By Veronique Ram on Wednesday, 13 June 2018
Category: Patient Medical Home

Patients Aren’t Pariahs, They’re People: Join Us for the Canada Day Parade

If you've been to the clinic these past few months, you've likely heard us playing the soundtrack to The Greatest Showman. In fact, if you've been to the legion on a Friday night, you may have even heard Rithesh's one man show performance of the entire album. We love the songs and play them at home, and at the clinic, daily. We dance, we sing, we love it to the core.

My initial interest in the movie was, believe it or not, intellectual. I wrote my dissertation for my 
PhD on deformity in Canadian fiction and one chapter discussed a book, The Biggest Modern Woman of the World, which features P.T. Barnum - the hero of The Greatest Showman. Historically, he was a financially motivated, racist, profiting prick - in the film, he's the champion of misfits. Like the "serious" critics, I should've hated the film for its caricatures and rushed storyline, but I didn't. Audiences haven't either; rather, they have seen the film two, three, four times, enthralled with its swooping optimism. Not only is the music addictive and the choreography enchanting, but the film expresses, as one character puts it, "a celebration of humanity."

I think one of the reasons we loved it so much was that it resonated with our year of ups and downs: 


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