
George Stroumboulopoulos
hasn’t forgotten his Remarkable Teacher, Rob Ciccotelli, OCT
by Bill Harris
As host of CBC television’s The Hour, George Stroumboulopoulos conducts poised
and entertaining interviews with everyone from prime ministers and presidents
to hot actors and raging rock stars. Essentially, Stroumboulopoulos is a performer
and public speaker, and he credits a high school teacher at Ascension of Our
Lord Catholic SS in Malton for much of his success.
“In terms of what I do today, I don’t think there’s any chance that I’m doing
this without Rob Ciccotelli,” he says.
Ciccotelli, who now teaches dramatic arts and photography at Robert F. Hall
Catholic SS in Caledon East, is in his 24th year of teaching. He spent eight
years at Ascension before moving to Robert F. Hall, where he has taught for
the past 16 years.
“George was always a really nice guy,” recalls Ciccotelli. “He had an edge
to him, though, so I can see how some teachers may have had a hard time with
him.
“I’ve learned not to be judgmental. Punk-rock kids with spiky hair are sometimes
the best kids, the smartest kids. George was really great with me. He even
helped me move into my house when he graduated – George and two other kids,
without me paying them or anything.”
Stroumboulopoulos, perhaps, could have used the money. Explaining why he attended
a Catholic school as a non-Catholic, he says: “The fundamental reason to go
to a Catholic school when you’re poor is that you don’t have to buy clothes.
You wear a uniform. All you needed was two pairs of grey slacks, two white
shirts and a cardigan.
“How you dress is often how you’re defined as a kid. So my mother thought
the way to level the playing field, at least in terms of clothes, was that
everybody was the same.”
Difficult connection
Despite his positive relationship with Ciccotelli, Stroumboulopoulos didn’t
enjoy school. “I hated school. I was a terrible student,” he says. “I liked
hanging out with people but the actual school part of it, let’s just say I’m
not the guy who wishes he could go back to high school.
“I was bored. I didn’t feel like, for my mind, it was working for me. Now,
looking back, it’s not the school’s fault. It’s my fault, right? But I was
just a young boy who didn’t care. I don’t think the school could have done
anything differently. There are always going to be kids who never feel like
they connect or they’re a part of it.”
Stroumboulopoulos adds that even though he wasn’t a fan of school, he liked
Ascension.
“I’m glad you’re writing this piece because it’s important for good teachers
to be talked about, and there were a group of teachers in that school who were
good to me,” he says. “Not like they were buddies, but they were instrumental.
“Ascension was a really cool school and Rob Ciccotelli wasn’t the only good
teacher. It was just that, as I got older, Rob was the guy who really took
me under his wing and taught me a lot.”
As a youth, Stroumboulopoulos was no fan of drama, so the fact that he and
Ciccotelli – the drama teacher and head of the drama club – crossed paths was
somewhat by default.
“If you had given me the course calendar in Grade 10 and I’d picked all the
classes that I wanted to attend, the last one would have been drama,” he says.
Stroumboulopoulos wanted to be a graphic designer and an architect, but the
art teacher wouldn’t let him in her class. Recalls Stroumboulopoulos: “She
said, ‘No, you can’t take this class. I don’t think you could do this.’ But
I needed an arts credit to graduate, so I had to take drama. I got lucky. I
stumbled into the world of Mr. Ciccotelli.”
Ciccotelli chuckles when he hears the story. “I didn’t know that,” he says.
So Ciccotelli taught Stroum-boulopoulos English and dramatic arts, and after
that …
“I would just take courses that he taught,” Stroumboulopoulos says. “I took
writer’s craft because he taught it.”
So what was it about Rob Ciccotelli that spoke to the youthful George?
“First, he was young,” Stroum-boulopoulos says. “Much is made about how you
teach kids, but I think high school boys, to understand what goes on inside
their heads, it’s not easy. And I think the further removed from that reality
teachers get, the harder it is for some of them to relate. But Rob seemed to
understand.
“He was also fun. For example, he would use music – the Doors and Jefferson
Airplane – to make his point.”
“I’m one of probably a thousand students
who feel this way about him, because he’s a good teacher.”
Ciccotelli says he’s always made a point of looking for ways to keep students
engaged.
