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The
Tewk
SOURCE
: Hour — Three Dollar Bill
The
Tewk
par Richard Burnett.
8 septembre 2005
I am having a greasy breakfast
with Olympic gold medallist Mark Tewksbury at Le Vieux
St-Laurent, a classic diner on the Main, when The Tewk
blurts out, "People think I only eat healthy food,
but I eat greasy stuff just like everybody else."
Tewksbury orders an omelette and
talks with that great TV voice of his, the one that
makes him a perfect sports commentator on CTV and CBC,
the voice that has powered him through 17 years of public
speaking and made him the face (and co-president) of
Montreal's 2006 OutGames.
"Male audiences are less demonstrative
and it has to do with masculinity," Tewskbury says.
"One time I had to speak to senior-level bankers
- 200 of them - and their concern concerned me. I think
they were making sure I wasn't too gay."
Which is the story of so many athletes
desperately trying to fit in, trying hard to not be
so obviously gay in a sports world where the closet
still reigns supreme. Alberta native Tewksbury - famously
in the closet for so many years - finally harnessed
the power of coming out and in the process modelled
himself into a personality Canadians like and trust.
"A gold medal opens doors,"
says Tewksbury, who won his swimming the 100-metre backstroke
at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. "But you need more
than a medal after 13 years."
When the Canadian swim team imploded at
the Olympic Games in Athens last summer, Tewksbury was
a commentator with the CBC. And what struck him was
that few athletes spoke with reporters afterwards, denying
children - aspiring Olympians - watching on TV back
home the opportunity of seeing a hero they might identify
with.
"It's a different era," Tewksbury
says. "There was little money in my day. Now there's
this star-system attitude. The Australian and American
teams now have press agents. You have to request an
interview. That wasn't heard of 10-20 years ago."
And he was back working on-camera when
Montreal hosted the FINA World Aquatic Championships
earlier this summer.
"The crowds turned out and they were
gracious," Mark says. "And Montreal 2006 was
there too. We had the biggest outreach tent during the
games. It was so incredible to me because this [gay
outreach] didn't exist 12 years ago. It was inconceivable.
What ground we've made. And it was also important to
see the delivery of the event, the site, the venues
and contacts with thousands of volunteers. And we bridge,
which is the whole point of gay and lesbian sport. How
do you get rid of homophobia? It'll take another 10
or 20 years to change, but we've become the buzz of
the Canadian sports system."
Make no mistake: Tewksbury is a great
pitchman for Montreal 2006.
And - unlike me - he can't really be bothered
by the pit bulls that run the Federation of Gay Games,
who keep bitching (along with folks like Washington
Blade executive editor Chris Crain) that Montreal walked
away after spending $500,000 of hard-earned Canadian
taxpayer money to win the race to host the 2006 Gay
Games. When the FGG demanded financial control of the
event - essentially grabbing the keys to the vault without
any accountability - Montreal ended up hosting the competing
2006 OutGames while Chicago scrambled to prepare for
their 2006 replacement Gay Games.
"It wasn't about the numbers. They
weren't so terrifying," Mark explains. "Financial
control was the deal breaker. When they [the FGG] say
we walked away, it boggles my mind. After two years
of trying to land a licensing agreement, we sat in Chicago
[the night of Nov. 9, 2003] for 15 hours. At 2 in the
morning we received a contract that once again did not
reflect any of the language we had agreed to."
Before everything came to a head at an
FGG convention vote the next day, Nov. 10, Mark says,
"I did everything humanly possible as co-president
to save it. I called every single federation member.
Every single one."
Which makes the FGG's vilification of
Montreal especially nasty.
To make matters worse, the FGG deliberately
scheduled Chicago's replacement games two weeks ahead
of Montreal's, which will run next July 29 to Aug. 5.
"It was very hurtful," Mark
says. "Now I'm much more removed from it. Now I'm
focused on the delivery of our [own] games. With 10
months to go we're right on target. We will deliver
a budget in September that will secure delivery of the
games. We are now expecting 12,000 sports participants
[over 6,000 have already registered], 2,000 human rights
conference participants, and 2,000 cultural participants.
Globally we're looking at 16,000 people, which will
make these the biggest games ever
Last week GLISA (the Gay and Lesbian International
Sport Association) announced at Montreal city hall that
the 2009 OutGames will be held in Copenhagen, and both
Manchester and São Paulo have put up their names
for 2013.
"Montreal is now looking at a financial
surplus for the games, and when we're done I will be
busy handing over the legacy of Montreal to the next
host city - a database of 50,000 contacts worldwide,
media relationships with every single major market in
the world, a registration system etc.," The Tewk
says, flashing his million-dollar smile. "Now we're
getting ready to welcome the world to Montreal in 2006."
© Hour
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