff and volunteers for a “casual afternoon of socializing and reminiscing.”

Tickets for SkyFest are currently on sale for the event, though a notice on the museum’s website said that tickets for Saturday (June 25) are already sold out.

A preview event is scheduled for Friday but there will be no access to the ramp.

Tickets for SkyFest50can be purchased through the museum’s website. So too can tickets for the homecoming event.


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Events of the Week: ‘The Dropout,’ ‘The Godfather’ 50th Anniversary and More

Events of the Week: ‘The Dropout,’ ‘The Godfather’ 50th Anniversary and More

As Hollywood events return to full force in New York and Los Angeles amid the coronavirus pandemic, here’s a look at the week’s biggest premieres, parties and openings, including red carpets for The Dropout, The Godfather‘s 50th anniversary and season five of Better Things.

The Godfather 50th Anniversary 

“A couple of times I thought I was finished,” Francis Ford Coppola told The Hollywood Reporter on Tuesday night of the ongoing fear he was about to be fired while filming an adaptation of Mario Puzo’s Mafia novel The Godfather. Needless to say, he kept the gig, won three Oscars including best picture and launched a franchise that has become one of the most iconic in history. Coppola returned to the Paramount lot this week to honor the 1972 film’s milestone 50th anniversary, a celebration that included a dedication of Francis Ford Coppola Avenue on the studio lot and a special screening and red carpet event. The latter hosted Coppola and the film’s stars Talia Shire and James Caan along with guests Alden Ehrenreich and Jon Voight and studio brass Brian Robbins, among others. Looking back on how he was able to keep the job, Coppola joked that he pulled some tricks out of his sleeve that had been up there since college. “I was a theater major and I learned how to handle the faculty that was always trying to tell you what to do,” he explained. “When I came out here, I treated executives the same way by bluffing them, basically, and using what little power I had to trick them into getting my way.” — Chris Gardner

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Francis Ford Coppola
Steve Granitz/FilmMagic

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Francis Ford Coppola, James Caan and Talia Shire
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Tick, Tick… Boom! 92Y Screening

Andrew Garfield stopped by 92Y on Tuesday for a screening of Tick, Tick … Boom! and a conversation about his career with moderator Annette Insdorf.

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Andrew Garfield at 92Y
Courtesy of Michael Priest Photography

Tyler Perry’s A Madea Homecoming premiere

Tyler Perry was joined by costars Brendan O’Carroll, Brandon Black and Isha Blaaker at Tuesday night’s downtown Los Angeles premiere of his latest Madea film, which is streaming on Netflix.

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Isha Blaaker, Brandon Black and Tyler Perry
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Cyrano special screening 

NYC’s SVA Theatre hosted a special screening of Cyrano on Wednesday night, where stars Peter Dinklage, Haley Bennett and Kelvin Harrison Jr. and director Joe Wright were joined by MGM chairman of the board Kevin Ulrich, MGM Motion Picture Group chairman Michael De Luca and MGM Motion Picture Group president Pamela Abdy.

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Erica Schmidt and Peter Dinklage
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Joe Wright, Haley Bennett, Kelvin Harrison Jr. pose with MGM chairman of the board Kevin Ulrich, MGM Motion Picture Group president Pamela Abdy and MGM Motion Picture Group chairman Michael De Luca.
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Better Things season five premiere

Pamela Adlon unveiled the fifth and final season of her show Better Things at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery on Wednesday, alongside onscreen daughters Mikey Madison, Hannah Riley and Olivia Edward and costars Kevin Pollak, Alysia Reiner and Greg Cromer.

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Hannah Riley, Olivia Edward, Pamela Adlon and Mikey Madison
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Jeremy K. Williams, Hannah Riley, Rebecca Metz, Alysia Reiner, Greg Cromer, Pamela Adlon, Olivia Edward, Mikey Madison, Phil LaMarr, Kevin Pollak and Cree Summer.
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The Dropout Los Angeles premiere

Hulu’s Elizabeth Holmes series The Dropout debuted at the DGA Theatre in L.A. on Thursday, with stars Amanda Seyfried, Naveen Andrews, Alan Ruck, Dylan Minnette, Utkarsh Ambudkar and Elizabeth Marvel, along with showrunner Liz Meriwether and executive producers Michael Showalter and Rebecca Jarvis.

Succession star Ruck, who plays a Walgreens exec partnering with Holmes in the series, said he knew little about the woman before the show: “I had seen Elizabeth’s giant face on a billboard when [Alex Gibney’s The Inventor] documentary came out, I was like, ‘Oh bad lady did something bad in Silicon Valley, that’s bad’ and I didn’t think too much about it,” he told THR. After getting deep into the story, “you realize there’s a human being involved and she’s not a vicious, malicious, deceitful person, she’s misguided I think and she so desperately wanted to believe it was going to happen that she just stopped being able to hear the truth. And the amazing thing is she convinced a lot of other people that she was right.”

And of course, a major element in the portrayal of Holmes is the voice, which the team said Seyfried mastered in her performance. “To see someone bring someone to life so effortlessly and just embody this character so well, it was really inspiring,” said Minnette, as exec producer and ABC News correspondent Jarvis added that she “was blown away” by the actress.

“Not just the voice, which she absolutely nailed, but the mannerisms,” she said. “There’s so many layers to this person and I think Amanda just spent so time researching and digging deep and watching those deposition tapes which we’ve spent so much time with, and I just admire the amount of energy and attention to detail she and the whole team put into this project.”

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Chairman, Disney General Entertainment Content for The Walt Disney Company Peter Rice, Liz Meriwether, Amanda Seyfried, Naveen Andrews and chairman, Entertainment for Walt Disney Television Dana Walden
Frank Micelotta/PictureGroup for Hulu

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Alan Ruck
Emma McIntyre/WireImage

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Rebecca Jarvis, Camryn Mi-young Kim, Katherine Powers, Shaun J. Brown and Dylan Minnette
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