“I’m not the type to stand there and talk about – information,” he says. “I’m
more the kind of teacher who wants you to keep doing things, and I try to help
you get better at it.
“I do have a sense of humour. I think a lot of the kids like that I’m laid-back
and can make them laugh sometimes.
“And I’m very involved in the two crafts that I do. I’m a playwright, so I’m
always writing. And I’m a professional photographer, so I’m always shooting.
The kids see me as not just a teacher. They see me actually doing the arts
that I’m teaching – actively doing them outside of school.”
Ciccotelli proved to be an invaluable conduit for Stroumboulopoulos, not only
in relation to his eventual profession, but also in terms of personal growth.
Finding direction
“I was shy,” Stroumboulopoulos says. “And when you’re shy, you can overcompensate
and just kind of put yourself out there. Rob taught me how to harness that.
“He taught me how to analyze a script. He helped me direct a play. He cast
me as an actor and worked with me as a performer. I got a performance award
for one thing I was in, and that was because of him.”
Stroumboulopoulos, 37, hasn’t gone on to be a stage actor, of course, but
performing is performing, and certain skills are required.
“I’ll put it this way: To work in this job (in both radio and TV) for as long
as I have, you need a bunch of people in your journey who help you. You need
a bunch of people who coach you and guide you, and I’ve been lucky enough to
have that.
“Rob was the first one who took an interest in what I was doing. He was the
first person who worked with me and coached me in how to perform. You know,
‘Try this. Why don’t you say it this way?’ Things like that.
“So, in a sense, my first performance coach was Rob. And the fact that I perform
for a living, I’m definitely influenced by what he taught me.”
About a year after Stroum-boulopoulos graduated, Ciccotelli started a theatre
company.
“George was the star of my first show outside of school,” Ciccotelli recalls.
“A group of alumni was involved but George had the lead. He was awesome. He
was fantastic.”
 |
| Rob Ciccotelli visited George Stroumboulopoulos on the set of The Hour
with students in October 2008. |
Did Ciccotelli foresee the successful career in broadcasting?
“George was a mildly rebellious but very bright student with loads of potential,”
Ciccotelli says. “He was obviously a very talented performer with his deep
voice and magnetic stage presence.
“He said he was going to go off to study radio broadcasting in college, which
I thought was great. I encouraged him because it was something I could see
him doing.”
In 2005 – after stints in radio and with MuchMusic – Stroumboulopoulos
began hosting CBC’s The Hour, where he has established himself as one of Canada’s
leading interviewers.
“There’s no question I would not be here without Rob, because I wouldn’t have
taken an interest in it,” Stroumboulopoulos says. “Drama taught me how to express
myself, how to dig deeper, how to handle pressure, how to handle it backstage
waiting to go on when you have 2,000 kids out there, your peers, who might
laugh at you. All the little life lessons that I get to apply in my show, I
learned the first versions of those from Rob.”
Stroumboulopoulos and Ciccotelli have kept in touch.
“When he was at MuchMusic, I got him up to our school for career day,” Ciccotelli
recalls. “The kids just flocked to him – he drew such a crowd – because
he had these great stories about all the bands he had interviewed.
“Last year, I brought some kids to the set of The Hour and George was great.
After the show he spent an hour and a half talking to them. He took pictures
with them on the couch. They were in heaven afterward. The only reason it ended
was because the crew members told George they were tired and wanted to go home.”
So has Stroumboulopoulos ever told Ciccotelli how much he has meant?
“He knows he’s a big deal to me,” Stroumboulopoulos says. “But I also know
I’m not the only one. I’m one of probably a thousand students who feel this
way about him, because he’s a good teacher. He’s a great teacher.
“The right teacher is good for everybody. But the right teacher is really
good for guys like me, who were just not into school, who have all this energy
and misplaced whatever. You know, just young dumb boys filled with a bit of
rage, a little lost.
“When you’re that kid, it’s important for people to be able to reach you.
And not everybody will. But lots of teachers try. For whatever reason, Rob
just sort of got it, and he got to me. When he spoke, I listened to what he
had to say.
“Rob Ciccotelli was a big player in my life. I’ve told him, yes. But this
is why I’m talking to you. I want everyone to know.” |